The Return of the Native by Thomas Hardy (most read books TXT) đ
- Author: Thomas Hardy
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âAs man and wife be one flesh, âtwould have been all the same, I should think,â said Christian. âBut my strict documents was, to give the money into Mrs. Wildeveâs handâand âtis well to do things right.â
âNo doubt,â said Wildeve. Any person who had known the circumstances might have perceived that Wildeve was mortified by the discovery that the matter in transit was money, and not, as he had supposed when at Blooms-End, some fancy nick-nack which only interested the two women themselves. Mrs. Yeobrightâs refusal implied that his honour was not considered to be of sufficiently good quality to make him a safer bearer of his wifeâs property.
âHow very warm it is tonight, Christian!â he said, panting, when they were nearly under Rainbarrow. âLet us sit down for a few minutes, for Heavenâs sake.â
Wildeve flung himself down on the soft ferns; and Christian, placing the lantern and parcel on the ground, perched himself in a cramped position hard by, his knees almost touching his chin. He presently thrust one hand into his coat-pocket and began shaking it about.
âWhat are you rattling in there?â said Wildeve.
âOnly the dice, sir,â said Christian, quickly withdrawing his hand. âWhat magical machines these little things be, Mr. Wildeve! âTis a game I should never get tired of. Would you mind my taking âem out and looking at âem for a minute, to see how they are made? I didnât like to look close before the other men, for fear they should think it bad manners in me.â Christian took them out and examined them in the hollow of his hand by the lantern light. âThat these little things should carry such luck, and such charm, and such a spell, and such power in âem, passes all I ever heard or zeed,â he went on, with a fascinated gaze at the dice, which, as is frequently the case in country places, were made of wood, the points being burnt upon each face with the end of a wire.
âThey are a great deal in a small compass, You think?â
âYes. Do ye suppose they really be the devilâs playthings, Mr. Wildeve? If so, âtis no good sign that I be such a lucky man.â
âYou ought to win some money, now that youâve got them. Any woman would marry you then. Now is your time, Christian, and I would recommend you not to let it slip. Some men are born to luck, some are not. I belong to the latter class.â
âDid you ever know anybody who was born to it besides myself?â
âO yes. I once heard of an Italian, who sat down at a gaming table with only a louis, (thatâs a foreign sovereign), in his pocket. He played on for twenty-four hours, and won ten thousand pounds, stripping the bank he had played against. Then there was another man who had lost a thousand pounds, and went to the brokerâs next day to sell stock, that he might pay the debt. The man to whom he owed the money went with him in a hackney-coach; and to pass the time they tossed who should pay the fare. The ruined man won, and the other was tempted to continue the game, and they played all the way. When the coachman stopped he was told to drive home again: the whole thousand pounds had been won back by the man who was going to sell.â
âHaâhaâsplendid!â exclaimed Christian. âGo onâgo on!â
âThen there was a man of London, who was only a waiter at Whiteâs clubhouse. He began playing first half-crown stakes, and then higher and higher, till he became very rich, got an appointment in India, and rose to be Governor of Madras. His daughter married a member of Parliament, and the Bishop of Carlisle stood godfather to one of the children.â
âWonderfull wonderfullâ
âAnd once there was a young man in America who gambled till he had lost his last dollar. He staked his watch and chain, and lost as before; staked his umbrella, lost again; staked his hat, lost again; staked his coat and stood in his shirtsleeves, lost again. Began taking off his breeches, and then a looker-on gave him a trifle for his pluck. With this he won. Won back his coat, won back his hat, won back his umbrella, his watch, his money, and went out of the door a rich man.â
âOh, âtis too goodâit takes away my breath! Mr. Wildeve, I think I will try another shilling with you, as I am one of that sort; no danger can come oât, and you can afford to lose.â
âVery well,â said Wildeve, rising. Searching about with the lantern, he found a large flat stone, which he placed between himself and Christian, and sat down again. The lantern was opened to give more light, and itâs rays directed upon the stone. Christian put down a shilling, Wildeve another, and each threw. Christian won. They played for two, Christian won again.
âLet us try four,â said Wildeve. They played for four. This time the stakes were won by Wildeve.
âAh, those little accidents will, of course, sometimes happen, to the luckiest man,â he observed.
âAnd now I have no more money!â explained Christian excitedly. âAnd yet, if I could go on, I should get it back again, and more. I wish this was mine.â He struck his boot upon the ground, so that the guineas chinked within.
âWhat! you have not put Mrs. Wildeveâs money there?â
âYes. âTis for safety. Is it any harm to raffle with a married ladyâs money when, if I win, I shall only keep my winnings, and give her her own all the same; and if tâother man wins, her money will go to the lawful owner?â
âNone at all.â
Wildeve had been brooding ever since they started on the mean estimation in which he was held by his wifeâs friends; and it cut his heart severely. As the minutes passed he had gradually drifted into a revengeful intention without knowing the precise moment of forming it. This was to teach Mrs. Yeobright a lesson, as he considered it to be; in other words, to show her if he could that her nieceâs husband was the proper guardian of her nieceâs money.
