<SPAN name="ch04"><!--Marker--></SPAN>
<h2> CHAPTER IV </h2>
<h3> A SHEPHERD OF THE DOWNS </h3>
<blockquote>
Caleb Bawcombe—An old shepherd's love of his
home—Fifty years' shepherding—Bawcombe's singular
appearance—A tale of a titlark—Caleb Bawcombe's
father—Father and son—A grateful sportsman and
Isaac Bawcombe's pension—Death following death in old
married couples—In a village churchyard—A
farm-labourer's gravestone and his story
</blockquote>
<p>It is now several years since I first met Caleb Bawcombe, a
shepherd of the South Wiltshire Downs, but already old and
infirm and past work. I met him at a distance from his native
village, and it was only after I had known him a long time
and had spent many afternoons and evenings in his company,
listening to his anecdotes of his shepherding days, that I
went to see his own old home for myself—the village of
Winterbourne Bishop already described, to find it a place
after my own heart. But as I have said, if I had never known
Caleb and heard so much from him about his own life and the
lives of many of his fellow-villagers, I should probably
never have seen this village.</p>
<p>One of his memories was of an old shepherd named John, whose
acquaintance he made when a very young man—John being
at that time seventy-eight years old—on the
Winterbourne Bishop farm, where he had served for an unbroken
period of close on sixty years. Though so aged he was still
head shepherd, and he continued to hold that place seven
years longer—until his master, who had taken over old
John with the place, finally gave up the farm and farming at
the same time. He, too, was getting past work and wished to
spend his declining years in his native village in an
adjoining parish, where he owned some house and cottage
property. And now what was to become of the old shepherd,
since the new tenant had brought his own men with
him?—and he, moreover, considered that John, at
eighty-five, was too old to tend a flock on the hills, even
of tegs. His old master, anxious to help him, tried to get
him some employment in the village where he wished to stay;
and failing in this, he at last offered him a cottage rent
free in the village where he was going to live himself, and,
in addition, twelve shillings a week for the rest of his
life. It was in those days an exceedingly generous offer, but
John refused it. "Master," he said, "I be going to stay in my
own native village, and if I can't make a living the
parish'll have to keep I; but keep or not keep, here I be and
here I be going to stay, where I were borned."</p>
<p>From this position the stubborn old man refused to be moved,
and there at Winterbourne Bishop his master had to leave him,
although not without having first made him a sufficient
provision.</p>
<p>The way in which my old friend, Caleb Bawcombe, told the
story plainly revealed his own feeling in the matter. He
understood and had the keenest sympathy with old John, dead
now over half a century; or rather, let us say, resting very
peacefully in that green spot under the old grey tower of
Winterbourne Bishop church where as a small boy he had played
among the old gravestones as far back in time as the middle
of the eighteenth century. But old John had long survived
wife and children, and having no one but himself to think of
was at liberty to end his days where he pleased. Not so with
Caleb, for, although his undying passion for home and his
love of the shepherd's calling were as great as John's, he
was not so free, and he was compelled at last to leave his
native downs, which he may never see again, to settle for the
remainder of his days in another part of the country.</p>
<p>Early in life he "caught a chill" through long exposure to
wet and cold in winter; this brought on rheumatic fever and a
malady of the thigh, which finally affected the whole limb
and made him lame for life. Thus handicapped he had continued
as shepherd for close on fifty years, during which time his
sons and daughters had grown up, married, and gone away,
mostly to a considerable distance, leaving their aged parents
alone once more. Then the wife, who was a strong woman and of
an enterprising temper, found an opening for herself at a
distance from home where she could start a little business.
