Snugly ensconced under the
tilt, they could forget the sorrows of the world without, and
survey life and recapitulate the incidents of the day with placid
smiles.
The passengers in the back part formed a group to themselves,
and while the new-comer spoke to the proprietress, they indulged in
a confidential chat about him as about other people, which the
noise of the van rendered inaudible to himself and Mrs. Dollery,
sitting forward.
"'Tis Barber Percombe—he that's got the waxen woman in his
window at the top of Abbey Street," said one. "What business can
bring him from his shop out here at this time and not a journeyman
hair-cutter, but a master-barber that's left off his pole because
'tis not genteel!"
They listened to his conversation, but Mr. Percombe, though he
had nodded and spoken genially, seemed indisposed to gratify the
curiosity which he had aroused; and the unrestrained flow of ideas
which had animated the inside of the van before his arrival was
checked thenceforward.
Thus they rode on till they turned into a half-invisible little
lane, whence, as it reached the verge of an eminence, could be
discerned in the dusk, about half a mile to the right, gardens and
orchards sunk in a concave, and, as it were, snipped out of the
woodland. From this self-contained place rose in stealthy silence
tall stems of smoke, which the eye of imagination could trace
downward to their root on quiet hearth-stones festooned overhead
with hams and flitches. It was one of those sequestered spots
outside the gates of the world where may usually be found more
meditation than action, and more passivity than meditation; where
reasoning proceeds on narrow premises, and results in inferences
wildly imaginative; yet where, from time to time, no less than in
other places, dramas of a grandeur and unity truly Sophoclean are
enacted in the real, by virtue of the concentrated passions and
closely knit interdependence of the lives therein.
This place was the Little Hintock of the master-barber's search.
The coming night gradually obscured the smoke of the chimneys, but
the position of the sequestered little world could still be
distinguished by a few faint lights, winking more or less
ineffectually through the leafless boughs, and the undiscerned
songsters they bore, in the form of balls of feathers, at roost
among them.
Out of the lane followed by the van branched a yet smaller lane,
at the corner of which the barber alighted, Mrs. Dollery's van
going on to the larger village, whose superiority to the despised
smaller one as an exemplar of the world's movements was not
particularly apparent in its means of approach.
"A very clever and learned young doctor, who, they say, is in
league with the devil, lives in the place you be going to—not
because there's anybody for'n to cure there, but because 'tis the
middle of his district."
The observation was flung at the barber by one of the women at
parting, as a last attempt to get at his errand that way.
But he made no reply, and without further pause the pedestrian
plunged towards the umbrageous nook, and paced cautiously over the
dead leaves which nearly buried the road or street of the hamlet.
As very few people except themselves passed this way after dark, a
majority of the denizens of Little Hintock deemed window-curtains
unnecessary; and on this account Mr. Percombe made it his business
to stop opposite the casements of each cottage that he came to,
with a demeanor which showed that he was endeavoring to conjecture,
from the persons and things he observed within, the whereabouts of
somebody or other who resided here.
Only the smaller dwellings interested him; one or two houses,
whose size, antiquity, and rambling appurtenances signified that
notwithstanding their remoteness they must formerly have been, if
they were not still, inhabited by people of a certain social
standing, being neglected by him entirely. Smells of pomace, and
the hiss of fermenting cider, which reached him from the back
quarters of other tenements, revealed the recent occupation of some
of the inhabitants, and joined with the scent of decay from the
perishing leaves underfoot.
Half a dozen dwellings were passed without result. The next,
which stood opposite a tall tree, was in an exceptional state of
radiance, the flickering brightness from the inside shining up the
chimney and making a luminous mist of the emerging smoke. The
interior, as seen through the window, caused him to draw up with a
terminative air and watch. The house was rather large for a
cottage, and the door, which opened immediately into the
living-room, stood ajar, so that a ribbon of light fell through the
opening into the dark atmosphere without. Every now and then a
moth, decrepit from the late season, would flit for a moment across
the out-coming rays and disappear again into the night.