âWell, here goes!â said Christian, beginning to unlace one boot. âI shall dream of it nights and nights, I suppose; but I shall always swear my flesh donât crawl when I think oât!â
He thrust his hand into the boot and withdrew one of poor Thomasinâs precious guineas, piping hot. Wildeve had already placed a sovereign on the stone. The game was then resumed. Wildeve won first, and Christian ventured another, winning himself this time. The game fluctuated, but the average was in Wildeveâs favour. Both men became so absorbed in the game that they took no heed of anything but the pigmy objects immediately beneath their eyes, the flat stone, the open lantern, the dice, and the few illuminated fern-leaves which lay under the light, were the whole world to them.
At length Christian lost rapidly; and presently, to his horror, the whole fifty guineas belonging to Thomasin had been handed over to his adversary.
âI donât careâI donât care!â he moaned, and desperately set about untying his left boot to get at the other fifty. âThe devil will toss me into the flames on his three-pronged fork for this nightâs work, I know! But perhaps I shall win yet, and then Iâll get a wife to sit up with me oâ nights and I wonât be afeard, I wonât! Hereâs another forâee, my man!â He slapped another guinea down upon the stone, and the dice-box was rattled again.
Time passed on. Wildeve began to be as excited as Christian himself. When commencing the game his intention had been nothing further than a bitter practical joke on Mrs. Yeobright. To win the money, fairly or otherwise, and to hand it contemptuously to Thomasin in her auntâs presence, had been the dim outline of his purpose. But men are drawn from their intentions even in the course of carrying them out, and it was extremely doubtful, by the time the twentieth guinea had been reached, whether Wildeve was conscious of any other intention than that of winning for his own personal benefit. Moreover, he was now no longer gambling for his wifeâs money, but for Yeobrightâs; though of this fact Christian, in his apprehensiveness, did not inform him till afterwards.
It was nearly eleven oâclock, when, with almost a shriek, Christian placed Yeobrightâs last gleaming guinea upon the stone. In thirty seconds it had gone the way of its companions.
Christian turned and flung himself on the ferns in a convulsion of remorse, âO, what shall I do with my wretched self?â he groaned. âWhat shall I do? Will any good Heaven hae mercy upon my wicked soul?â
âDo? Live on just the same.â
âI wonât live on just the same! Iâll die! I say you are aâaâ-â
âA man sharper than my neighbour.â
âYes, a man sharper than my neighbour; a regular sharper!â
âPoor chips-in-porridge, you are very unmannerly.â
âI donât know about that! And I say you be unmannerly! Youâve got money that isnât your own. Half the guineas are poor Mr. Clymâs.â
âHowâs that?â
âBecause I had to gie fifty of âem to him. Mrs. Yeobright said so.â
âOh?âŠWell, âtwould have been more graceful of her to have given them to his wife Eustacia. But they are in my hands now.â
Christian pulled on his boots, and with heavy breathings, which could be heard to some distance, dragged his limbs together, arose, and tottered away out of sight. Wildeve set about shutting the lantern to return to the house, for he deemed it too late to go to Mistover to meet his wife, who was to be driven home in the captainâs four-wheel. While he was closing the little horn door a figure rose from behind a neighbouring bush and came forward into the lantern light. It was the reddleman approaching.
8 - A New Force Disturbs the CurrentWildeve stared. Venn looked coolly towards Wildeve, and, without a word being spoken, he deliberately sat himself down where Christian had been seated, thrust his hand into his pocket, drew out a sovereign, and laid it on the stone.
âYou have been watching us from behind that bush?â said Wildeve.
The reddleman nodded. âDown with your stake,â he said. âOr havenât you pluck enough to go on?â
Now, gambling is a species of amusement which is much more easily begun with full pockets than left off with the same; and though Wildeve in a cooler temper might have prudently declined this invitation, the excitement of his recent success carried him completely away. He placed one of the guineas on a slab beside the reddlemanâs sovereign. âMine is a guinea,â he said.
âA guinea thatâs not your own,â said Venn sarcastically.
âIt is my own,â answered Wildeve haughtily. âIt is my wifeâs, and what is hers is mine.â
âVery well; letâs make a beginning.â He shook the box, and threw eight, ten, and nine; the three casts amounted to twenty-seven.
This encouraged Wildeve. He took the box; and his three casts amounted to forty-five.
Down went another of the reddlemanâs sovereigns against his first one which Wildeve laid. This time Wildeve threw fifty-one points, but no pair. The reddleman looked grim, threw a raffle of aces, and pocketed the stakes.
âHere you are again,â said Wildeve contemptuously. âDouble the stakes.â He laid two of Thomasinâs guineas, and the reddleman his two pounds. Venn won again. New stakes were laid on the stone, and the gamblers proceeded as before.
Wildeve was a nervous and excitable man, and the game was beginning to tell upon his temper. He writhed, fumed, shifted his seat, and the beating of his heart was almost audible. Venn sat with
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