<h2><SPAN name="chap31"></SPAN>XXXI.</h2>
<p>The retort of the furmity-woman before the magistrates had spread; and in
four-and-twenty hours there was not a person in Casterbridge who remained
unacquainted with the story of Henchard’s mad freak at Weydon-Priors
Fair, long years before. The amends he had made in after life were lost sight
of in the dramatic glare of the original act. Had the incident been well known
of old and always, it might by this time have grown to be lightly regarded as
the rather tall wild oat, but well-nigh the single one, of a young man with
whom the steady and mature (if somewhat headstrong) burgher of to-day had
scarcely a point in common. But the act having lain as dead and buried ever
since, the interspace of years was unperceived; and the black spot of his youth
wore the aspect of a recent crime.</p>
<p>Small as the police-court incident had been in itself, it formed the edge or
turn in the incline of Henchard’s fortunes. On that day—almost at
that minute—he passed the ridge of prosperity and honour, and began to
descend rapidly on the other side. It was strange how soon he sank in esteem.
Socially he had received a startling fillip downwards; and, having already lost
commercial buoyancy from rash transactions, the velocity of his descent in both
aspects became accelerated every hour.</p>
<p>He now gazed more at the pavements and less at the house-fronts when he walked
about; more at the feet and leggings of men, and less into the pupils of their
eyes with the blazing regard which formerly had made them blink.</p>
<p>New events combined to undo him. It had been a bad year for others besides
himself, and the heavy failure of a debtor whom he had trusted generously
completed the overthrow of his tottering credit. And now, in his desperation,
he failed to preserve that strict correspondence between bulk and sample which
is the soul of commerce in grain. For this, one of his men was mainly to blame;
that worthy, in his great unwisdom, having picked over the sample of an
enormous quantity of second-rate corn which Henchard had in hand, and removed
the pinched, blasted, and smutted grains in great numbers. The produce if
honestly offered would have created no scandal; but the blunder of
misrepresentation, coming at such a moment, dragged Henchard’s name into
the ditch.</p>
<p>The details of his failure were of the ordinary kind. One day Elizabeth-Jane
was passing the King’s Arms, when she saw people bustling in and out more
than usual where there was no market. A bystander informed her, with some
surprise at her ignorance, that it was a meeting of the Commissioners under Mr.
Henchard’s bankruptcy. She felt quite tearful, and when she heard that he
was present in the hotel she wished to go in and see him, but was advised not
to intrude that day.</p>
<p>The room in which debtor and creditors had assembled was a front one, and
Henchard, looking out of the window, had caught sight of Elizabeth-Jane through
the wire blind. His examination had closed, and the creditors were leaving. The
appearance of Elizabeth threw him into a reverie, till, turning his face from
the window, and towering above all the rest, he called their attention for a
moment more. His countenance had somewhat changed from its flush of prosperity;
the black hair and whiskers were the same as ever, but a film of ash was over
the rest.</p>
<p>“Gentlemen,” he said, “over and above the assets that
we’ve been talking about, and that appear on the balance-sheet, there be
these. It all belongs to ye, as much as everything else I’ve got, and I
don’t wish to keep it from you, not I.” Saying this, he took his
gold watch from his pocket and laid it on the table; then his purse—the
yellow canvas moneybag, such as was carried by all farmers and
dealers—untying it, and shaking the money out upon the table beside the
watch. The latter he drew back quickly for an instant, to remove the hair-guard
made and given him by Lucetta. “There, now you have all I’ve got in
the world,” he said. “And I wish for your sakes ’twas
more.”</p>
<p>The creditors, farmers almost to a man, looked at the watch, and at the money,
and into the street; when Farmer James Everdene of Weatherbury spoke.</p>
<p>“No, no, Henchard,” he said warmly. “We don’t want
that. ’Tis honourable in ye; but keep it. What do you say,
neighbours—do ye agree?”</p>
<p>“Ay, sure: we don’t wish it at all,” said Grower, another
creditor.</p>
<p>“Let him keep it, of course,” murmured another in the
background—a silent, reserved young man named Boldwood; and the rest
responded unanimously.</p>
<p>“Well,” said the senior Commissioner, addressing Henchard,
“though the case is a desperate one, I am bound to admit that I have
never met a debtor who behaved more fairly. I’ve proved the balance-sheet
to be as honestly made out as it could possibly be; we have had no trouble;
there have been no evasions and no concealments. The rashness of dealing which
led to this unhappy situation is obvious enough; but as far as I can see every
attempt has been made to avoid wronging anybody.”</p>
<p>Henchard was more affected by this than he cared to let them perceive, and he
turned aside to the window again. A general murmur of agreement followed the
Commissioner’s words, and the meeting dispersed. When they were gone
Henchard regarded the watch they had returned to him.
