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<h2> 4—Cheerfulness Again Asserts Itself at Blooms-End, and Clym Finds His </h2>
<p>Vocation</p>
<p>Anybody who had passed through Blooms-End about eleven o'clock on the
morning fixed for the wedding would have found that, while Yeobright's
house was comparatively quiet, sounds denoting great activity came from
the dwelling of his nearest neighbour, Timothy Fairway. It was chiefly a
noise of feet, briskly crunching hither and thither over the sanded floor
within. One man only was visible outside, and he seemed to be later at an
appointment than he had intended to be, for he hastened up to the door,
lifted the latch, and walked in without ceremony.</p>
<p>The scene within was not quite the customary one. Standing about the room
was the little knot of men who formed the chief part of the Egdon coterie,
there being present Fairway himself, Grandfer Cantle, Humphrey, Christian,
and one or two turf-cutters. It was a warm day, and the men were as a
matter of course in their shirtsleeves, except Christian, who had always a
nervous fear of parting with a scrap of his clothing when in anybody's
house but his own. Across the stout oak table in the middle of the room
was thrown a mass of striped linen, which Grandfer Cantle held down on one
side, and Humphrey on the other, while Fairway rubbed its surface with a
yellow lump, his face being damp and creased with the effort of the
labour.</p>
<p>"Waxing a bed-tick, souls?" said the newcomer.</p>
<p>"Yes, Sam," said Grandfer Cantle, as a man too busy to waste words. "Shall
I stretch this corner a shade tighter, Timothy?"</p>
<p>Fairway replied, and the waxing went on with unabated vigour. "'Tis going
to be a good bed, by the look o't," continued Sam, after an interval of
silence. "Who may it be for?"</p>
<p>"'Tis a present for the new folks that's going to set up housekeeping,"
said Christian, who stood helpless and overcome by the majesty of the
proceedings.</p>
<p>"Ah, to be sure; and a valuable one, 'a b'lieve."</p>
<p>"Beds be dear to fokes that don't keep geese, bain't they, Mister
Fairway?" said Christian, as to an omniscient being.</p>
<p>"Yes," said the furze-dealer, standing up, giving his forehead a thorough
mopping, and handing the beeswax to Humphrey, who succeeded at the rubbing
forthwith. "Not that this couple be in want of one, but 'twas well to show
'em a bit of friendliness at this great racketing vagary of their lives. I
set up both my own daughters in one when they was married, and there have
been feathers enough for another in the house the last twelve months. Now
then, neighbours, I think we have laid on enough wax. Grandfer Cantle, you
turn the tick the right way outwards, and then I'll begin to shake in the
feathers."</p>
<p>When the bed was in proper trim Fairway and Christian brought forward vast
paper bags, stuffed to the full, but light as balloons, and began to turn
the contents of each into the receptacle just prepared. As bag after bag
was emptied, airy tufts of down and feathers floated about the room in
increasing quantity till, through a mishap of Christian's, who shook the
contents of one bag outside the tick, the atmosphere of the room became
dense with gigantic flakes, which descended upon the workers like a
windless snowstorm.</p>
<p>"I never saw such a clumsy chap as you, Christian," said Grandfer Cantle
severely. "You might have been the son of a man that's never been outside
Blooms-End in his life for all the wit you have. Really all the soldiering
and smartness in the world in the father seems to count for nothing in
forming the nater of the son. As far as that chief Christian is concerned
I might as well have stayed at home and seed nothing, like all the rest of
ye here. Though, as far as myself is concerned, a dashing spirit has
counted for sommat, to be sure!"</p>
<p>"Don't ye let me down so, Father; I feel no bigger than a ninepin after
it. I've made but a bruckle hit, I'm afeard."</p>
<p>"Come, come. Never pitch yerself in such a low key as that, Christian; you
should try more," said Fairway.</p>
<p>"Yes, you should try more," echoed the Grandfer with insistence, as if he
had been the first to make the suggestion. "In common conscience every man
ought either to marry or go for a soldier. 'Tis a scandal to the nation to
do neither one nor t'other. I did both, thank God! Neither to raise men
nor to lay 'em low—that shows a poor do-nothing spirit indeed."</p>
<p>"I never had the nerve to stand fire," faltered Christian. "But as to
marrying, I own I've asked here and there, though without much fruit from
it. Yes, there's some house or other that might have had a man for a
master—such as he is—that's now ruled by a woman alone. Still
it might have been awkward if I had found her; for, d'ye see, neighbours,
there'd have been nobody left at home to keep down Father's spirits to the
decent pitch that becomes a old man."</p>
<p>"And you've your work cut out to do that, my son," said Grandfer Cantle
smartly. "I wish that the dread of infirmities was not so strong in me!—I'd
start the very first thing tomorrow to see the world over again! But
seventy-one, though nothing at home, is a high figure for a rover....Ay,
seventy-one, last Candlemasday. Gad, I'd sooner have it in guineas than in
years!" And the old man sighed.</p>
<p>"Don't you be mournful, Grandfer," said Fairway. "Empt some more feathers
into the bed-tick, and keep up yer heart. Though rather lean in the stalks
you be a green-leaved old man still. There's time enough left to ye yet to
fill whole chronicles."</p>
<p>"Begad, I'll go to 'em, Timothy—to the married pair!" said Granfer
Cantle in an encouraged voice, and starting round briskly. "I'll go to 'em
tonight and sing a wedding song, hey? 'Tis like me to do so, you know; and
they'd see it as such. My 'Down in Cupid's Gardens' was well liked in
