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<h2> 7—The Tragic Meeting of Two Old Friends </h2>
<p>He in the meantime had aroused himself from sleep, sat up, and looked
around. Eustacia was sitting in a chair hard by him, and though she held a
book in her hand she had not looked into it for some time.</p>
<p>"Well, indeed!" said Clym, brushing his eyes with his hands. "How soundly
I have slept! I have had such a tremendous dream, too—one I shall
never forget."</p>
<p>"I thought you had been dreaming," said she.</p>
<p>"Yes. It was about my mother. I dreamt that I took you to her house to
make up differences, and when we got there we couldn't get in, though she
kept on crying to us for help. However, dreams are dreams. What o'clock is
it, Eustacia?"</p>
<p>"Half-past two."</p>
<p>"So late, is it? I didn't mean to stay so long. By the time I have had
something to eat it will be after three."</p>
<p>"Ann is not come back from the village, and I thought I would let you
sleep on till she returned."</p>
<p>Clym went to the window and looked out. Presently he said, musingly, "Week
after week passes, and yet Mother does not come. I thought I should have
heard something from her long before this."</p>
<p>Misgiving, regret, fear, resolution, ran their swift course of expression
in Eustacia's dark eyes. She was face to face with a monstrous difficulty,
and she resolved to get free of it by postponement.</p>
<p>"I must certainly go to Blooms-End soon," he continued, "and I think I had
better go alone." He picked up his leggings and gloves, threw them down
again, and added, "As dinner will be so late today I will not go back to
the heath, but work in the garden till the evening, and then, when it will
be cooler, I will walk to Blooms-End. I am quite sure that if I make a
little advance Mother will be willing to forget all. It will be rather
late before I can get home, as I shall not be able to do the distance
either way in less than an hour and a half. But you will not mind for one
evening, dear? What are you thinking of to make you look so abstracted?"</p>
<p>"I cannot tell you," she said heavily. "I wish we didn't live here, Clym.
The world seems all wrong in this place."</p>
<p>"Well—if we make it so. I wonder if Thomasin has been to Blooms-End
lately. I hope so. But probably not, as she is, I believe, expecting to be
confined in a month or so. I wish I had thought of that before. Poor
Mother must indeed be very lonely."</p>
<p>"I don't like you going tonight."</p>
<p>"Why not tonight?"</p>
<p>"Something may be said which will terribly injure me."</p>
<p>"My mother is not vindictive," said Clym, his colour faintly rising.</p>
<p>"But I wish you would not go," Eustacia repeated in a low tone. "If you
agree not to go tonight I promise to go by myself to her house tomorrow,
and make it up with her, and wait till you fetch me."</p>
<p>"Why do you want to do that at this particular time, when at every
previous time that I have proposed it you have refused?"</p>
<p>"I cannot explain further than that I should like to see her alone before
you go," she answered, with an impatient move of her head, and looking at
him with an anxiety more frequently seen upon those of a sanguine
temperament than upon such as herself.</p>
<p>"Well, it is very odd that just when I had decided to go myself you should
want to do what I proposed long ago. If I wait for you to go tomorrow
another day will be lost; and I know I shall be unable to rest another
night without having been. I want to get this settled, and will. You must
visit her afterwards—it will be all the same."</p>
<p>"I could even go with you now?"</p>
<p>"You could scarcely walk there and back without a longer rest than I shall
take. No, not tonight, Eustacia."</p>
<p>"Let it be as you say, then," she replied in the quiet way of one who,
though willing to ward off evil consequences by a mild effort, would let
events fall out as they might sooner than wrestle hard to direct them.</p>
<p>Clym then went into the garden; and a thoughtful languor stole over
Eustacia for the remainder of the afternoon, which her husband attributed
to the heat of the weather.</p>
<p>In the evening he set out on the journey. Although the heat of summer was
yet intense the days had considerably shortened, and before he had
advanced a mile on his way all the heath purples, browns, and greens had
merged in a uniform dress without airiness or graduation, and broken only
by touches of white where the little heaps of clean quartz sand showed the
entrance to a rabbit burrow, or where the white flints of a footpath lay
like a thread over the slopes. In almost every one of the isolated and
stunted thorns which grew here and there a nighthawk revealed his presence
by whirring like the clack of a mill as long as he could hold his breath,
then stopping, flapping his wings, wheeling round the bush, alighting, and
after a silent interval of listening beginning to whirr again. At each
brushing of Clym's feet white millermoths flew into the air just high
enough to catch upon their dusty wings the mellowed light from the west,
which now shone across the depressions and levels of the ground without
falling thereon to light them up.</p>
<p>Yeobright walked on amid this quiet scene with a hope that all would soon
be well. Three miles on he came to a spot where a soft perfume was wafted
across his path, and he stood still for a moment to inhale the familiar
scent. It was the place at which, four hours earlier, his mother had sat
down exhausted on the knoll covered with shepherd's-thyme. While he stood
a sound between a breathing and a moan suddenly reached his ears.</p>
<p>He looked to where the sound came from; but nothing appeared there save
the verge of the hillock stretching against the sky in an unbroken line.
