Under the Greenwood Tree

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Under the Greenwood Tree Page 14

by Thomas Hardy


  Geoffrey nodded.

  "Those holes will be the grave of thousands!" said Fancy. "I think 'tis rather a cruel thing to do."

  Her father shook his head. "No," he said, tapping the hives to shake the dead bees from their cells, "if you suffocate 'em this way, they only die once: if you fumigate 'em in the new way, they come to life again, and die o' starvation; so the pangs o' death be twice upon 'em."

  "I incline to Fancy's notion," said Mr. Shiner, laughing lightly.

  "The proper way to take honey, so that the bees be neither starved nor murdered, is a puzzling matter," said the keeper steadily.

  "I should like never to take it from them," said Fancy.

  "But 'tis the money," said Enoch musingly. "For without money man is a shadder!"

  The lantern-light had disturbed many bees that had escaped from hives destroyed some days earlier, and, demoralized by affliction, were now getting a living as marauders about the doors of other hives. Several flew round the head and neck of Geoffrey; then darted upon him with an irritated bizz.

  Enoch threw down the lantern, and ran off and pushed his head into a currant bush; Fancy scudded up the path; and Mr. Shiner floundered away helter-skelter among the cabbages.

  Geoffrey stood his ground, unmoved and firm as a rock. Fancy was the first to return, followed by Enoch picking up the lantern. Mr. Shiner still remained invisible.

  "Have the craters stung ye?" said Enoch to Geoffrey.

  "No, not much--on'y a little here and there," he said with leisurely solemnity, shaking one bee out of his shirt sleeve, pulling another from among his hair, and two or three more from his neck. The rest looked on during this proceeding with a complacent sense of being out of it,--much as a European nation in a state of internal commotion is watched by its neighbours.

  "Are those all of them, father?" said Fancy, when Geoffrey had pulled away five.

  "Almost all,--though I feel one or two more sticking into my shoulder and side. Ah!

  there's another just begun again upon my backbone. You lively young mortals, how did you get inside there? However, they can't sting me many times more, poor things, for they must be getting weak. They mid as well stay in me till bedtime now, I suppose."

  As he himself was the only person affected by this arrangement, it seemed satisfactory enough; and after a noise of feet kicking against cabbages in a blundering progress among them, the voice of Mr. Shiner was heard from the darkness in that direction.

  "Is all quite safe again?"

  No answer being returned to this query, he apparently assumed that he might venture forth, and gradually drew near the lantern again. The hives were now removed from their position over the holes, one being handed to Enoch to carry indoors, and one being taken by Geoffrey himself.

  "Bring hither the lantern, Fancy: the spade can bide."

  Geoffrey and Enoch then went towards the house, leaving Shiner and Fancy standing side by side on the garden-plot.

  "Allow me," said Shiner, stooping for the lantern and seizing it at the same time with Fancy.

  "I can carry it," said Fancy, religiously repressing all inclination to trifle. She had thoroughly considered that subject after the tearful explanation of the bird-catching adventure to Dick, and had decided that it would be dishonest in her, as an engaged young woman, to trifle with men's eyes and hands any more. Finding that Shiner still retained his hold of the lantern, she relinquished it, and he, having found her retaining it, also let go. The lantern fell, and was extinguished. Fancy moved on.

  "Where is the path?" said Mr. Shiner.

  "Here," said Fancy. "Your eyes will get used to the dark in a minute or two."

  "Till that time will ye lend me your hand?" Fancy gave him the extreme tips of her fingers, and they stepped from the plot into the path.

  "You don't accept attentions very freely."

  "It depends upon who offers them."

  "A fellow like me, for instance." A dead silence.

  "Well, what do you say, Missie?"

  "It then depends upon how they are offered."

  "Not wildly, and yet not careless-like; not purposely, and yet not by chance; not too quick nor yet too slow."

  "How then?" said Fancy.

  "Coolly and practically," he said. "How would that kind of love be taken?"

  "Not anxiously, and yet not indifferently; neither blushing nor pale; nor religiously nor yet quite wickedly."

  "Not at all."