four; still, I've got others as good, and even better. What do you say to
my</p>
<p>She cal'-led to' her love'<br/>
From the lat'-tice a-bove,<br/>
'O come in' from the fog-gy fog'-gy dew'.'<br/></p>
<p>'Twould please 'em well at such a time! Really, now I come to think of it,
I haven't turned my tongue in my head to the shape of a real good song
since Old Midsummer night, when we had the 'Barley Mow' at the Woman; and
'tis a pity to neglect your strong point where there's few that have the
compass for such things!"</p>
<p>"So 'tis, so 'tis," said Fairway. "Now gie the bed a shake down. We've put
in seventy pounds of best feathers, and I think that's as many as the tick
will fairly hold. A bit and a drap wouldn't be amiss now, I reckon.
Christian, maul down the victuals from corner-cupboard if canst reach,
man, and I'll draw a drap o' sommat to wet it with."</p>
<p>They sat down to a lunch in the midst of their work, feathers around,
above, and below them; the original owners of which occasionally came to
the open door and cackled begrudgingly at sight of such a quantity of
their old clothes.</p>
<p>"Upon my soul I shall be chokt," said Fairway when, having extracted a
feather from his mouth, he found several others floating on the mug as it
was handed round.</p>
<p>"I've swallered several; and one had a tolerable quill," said Sam placidly
from the corner.</p>
<p>"Hullo—what's that—wheels I hear coming?" Grandfer Cantle
exclaimed, jumping up and hastening to the door. "Why, 'tis they back
again—I didn't expect 'em yet this half-hour. To be sure, how quick
marrying can be done when you are in the mind for't!"</p>
<p>"O yes, it can soon be DONE," said Fairway, as if something should be
added to make the statement complete.</p>
<p>He arose and followed the Grandfer, and the rest also went to the door. In
a moment an open fly was driven past, in which sat Venn and Mrs. Venn,
Yeobright, and a grand relative of Venn's who had come from Budmouth for
the occasion. The fly had been hired at the nearest town, regardless of
distance and cost, there being nothing on Egdon Heath, in Venn's opinion,
dignified enough for such an event when such a woman as Thomasin was the
bride; and the church was too remote for a walking bridal-party.</p>
<p>As the fly passed the group which had run out from the homestead they
shouted "Hurrah!" and waved their hands; feathers and down floating from
their hair, their sleeves, and the folds of their garments at every
motion, and Grandfer Cantle's seals dancing merrily in the sunlight as he
twirled himself about. The driver of the fly turned a supercilious gaze
upon them; he even treated the wedded pair themselves with something like
condescension; for in what other state than heathen could people, rich or
poor, exist who were doomed to abide in such a world's end as Egdon?
Thomasin showed no such superiority to the group at the door, fluttering
her hand as quickly as a bird's wing towards them, and asking Diggory,
with tears in her eyes, if they ought not to alight and speak to these
kind neighbours. Venn, however, suggested that, as they were all coming to
the house in the evening, this was hardly necessary.</p>
<p>After this excitement the saluting party returned to their occupation, and
the stuffing and sewing were soon afterwards finished, when Fairway
harnessed a horse, wrapped up the cumbrous present, and drove off with it
in the cart to Venn's house at Stickleford.</p>
<p>Yeobright, having filled the office at the wedding service which naturally
fell to his hands, and afterwards returned to the house with the husband
and wife, was indisposed to take part in the feasting and dancing that
wound up the evening. Thomasin was disappointed.</p>
<p>"I wish I could be there without dashing your spirits," he said. "But I
might be too much like the skull at the banquet."</p>
<p>"No, no."</p>
<p>"Well, dear, apart from that, if you would excuse me, I should be glad. I
know it seems unkind; but, dear Thomasin, I fear I should not be happy in
the company—there, that's the truth of it. I shall always be coming
to see you at your new home, you know, so that my absence now will not
matter."</p>
<p>"Then I give in. Do whatever will be most comfortable to yourself."</p>
<p>Clym retired to his lodging at the housetop much relieved, and occupied
himself during the afternoon in noting down the heads of a sermon, with
which he intended to initiate all that really seemed practicable of the
scheme that had originally brought him hither, and that he had so long
kept in view under various modifications, and through evil and good
report. He had tested and weighed his convictions again and again, and saw
no reason to alter them, though he had considerably lessened his plan. His
eyesight, by long humouring in his native air, had grown stronger, but not
sufficiently strong to warrant his attempting his extensive educational
project. Yet he did not repine—there was still more than enough of
an unambitious sort to tax all his energies and occupy all his hours.</p>
<p>Evening drew on, and sounds of life and movement in the lower part of the
domicile became more pronounced, the gate in the palings clicking
incessantly. The party was to be an early one, and all the guests were
assembled long before it was dark. Yeobright went down the back staircase
and into the heath by another path than that in front, intending to walk
in the open air till the party was over, when he would return to wish
Thomasin and her husband good-bye as they departed. His steps were
insensibly bent towards Mistover by the path that he had followed on that
terrible morning when he learnt the strange news from Susan's boy.</p>
<p>He did not turn aside to the cottage, but pushed on to an eminence, whence
he could see over the whole quarter that had once been Eustacia's home.