He moved a few steps in that direction, and now he perceived a recumbent
figure almost close to his feet.</p>
<p>Among the different possibilities as to the person's individuality there
did not for a moment occur to Yeobright that it might be one of his own
family. Sometimes furze-cutters had been known to sleep out of doors at
these times, to save a long journey homeward and back again; but Clym
remembered the moan and looked closer, and saw that the form was feminine;
and a distress came over him like cold air from a cave. But he was not
absolutely certain that the woman was his mother till he stooped and
beheld her face, pallid, and with closed eyes.</p>
<p>His breath went, as it were, out of his body and the cry of anguish which
would have escaped him died upon his lips. During the momentary interval
that elapsed before he became conscious that something must be done all
sense of time and place left him, and it seemed as if he and his mother
were as when he was a child with her many years ago on this heath at hours
similar to the present. Then he awoke to activity; and bending yet lower
he found that she still breathed, and that her breath though feeble was
regular, except when disturbed by an occasional gasp.</p>
<p>"O, what is it! Mother, are you very ill—you are not dying?" he
cried, pressing his lips to her face. "I am your Clym. How did you come
here? What does it all mean?"</p>
<p>At that moment the chasm in their lives which his love for Eustacia had
caused was not remembered by Yeobright, and to him the present joined
continuously with that friendly past that had been their experience before
the division.</p>
<p>She moved her lips, appeared to know him, but could not speak; and then
Clym strove to consider how best to move her, as it would be necessary to
get her away from the spot before the dews were intense. He was
able-bodied, and his mother was thin. He clasped his arms round her,
lifted her a little, and said, "Does that hurt you?"</p>
<p>She shook her head, and he lifted her up; then, at a slow pace, went
onward with his load. The air was now completely cool; but whenever he
passed over a sandy patch of ground uncarpeted with vegetation there was
reflected from its surface into his face the heat which it had imbibed
during the day. At the beginning of his undertaking he had thought but
little of the distance which yet would have to be traversed before
Blooms-End could be reached; but though he had slept that afternoon he
soon began to feel the weight of his burden. Thus he proceeded, like
Aeneas with his father; the bats circling round his head, nightjars
flapping their wings within a yard of his face, and not a human being
within call.</p>
<p>While he was yet nearly a mile from the house his mother exhibited signs
of restlessness under the constraint of being borne along, as if his arms
were irksome to her. He lowered her upon his knees and looked around. The
point they had now reached, though far from any road, was not more than a
mile from the Blooms-End cottages occupied by Fairway, Sam, Humphrey, and
the Cantles. Moreover, fifty yards off stood a hut, built of clods and
covered with thin turves, but now entirely disused. The simple outline of
the lonely shed was visible, and thither he determined to direct his
steps. As soon as he arrived he laid her down carefully by the entrance,
and then ran and cut with his pocketknife an armful of the dryest fern.
Spreading this within the shed, which was entirely open on one side, he
placed his mother thereon; then he ran with all his might towards the
dwelling of Fairway.</p>
<p>Nearly a quarter of an hour had passed, disturbed only by the broken
breathing of the sufferer, when moving figures began to animate the line
between heath and sky. In a few moments Clym arrived with Fairway,
Humphrey, and Susan Nunsuch; Olly Dowden, who had chanced to be at
Fairway's, Christian and Grandfer Cantle following helter-skelter behind.