Caleb indignantly refused to give up shepherding in his place
to take part in so unheard-of an adventure; but after a year
or more of life in his lonely hut among the hills and cold,
empty cottage in the village, he at length tore himself away
from that beloved spot and set forth on the longest journey
of his life—about forty-five miles—to join her
and help in the work of her new home. Here a few years later
I found him, aged seventy-two, but owing to his increasing
infirmities looking considerably more. When he considered
that his father, a shepherd before him on those same
Wiltshire Downs, lived to eighty-six, and his mother to
eighty-four, and that both were vigorous and led active lives
almost to the end, he thought it strange that his own work
should be so soon done. For in heart and mind he was still
young; he did not want to rest yet.</p>
<p>Since that first meeting nine years have passed, and as he is
actually better in health to-day than he was then, there is
good reason to hope that his staying power will equal that of
his father.</p>
<p>I was at first struck with the singularity of Caleb's
appearance, and later by the expression of his eyes. A very
tall, big-boned, lean, round-shouldered man, he was uncouth
almost to the verge of grotesqueness, and walked painfully
with the aid of a stick, dragging his shrunken and shortened
bad leg. His head was long and narrow, and his high forehead,
long nose, long chin, and long, coarse, grey whiskers, worn
like a beard on his throat, produced a goat-like effect. This
was heightened by the ears and eyes. The big ears stood out
from his head, and owing to a peculiar bend or curl in the
membrane at the top they looked at certain angles almost
pointed. The hazel eyes were wonderfully clear, but that
quality was less remarkable than the unhuman intelligence in
them—fawn-like eyes that gazed steadily at you as one
may gaze through the window, open back and front, of a house
at the landscape beyond. This peculiarity was a little
disconcerting at first, when, after making his acquaintance
out of doors, I went in uninvited and sat down with him at
his own fireside. The busy old wife talked of this and that,
and hinted as politely as she knew how that I was in her way.
To her practical, peasant mind there was no sense in my being
there. "He be a stranger to we, and we be strangers to he."
Caleb was silent, and his clear eyes showed neither annoyance
nor pleasure but only their native, wild alertness, but the
caste feeling is always less strong in the hill shepherd than
in other men who are on the land; in some cases it will
vanish at a touch, and it was so in this one. A canary in a
cage hanging in the kitchen served to introduce the subject
of birds captive and birds free. I said that I liked the
little yellow bird, and was not vexed to see him in a cage,
since he was cage-born; but I considered that those who
caught wild birds and kept them prisoners did not properly
understand things. This happened to be Caleb's view. He had a
curiously tender feeling about the little wild birds, and one
amusing incident of his boyhood which he remembered came out
during our talk. He was out on the down one summer day in
charge of his father's flock, when two boys of the village on
a ramble in the hills came and sat down on the turf by his
side. One of them had a titlark, or meadow pipit, which he
had just caught, in his hand, and there was a hot argument as
to which of the two was the lawful owner of the poor little
captive. The facts were as follows. One of the boys having
found the nest became possessed with the desire to get the
bird. His companion at once offered to catch it for him, and
together they withdrew to a distance and sat down and waited
until the bird returned to sit on the eggs. Then the young
birdcatcher returned to the spot, and creeping quietly up to
within five or six feet of the nest threw his hat so that it
fell over the sitting titlark; but after having thus secured
it he refused to give it up. The dispute waxed hotter as they
sat there, and at last when it got to the point of threats of
cuffs on the ear and slaps on the face they agreed to fight
it out, the victor to have the titlark. The bird was then put
under a hat for safety on the smooth turf a few feet away,
and the boys proceeded to take off their jackets and roll up
their shirt-sleeves, after which they faced one another, and
were just about to begin when Caleb, thrusting out his crook,
turned the hat over and away flew the titlark.</p>
<p>The boys, deprived of their bird and of an excuse for a
fight, would gladly have discharged their fury on Caleb, but
they durst not, seeing that his dog was lying at his side;
they could only threaten and abuse him, call him bad names,
and finally put on their coats and walk off.</p>
<p>That pretty little tale of a titlark was but the first of a
long succession of memories of his early years, with half a
century of shepherding life on the downs, which came out
