the wind, her bodice apart, her sleeves rolled above her elbows for
her work, and her hands reeking with melted fat. One of the passers
said in mock terror: ‘Good Lord deliver us!’
‘See how he’s served me!’ she cried. ‘Making me work Sunday
mornings when I ought to be going to my church, and tearing my
hair o
ff my head, and my gown off my back!’
Jude was exasperated, and went out to drag her in by main force.
Then he suddenly lost his heat. Illuminated with the sense that all
was over between them, and that it mattered not what she did, or he,
her husband stood still, regarding her. Their lives were ruined, he
thought; ruined by the fundamental error of their matrimonial
union: that of having based a permanent contract on a temporary
feeling which had no necessary connection with a
ffinities that alone
render a life-long comradeship tolerable.
‘Going to ill-use me on principle, as your father ill-used your
mother, and your father’s sister ill-used her husband?’ she asked. ‘All
you Fawleys be a queer lot as husbands and wives.’
Jude
fixed an arrested, surprised look on her. But she said no
more, and continued her saunter till she was tired. He left the spot,
and after wandering vaguely a little while walked in the direction of
Marygreen. Here he called upon his great-aunt, whose in
firmities
daily increased.
‘Aunt––did my father ill-use my mother, and my aunt her
husband?’ said Jude abruptly, sitting down by the
fire.
She raised her ancient eyes under the rim of the bygone bonnet
that she always wore. ‘Who’s been telling you that?’ she said.
‘I have heard it spoken of, and want to know all.’
‘You med so well, I s’pose; though your wife––I reckon ’twas
she––must have been a fool to open up that. There isn’t much to
know, after all. Your father and mother couldn’t get on together, and
they parted. It was coming home from Alfredston market, when you
were a baby––on the hill by the Brown House barn––that they had
their last di
fference, and took leave of one another for the last time.
Your mother soon afterwards died––she drowned herself, in short,
and your father went away with you to South Wessex, and never
came here any more.’
Jude recalled his father’s silence about North Wessex and Jude’s
mother, never speaking of either till his dying day.
‘It was the same with your father’s sister. Her husband o
ffended
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