They had brought a lantern and matches, water, a pillow, and a few other
articles which had occurred to their minds in the hurry of the moment. Sam
had been despatched back again for brandy, and a boy brought Fairway's
pony, upon which he rode off to the nearest medical man, with directions
to call at Wildeve's on his way, and inform Thomasin that her aunt was
unwell.</p>
<p>Sam and the brandy soon arrived, and it was administered by the light of
the lantern; after which she became sufficiently conscious to signify by
signs that something was wrong with her foot. Olly Dowden at length
understood her meaning, and examined the foot indicated. It was swollen
and red. Even as they watched the red began to assume a more livid colour,
in the midst of which appeared a scarlet speck, smaller than a pea, and it
was found to consist of a drop of blood, which rose above the smooth flesh
of her ankle in a hemisphere.</p>
<p>"I know what it is," cried Sam. "She has been stung by an adder!"</p>
<p>"Yes," said Clym instantly. "I remember when I was a child seeing just
such a bite. O, my poor mother!"</p>
<p>"It was my father who was bit," said Sam. "And there's only one way to
cure it. You must rub the place with the fat of other adders, and the only
way to get that is by frying them. That's what they did for him."</p>
<p>"'Tis an old remedy," said Clym distrustfully, "and I have doubts about
it. But we can do nothing else till the doctor comes."</p>
<p>"'Tis a sure cure," said Olly Dowden, with emphasis. "I've used it when I
used to go out nursing."</p>
<p>"Then we must pray for daylight, to catch them," said Clym gloomily.</p>
<p>"I will see what I can do," said Sam.</p>
<p>He took a green hazel which he had used as a walking stick, split it at
the end, inserted a small pebble, and with the lantern in his hand went
out into the heath. Clym had by this time lit a small fire, and despatched
Susan Nunsuch for a frying pan. Before she had returned Sam came in with
three adders, one briskly coiling and uncoiling in the cleft of the stick,
and the other two hanging dead across it.</p>
<p>"I have only been able to get one alive and fresh as he ought to be," said
Sam. "These limp ones are two I killed today at work; but as they don't
die till the sun goes down they can't be very stale meat."</p>
<p>The live adder regarded the assembled group with a sinister look in its
small black eye, and the beautiful brown and jet pattern on its back
seemed to intensify with indignation. Mrs. Yeobright saw the creature, and
the creature saw her—she quivered throughout, and averted her eyes.</p>
<p>"Look at that," murmured Christian Cantle. "Neighbours, how do we know but
that something of the old serpent in God's garden, that gied the apple to
the young woman with no clothes, lives on in adders and snakes still? Look
at his eye—for all the world like a villainous sort of black
currant. 'Tis to be hoped he can't ill-wish us! There's folks in heath
who've been overlooked already. I will never kill another adder as long as
I live."</p>
<p>"Well, 'tis right to be afeard of things, if folks can't help it," said
Grandfer Cantle. "'Twould have saved me many a brave danger in my time."</p>
<p>"I fancy I heard something outside the shed," said Christian. "I wish
troubles would come in the daytime, for then a man could show his courage,
and hardly beg for mercy of the most broomstick old woman he should see,
if he was a brave man, and able to run out of her sight!"</p>
<p>"Even such an ignorant fellow as I should know better than do that," said
Sam.</p>
<p>"Well, there's calamities where we least expect it, whether or no.
Neighbours, if Mrs. Yeobright were to die, d'ye think we should be took up
and tried for the manslaughter of a woman?"</p>
<p>"No, they couldn't bring it in as that," said Sam, "unless they could
prove we had been poachers at some time of our lives. But she'll fetch
round."</p>
<p>"Now, if I had been stung by ten adders I should hardly have lost a day's
work for't," said Grandfer Cantle. "Such is my spirit when I am on my
mettle. But perhaps 'tis natural in a man trained for war. Yes, I've gone
through a good deal; but nothing ever came amiss to me after I joined the
Locals in four." He shook his head and smiled at a mental picture of
himself in uniform. "I was always first in the most galliantest scrapes in
my younger days!"</p>
<p>"I suppose that was because they always used to put the biggest fool
afore," said Fairway from the fire, beside which he knelt, blowing it with
his breath.</p>
<p>"D'ye think so, Timothy?" said Grandfer Cantle, coming forward to
Fairway's side with sudden depression in his face. "Then a man may feel
for years that he is good solid company, and be wrong about himself after
all?"</p>
<p>"Never mind that question, Grandfer. Stir your stumps and get some more
sticks. 'Tis very nonsense of an old man to prattle so when life and
death's in mangling."</p>
<p>"Yes, yes," said Grandfer Cantle, with melancholy conviction. "Well, this
is a bad night altogether for them that have done well in their time; and
if I were ever such a dab at the hautboy or tenor viol, I shouldn't have
the heart to play tunes upon 'em now."</p>
<p>Susan now arrived with the frying pan, when the live adder was killed and
the heads of the three taken off. The remainders, being cut into lengths
and split open, were tossed into the pan, which began hissing and
crackling over the fire. Soon a rill of clear oil trickled from the
carcases, whereupon Clym dipped the corner of his handkerchief into the
liquid and anointed the wound.</p>
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