during our talks on many autumn and winter evenings as we sat
by his kitchen fire. The earlier of these memories were
always the best to me, because they took one back sixty years
or more, to a time when there was more wildness in the earth
than now, and a nobler wild animal life. Even more
interesting were some of the memories of his father, Isaac
Bawcombe, whose time went back to the early years of the
nineteenth century. Caleb cherished an admiration and
reverence for his father's memory which were almost a
worship, and he loved to describe him as he appeared in his
old age, when upwards of eighty. He was erect and tall,
standing six feet two in height, well proportioned, with a
clean-shaved, florid face, clear, dark eyes, and silver-white
hair; and at this later period of his life he always wore the
dress of an old order of pensioners to which he had been
admitted—a soft, broad, white felt hat, thick boots and
brown leather leggings, and a long, grey cloth overcoat with
red collar and brass buttons.</p>
<p>According to Caleb, he must have been an exceedingly fine
specimen of a man, both physically and morally. Born in 1800,
he began following a flock as a boy, and continued as
shepherd on the same farm until he was sixty, never rising to
more than seven shillings a week and nothing found, since he
lived in the cottage where he was born and which he inherited
from his father. That a man of his fine powers, a
head-shepherd on a large hill-farm, should have had no better
pay than that down to the year 1860, after nearly half a
century of work in one place, seems almost incredible. Even
his sons, as they grew up to man's estate, advised him to ask
for an increase, but he would not. Seven shillings a week he
had always had; and that small sum, with something his wife
earned by making highly finished smock-frocks, had been
sufficient to keep them all in a decent way; and his sons
were now all earning their own living. But Caleb got married,
and resolved to leave the old farm at Bishop to take a better
place at a distance from home, at Warminster, which had been
offered him. He would there have a cottage to live in, nine
shillings a week, and a sack of barley for his dog. At that
time the shepherd had to keep his own dog—no small
expense to him when his wages were no more than six to eight
shillings a week. But Caleb was his father's favourite son,
and the old man could not endure the thought of losing sight
of him; and at last, finding that he could not persuade him
not to leave the old home, he became angry, and told him that
if he went away to Warminster for the sake of the higher
wages and barley for the dog he would disown him! This was a
serious matter to Caleb, in spite of the fact that a shepherd
has no money to leave to his children when he passes away. He
went nevertheless, for, though he loved and reverenced his
father, he had a young wife who pulled the other way; and he
was absent for years, and when he returned the old man's
heart had softened, so that he was glad to welcome him back
to the old home.</p>
<p>Meanwhile at that humble cottage at Winterbourne Bishop great
things had happened; old Isaac was no longer shepherding on
the downs, but living very comfortably in his own cottage in
the village. The change came about in this way.</p>
<p>The downland shepherds, Caleb said, were as a rule clever
poachers; and it is really not surprising, when one considers
the temptation to a man with a wife and several hungry
children, besides himself and a dog, to feed out of about
seven shillings a week. But old Bawcombe was an exception: he
would take no game, furred or feathered, nor, if he could
prevent it, allow another to take anything from the land fed
by his flock. Caleb and his brothers, when as boys and youths
they began their shepherding, sometimes caught a rabbit, or
their dog caught and killed one without their encouragement;
but, however the thing came into their hands, they could not
take it home on account of their father. Now it happened that
an elderly gentleman who had the shooting was a keen
sportsman, and that in several successive years he found a
wonderful difference in the amount of game at one spot among
the hills and in all the rest of his hill property. The only
explanation the keeper could give was that Isaac Bawcombe
tended his flock on that down where rabbits, hares, and
partridges were so plentiful. One autumn day the gentleman
was shooting over that down, and seeing a big man in a
smock-frock standing motionless, crook in hand, regarding
him, he called out to his keeper, who was with him, "Who is
that big man?" and was told that it was Shepherd Bawcombe.
The old gentleman pulled some money out of his pocket and
said, "Give him this half-crown, and thank him for the good
sport I've had to-day." But after the coin had been given the
giver still remained standing there, thinking, perhaps, that
he had not yet sufficiently rewarded the man; and at last,
before turning away, he shouted, "Bawcombe, that's not all.
