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<h2> CHAPTER XXII </h2>
<p>After hearing that tale from Lorna, I went home in sorry spirits, having
added fear for her, and misery about, to all my other ailments. And was it
not quite certain now that she, being owned full cousin to a peer and lord
of Scotland (although he was a dead one), must have nought to do with me,
a yeoman's son, and bound to be the father of more yeomen? I had been very
sorry when first I heard about that poor young popinjay, and would gladly
have fought hard for him; but now it struck me that after all he had no
right to be there, prowling (as it were) for Lorna, without any
invitation: and we farmers love not trespass. Still, if I had seen the
thing, I must have tried to save him.</p>
<p>Moreover, I was greatly vexed with my own hesitation, stupidity, or
shyness, or whatever else it was, which had held me back from saying, ere
she told her story, what was in my heart to say, videlicet, that I must
die unless she let me love her. Not that I was fool enough to think that
she would answer me according to my liking, or begin to care about me for
a long time yet; if indeed she ever should, which I hardly dared to hope.
But that I had heard from men more skillful in the matter that it is wise
to be in time, that so the maids may begin to think, when they know that
they are thought of. And, to tell the truth, I had bitter fears, on
account of her wondrous beauty, lest some young fellow of higher birth and
finer parts, and finish, might steal in before poor me, and cut me out
altogether. Thinking of which, I used to double my great fist, without
knowing it, and keep it in my pocket ready.</p>
<p>But the worst of all was this, that in my great dismay and anguish to see
Lorna weeping so, I had promised not to cause her any further trouble from
anxiety and fear of harm. And this, being brought to practice, meant that
I was not to show myself within the precincts of Glen Doone, for at least
another month. Unless indeed (as I contrived to edge into the agreement)
anything should happen to increase her present trouble and every day's
uneasiness. In that case, she was to throw a dark mantle, or covering of
some sort, over a large white stone which hung within the entrance to her
retreat—I mean the outer entrance—and which, though unseen
from the valley itself, was (as I had observed) conspicuous from the
height where I stood with Uncle Reuben.</p>
<p>Now coming home so sad and weary, yet trying to console myself with the
thought that love o'erleapeth rank, and must still be lord of all, I found
a shameful thing going on, which made me very angry. For it needs must
happen that young Marwood de Whichehalse, only son of the Baron, riding
home that very evening, from chasing of the Exmoor bustards, with his
hounds and serving-men, should take the short cut through our farmyard,
and being dry from his exercise, should come and ask for drink. And it
needs must happen also that there should be none to give it to him but my
sister Annie. I more than suspect that he had heard some report of our
Annie's comeliness, and had a mind to satisfy himself upon the subject.
Now, as he took the large ox-horn of our quarantine-apple cider (which we
always keep apart from the rest, being too good except for the quality),
he let his fingers dwell on Annie's, by some sort of accident, while he
lifted his beaver gallantly, and gazed on her face in the light from the
west. Then what did Annie do (as she herself told me afterwards) but make
her very best curtsey to him, being pleased that he was pleased with her,
while she thought what a fine young man he was and so much breeding about
him! And in truth he was a dark, handsome fellow, hasty, reckless, and
changeable, with a look of sad destiny in his black eyes that would make
any woman pity him. What he was thinking of our Annie is not for me to
say, although I may think that you could not have found another such
maiden on Exmoor, except (of course) my Lorna.</p>
<p>Though young Squire Marwood was so thirsty, he spent much time over his
cider, or at any rate over the ox-horn, and he made many bows to Annie,
and drank health to all the family, and spoke of me as if I had been his
very best friend at Blundell's; whereas he knew well enough all the time
that we had nought to say to one another; he being three years older, and
therefore of course disdaining me. But while he was casting about perhaps
for some excuse to stop longer, and Annie was beginning to fear lest
mother should come after her, or Eliza be at the window, or Betty up in
pigs' house, suddenly there came up to them, as if from the very heart of
the earth, that long, low, hollow, mysterious sound which I spoke of in
winter.</p>
<p>The young man started in his saddle, let the horn fall on the horse-steps,
and gazed all around in wonder; while as for Annie, she turned like a
ghost, and tried to slam the door, but failed through the violence of her
trembling; (for never till now had any one heard it so close at hand as
you might say) or in the mere fall of the twilight. And by this time there
was no man, at least in our parish, but knew—for the Parson himself
had told us so—that it was the devil groaning because the Doones
were too many for him.</p>
<p>Marwood de Whichehalse was not so alarmed but what he saw a fine
opportunity. He leaped from his horse, and laid hold of dear Annie in a
