Life's Little Ironies by Thomas Hardy (most popular novels of all time TXT) đ
- Author: Thomas Hardy
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âTo her great surprise, and I might say alarm, on reaching the foot of the stairs his boots were standing there as they always stood when he had gone to rest; going up to their chamber she found him in bed sleeping as sound as a rock. How he could have got back again without her seeing or hearing him was beyond her comprehension. It could only have been by passing behind her very quietly while she was bumping with the iron. But this notion did not satisfy her: it was surely impossible that she should not have seen him come in through a room so small. She could not unravel the mystery, and felt very queer and uncomfortable about it. However, she would not disturb him to question him then, and went to bed herself.
âHe rose and left for his work very early the next morning, before she was awake, and she waited his return to breakfast with much anxiety for an explanation, for thinking over the matter by daylight made it seem only the more startling. When he came in to the meal he said, before she could put her question, âWhatâs the meaning of them words chalked on the door?â
âShe told him, and asked him about his going out the night before. William declared that he had never left the bedroom after entering it, having in fact undressed, lain down, and fallen asleep directly, never once waking till the clock struck five, and he rose up to go to his labour.
âBetty Privett was as certain in her own mind that he did go out as she was of her own existence, and was little less certain that he did not return. She felt too disturbed to argue with him, and let the subject drop as though she must have been mistaken. When she was walking down Longpuddle street later in the day she met Jim Weedleâs daughter Nancy, and said, âWell, Nancy, you do look sleepy to-day!â
ââYes, Mrs. Privett,â says Nancy. âNow donât tell anybody, but I donât mind letting you know what the reason oât is. Last night, being Old Midsummer Eve, some of us went to church porch, and didnât get home till near one.â
ââDid ye?â says Mrs. Privett. âOld Midsummer yesterday was it? Faith I didnât think wheâr âtwas Midsummer or Michaelmas; Iâd too much work to do.â
ââYes. And we were frightened enough, I can tell âee, by what we saw.â
ââWhat did ye see?â
â(You may not remember, sir, having gone off to foreign parts so young, that on Midsummer Night it is believed hereabout that the faint shapes of all the folk in the parish who are going to be at deathâs door within the year can be seen entering the church. Those who get over their illness come out again after a while; those that are doomed to die do not return.)
ââWhat did you see?â asked Williamâs wife.
ââWell,â says Nancy, backwardlyââwe neednât tell what we saw, or who we saw.â
ââYou saw my husband,â says Betty Privett, in a quiet way.
ââWell, since you put it so,â says Nancy, hanging fire, âweâthought we did see him; but it was darkish, and we was frightened, and of course it might not have been he.â
ââNancy, you neednât mind letting it out, though âtis kept back in kindness. And he didnât come out of church again: I know it as well as you.â
âNancy did not answer yes or no to that, and no more was said. But three days after, William Privett was mowing with John Chiles in Mr. Hardcomeâs meadow, and in the heat of the day they sat down to eat their bit oâ nunch under a tree, and empty their flagon. Afterwards both of âem fell asleep as they sat. John Chiles was the first to wake, and as he looked towards his fellow-mower he saw one of those great white millerâs-souls as we call âemâthat is to say, a miller-mothâcome from Williamâs open mouth while he slept, and fly straight away. John thought it odd enough, as William had worked in a mill for several years when he was a boy. He then looked at the sun, and found by the place oât that they had slept a long while, and as William did not wake, John called to him and said it was high time to begin work again. He took no notice, and then John went up and shook him, and found he was dead.
âNow on that very day old Philip Hookhorn was down at Longpuddle Spring dipping up a pitcher of water; and as he turned away, who should he see coming down to the spring on the other side but William, looking very pale and odd. This surprised Philip Hookhorn very much, for years before that time Williamâs little sonâhis only childâhad been drowned in that spring while at play there, and this had so preyed upon Williamâs mind that heâd never been seen near the spring afterwards, and had been known to go half a mile out of his way to avoid the place. On inquiry, it was found that William in body could not have stood by the spring, being in the mead two miles off; and it also came out that the time at which he was seen at the spring was the very time when he died.â
* * * * *
âA rather melancholy story,â observed the emigrant, after a minuteâs silence.