You'll get something more by and by."</p>
<p>Isaac had not long to wait for the something more, and it
turned out not to be the hare or brace of birds he had half
expected. It happened that the sportsman was one of the
trustees of an ancient charity which provided for six of the
most deserving old men of the parish of Bishop; now, one of
the six had recently died, and on this gentleman's
recommendation Bawcombe had been elected to fill the vacant
place. The letter from Salisbury informing him of his
election and commanding his presence in that city filled him
with astonishment; for, though he was sixty years old and the
father of three sons now out in the world, he could not yet
regard himself as an old man, for he had never known a day's
illness, nor an ache, and was famed in all that neighbourhood
for his great physical strength and endurance. And now, with
his own cottage to live in, eight shillings a week, and his
pensioners' garments, with certain other benefits, and a
shilling a day besides which his old master paid him for some
services at the farm-house in the village, Isaac found
himself very well off indeed, and he enjoyed his prosperous
state for twenty-six years. Then, in 1886, his old wife fell
ill and died, and no sooner was she in her grave than he,
too, began to droop; and soon, before the year was out, he
followed her, because, as the neighbours said, they had
always been a loving pair and one could not 'bide without the
other.</p>
<p>This chapter has already had its proper ending and there was
no intention of adding to it, but now for a special reason,
which I trust the reader will pardon when he hears it, I must
go on to say something about that strange phenomenon of death
succeeding death in old married couples, one dying for no
other reason than that the other has died. For it is our
instinct to hold fast to life, and the older a man gets if he
be sane the more he becomes like a newborn child in the
impulse to grip tightly. A strange and a rare thing among
people generally (the people we know), it is nevertheless
quite common among persons of the labouring class in the
rural districts. I have sometimes marvelled at the number of
such cases to be met with in the villages; but when one comes
to think about it one ceases to wonder that it should be so.
For the labourer on the land goes on from boyhood to the end
of life in the same everlasting round, the changes from task
to task, according to the seasons, being no greater than in
the case of the animals that alter their actions and habits
to suit the varying conditions of the year. March and August
and December, and every month, will bring about the changes
in the atmosphere and earth and vegetation and in the
animals, which have been from of old, which he knows how to
meet, and the old, familiar task, lambing-time,
shearing-time, root and seed crops hoeing, haymaking,
harvesting. It is a life of the extremest simplicity, without
all those interests outside the home and the daily task, the
innumerable distractions, common to all persons in other
classes and to the workmen in towns as well. Incidentally it
may be said that it is also the healthiest, that, speaking
generally, the agricultural labourer is the healthiest and
sanest man in the land, if not also the happiest, as some
believe.</p>
<p>It is this life of simple, unchanging actions and of habits
that are like instincts, of hard labour in sun and wind and
rain from day to day, with its weekly break and rest, and of
but few comforts and no luxuries, which serves to bind man
and wife so closely. And the longer their life goes on
together the closer and more unbreakable the union grows.
They are growing old: old friends and companions have died or
left them; their children have married and gone away and have
their own families and affairs, so that the old folks at home
are little remembered, and to all others they have become of
little consequence in the world. But they do not know it, for
they are together, cherishing the same memories, speaking of
the same old, familiar things, and their lost friends and
companions, their absent, perhaps estranged, children, are
with them still in mind as in the old days. The past is with
them more than the present, to give an undying interest to
life; for they share it, and it is only when one goes, when
the old wife gets the tea ready and goes mechanically to the
door to gaze out, knowing that her tired man will come in no
more to take his customary place and listen to all the things
she has stored up in her mind during the day to tell him; and
when the tired labourer comes in at dusk to find no old wife
waiting to give him his tea and talk to him while he
refreshes himself, he all at once realizes his position; he
finds himself cut off from the entire world, from all of his
kind. Where are they all? The enduring sympathy of that one
soul that was with him till now had kept him in touch with
life, had made it seem unchanged and unchangeable, and with
that soul has vanished the old, sweet illusion as well as all
ties, all common, human affection. He is desolate, indeed,
alone in a desert world, and it is not strange that in many
and many a case, even in that of a man still strong,
untouched by disease and good for another decade or two, the
loss, the awful solitude, has proved too much for him.</p>
<p>Such cases, I have said, are common, but they are not
recorded, though it is possible with labour to pick them out
in the church registers; but in the churchyards you do not
find them, since the farm-labourer has only a green mound to
mark the spot where he lies. Nevertheless, he is sometimes
honoured with a gravestone, and last August I came by chance
on one on which was recorded a case like that of Isaac
Bawcombe and his life-mate.</p>
<p>The churchyard is in one of the prettiest and most secluded
villages in the downland country described in this book. The
church is ancient and beautiful and interesting in many ways,
and the churchyard, too, is one of the most interesting I
know, a beautiful, green, tree-shaded spot, with an
extraordinary number of tombs and gravestones, many of them
dated in the eighteenth and seventeenth centuries, inscribed
with names of families which have long died out.</p>
<p>I went on that afternoon to pass an hour in the churchyard,
and finding an old man in labourer's clothes resting on a
tomb, I sat down and entered into conversation with him. He
was seventy-nine, he told me, and past work, and he had three
shillings a week from the parish; but he was very deaf and it
fatigued me to talk to him, and seeing the church open I went
in. On previous visits I had had a good deal of trouble to
get the key, and to find it open now was a pleasant surprise.