CHAPTER II.
In the room from which this cheerful blaze proceeded, he beheld
a girl seated on a willow chair, and busily occupied by the light
of the fire, which was ample and of wood. With a bill-hook in one
hand and a leather glove, much too large for her, on the other, she
was making spars, such as are used by thatchers, with great
rapidity. She wore a leather apron for this purpose, which was also
much too large for her figure. On her left hand lay a bundle of the
straight, smooth sticks called spar-gads—the raw material of her
manufacture; on her right, a heap of chips and ends—the refuse—with
which the fire was maintained; in front, a pile of the finished
articles. To produce them she took up each gad, looked critically
at it from end to end, cut it to length, split it into four, and
sharpened each of the quarters with dexterous blows, which brought
it to a triangular point precisely resembling that of a
bayonet.
Beside her, in case she might require more light, a brass
candlestick stood on a little round table, curiously formed of an
old coffin-stool, with a deal top nailed on, the white surface of
the latter contrasting oddly with the black carved oak of the
substructure. The social position of the household in the past was
almost as definitively shown by the presence of this article as
that of an esquire or nobleman by his old helmets or shields. It
had been customary for every well-to-do villager, whose tenure was
by copy of court-roll, or in any way more permanent than that of
the mere cotter, to keep a pair of these stools for the use of his
own dead; but for the last generation or two a feeling of cui bono
had led to the discontinuance of the custom, and the stools were
frequently made use of in the manner described.
The young woman laid down the bill-hook for a moment and
examined the palm of her right hand, which, unlike the other, was
ungloved, and showed little hardness or roughness about it. The
palm was red and blistering, as if this present occupation were not
frequent enough with her to subdue it to what it worked in. As with
so many right hands born to manual labor, there was nothing in its
fundamental shape to bear out the physiological conventionalism
that gradations of birth, gentle or mean, show themselves primarily
in the form of this member. Nothing but a cast of the die of
destiny had decided that the girl should handle the tool; and the
fingers which clasped the heavy ash haft might have skilfully
guided the pencil or swept the string, had they only been set to do
it in good time.
Her face had the usual fulness of expression which is developed
by a life of solitude. Where the eyes of a multitude beat like
waves upon a countenance they seem to wear away its individuality;
but in the still water of privacy every tentacle of feeling and
sentiment shoots out in visible luxuriance, to be interpreted as
readily as a child's look by an intruder. In years she was no more
than nineteen or twenty, but the necessity of taking thought at a
too early period of life had forced the provisional curves of her
childhood's face to a premature finality. Thus she had but little
pretension to beauty, save in one prominent particular—her hair.
Its abundance made it almost unmanageable; its color was, roughly
speaking, and as seen here by firelight, brown, but careful notice,
or an observation by day, would have revealed that its true shade
was a rare and beautiful approximation to chestnut.
On this one bright gift of Time to the particular victim of his
now before us the new-comer's eyes were fixed; meanwhile the
fingers of his right hand mechanically played over something
sticking up from his waistcoat-pocket—the bows of a pair of
scissors, whose polish made them feebly responsive to the light
within. In her present beholder's mind the scene formed by the
girlish spar-maker composed itself into a post-Raffaelite picture
of extremest quality, wherein the girl's hair alone, as the focus
of observation, was depicted with intensity and distinctness, and
her face, shoulders, hands, and figure in general, being a blurred
mass of unimportant detail lost in haze and obscurity.
He hesitated no longer, but tapped at the door and entered. The
young woman turned at the crunch of his boots on the sanded floor,
and exclaiming, "Oh, Mr. Percombe, how you frightened me!" quite
lost her color for a moment.
He replied, "You should shut your door—then you'd hear folk open
it."
"I can't," she said; "the chimney smokes so. Mr. Percombe, you
look as unnatural out of your shop as a canary in a thorn-hedge.
Surely you have not come out here on my account—for—"
"Yes—to have your answer about this." He touched her head with
his cane, and she winced.
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