<h2><SPAN name="chap04"></SPAN>IV.</h2>
<p>Henchard’s wife acted for the best, but she had involved herself in
difficulties. A hundred times she had been upon the point of telling her
daughter Elizabeth-Jane the true story of her life, the tragical crisis of
which had been the transaction at Weydon Fair, when she was not much older than
the girl now beside her. But she had refrained. An innocent maiden had thus
grown up in the belief that the relations between the genial sailor and her
mother were the ordinary ones that they had always appeared to be. The risk of
endangering a child’s strong affection by disturbing ideas which had
grown with her growth was to Mrs. Henchard too fearful a thing to contemplate.
It had seemed, indeed folly to think of making Elizabeth-Jane wise.</p>
<p>But Susan Henchard’s fear of losing her dearly loved daughter’s
heart by a revelation had little to do with any sense of wrong-doing on her own
part. Her simplicity—the original ground of Henchard’s contempt for
her—had allowed her to live on in the conviction that Newson had acquired
a morally real and justifiable right to her by his purchase—though the
exact bearings and legal limits of that right were vague. It may seem strange
to sophisticated minds that a sane young matron could believe in the
seriousness of such a transfer; and were there not numerous other instances of
the same belief the thing might scarcely be credited. But she was by no means
the first or last peasant woman who had religiously adhered to her purchaser,
as too many rural records show.</p>
<p>The history of Susan Henchard’s adventures in the interim can be told in
two or three sentences. Absolutely helpless she had been taken off to Canada
where they had lived several years without any great worldly success, though
she worked as hard as any woman could to keep their cottage cheerful and
well-provided. When Elizabeth-Jane was about twelve years old the three
returned to England, and settled at Falmouth, where Newson made a living for a
few years as boatman and general handy shoreman.</p>
<p>He then engaged in the Newfoundland trade, and it was during this period that
Susan had an awakening. A friend to whom she confided her history ridiculed her
grave acceptance of her position; and all was over with her peace of mind. When
Newson came home at the end of one winter he saw that the delusion he had so
carefully sustained had vanished for ever.</p>
<p>There was then a time of sadness, in which she told him her doubts if she could
live with him longer. Newson left home again on the Newfoundland trade when the
season came round. The vague news of his loss at sea a little later on solved a
problem which had become torture to her meek conscience. She saw him no more.</p>
<p>Of Henchard they heard nothing. To the liege subjects of Labour, the England of
those days was a continent, and a mile a geographical degree.</p>
<p>Elizabeth-Jane developed early into womanliness. One day a month or so after
receiving intelligence of Newson’s death off the Bank of Newfoundland,
when the girl was about eighteen, she was sitting on a willow chair in the
cottage they still occupied, working twine nets for the fishermen. Her mother
was in a back corner of the same room engaged in the same labour, and dropping
the heavy wood needle she was filling she surveyed her daughter thoughtfully.
The sun shone in at the door upon the young woman’s head and hair, which
was worn loose, so that the rays streamed into its depths as into a hazel
copse. Her face, though somewhat wan and incomplete, possessed the raw
materials of beauty in a promising degree. There was an under-handsomeness in
it, struggling to reveal itself through the provisional curves of immaturity,
and the casual disfigurements that resulted from the straitened circumstances
of their lives. She was handsome in the bone, hardly as yet handsome in the
flesh. She possibly might never be fully handsome, unless the carking accidents
of her daily existence could be evaded before the mobile parts of her
countenance had settled to their final mould.</p>
<p>The sight of the girl made her mother sad—not vaguely but by logical
inference. They both were still in that strait-waistcoat of poverty from which
she had tried so many times to be delivered for the girl’s sake. The
woman had long perceived how zealously and constantly the young mind of her
companion was struggling for enlargement; and yet now, in her eighteenth year,
it still remained but little unfolded. The desire—sober and
repressed—of Elizabeth-Jane’s heart was indeed to see, to hear, and
to understand. How could she become a woman of wider knowledge, higher
repute—“better,” as she termed it—this was her constant
inquiry of her mother. She sought further into things than other girls in her
position ever did, and her mother groaned as she felt she could not aid in the
search.</p>
<p>The sailor, drowned or no, was probably now lost to them; and Susan’s
staunch, religious adherence to him as her husband in principle, till her views
