more. O Jude––please Jude––I want to see them! I didn’t know you
would let them be taken away while I was asleep! You said perhaps I
should see them once more before they were screwed down; and then
you didn’t, but took them away! O Jude, you are cruel to me too!’
‘She’s been wanting me to dig out the grave again, and let her get
to the co
ffins,’ said the man with the spade. ‘She ought to be took
home, by the look o’ her. She is hardly responsible, poor thing,
seemingly. Can’t dig ’em up again now, ma’am. Do ye go home with
your husband, and take it quiet, and thank God that there’ll be
another soon to swage yer grief.’
But Sue kept asking piteously: ‘Can’t I see them once more––just
once. Can’t I? Only just one little minute, Jude. It would not
take long! And I should be so glad, Jude. I will be so good, and
not disobey you ever any more, Jude, if you will let me? I would
go home quietly afterwards, and not want to see them any more!
Can’t I?––why can’t I?’
Thus she went on. Jude was thrown into such acute sorrow that he
almost felt he would try to get the man to accede. But it could do no
good, and might make her still worse; and he saw that it was impera-
tive to get her home at once. So he coaxed her, and whispered ten-
derly, and put his arm round her to support her; till she helplessly
gave in, and was induced to leave the cemetery.
He wished to obtain a
fly to take her back in, but economy being so
imperative she deprecated his doing so, and they walked along
slowly, Jude in black crape, she in brown and red clothing. They
were to have gone to a new lodging that afternoon, but Jude saw that
it was not practicable, and in course of time they entered the now
hated house. Sue was at once got to bed, and the doctor sent for.
Jude waited all the evening downstairs. At a very late hour the
intelligence was brought to him that a child had been prematurely
born, and that it, like the others, was a corpse.
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