This caused here and there an apparent mixture of the
seasons; so that in some of the dells that they passed by
holly-berries in full red were found growing beside oak and hazel
whose leaves were as yet not far removed from green, and brambles
whose verdure was rich and deep as in the month of August. To Grace
these well-known peculiarities were as an old painting
restored.
Now could be beheld that change from the handsome to the curious
which the features of a wood undergo at the ingress of the winter
months. Angles were taking the place of curves, and reticulations
of surfaces—a change constituting a sudden lapse from the ornate to
the primitive on Nature's canvas, and comparable to a retrogressive
step from the art of an advanced school of painting to that of the
Pacific Islander.
Winterborne followed, and kept his eye upon the two figures as
they threaded their way through these sylvan phenomena. Mr.
Melbury's long legs, and gaiters drawn in to the bone at the
ankles, his slight stoop, his habit of getting lost in thought and
arousing himself with an exclamation of "Hah!" accompanied with an
upward jerk of the head, composed a personage recognizable by his
neighbors as far as he could be seen. It seemed as if the squirrels
and birds knew him. One of the former would occasionally run from
the path to hide behind the arm of some tree, which the little
animal carefully edged round pari passu with Melbury and his
daughters movement onward, assuming a mock manner, as though he
were saying, "Ho, ho; you are only a timber-merchant, and carry no
gun!"
They went noiselessly over mats of starry moss, rustled through
interspersed tracts of leaves, skirted trunks with spreading roots,
whose mossed rinds made them like hands wearing green gloves;
elbowed old elms and ashes with great forks, in which stood pools
of water that overflowed on rainy days, and ran down their stems in
green cascades. On older trees still than these, huge lobes of
fungi grew like lungs. Here, as everywhere, the Unfulfilled
Intention, which makes life what it is, was as obvious as it could
be among the depraved crowds of a city slum. The leaf was deformed,
the curve was crippled, the taper was interrupted; the lichen eat
the vigor of the stalk, and the ivy slowly strangled to death the
promising sapling.
They dived amid beeches under which nothing grew, the younger
boughs still retaining their hectic leaves, that rustled in the
breeze with a sound almost metallic, like the sheet-iron foliage of
the fabled Jarnvid wood. Some flecks of white in Grace's drapery
had enabled Giles to keep her and her father in view till this
time; but now he lost sight of them, and was obliged to follow by
ear—no difficult matter, for on the line of their course every
wood-pigeon rose from its perch with a continued clash, dashing its
wings against the branches with wellnigh force enough to break
every quill. By taking the track of this noise he soon came to a
stile.
Was it worth while to go farther? He examined the doughy soil at
the foot of the stile, and saw among the large sole-and-heel tracks
an impression of a slighter kind from a boot that was obviously not
local, for Winterborne knew all the cobblers' patterns in that
district, because they were very few to know. The mud-picture was
enough to make him swing himself over and proceed.
The character of the woodland now changed. The bases of the
smaller trees were nibbled bare by rabbits, and at divers points
heaps of fresh-made chips, and the newly-cut stool of a tree,
stared white through the undergrowth. There had been a large fall
of timber this year, which explained the meaning of some sounds
that soon reached him.
A voice was shouting intermittently in a sort of human bark,
which reminded Giles that there was a sale of trees and fagots that
very day. Melbury would naturally be present. Thereupon Winterborne
remembered that he himself wanted a few fagots, and entered upon
the scene.
A large group of buyers stood round the auctioneer, or followed
him when, between his pauses, he wandered on from one lot of
plantation produce to another, like some philosopher of the
Peripatetic school delivering his lectures in the shady groves of
the Lyceum. His companions were timber-dealers, yeomen, farmers,
villagers, and others; mostly woodland men, who on that account
could afford to be curious in their walking-sticks, which
consequently exhibited various monstrosities of vegetation, the
chief being cork-screw shapes in black and white thorn, brought to
that pattern by the slow torture of an encircling woodbine during
their growth, as the Chinese have been said to mould human beings
into grotesque toys by continued compression in infancy. Two women,
wearing men's jackets on their gowns, conducted in the rear of the
halting procession a pony-cart containing a tapped barrel of beer,
from which they drew and replenished horns that were handed round,
with bread-and-cheese from a basket.
The auctioneer adjusted himself to circumstances by using his
walking-stick as a hammer, and knocked down the lot on any
convenient object that took his fancy, such as the crown of a
little boy's head, or the shoulders of a by-stander who had no
business there except to taste the brew; a proceeding which would
have been deemed humorous but for the air of stern rigidity which
that auctioneer's face preserved, tending to show that the
eccentricity was a result of that absence of mind which is
engendered by the press of affairs, and no freak of fancy at
all.
Mr. Melbury stood slightly apart from the rest of the
Peripatetics, and Grace beside him, clinging closely to his arm,
her modern attire looking almost odd where everything else was
old-fashioned, and throwing over the familiar garniture of the
trees a homeliness that seemed to demand improvement by the
addition of a few contemporary novelties also. Grace seemed to
regard the selling with the interest which attaches to memories
revived after an interval of obliviousness.
Winterborne went and stood close to them; the timber-merchant
spoke, and continued his buying; Grace merely smiled. To justify
his presence there Winterborne began bidding for timber and fagots
that he did not want, pursuing the occupation in an abstracted
mood, in which the auctioneer's voice seemed to become one of the
natural sounds of the woodland. A few flakes of snow descended, at
the sight of which a robin, alarmed at these signs of imminent
winter, and seeing that no offence was meant by the human invasion,
came and perched on the tip of the fagots that were being sold, and
looked into the auctioneer's face, while waiting for some chance
crumb from the bread-basket. Standing a little behind Grace,
Winterborne observed how one flake would sail downward and settle
on a curl of her hair, and how another would choose her shoulder,
and another the edge of her bonnet, which took up so much of his
attention that his biddings proceeded incoherently; and when the
auctioneer said, every now and then, with a nod towards him,
"Yours, Mr. Winterborne," he had no idea whether he had bought
fagots, poles, or logwood.
He regretted, with some causticity of humor, that her father
should show such inequalities of temperament as to keep Grace
tightly on his arm to-day, when he had quite lately seemed anxious
to recognize their betrothal as a fact. And thus musing, and
joining in no conversation with other buyers except when directly
addressed, he followed the assemblage hither and thither till the
end of the auction, when Giles for the first time realized what his
purchases had been. Hundreds of fagots, and divers lots of timber,
had been set down to him, when all he had required had been a few
bundles of spray for his odd man Robert Creedle's use in baking and
lighting fires.
Business being over, he turned to speak to the timber merchant.
But Melbury's manner was short and distant; and Grace, too, looked
vexed and reproachful. Winterborne then discovered that he had been
unwittingly bidding against her father, and picking up his favorite
lots in spite of him. With a very few words they left the spot and
pursued their way homeward.
Giles was extremely sorry at what he had done, and remained
standing under the trees, all the other men having strayed silently
away. He saw Melbury and his daughter pass down a glade without
looking back. While they moved slowly through it a lady appeared on
horseback in the middle distance, the line of her progress
converging upon that of Melbury's.
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