The Winters and the Palmleys
'To go back to the
beginning if one must there were two women in the parish when I was a
child, who were to a certain extent rivals in good looks. Never mind
particulars, but in consequence of this they were at
daggers-drawn, and they did not love each other any better when one of them
tempted the other's lover away from her and married him. He was a young man of
the name of Winter, and in due time they had a son.
'The other woman
did not marry for many years: but when she was about thirty a quiet man named Palmley asked her to be his wife, and she accepted him. You
don't mind when the Palmleys
were Longpuddle folk, but I do well. She had a son
also, who was, of course, nine or ten years younger than the son of the first. The child proved to be of rather weak intellect,
though his mother loved him as the apple of her eye.
'This woman's
husband died when the child was eight years old, and left his widow and boy in
poverty. Her former rival, also a widow now, but fairly well provided for,
offered for pity's sake to take the child as errand boy, small
as he was, her own son, Jack, being hard upon seventeen. Her poor neighbour could do no better than let the child go there. And to the richer woman' house little Palmley
straightway went.
'Well, in some way
or other how, it was never exactly known the thriving woman, Mrs. Winter,
sent the little boy with a message to the next village one December day, much
against his will. It was getting dark, and the child prayed to be allowed not
to go, because he would be afraid coming home. But the
mistress insisted, more out of thoughtlessness than cruelty, and the child
went. On his way back he had to pass through Yalbury Wood, and something came out from behind a tree and
frightened him into fits. The child was quite ruined
by it; he became quite a drivelling idiot, and soon
afterward died.
"Then the
other woman had nothing left to live for, and vowed vengeance against that
rival who had first won away her lover, and now had been the cause of her
bereavement. This last affliction was certainly not intended by her thriving
acquaintance, though it must be owned that when it was done she seemed but
little concerned. Whatever vengeance poor Mrs. Palmley
felt, she had no opportunity of carrying it out, and time might have softened
her feelings into forgetfulness of her supposed wrongs as she dragged on her
lonely life. So matters stood when, a year after the death of the child, Mrs.Palmley's niece, who had been born and bred in the city
of Exonbury, came to live with her.
'This young woman
Miss Harriet Palmley was a proud and handsome
girl, very well brought up, and more stylish and genteel than the people of our
village, as was natural, considering where she came from. She regarded herself
as much above Mrs. Winter and her son in position as Mrs. Winter and her son
considered themselves above poor Mrs. Palmley. But love is an unceremonious thing, and what in the world
should happen but that young Jack Winter must fall wofully
and wildly in love with Harriet Palmley almost as
soon as he saw her.
'She being better
educated than he, and caring nothing for the village notion of his mother's
superiority to her aunt, did not give him much encouragement. But Longpuddle being no very large
world, the two could not help seeing a good deal of each other while she was
staying there, and, disdainful young woman as she was, she did seem to take a
little pleasure in his attentions and advances.
'One day when they
were picking apples together, he asked her to marry him. She had not expected
anything so practical as that at so early a time, and
was led by her surprise into a half-promise; at any rate she did not absolutely
refuse him, and accepted some little presents that he made her.
'But he saw that
her view of him was rather as a simple village lad than as a young man to look
up to, and he felt that he must do something bold to secure her. So he said one
day, 'I am going away, to try to get into a better position than I can get
here.' In two or three weeks he wished her good-bye, and went away to Monksbury, to superintend a farm, with a view to start as a
farmer himself; and from there he wrote regularly to her, as if their marriage
were an understood thing.
'Now Harriet liked
the young man's presents and the admiration of his eyes; but on paper he was
less attractive to her. Her mother had been a schoolmistress, and Harriet had
besides a natural aptitude for pen-and-ink work, in days when to be a ready
writer was not such a common thing as it is now, and when actual handwriting
was valued as an accomplishment in itself. Jack Winter's performances in the
shape of love-letters quite jarred her city nerves and her
finer taste, and when she answered one of them, in the lovely running hand that
she took such pride in, she very strictly and loftily bade him to practise with a pen and spelling-book if he wished to
please her. Whether he listened to her request or not nobody knows, but
his letters did not improve. He ventured to tell her in his clumsy way that if
her heart were more warm towards him she would not be
so nice about his handwriting and spelling; which indeed was true enough.