While he stood observing the darkening scene somebody came up. Clym,
seeing him but dimly, would have let him pass silently, had not the
pedestrian, who was Charley, recognized the young man and spoken to him.</p>
<p>"Charley, I have not seen you for a length of time," said Yeobright. "Do
you often walk this way?"</p>
<p>"No," the lad replied. "I don't often come outside the bank."</p>
<p>"You were not at the Maypole."</p>
<p>"No," said Charley, in the same listless tone. "I don't care for that sort
of thing now."</p>
<p>"You rather liked Miss Eustacia, didn't you?" Yeobright gently asked.
Eustacia had frequently told him of Charley's romantic attachment.</p>
<p>"Yes, very much. Ah, I wish—"</p>
<p>"Yes?"</p>
<p>"I wish, Mr. Yeobright, you could give me something to keep that once
belonged to her—if you don't mind."</p>
<p>"I shall be very happy to. It will give me very great pleasure, Charley.
Let me think what I have of hers that you would like. But come with me to
the house, and I'll see."</p>
<p>They walked towards Blooms-End together. When they reached the front it
was dark, and the shutters were closed, so that nothing of the interior
could be seen.</p>
<p>"Come round this way," said Clym. "My entrance is at the back for the
present."</p>
<p>The two went round and ascended the crooked stair in darkness till Clym's
sitting-room on the upper floor was reached, where he lit a candle,
Charley entering gently behind. Yeobright searched his desk, and taking
out a sheet of tissue-paper unfolded from it two or three undulating locks
of raven hair, which fell over the paper like black streams. From these he
selected one, wrapped it up, and gave it to the lad, whose eyes had filled
with tears. He kissed the packet, put it in his pocket, and said in a
voice of emotion, "O, Mr. Clym, how good you are to me!"</p>
<p>"I will go a little way with you," said Clym. And amid the noise of
merriment from below they descended. Their path to the front led them
close to a little side window, whence the rays of candles streamed across
the shrubs. The window, being screened from general observation by the
bushes, had been left unblinded, so that a person in this private nook
could see all that was going on within the room which contained the
wedding guests, except in so far as vision was hindered by the green
antiquity of the panes.</p>
<p>"Charley, what are they doing?" said Clym. "My sight is weaker again
tonight, and the glass of this window is not good."</p>
<p>Charley wiped his own eyes, which were rather blurred with moisture, and
stepped closer to the casement. "Mr. Venn is asking Christian Cantle to
sing," he replied, "and Christian is moving about in his chair as if he
were much frightened at the question, and his father has struck up a stave
instead of him."</p>
<p>"Yes, I can hear the old man's voice," said Clym. "So there's to be no
dancing, I suppose. And is Thomasin in the room? I see something moving in
front of the candles that resembles her shape, I think."</p>
<p>"Yes. She do seem happy. She is red in the face, and laughing at something
Fairway has said to her. O my!"</p>
<p>"What noise was that?" said Clym.</p>
<p>"Mr. Venn is so tall that he knocked his head against the beam in gieing a
skip as he passed under. Mrs. Venn has run up quite frightened and now
she's put her hand to his head to feel if there's a lump. And now they be
all laughing again as if nothing had happened."</p>
<p>"Do any of them seem to care about my not being there?" Clym asked.</p>
<p>"No, not a bit in the world. Now they are all holding up their glasses and
drinking somebody's health."</p>
<p>"I wonder if it is mine?"</p>
<p>"No, 'tis Mr. and Mrs. Venn's, because he is making a hearty sort of
speech. There—now Mrs. Venn has got up, and is going away to put on
her things, I think."</p>
<p>"Well, they haven't concerned themselves about me, and it is quite right
they should not. It is all as it should be, and Thomasin at least is
happy. We will not stay any longer now, as they will soon be coming out to
go home."</p>
<p>He accompanied the lad into the heath on his way home, and, returning
alone to the house a quarter of an hour later, found Venn and Thomasin
ready to start, all the guests having departed in his absence. The wedded
pair took their seats in the four-wheeled dogcart which Venn's head milker
and handy man had driven from Stickleford to fetch them in; little
Eustacia and the nurse were packed securely upon the open flap behind; and
the milker, on an ancient overstepping pony, whose shoes clashed like
cymbals at every tread, rode in the rear, in the manner of a body-servant
of the last century.</p>
<p>"Now we leave you in absolute possession of your own house again," said
