‘You could take a lock of your late-lost husband’s hair, and have it
made into a mourning brooch, and look at it every hour of the day.’
‘I haven’t a morsel!––and if I had ’twould be no good. . . . After all
that’s said about the comforts of this religion, I wish I had Jude back
again!’
‘You must
fight valiant against the feeling, since he’s another’s.
And I’ve heard that another good thing for it, when it a
fflicts volup-
shious widows, is to go to your husband’s grave in the dusk of
evening, and stand a long while a-bowed down.’
‘Pooh! I know as well as you what I should do; only I don’t do it!’
They drove in silence along the straight road till they were within
the horizon of Marygreen, which lay not far to the left of their route.
They came to the junction of the highway and the cross-lane leading
to that village, whose church-tower could be seen athwart the hollow.
When they got yet further on, and were passing the lonely house in
which Arabella and Jude had lived during the
first months of their
marriage, and where the pig-killing had taken place, she could
control herself no longer.
‘He’s more mine than hers!’ she burst out. ‘What right has she to
him, I should like to know! I’d take him from her if I could!’
‘Fie, Abby! And your husband only six weeks gone! Pray against
it!’
‘Be damned if I do! Feelings are feelings! I won’t be a creeping
hypocrite any longer––so there!’
Arabella had hastily drawn from her pocket a bundle of tracts
which she had brought with her to distribute at the fair, and of which
she had given away several. As she spoke she
flung the whole
remainder of the packet into the hedge. ‘I’ve tried that sort o’ physic.
And have failed wi’ it. I must be as I was born!’
‘Hush! You be excited, dear! Now you come along home quiet,
and have a cup of tea, and don’t let us talk about un no more. We
won’t come out this road again, as it leads to where he is, because it
in
flames ’ee so. You’ll be all right again soon.’
Arabella did calm herself down by degrees; and they crossed the
Ridge-way. When they began to descend the long, straight hill, they
saw plodding along in front of them an elderly man of spare stature
and thoughtful gait. In his hand he carried a basket; and there was a
touch of slovenliness in his attire, together with that inde
finable
something in his whole appearance which suggested one who was his
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