had been disturbed by enlightenment, was demanded no more. She asked herself
whether the present moment, now that she was a free woman again, were not as
opportune a one as she would find in a world where everything had been so
inopportune, for making a desperate effort to advance Elizabeth. To pocket her
pride and search for the first husband seemed, wisely or not, the best
initiatory step. He had possibly drunk himself into his tomb. But he might, on
the other hand, have had too much sense to do so; for in her time with him he
had been given to bouts only, and was not a habitual drunkard.</p>
<p>At any rate, the propriety of returning to him, if he lived, was
unquestionable. The awkwardness of searching for him lay in enlightening
Elizabeth, a proceeding which her mother could not endure to contemplate. She
finally resolved to undertake the search without confiding to the girl her
former relations with Henchard, leaving it to him if they found him to take
what steps he might choose to that end. This will account for their
conversation at the fair and the half-informed state at which Elizabeth was led
onward.</p>
<p>In this attitude they proceeded on their journey, trusting solely to the dim
light afforded of Henchard’s whereabouts by the furmity woman. The
strictest economy was indispensable. Sometimes they might have been seen on
foot, sometimes on farmers’ waggons, sometimes in carriers’ vans;
and thus they drew near to Casterbridge. Elizabeth-Jane discovered to her alarm
that her mother’s health was not what it once had been, and there was
ever and anon in her talk that renunciatory tone which showed that, but for the
girl, she would not be very sorry to quit a life she was growing thoroughly
weary of.</p>
<p>It was on a Friday evening, near the middle of September and just before dusk,
that they reached the summit of a hill within a mile of the place they sought.
There were high banked hedges to the coach-road here, and they mounted upon the
green turf within, and sat down. The spot commanded a full view of the town and
its environs.</p>
<p>“What an old-fashioned place it seems to be!” said Elizabeth-Jane,
while her silent mother mused on other things than topography. “It is
huddled all together; and it is shut in by a square wall of trees, like a plot
of garden ground by a box-edging.”</p>
<p>Its squareness was, indeed, the characteristic which most struck the eye in
this antiquated borough, the borough of Casterbridge—at that time, recent
as it was, untouched by the faintest sprinkle of modernism. It was compact as a
box of dominoes. It had no suburbs—in the ordinary sense. Country and
town met at a mathematical line.</p>
<p>To birds of the more soaring kind Casterbridge must have appeared on this fine
evening as a mosaic-work of subdued reds, browns, greys, and crystals, held
together by a rectangular frame of deep green. To the level eye of humanity it
stood as an indistinct mass behind a dense stockade of limes and chestnuts, set
in the midst of miles of rotund down and concave field. The mass became
gradually dissected by the vision into towers, gables, chimneys, and casements,
the highest glazings shining bleared and bloodshot with the coppery fire they
caught from the belt of sunlit cloud in the west.</p>
<p>From the centre of each side of this tree-bound square ran avenues east, west,
and south into the wide expanse of cornland and coomb to the distance of a mile
or so. It was by one of these avenues that the pedestrians were about to enter.
Before they had risen to proceed two men passed outside the hedge, engaged in
argumentative conversation.</p>
<p>“Why, surely,” said Elizabeth, as they receded, “those men
mentioned the name of Henchard in their talk—the name of our
relative?”</p>
<p>“I thought so too,” said Mrs. Newson.</p>
<p>“That seems a hint to us that he is still here.”</p>
<p>“Yes.”</p>
<p>“Shall I run after them, and ask them about him——”</p>
<p>“No, no, no! Not for the world just yet. He may be in the workhouse, or
in the stocks, for all we know.”</p>
<p>“Dear me—why should you think that, mother?”</p>
<p>“’Twas just something to say—that’s all! But we must
make private inquiries.”</p>
<p>Having sufficiently rested they proceeded on their way at evenfall. The dense
trees of the avenue rendered the road dark as a tunnel, though the open land on
each side was still under a faint daylight, in other words, they passed down a
midnight between two gloamings. The features of the town had a keen interest
for Elizabeth’s mother, now that the human side came to the fore. As soon
as they had wandered about they could see that the stockade of gnarled trees
which framed in Casterbridge was itself an avenue, standing on a low green bank
or escarpment, with a ditch yet visible without. Within the avenue and bank was
a wall more or less discontinuous, and within the wall were packed the abodes
of the burghers.</p>
<p>Though the two women did not know it these external features were but the
ancient defences of the town, planted as a promenade.</p>