'Well, in Jack's
absence the weak flame that had been set alight in Harriet's heart soon sank
low, and at last went out altogether. He wrote and wrote, and begged and prayed
her to give a reason for her coldness; and then she told him plainly that she
was town born, and he was not sufficiently well educated to please her.
'Jack Winter's
want of pen-and-ink training did not make him less thin-skinned than others; in
fact, he was terribly tender and touchy about anything. This reason that she
gave for finally throwing him over grieved him, shamed him, and mortified him
more than can be told in these times, the pride of that day in being able to
write with beautiful flourishes, and the sorrow at not being able to do so,
raging so high. Jack replied to her with an angry note, and then she hit back
with smart little stings, telling him how many words he had misspelt
in his last letter, and declaring again that this alone was sufficient
justification for any woman to put an end to an understanding with him. Her
husband must be a better scholar.
'He bore her
rejection of him in silence, but his suffering was sharp all
the sharper in being untold. She communicated with Jack no more; and as
his reason for going out into the world had been only to provide a home worthy
of her, he had no further object in planning such a home now that she was lost
to him. He therefore gave up the farming occupation by which he had hoped to
make himself a master-farmer, and left the spot to return to his mother.
'As soon as he got
back to Longpuddle he found that Harriet had already
looked wi favour upon another lover. He was a young road-contractor,
and Jack could not but admit that his rival was both in
manners and scholarship much ahead of him. Indeed, a more sensible match
for the beauty who had been dropped into the village by fate could hardly have
been found than this man, who could offer her so much better a chance than Jack could have done, with his uncertain future and
narrow abilities for grappling with the world. The fact was so clear to him
that he could hardly blame her.
'One day by
accident Jack saw on a scrap of paper the handwriting of Harriet's new beloved.
It was flowing like a stream, well spelt, the work of a man accustomed to the ink-bottle and the dictionary, of a man already called in
the parish a good scholar. And then it struck all of a
sudden into Jack's mind what a contrast the letters of this young man must make
to his own miserable old letters, and how ridiculous they must make his lines appear.
He groaned and wished he had never written to her, and wondered if she had ever
kept his poor performances. Possibly she had kept them, for women are in the
habit of doing that, he thought, and whilst they were in her hands there was
always a chance of his honest, stupid love-assurances to her being joked over
by Harriet with her present lover, or by anybody who should accidentally
uncover them.
'The nervous,
moody young man could not bear the thought of it, and at length decided to ask
her to return them, as was proper when engagements were broken off. He was some
hours in framing, copying, and recopying the short note in which he made his
request, and having finished it he sent it to her
house. His messenger came back with the answer, by word of mouth,
that Miss Palmley bade him say she should not
part with what was hers, and wondered at his boldness in troubling her.
'Jack was much
affronted at this, and determined to go for his letters himself. He chose a
time when he knew she was at home, and knocked and went in without much
ceremony; for though Harriet was so high and mighty, Jack had small respect for
her aunt, Mrs.Palmley, whose little child had been
his boot-cleaner in earlier days. Harriet was in the room, this being the first
time they had met since she had jilted him. He asked for his letters with a
stern and bitter took at her.
'At first she said
he might have them for all that she cared, and took them out of the bureau
where she kept them. Then she glanced over the outside one of
the packet, and suddenly altering her mind, she told him shortly that his
request was a silly one, and slipped the letters into her aunt's work-box,
which stood open on the table, locking it, and saying with a bantering laugh
that of course she thought it best to keep 'em, since
they might be useful to produce as evidence that she had good cause for
declining to marry him.
'He blazed up
hot.' "Give me those letters!" he said. "They are mine!"
"No, they are
not," she replied; "they are mine."
'
"Whosever they are I want them back," says he. "I
don't want to be made sport of for my penmanship: you've another young man now!
He has your confidence, and you pour all your tales into his ear. You'll be
showing them to him!"
'"Perhaps,"
said my lady Harriet, with calm coolness, like the heartless woman that she
was.
'Her manner so
maddened him that he made a step towards the work-box, but she snatched it up,
locked it in the bureau, and turned upon him triumphant. For a moment he seemed to be going to wrench the key of the bureau
out of her hand; but he stopped himself, and swung round upon his heel and went
away.