  Geoffrey Day's storehouse at the back of his dwelling was hung with bunches of dried horehound, mint, and sage; brown-paper bags of thyme and lavender; and long ropes of clean onions. On shelves were spread large red and yellow apples, and choice selections of early potatoes for seed next year;--vulgar crowds of commoner kind lying beneath in heaps. A few empty beehives were clustered around a nail in one corner, under which stood two or three barrels of new cider of the first crop, each bubbling and squirting forth from the yet open bunghole.

  Fancy was now kneeling beside the two inverted hives, one of which rested against her lap, for convenience in operating upon the contents. She thrust her sleeves above her elbows, and inserted her small pink hand edgewise between each white lobe of honeycomb, performing the act so adroitly and gently as not to unseal a single cell. Then cracking the piece off at the crown of the hive by a slight backward and forward movement, she lifted each portion as it was loosened into a large blue platter, placed on a bench at her side.

  "Bother these little mortals!" said Geoffrey, who was holding the light to her, and giving his back an uneasy twist. "I really think I may as well go indoors and take 'em out, poor things! for they won't let me alone. There's two a stinging wi' all their might now. I'm sure I wonder their strength can last so long."

  "All right, friend; I'll hold the candle whilst you are gone," said Mr. Shiner, leisurely taking the light, and allowing Geoffrey to depart, which he did with his usual long paces.

  He could hardly have gone round to the house-door when other footsteps were heard approaching the outbuilding; the tip of a finger appeared in the hole through which the wood latch was lifted, and Dick Dewy came in, having been all this time walking up and down the wood, vainly waiting for Shiner's departure.

  Fancy looked up and welcomed him rather confusedly. Shiner grasped the candlestick more firmly, and, lest doing this in silence should not imply to Dick with sufficient force that he was quite at home and cool, he sang invincibly -

  "'King Arthur he had three sons.'"

  "Father here?" said Dick.

  "Indoors, I think," said Fancy, looking pleasantly at him.

  Dick surveyed the scene, and did not seem inclined to hurry off just at that moment.

  Shiner went on singing

  "'The miller was drown'd in his pond, The weaver was hung in his yarn, And the d- ran away with the little tail-or, With the broadcloth under his arm.'"

  "That's a terrible crippled rhyme, if that's your rhyme!" said Dick, with a grain of superciliousness in his tone.

  "It's no use your complaining to me about the rhyme!" said Mr. Shiner. "You must go to the man that made it."

  Fancy by this time had acquired confidence.

  "Taste a bit, Mr. Dewy," she said, holding up to him a small circular piece of honeycomb that had been the last in the row of layers, remaining still on her knees and flinging back her head to look in his face; "and then I'll taste a bit too."

  "And I, if you please," said Mr. Shiner. Nevertheless the farmer looked superior, as if he could even now hardly join the trifling from very importance of station; and after receiving the honeycomb from Fancy, he turned it over in his hand till the cells began to be crushed, and the liquid honey ran down from his fingers in a thin string.

  Suddenly a faint cry from Fancy caused them to gaze at her.

  "What's the matter, dear?" said Dick.

  "It is nothing, but O-o! a bee has stung the inside of my lip! He was in one of the cells I was eating!"

  "We must keep down the swelling, o
r it may be serious!" said Shiner, stepping up and kneeling beside her. "Let me see it."

  "No, no!"

  "Just let ME see it," said Dick, kneeling on the other side: and after some hesitation she pressed down her lip with one finger to show the place. "O, I hope 'twill soon he better! I don't mind a sting in ordinary places, hut it is so bad upon your lip," she added with tears in her eyes, and writhing a little from the pain.

  Shiner held the light above his head and pushed his face close to Fancy's, as if the lip had been shown exclusively to himself, upon which Dick pushed closer, as if Shiner were not there at all.

  "It is swelling," said Dick to her right aspect.

  "It isn't swelling," said Shiner to her left aspect.

  "Is it dangerous on the lip?" cried Fancy. "I know it is dangerous on the tongue."

  "O no, not dangerous!" answered Dick.

  "Rather dangerous," had answered Shiner simultaneously.

  "I must try to bear it!" said Fancy, turning again to the hives.

  "Hartshorn-and-oil is a good thing to put to it, Miss Day," said Shiner with great concern.

  "Sweet-oil-and-hartshorn I've found to be a good thing to cure stings, Miss Day," said Dick with greater concern.