<p>The lamplights now glimmered through the engirdling trees, conveying a sense of
great smugness and comfort inside, and rendering at the same time the unlighted
country without strangely solitary and vacant in aspect, considering its
nearness to life. The difference between burgh and champaign was increased,
too, by sounds which now reached them above others—the notes of a brass
band. The travellers returned into the High Street, where there were timber
houses with overhanging stories, whose small-paned lattices were screened by
dimity curtains on a drawing-string, and under whose bargeboards old cobwebs
waved in the breeze. There were houses of brick-nogging, which derived their
chief support from those adjoining. There were slate roofs patched with tiles,
and tile roofs patched with slate, with occasionally a roof of thatch.</p>
<p>The agricultural and pastoral character of the people upon whom the town
depended for its existence was shown by the class of objects displayed in the
shop windows. Scythes, reap-hooks, sheep-shears, bill-hooks, spades, mattocks,
and hoes at the iron-monger’s; bee-hives, butter-firkins, churns, milking
stools and pails, hay-rakes, field-flagons, and seed-lips at the
cooper’s; cart-ropes and plough-harness at the saddler’s; carts,
wheel-barrows, and mill-gear at the wheelwright’s and machinist’s,
horse-embrocations at the chemist’s; at the glover’s and
leather-cutter’s, hedging-gloves, thatchers’ knee-caps,
ploughmen’s leggings, villagers’ pattens and clogs.</p>
<p>They came to a grizzled church, whose massive square tower rose unbroken into
the darkening sky, the lower parts being illuminated by the nearest lamps
sufficiently to show how completely the mortar from the joints of the stonework
had been nibbled out by time and weather, which had planted in the crevices
thus made little tufts of stone-crop and grass almost as far up as the very
battlements. From this tower the clock struck eight, and thereupon a bell began
to toll with a peremptory clang. The curfew was still rung in Casterbridge, and
it was utilized by the inhabitants as a signal for shutting their shops. No
sooner did the deep notes of the bell throb between the house-fronts than a
clatter of shutters arose through the whole length of the High Street. In a few
minutes business at Casterbridge was ended for the day.</p>
<p>Other clocks struck eight from time to time—one gloomily from the gaol,
another from the gable of an almshouse, with a preparative creak of machinery,
more audible than the note of the bell; a row of tall, varnished case-clocks
from the interior of a clock-maker’s shop joined in one after another
just as the shutters were enclosing them, like a row of actors delivering their
final speeches before the fall of the curtain; then chimes were heard
stammering out the Sicilian Mariners’ Hymn; so that chronologists of the
advanced school were appreciably on their way to the next hour before the whole
business of the old one was satisfactorily wound up.</p>
<p>In an open space before the church walked a woman with her gown-sleeves rolled
up so high that the edge of her underlinen was visible, and her skirt tucked up
through her pocket hole. She carried a loaf under her arm from which she was
pulling pieces of bread, and handing them to some other women who walked with
her, which pieces they nibbled critically. The sight reminded Mrs.
Henchard-Newson and her daughter that they had an appetite; and they inquired
of the woman for the nearest baker’s.</p>
<p>“Ye may as well look for manna-food as good bread in Casterbridge just
now,” she said, after directing them. “They can blare their
trumpets and thump their drums, and have their roaring
dinners”—waving her hand towards a point further along the street,
where the brass band could be seen standing in front of an illuminated
building—“but we must needs be put-to for want of a wholesome
crust. There’s less good bread than good beer in Casterbridge now.”</p>
<p>“And less good beer than swipes,” said a man with his hands in his
pockets.</p>
<p>“How does it happen there’s no good bread?” asked Mrs.
Henchard.</p>
<p>“Oh, ’tis the corn-factor—he’s the man that our millers
and bakers all deal wi’, and he has sold ’em growed wheat, which
they didn’t know was growed, so they say, till the dough ran all over the
ovens like quicksilver; so that the loaves be as flat as toads, and like suet
pudden inside. I’ve been a wife, and I’ve been a mother, and I
never see such unprincipled bread in Casterbridge as this before.—But you
must be a real stranger here not to know what’s made all the poor
volks’ insides plim like blowed bladders this week?”</p>
<p>“I am,” said Elizabeth’s mother shyly.</p>
<p>Not wishing to be observed further till she knew more of her future in this
place, she withdrew with her daughter from the speaker’s side. Getting a
couple of biscuits at the shop indicated as a temporary substitute for a meal,
they next bent their steps instinctively to where the music was playing.</p>
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