Under the Greenwood Tree by Thomas Hardy (ink ebook reader txt) đ
- Author: Thomas Hardy
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A good deal of desperation became noticeable in the gallery throats and strings, which continued throughout the musical portion of the service. Directly the fiddles were laid down, Mr. Pennyâs spectacles put in their sheath, and the text had been given out, an indignant whispering began.
âDid ye hear that, souls?â Mr. Penny said, in a groaning breath.
âBrazen-faced hussies!â said Bowman.
âTrue; why, they were every note as loud as we, fiddles and all, if not louder!â
âFiddles and all!â echoed Bowman bitterly.
âShall anything saucier be found than united âooman?â Mr. Spinks murmured.
âWhat I want to know is,â said the tranter (as if he knew already, but that civilization required the form of words), âwhat business people have to tell maidens to sing like that when they donât sit in a gallery, and never have entered one in their lives? Thatâs the question, my sonnies.â
ââTis the gallery have got to sing, all the world knows,â said Mr. Penny. âWhy, souls, whatâs the use oâ the ancients spending scores of pounds to build galleries if people down in the lowest depths of the church sing like that at a momentâs notice?â
âReally, I think we useless ones had better march out of church, fiddles and all!â said Mr. Spinks, with a laugh which, to a stranger, would have sounded mild and real. Only the initiated body of men he addressed could understand the horrible bitterness of irony that lurked under the quiet words âuseless ones,â and the ghastliness of the laughter apparently so natural.
âNever mind! Let âem sing tooââtwill make it all the louderâhee, hee!â said Leaf.
âThomas Leaf, Thomas Leaf! Where have you lived all your life?â said grandfather William sternly.
The quailing Leaf tried to look as if he had lived nowhere at all.
âWhen allâs said and done, my sonnies,â Reuben said, âthereâd have been no real harm in their singing if they had let nobody hear âem, and only jined in now and then.â
âNone at all,â said Mr. Penny. âBut though I donât wish to accuse people wrongfully, Iâd say before my lord judge that I could hear every note oâ that last psalm come from âem as much as from usâ every note as if âtwas their own.â
âKnow it! ah, I should think I did know it!â Mr. Spinks was heard to observe at this moment, without reference to his fellow playersâ shaking his head at some idea he seemed to see floating before him, and smiling as if he were attending a funeral at the time. âAh, do I or donât I know it!â
No one said âKnow what?â because all were aware from experience that what he knew would declare itself in process of time.
âI could fancy last night that we should have some trouble wiâ that young man,â said the tranter, pending the continuance of Spinksâs speech, and looking towards the unconscious Mr. Maybold in the pulpit.
âI fancy,â said old William, rather severely, âI fancy thereâs too much whispering going on to be of any spiritual use to gentle or simple.â Then folding his lips and concentrating his glance on the vicar, he implied that none but the ignorant would speak again; and accordingly there was silence in the gallery, Mr. Spinksâs telling speech remaining for ever unspoken.
Dick had said nothing, and the tranter little, on this episode of the morning; for Mrs. Dewy at breakfast expressed it as her intention to invite the youthful leader of the culprits to the small party it was customary with them to have on Christmas nightâa piece of knowledge which had given a particular brightness to Dickâs reflections since he had received it. And in the tranterâs slightly-cynical nature, party feeling was weaker than in the other members of the choir, though friendliness and faithful partnership still sustained in him a hearty earnestness on their account.
During the afternoon unusual activity was seen to prevail about the precincts of tranter Dewyâs house. The flagstone floor was swept of dust, and a sprinkling of the finest yellow sand from the innermost stratum of the adjoining sand-pit lightly scattered thereupon. Then were produced large knives and forks, which had been shrouded in darkness and grease since the last occasion of the kind, and bearing upon their sides, âShear-steel, warranted,â in such emphatic letters of assurance, that the warranterâs name was not required as further proof, and not given. The key was left in the tap of the cider-barrel, instead of being carried in a pocket. And finally the tranter had to stand up in the room and let his wife wheel him round like a turnstile, to see if anything discreditable was visible in his appearance.
âStand still till Iâve been for the scissors,â said Mrs. Dewy.
The tranter stood as still as a sentinel at the challenge.
The only repairs necessary were a trimming of one or two whiskers that had extended beyond the general contour of the mass; a like trimming of a slightly-frayed edge visible on his shirt-collar; and a final tug at a grey hairâto all of which operations he submitted in resigned silence, except the last, which produced a mild âCome, come, Ann,â by way of expostulation.