  "We have some mixed indoors; would you kindly run and get it for me?" she said.

  Now, whether by inadvertence, or whether by mischievous intention, the individuality of the YOU was so carelessly denoted that both Dick and Shiner sprang to their feet like twin acrobats, and marched abreast to the door; both seized the latch and lifted it, and continued marching on, shoulder to shoulder, in the same manner to the dwelling-house.

  Not only so, but entering the room, they marched as before straight up to Mrs. Day's chair, letting the door in the oak partition slam so forcibly, that the rows of pewter on the dresser rang like a bell.

  "Mrs. Day, Fancy has stung her lip, and wants you to give me the hartshorn, please," said Mr. Shiner, very close to Mrs. Day's face.

  "O, Mrs. Day, Fancy has asked me to bring out the hartshorn, please, because she has stung her lip!" said Dick, a little closer to Mrs. Day's face.

  "Well, men alive! that's no reason why you should eat me, I suppose!" said Mrs. Day, drawing back.

  She searched in the corner-cupboard, produced the bottle, and began to dust the cork, the rim, and every other part very carefully, Dick's hand and Shiner's hand waiting side by side.

  "Which is head man?" said Mrs. Day. "Now, don't come mumbudgeting so close again.

  Which is head man?"

  Neither spoke; and the bottle was inclined towards Shiner. Shiner, as a high-class man, would not look in the least triumphant, and turned to go off with it as Geoffrey came downstairs after the search in his linen for concealed bees.

  "O--that you, Master Dewy?"

  Dick assured the keeper that it was; and the young man then determined upon a bold stroke for the attainment of his end, forgetting that the worst of bold strokes is the disastrous consequences they involve if they fail.

  "I've come on purpose to speak to you very particular, Mr. Day," he said, with a crushing emphasis intended for the ears of Mr. Shiner, who was vanishing round the door-post at that moment.

  "Well, I've been forced to go upstairs and unrind myself, and shake some bees out o' me"

  said Geoffrey, walking slowly towards the open door, and standing on the threshold.

  "The young rascals got into my shirt and wouldn't be quiet nohow."

  Dick followed him to the door.

  "I've come to speak a word to you," he repeated, looking out at the pale mist creeping up from the gloom of the valley. "You may perhaps guess what it is about."

  The keeper lowered his hands into the depths of his pockets, twirled his eyes, balanced himself on his toes, looked as perpendicularly downward as if his glance were a plumb-line, then horizontally, collecting together the cracks that lay about his face till they were all in the neighbourhood of his eyes.

  "Maybe I don't know," he replied.

  Dick said nothing; and the stillness was disturbed only by some small bird that was being killed by an owl in the adjoining wood, whose cry passed into the silence without mingling with it.

  "I've left my hat up in chammer," said Geoffrey; "wait while I step up and get en."

  "I'll be in the garden," said Dick.

  He went round by a side wicket into the garden, and Geoffrey went upstairs. It was the custom in Mellstock and its vicinity to discuss matters of pleasure and ordinary business inside the house, and to reserve the garden for very important affairs: a custom which, as is supposed, originated in the desirability of getting away at such times from the other members of the family when there was only one room for living in, though it was now quite as frequently practised by those who suffered from no such limitation to the size of their domiciles.

  The head-keeper's form appeared in the dusky garden, and Dick walked towards him. The elder paused and leant over the rail of a piggery that stood on the left of the path, upon which Dick did the same; and they both contemplated a whitish shadowy shape that was moving about and grunting among the straw of the interior.

  "I've come to ask for Fancy," said Dick.

  "I'd as lief you hadn't."

  "Why should that be, Mr. Day?"

  "Because it makes me say that you've come to ask what ye be'n't likely to have. Have ye come for anything else?"

  "Nothing."

  "Then I'll just tell 'ee you've come on a very foolish errand. D'ye know what her mother was?"

  "No."

  "A teacher in a landed family's nursery, who was foolish enough to marry the keeper of the same establishment; for I was only a keeper then, though now I've a dozen other irons in the fire as steward here for my lord, what with the timber sales and the yearly fellings, and the gravel and sand sales and one thing and 'tother. However, d'ye think Fancy picked up her good manners, the smooth turn of her tongue, her musical notes, and her knowledge of books, in a homely hole like this?"