highly comforting manner; and she never would tell us about it (being so
shy and modest), whether in breathing his comfort to her he tried to take
some from her pure lips. I hope he did not, because that to me would seem
not the deed of a gentleman, and he was of good old family.</p>
<p>At this very moment, who should come into the end of the passage upon them
but the heavy writer of these doings I, John Ridd myself, and walking the
faster, it may be, on account of the noise I mentioned. I entered the
house with some wrath upon me at seeing the gazehounds in the yard; for it
seems a cruel thing to me to harass the birds in the breeding-time. And to
my amazement there I saw Squire Marwood among the milk-pans with his arm
around our Annie's waist, and Annie all blushing and coaxing him off, for
she was not come to scold yet.</p>
<p>Perhaps I was wrong; God knows, and if I was, no doubt I shall pay for it;
but I gave him the flat of my hand on his head, and down he went in the
thick of the milk-pans. He would have had my fist, I doubt, but for having
been at school with me; and after that it is like enough he would never
have spoken another word. As it was, he lay stunned, with the cream
running on him; while I took poor Annie up and carried her in to mother,
who had heard the noise and was frightened.</p>
<p>Concerning this matter I asked no more, but held myself ready to bear it
out in any form convenient, feeling that I had done my duty, and cared not
for the consequence; only for several days dear Annie seemed frightened
rather than grateful. But the oddest result of it was that Eliza, who had
so despised me, and made very rude verses about me, now came trying to sit
on my knee, and kiss me, and give me the best of the pan. However, I would
not allow it, because I hate sudden changes.</p>
<p>Another thing also astonished me—namely, a beautiful letter from
Marwood de Whichehalse himself (sent by a groom soon afterwards), in which
he apologised to me, as if I had been his equal, for his rudeness to my
sister, which was not intended in the least, but came of their common
alarm at the moment, and his desire to comfort her. Also he begged
permission to come and see me, as an old schoolfellow, and set everything
straight between us, as should be among honest Blundellites.</p>
<p>All this was so different to my idea of fighting out a quarrel, when once
it is upon a man, that I knew not what to make of it, but bowed to higher
breeding. Only one thing I resolved upon, that come when he would he
should not see Annie. And to do my sister justice, she had no desire to
see him.</p>
<p>However, I am too easy, there is no doubt of that, being very quick to
forgive a man, and very slow to suspect, unless he hath once lied to me.
Moreover, as to Annie, it had always seemed to me (much against my wishes)
that some shrewd love of a waiting sort was between her and Tom Faggus:
and though Tom had made his fortune now, and everybody respected him, of
course he was not to be compared, in that point of respectability, with
those people who hanged the robbers when fortune turned against them.</p>
<p>So young Squire Marwood came again, as though I had never smitten him, and
spoke of it in as light a way as if we were still at school together. It
was not in my nature, of course, to keep any anger against him; and I knew
what a condescension it was for him to visit us. And it is a very grievous
thing, which touches small landowners, to see an ancient family day by day
decaying: and when we heard that Ley Barton itself, and all the Manor of
Lynton were under a heavy mortgage debt to John Lovering of Weare-Gifford,
there was not much, in our little way, that we would not gladly do or
suffer for the benefit of De Whichehalse.</p>
<p>Meanwhile the work of the farm was toward, and every day gave us more ado
to dispose of what itself was doing. For after the long dry skeltering
wind of March and part of April, there had been a fortnight of soft wet;
and when the sun came forth again, hill and valley, wood and meadow, could
not make enough of him. Many a spring have I seen since then, but never
yet two springs alike, and never one so beautiful. Or was it that my love
came forth and touched the world with beauty?</p>
<p>The spring was in our valley now; creeping first for shelter shyly in the
pause of the blustering wind. There the lambs came bleating to her, and
the orchis lifted up, and the thin dead leaves of clover lay for the new
ones to spring through. There the stiffest things that sleep, the stubby
oak, and the saplin'd beech, dropped their brown defiance to her, and
prepared for a soft reply.</p>
<p>While her over-eager children (who had started forth to meet her, through
the frost and shower of sleet), catkin'd hazel, gold-gloved withy,
youthful elder, and old woodbine, with all the tribe of good
hedge-climbers (who must hasten while haste they may)—was there one
of them that did not claim the merit of coming first?</p>
<p>There she stayed and held her revel, as soon as the fear of frost was
gone; all the air was a fount of freshness, and the earth of gladness, and
the laughing waters prattled of the kindness of the sun.</p>
<p>But all this made it much harder for us, plying the hoe and rake, to keep
the fields with room upon them for the corn to tiller. The winter wheat
was well enough, being sturdy and strong-sided; but the spring wheat and
the barley and the oats were overrun by ill weeds growing faster.