âReally, Reuben, âtis quite a disgrace to see such a man,â said Mrs. Dewy, with the severity justifiable in a long-tried companion, giving him another turn round, and picking several of Smilerâs hairs from the shoulder of his coat. Reubenâs thoughts seemed engaged elsewhere, and he yawned. âAnd the collar of your coat is a shame to beholdâso plastered with dirt, or dust, or grease, or something. Why, wherever could you have got it?â
ââTis my warm nater in summer-time, I suppose. I always did get in such a heat when I bustle about.â
âAy, the Dewys always were such a coarse-skinned family. Thereâs your brother Bob just as badâas fat as a porpoiseâwiâ his how, mean, âHowâst do, Ann?â whenever he meets me. Iâd âHowâst doâ him indeed! If the sun only shines out a minute, there be you all streaming in the faceâI never see!â
âIf I be hot weekdays, I must be hot Sundays.â
âIf any of the girls should turn after their father âtwill be a bad look-out for âem, poor things! None of my family were sich vulgar sweaters, not one of âem. But, Lord-a-mercy, the Dewys! I donât know how ever I camâ into such a family!â
âYour womanâs weakness when I asked ye to jine us. Thatâs how it was I suppose.â But the tranter appeared to have heard some such words from his wife before, and hence his answer had not the energy it might have shown if the inquiry had possessed the charm of novelty.
âYou never did look so well in a pair oâ trousers as in them,â she continued in the same unimpassioned voice, so that the unfriendly criticism of the Dewy family seemed to have been more normal than spontaneous. âSuch a cheap pair as âtwas too. As big as any man could wish to have, and lined inside, and double-lined in the lower parts, and an extra piece of stiffening at the bottom. And âtis a nice high cut that comes up right under your armpits, and thereâs enough turned down inside the seams to make half a pair more, besides a piece of cloth left that will make an honest waistcoatâ all by my contriving in buying the stuff at a bargain, and having it made up under my eye. It only shows what may be done by taking a little trouble, and not going straight to the rascally tailors.â
The discourse was cut short by the sudden appearance of Charley on the scene, with a face and hands of hideous blackness, and a nose like a guttering candle. Why, on that particularly cleanly afternoon, he should have discovered that the chimney-crook and chain from which the hams were suspended should have possessed more merits and general interest as playthings than any other articles in the house, is a question for nursing mothers to decide. However, the humour seemed to lie in the result being, as has been seen, that any given player with these articles was in the long-run daubed with soot. The last that was seen of Charley by daylight after this piece of ingenuity was when in the act of vanishing from his fatherâs presence round the corner of the houseâlooking back over his shoulder with an expression of great sin on his face, like Cain as the Outcast in Bible pictures.
The guests had all assembled, and the tranterâs party had reached that degree of development which accords with ten oâclock P.M. in rural assemblies. At that hour the sound of a fiddle in process of tuning was heard from the inner pantry.
âThatâs Dick,â said the tranter. âThat ladâs crazy for a jig.â
âDick! Now I cannotâreally, I cannot have any dancing at all till Christmas-day is out,â said old William emphatically. âWhen the clock haâ done striking twelve, dance as much as ye like.â
âWell, I must say thereâs reason in that, William,â said Mrs. Penny. âIf you do have a party on Christmas-night, âtis only fair and honourable to the sky-folk to have it a sit-still party. Jigging parties be all very well on the Devilâs holidays; but a jigging party looks suspicious now. O yes; stop till the clock strikes, young folkâso say I.â
It happened that some warm mead accidentally got into Mr. Spinksâs head about this time.
âDancing,â he said, âis a most strengthening, livening, and courting movement, âspecially with a little beverage added! And dancing is good. But why disturb what is ordained, Richard and Reuben, and the company zhinerally? Why, I ask, as far as that do go?â
âThen nothing till after twelve,â said William.
Though Reuben and his wife ruled on social points, religious questions were mostly disposed of by the old man, whose firmness on this head quite counterbalanced a certain weakness in his handling of domestic matters. The hopes of the younger members of the household were therefore relegated to a distance of one hour and three-quartersâa result that took visible shape in them by a remote and listless look about the eyesâthe singing of songs being permitted in the interim.
At five minutes to twelve the soft tuning was again heard in the back quarters; and when at length the clock had whizzed forth the last stroke, Dick appeared ready primed, and the instruments were boldly handled; old William very readily taking the bass-viol from its accustomed nail, and touching the strings as irreligiously as could be desired.
The country-dance called the âTriumph, or Follow my Lover,â was the figure with which they opened. The tranter took for his partner Mrs. Penny, and Mrs. Dewy was chosen by Mr. Penny, who made so much of his limited height by a judicious carriage of the head, straightening of the back, and important flashes of his spectacle-glasses, that he seemed almost as tall as the tranter. Mr. Shiner, age about thirty-five, farmer and churchwarden, a character principally composed of a crimson stare, vigorous breath, and a watch-chain, with a mouth hanging on a dark smile but never smiling, had come quite willingly to the party, and showed a wondrous obliviousness of all his antics on the previous night. But the comely, slender, prettily-dressed prize Fancy Day fell to Dickâs lot, in spite of some private machinations of the farmer, for the reason that Mr.
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