  "No."

  "D'ye know where?"

  "No."

  "Well, when I went a-wandering after her mother's death, she lived with her aunt, who kept a boarding-school, till her aunt married Lawyer Green--a man as sharp as a needle--

  and the school was broke up. Did ye know that then she went to the training-school, and that her name stood first among the Queen's scholars of her year?"

  "I've heard so."

  "And that when she sat for her certificate as Government teacher, she had the highest of the first class?"

  "Yes."

  "Well, and do ye know what I live in such a miserly way for when I've got enough to do without it, and why I make her work as a schoolmistress instead of living here?"

  "No."

  "That if any gentleman, who sees her to be his equal in polish, should want to marry her, and she want to marry him, he sha'n't be superior to her in pocket. Now do ye think after this that you be good enough for her?"

  "No."

  "Then good-night t'ee, Master Dewy."

  "Good-night, Mr. Day."

  Modest Dick's reply had faltered upon his tongue, and he turned away wondering at his presumption in asking for a woman whom he had seen from the beginning to be so superior to him.

  PART IV: 3. Fancy In The Rain

  The next scene is a tempestuous afternoon in the following month, and Fancy Day is discovered walking from her father's home towards Mellstock.

  A single vast gray cloud covered the country, from which the small rain and mist had just begun to blow down in wavy sheets, alternately thick and thin. The trees of the fields and plantations writhed like miserable men as the air wound its way swiftly among them: the lowest portions of their trunks, that had hardly ever been known to move, were visibly rocked by the fiercer gusts, distressing the mind by its painful unwontedness, as when a strong man is seen to shed tears. Low-hanging boughs went up and down; high and erect boughs went to and fro; the blasts being so irregular, and divided into so
many cross--

  currents, that neighbouring branches of the same tree swept the skies in independent motions, crossed each other, or became entangled. Across the open spaces flew flocks of green and yellowish leaves, which, after travelling a long distance from their parent trees, reached the ground, and lay there with their under--sides upward.

  As the rain and wind increased, and Fancy's bonnet--ribbons leapt more and more snappishly against her chin, she paused on entering Mellstock Lane to consider her latitude, and the distance to a place of shelter. The nearest house was Elizabeth Endorfield's, in Higher Mellstock, whose cottage and garden stood not far from the junction of that hamlet with the road she followed. Fancy hastened onward, and in five minutes entered a gate, which shed upon her toes a flood of water-drops as she opened it.

  "Come in, chiel!" a voice exclaimed, before Fancy had knocked: a promptness that would have surprised her had she not known that Mrs. Endorfield was an exceedingly and exceptionally sharp woman in the use of her eyes and ears.

  Fancy went in and sat down. Elizabeth was paring potatoes for her husband's supper.

  Scrape, scrape, scrape; then a toss, and splash went a potato into a bucket of water.

  Now, as Fancy listlessly noted these proceedings of the dame, she began to reconsider an old subject that hay uppermost in her heart. Since the interview between her father and Dick, the days had been melancholy days for her. Geoffrey's firm opposition to the notion of Dick as a son-in-law was more than she had expected. She had frequently seen her lover since that time, it is true, and had loved him more for the opposition than she would have otherwise dreamt of doing--which was a happiness of a certain kind. Yet, though love is thus an end in itself, it must be believed to be the means to another end if it is to assume the rosy hues of an unalloyed pleasure. And such a belief Fancy and Dick were emphatically denied just now.

  Elizabeth Endorfield had a repute among women which was in its nature something between distinction and notoriety. It was founded on the following items of character.

  She was shrewd and penetrating; her house stood in a lonely place; she never went to church; she wore a red cloak; she always retained her bonnet indoors and she had a pointed chin. Thus far her attributes were distinctly Satanic; and those who looked no further called her, in plain terms a witch. But she was not gaunt, nor ugly in the upper part of her face, nor particularly strange in manner; so that, when her more intimate acquaintances spoke of her the term was softened, and she became simply a Deep Body, who was as long-headed as she was high. It may be stated that Elizabeth, belonged to a class of suspects who were gradually losing their mysterious characteristics under the administration of the young vicar; though, during the long reign of Mr. Grinham, the parish of Mellstock had proved extremely favourable to the growth of witches.

 

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