âYes, yes. Well, we must take ups and downs together,â said the seedsmanâs father.
âYou donât know, Mr. Lackland, I suppose, what a rum start that was between Andrey Satchel and Jane Vallens and the paâson and clerk oâ Scrimpton?â said the master-thatcher, a man with a spark of subdued liveliness in his eye, who had hitherto kept his attention mainly upon small objects a long way ahead, as he sat in front of the van with his feet outside. âTheirs was a queerer experience of a paâson and clerk than some folks get, and may cheer âee up a little after this dampness thatâs been flung over yer soul.â
The returned one replied that he knew nothing of the history, and should be happy to hear it, quite recollecting the personality of the man Satchel.
âAh no; this Andrey Satchel is the son of the Satchel that you knew; this one has not been married more than two or three years, and âtwas at the time oâ the wedding that the accident happened that I could tell âee of, or anybody else here, for that matter.â
âNo, no; you must tell it, neighbour, if anybody,â said several; a request in which Mr. Lackland joined, adding that the Satchel family was one he had known well before leaving home.
âIâll just mention, as you be a stranger,â whispered the carrier to Lackland, âthat Christopherâs stories will bear pruning.â
The emigrant nodded.
âWell, I can soon tell it,â said the master-thatcher, schooling himself to a tone of actuality. âThough as it has more to do with the paâson and clerk than with Andrey himself, it ought to be told by a better churchman than I.â
ANDREY SATCHEL AND THE PARSON AND CLERKâIt all arose, you must know, from Andrey being fond of a drop of drink at that timeâthough heâs a sober enough man now by all account, so much the better for him. Jane, his bride, you see, was somewhat older than Andrey; how much older I donât pretend to say; she was not one of our parish, and the register alone may be able to tell that. But, at any rate, her being a little ahead of her young man in mortal years, coupled with other bodily circumstancesââ
(âAh, poor thing!â sighed the women.)
ââmade her very anxious to get the thing done before he changed his mind; and âtwas with a joyful countenance (they say) that she, with Andrey and his brother and sister-in-law, marched off to church one November morning as soon as âtwas day aâmost, to be made one with Andrey for the rest of her life. He had left our place long before it was light, and the folks that were up all waved their lanterns at him, and flung up their hats as he went.
âThe church of her parish was a mile and more from the houses, and, as it was a wonderful fine day for the time of year, the plan was that as soon as they were married they would make out a holiday by driving straight off to Port Bredy, to see the ships and the sea and the sojers, instead of coming back to a meal at the house of the distant relation she lived wiâ, and moping about there all the afternoon.
âWell, some folks noticed that Andrey walked with rather wambling steps to church that morning; the truth oât was that his nearest neighbourâs child had been christened the day before, and Andrey, having stood godfather, had stayed all night keeping up the christening, for he had said to himself, âNot if I live to be thousand shall I again be made a godfather one day, and a husband the next, and perhaps a father the next, and therefore Iâll make the most of the blessing.â So that when he started from home in the morning he had not been in bed at all. The result was, as I say, that when he and his bride-to-he walked up the church to get married, the paâson (who was a very strict man inside the church, whatever he was outside) looked hard at Andrey, and said, very sharp:
ââHowâs this, my man? You are in liquor. And so early, too. Iâm ashamed of you!â
ââWell, thatâs true, sir,â says Andrey. âBut I can walk straight enough for practical purposes. I can walk a chalk line,â he says (meaning no offence), âas well as some other folk: andââ (getting hotter)ââI reckon that if you, Paâson Billy Toogood, had kept up a christening all night so thoroughly as I have done, you wouldnât be able to stand at all; d--- me if you would!â
âThis answer made Paâson Billyâas they used to call himârather spitish, not to say hot, for he was a warm-tempered man if provoked, and he said, very decidedly: âWell, I cannot marry you in this state; and I will not! Go home and get sober!â And he slapped the book together like a rat-trap.
âThen the bride burst out crying as if her heart would break, for very fear that she would lose Andrey after all her hard work to get him, and begged and implored the paâson to go on with the ceremony. But no.
ââI wonât be a party to your solemnizing matrimony with a tipsy
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