Therefore, as the old saying is,—</p>
<p>Farmer, that thy wife may thrive, Let not burr and burdock wive; And if
thou wouldst keep thy son, See that bine and gith have none.</p>
<p>So we were compelled to go down the field and up it, striking in and out
with care where the green blades hung together, so that each had space to
move in and to spread its roots abroad. And I do assure you now, though
you may not believe me, it was harder work to keep John Fry, Bill Dadds,
and Jem Slocomb all in a line and all moving nimbly to the tune of my own
tool, than it was to set out in the morning alone, and hoe half an acre by
dinner-time. For, instead of keeping the good ash moving, they would for
ever be finding something to look at or to speak of, or at any rate, to
stop with; blaming the shape of their tools perhaps, or talking about
other people's affairs; or, what was most irksome of all to me, taking
advantage as married men, and whispering jokes of no excellence about my
having, or having not, or being ashamed of a sweetheart. And this went so
far at last that I was forced to take two of them and knock their heads
together; after which they worked with a better will.</p>
<p>When we met together in the evening round the kitchen chimney-place, after
the men had had their supper and their heavy boots were gone, my mother
and Eliza would do their very utmost to learn what I was thinking of. Not
that we kept any fire now, after the crock was emptied; but that we loved
to see the ashes cooling, and to be together. At these times Annie would
never ask me any crafty questions (as Eliza did), but would sit with her
hair untwined, and one hand underneath her chin, sometimes looking softly
at me, as much as to say that she knew it all and I was no worse off than
she. But strange to say my mother dreamed not, even for an instant, that
it was possible for Annie to be thinking of such a thing. She was so very
good and quiet, and careful of the linen, and clever about the cookery and
fowls and bacon-curing, that people used to laugh, and say she would never
look at a bachelor until her mother ordered her. But I (perhaps from my
own condition and the sense of what it was) felt no certainty about this,
and even had another opinion, as was said before.</p>
<p>Often I was much inclined to speak to her about it, and put her on her
guard against the approaches of Tom Faggus; but I could not find how to
begin, and feared to make a breach between us; knowing that if her mind
was set, no words of mine would alter it; although they needs must grieve
her deeply. Moreover, I felt that, in this case, a certain homely
Devonshire proverb would come home to me; that one, I mean, which records
that the crock was calling the kettle smutty. Not, of course, that I
compared my innocent maid to a highwayman; but that Annie might think her
worse, and would be too apt to do so, if indeed she loved Tom Faggus. And
our Cousin Tom, by this time, was living a quiet and godly life; having
retired almost from the trade (except when he needed excitement, or came
across public officers), and having won the esteem of all whose purses
were in his power.</p>
<p>Perhaps it is needless for me to say that all this time while my month was
running—or rather crawling, for never month went so slow as that
with me—neither weed, nor seed, nor cattle, nor my own mother's
anxiety, nor any care for my sister, kept me from looking once every day,
and even twice on a Sunday, for any sign of Lorna. For my heart was ever
weary; in the budding valleys, and by the crystal waters, looking at the
lambs in fold, or the heifers on the mill, labouring in trickled furrows,
or among the beaded blades; halting fresh to see the sun lift over the
golden-vapoured ridge; or doffing hat, from sweat of brow, to watch him
sink in the low gray sea; be it as it would of day, of work, or night, or
slumber, it was a weary heart I bore, and fear was on the brink of it.</p>
<p>All the beauty of the spring went for happy men to think of; all the
increase of the year was for other eyes to mark. Not a sign of any sunrise
for me from my fount of life, not a breath to stir the dead leaves fallen
on my heart's Spring.</p>
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