Thomasin as she bent down to wish her cousin good night. "It will be
rather lonely for you, Clym, after the hubbub we have been making."</p>
<p>"O, that's no inconvenience," said Clym, smiling rather sadly. And then
the party drove off and vanished in the night shades, and Yeobright
entered the house. The ticking of the clock was the only sound that
greeted him, for not a soul remained; Christian, who acted as cook, valet,
and gardener to Clym, sleeping at his father's house. Yeobright sat down
in one of the vacant chairs, and remained in thought a long time. His
mother's old chair was opposite; it had been sat in that evening by those
who had scarcely remembered that it ever was hers. But to Clym she was
almost a presence there, now as always. Whatever she was in other people's
memories, in his she was the sublime saint whose radiance even his
tenderness for Eustacia could not obscure. But his heart was heavy, that
Mother had NOT crowned him in the day of his espousals and in the day of
the gladness of his heart. And events had borne out the accuracy of her
judgment, and proved the devotedness of her care. He should have heeded
her for Eustacia's sake even more than for his own. "It was all my fault,"
he whispered. "O, my mother, my mother! would to God that I could live my
life again, and endure for you what you endured for me!"</p>
<p>On the Sunday after this wedding an unusual sight was to be seen on
Rainbarrow. From a distance there simply appeared to be a motionless
figure standing on the top of the tumulus, just as Eustacia had stood on
that lonely summit some two years and a half before. But now it was fine
warm weather, with only a summer breeze blowing, and early afternoon
instead of dull twilight. Those who ascended to the immediate
neighbourhood of the Barrow perceived that the erect form in the centre,
piercing the sky, was not really alone. Round him upon the slopes of the
Barrow a number of heathmen and women were reclining or sitting at their
ease. They listened to the words of the man in their midst, who was
preaching, while they abstractedly pulled heather, stripped ferns, or
tossed pebbles down the slope. This was the first of a series of moral
lectures or Sermons on the Mount, which were to be delivered from the same
place every Sunday afternoon as long as the fine weather lasted.</p>
<p>The commanding elevation of Rainbarrow had been chosen for two reasons:
first, that it occupied a central position among the remote cottages
around; secondly, that the preacher thereon could be seen from all
adjacent points as soon as he arrived at his post, the view of him being
thus a convenient signal to those stragglers who wished to draw near. The
speaker was bareheaded, and the breeze at each waft gently lifted and
lowered his hair, somewhat too thin for a man of his years, these still
numbering less than thirty-three. He wore a shade over his eyes, and his
face was pensive and lined; but, though these bodily features were marked
with decay there was no defect in the tones of his voice, which were rich,
musical, and stirring. He stated that his discourses to people were to be
sometimes secular, and sometimes religious, but never dogmatic; and that
his texts would be taken from all kinds of books. This afternoon the words
were as follows:—</p>
<p>"'And the king rose up to meet her, and bowed himself unto her, and sat
down on his throne, and caused a seat to be set for the king's mother; and
she sat on his right hand. Then she said, I desire one small petition of
thee; I pray thee say me not nay. And the king said unto her, Ask, on, my
mother: for I will not say thee nay.'"</p>
<p>Yeobright had, in fact, found his vocation in the career of an itinerant
open-air preacher and lecturer on morally unimpeachable subjects; and from
this day he laboured incessantly in that office, speaking not only in
simple language on Rainbarrow and in the hamlets round, but in a more
cultivated strain elsewhere—from the steps and porticoes of town
halls, from market-crosses, from conduits, on esplanades and on wharves,
from the parapets of bridges, in barns and outhouses, and all other such
places in the neighbouring Wessex towns and villages. He left alone creeds
and systems of philosophy, finding enough and more than enough to occupy
his tongue in the opinions and actions common to all good men. Some
believed him, and some believed not; some said that his words were
commonplace, others complained of his want of theological doctrine; while
others again remarked that it was well enough for a man to take to
preaching who could not see to do anything else. But everywhere he was
kindly received, for the story of his life had become generally known.</p>
<p><br/></p>
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