An old woman was there dusting the seats, and by and by,
while I was talking with her, the old labourer came stumping
in with his ponderous, iron-shod boots and without taking off
his old, rusty hat, and began shouting at the church-cleaner
about a pair of trousers he had given her to mend, which he
wanted badly. Leaving them to their arguing I went out and
began studying the inscriptions on the stones, so hard to
make out in some instances; the old man followed and went his
way; then the church-cleaner came out to where I was
standing. "A tiresome old man!" she said. "He's that deaf he
has to shout to hear himself speak, then you've got to shout
back—and all about his old trousers!"</p>
<p>"I suppose he wants them," I returned, "and you promised to
do them, so he has some reason for going at you about it."</p>
<p>"Oh no, he hasn't," she replied. "The girl brought them for
me to mend, and I said, 'Leave them and I'll do them when
I've time'—how did I know he wanted them in a hurry? A
troublesome old man!"</p>
<p>By and by, taking a pair of spectacles out of her pocket, she
put them on, and going down on her knees she began
industriously picking the old, brown, dead moss out of the
lettering on one side of the tomb. "I'd like to know what it
says on this stone," she said.</p>
<p>"Well, you can read it for yourself, now you've got your
glasses on."</p>
<p>"I can't read. You see, I'm old—seventy-six years, and
when I were little we were very poor and I couldn't get no
schooling. I've got these glasses to do my sewing, and only
put them on to get this stuff out so's you could read it. I'd
like to hear you read it."</p>
<p>I began to get interested in the old dame who talked to me so
freely. She was small and weak-looking, and appeared very
thin in her limp, old, faded gown; she had a meek, patient
expression on her face, and her voice, too, like her face,
expressed weariness and resignation.</p>
<p>"But if you have always lived here you must know what is said
on this stone?"</p>
<p>"No, I don't; nobody never read it to me, and I couldn't read
it because I wasn't taught to read. But I'd like to hear you
read it."</p>
<p>It was a long inscription to a person named Ash, gentleman,
of this parish, who departed this life over a century ago,
and was a man of a noble and generous disposition, good as a
husband, a father, a friend, and charitable to the poor.
Under all were some lines of verse, scarcely legible in spite
of the trouble she had taken to remove the old moss from the
letters.</p>
<p>She listened with profound interest, then said, "I never
heard all that before; I didn't know the name, though I've
known this stone since I was a child. I used to climb on to
it then. Can you read me another?"</p>
<p>I read her another and several more, then came to one which
she said she knew—every word of it, for this was the
grave of the sweetest, kindest woman that ever lived. Oh, how
good this dear woman had been to her in her young married
life more'n fifty years ago! If that dear lady had only lived
it would not have been so hard for her when her trouble come!</p>
<p>"And what was your trouble?"</p>
<p>"It was the loss of my poor man. He was such a good man, a
thatcher; and he fell from a rick and injured his spine, and
he died, poor fellow, and left me with our five little
children." Then, having told me her own tragedy, to my
surprise she brightened up and begged me to read other
inscriptions to her.</p>
<p>I went on reading, and presently she said, "No, that's wrong.