“’Tisn’t mine by rights,” he said to himself.
“Why the devil didn’t they take it?—I don’t want what
don’t belong to me!” Moved by a recollection he took the watch to
the maker’s just opposite, sold it there and then for what the tradesman
offered, and went with the proceeds to one among the smaller of his creditors,
a cottager of Durnover in straitened circumstances, to whom he handed the
money.</p>
<p>When everything was ticketed that Henchard had owned, and the auctions were in
progress, there was quite a sympathetic reaction in the town, which till then
for some time past had done nothing but condemn him. Now that Henchard’s
whole career was pictured distinctly to his neighbours, and they could see how
admirably he had used his one talent of energy to create a position of
affluence out of absolutely nothing—which was really all he could show
when he came to the town as a journeyman hay-trusser, with his wimble and knife
in his basket—they wondered and regretted his fall.</p>
<p>Try as she might, Elizabeth could never meet with him. She believed in him
still, though nobody else did; and she wanted to be allowed to forgive him for
his roughness to her, and to help him in his trouble.</p>
<p>She wrote to him; he did not reply. She then went to his house—the great
house she had lived in so happily for a time—with its front of dun brick,
vitrified here and there and its heavy sash-bars—but Henchard was to be
found there no more. The ex-Mayor had left the home of his prosperity, and gone
into Jopp’s cottage by the Priory Mill—the sad purlieu to which he
had wandered on the night of his discovery that she was not his daughter.
Thither she went.</p>
<p>Elizabeth thought it odd that he had fixed on this spot to retire to, but
assumed that necessity had no choice. Trees which seemed old enough to have
been planted by the friars still stood around, and the back hatch of the
original mill yet formed a cascade which had raised its terrific roar for
centuries. The cottage itself was built of old stones from the long dismantled
Priory, scraps of tracery, moulded window-jambs, and arch-labels, being mixed
in with the rubble of the walls.</p>
<p>In this cottage he occupied a couple of rooms, Jopp, whom Henchard had
employed, abused, cajoled, and dismissed by turns, being the householder. But
even here her stepfather could not be seen.</p>
<p>“Not by his daughter?” pleaded Elizabeth.</p>
<p>“By nobody—at present: that’s his order,” she was
informed.</p>
<p>Afterwards she was passing by the corn-stores and hay-barns which had been the
headquarters of his business. She knew that he ruled there no longer; but it
was with amazement that she regarded the familiar gateway. A smear of decisive
lead-coloured paint had been laid on to obliterate Henchard’s name,
though its letters dimly loomed through like ships in a fog. Over these, in
fresh white, spread the name of Farfrae.</p>
<p>Abel Whittle was edging his skeleton in at the wicket, and she said, “Mr.
Farfrae is master here?”</p>
<p>“Yaas, Miss Henchet,” he said, “Mr. Farfrae have bought the
concern and all of we work-folk with it; and ’tis better for us than
’twas—though I shouldn’t say that to you as a daughter-law.
We work harder, but we bain’t made afeard now. It was fear made my few
poor hairs so thin! No busting out, no slamming of doors, no meddling with yer
eternal soul and all that; and though ’tis a shilling a week less
I’m the richer man; for what’s all the world if yer mind is always
in a larry, Miss Henchet?”</p>
<p>The intelligence was in a general sense true; and Henchard’s stores,
which had remained in a paralyzed condition during the settlement of his
bankruptcy, were stirred into activity again when the new tenant had
possession. Thenceforward the full sacks, looped with the shining chain, went
scurrying up and down under the cat-head, hairy arms were thrust out from the
different door-ways, and the grain was hauled in; trusses of hay were tossed
anew in and out of the barns, and the wimbles creaked; while the scales and
steel-yards began to be busy where guess-work had formerly been the rule.</p>
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