There wasn't ever a Lampard in this parish. That I know."</p>
<p>"You don't know! There certainly was a Lampard or it would
not be stated here, cut in deep letters on this stone."</p>
<p>"No, there wasn't a Lampard. I've never known such a name and
I've lived here all my life."</p>
<p>"But there were people living here before you came on the
scene. He died a long time ago, this Lampard—in 1714,
it says. And you are only seventy-six, you tell me; that is
to say, you were born in 1835, and that would be one hundred
and twenty-one years after he died."</p>
<p>"That's a long time! It must be very old, this stone. And the
church too. I've heard say it was once a Roman Catholic
church. Is that true?"</p>
<p>"Why, of course it's true—all the old churches were,
and we were all of that faith until a King of England had a
quarrel with the Pope and determined he would be Pope himself
as well as king in his own country. So he turned all the
priests and monks out, and took their property and churches
and had his own men put in. That was Henry VIII."</p>
<p>"I've heard something about that king and his wives. But
about Lampard, it do seem strange I've never heard that name
before."</p>
<p>"Not strange at all; it was a common name in this part of
Wiltshire in former days; you find it in dozens of
churchyards, but you'll find very few Lampards living in the
villages. Why, I could tell you a dozen or twenty surnames,
some queer, funny names, that were common in these parts not
more than a century ago which seem to have quite died out."</p>
<p>"I should like to hear some of them if you'll tell me."</p>
<p>"Let me think a moment: there was Thorr, Pizzie, Gee, Every,
Pottle, Kiddle, Toomer, Shergold, and—"</p>
<p>Here she interrupted to say that she knew three of the names
I had mentioned. Then, pointing to a small, upright
gravestone about twenty feet away, she added, "And there's
one."</p>
<p>"Very well," I said, "but don't keep putting me
out—I've got more names in my mind to tell you.
Maidment, Marchmont, Velvin, Burpitt, Winzur, Rideout,
Cullurne."</p>
<p>Of these she only knew one—Rideout.</p>
<p>Then I went over to the stone she had pointed to and read the
inscription to John Toomer and his wife Rebecca. She died
first, in March 1877, aged 72; he in July the same year, aged
75.</p>
<p>"You knew them, I suppose?"</p>
<p>"Yes, they belonged here, both of them."</p>
<p>"Tell me about them."</p>
<p>"There's nothing to tell; he was only a labourer and worked
on the same farm all his life."</p>
<p>"Who put a stone over them—their children?"</p>
<p>"No, they're all poor and live away. I think it was a lady
who lived here; she'd been good to them, and she came and
stood here when they put old John in the ground."</p>
<p>"But I want to hear more."</p>
<p>"There's no more, I've said; he was a labourer, and after she
died he died."</p>
<p>"Yes? go on."</p>
<p>"How can I go on? There's no more. I knew them so well; they
lived in the little thatched cottage over there, where the
Millards live now."</p>
<p>"Did they fall ill at the same time?"</p>
<p>"Oh no, he was as well as could be, still at work, till she
died, then he went on in a strange way. He would come in of
an evening and call his wife. 'Mother! Mother, where are
you?' you'd hear him call, 'Mother, be you upstairs? Mother,
ain't you coming down for a bit of bread and cheese before
you go to bed?' And then in a little while he just died."</p>
<p>"And you said there was nothing to tell!"</p>
<p>"No, there wasn't anything. He was just one of us, a labourer
on the farm."</p>
<p>I then gave her something, and to my surprise after taking it
she made me an elaborate curtsy. It rather upset me, for I
had thought we had got on very well together and were quite
free and easy in our talk, very much on a level. But she was
not done with me yet. She followed to the gate, and holding
out her open hand with that small gift in it, she said in a
pathetic voice, "Did you think, sir, I was expecting this? I
had no such thought and didn't want it."</p>
<p>And I had no thought of saying or writing a word about her.
But since that day she has haunted me—she and her old
John Toomer, and it has just now occurred to me that by
putting her in my book I may be able to get her out of my
mind.</p>
<p> </p>
<p> </p>
<p> </p>
<p> </p>
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