'When he was
out-of-doors alone, and it got night, he walked about restless, and stinging
with the sense of being beaten at all points by her. He could not help fancying
her telling her new lover or her acquaintances of this scene with himself, and
laughing with the mover those poor blotted, crooked lines of his that he had
been so anxious to obtain. As the evening passed on he
worked himself into a dogged resolution to have them back at any price, come
what might.
'At the dead of
night he came out of his mother's house by the back door,
and creeping through the garden hedge went along the field adjoining till he
reached the back of her aunt's dwelling. The moon struck bright and flat upon
the walls, 'twas said, and every shiny leaf of the creepers was like a little
looking-glass in the rays. From long acquaintance Jack
knew the arrangement and position of everything in Mrs. Palmley's
house as well as in his own mother's. The back window close to him was a
casement with little leaded squares, as it is to this day, and was, as now, one
of two lighting the sitting-room. The other, being in
front, was closed up with shutters, but this back one
had not even a blind, and the moonlight as it streamed in showed every article
of the furniture to him outside. To the right of the room is the fireplace, as
you may remember; to the left was the bureau at that time; inside the bureau
was Harriet's work-box, as he supposed (though it was really her aunt's), and
inside the work-box were his letters. Well, he took out his pocket-knife,
and without noise lifted the leading of one of the panes, so that he could take
out the glass, and putting his hand through the hole he unfastened the
casement, and climbed in through the opening. All the
household that is to say, Mrs. Palmley, Harriet,
and the little maidservant were asleep. Jack went straight to the bureau, so
he said, hoping it might have been unfastened again it not being
kept locked in ordinary but Harriet had never unfastened it since she
secured her letters there the day before. Jack told afterward how he thought of
her sleep upstairs, caring nothing for him, and of the
way she had made sport of him and of his letters; and having advanced so far,
he was not to be hindered now. By forcing the large blade of his knife under
the flap of the bureau, he burst the weak lock; within was the rosewood work-box just as she had placed it in her hurry to keep it
from him. There being no time to spare forgetting the letters out of it then,
he took it under his arm, shut the bureau, and made the best of his way out of
the house, latching the casement behind him, and re-fixing the pane of glass in
its place.
'Winter found his
way back to his mother's as he had come, and being dog-tired, crept upstairs to
bed, hiding the box till he could destroy its contents. The next morning early
he set about doing this, and carried it to the linhay at the back of his mother's dwelling. Hereby the hearth he opened the box, and began burning one by one
the letters that had cost him so much labour to write
and shame to think of, meaning to return the box to Harriet, after repairing
the slight damage he had caused it by opening it without a key, with a note
the last she would ever receive from him telling her triumphantly that in
refusing to return what he had asked for she had calculated too surely upon his
submission to her whims.
'But on removing
the last letter from the box he received a shock; for underneath it, at the
very bottom, lay money several golden guineas "Doubtless Harriet's
pocket-money," he said to himself; though it was not, but Mrs. Palmley's. Before he had got over his qualms at this discovery he heard footsteps coming through the
house-passage to where he was. In haste he pushed the
box and what was in it under some brushwood which lay in the linhay; but Jack had been already seen. Two constables
entered the out-house, and seized him as he knelt before the fireplace,
securing the work-box and all it contained at the same
moment. They had come to apprehend him on a charge of
breaking into the dwelling-house of Mrs. Palmley on
the night preceding; and almost before the lad knew what had happened to him
they were leading him along the lane that connects that end of the village with
this turnpike-road, and along they marched him between 'em
all the way to Casterbridge jail.
'Jack's act
amounted to night burglary though he had never thought of it and burglary
was felony, and a capital offense in those days. His figure had been seen by some one against the bright wall
as he came away from Mrs. Palmley's back window, and
the box and money were found in his possession, while the evidence of the
broken bureau-lock and tinkered window-pane was more than enough for
circumstantial detail. Whether his protestation that he went only for his
letters, which he believed to be wrongfully kept from him, would have availed
him anything if supported by other evidence I do not know; but the one person
who could have borne it out was Harriet, and she acted entirely under the sway
of her aunt. That aunt was deadly towards Jack Winter. Mrs. Palmley's
time had come. Here was her revenge upon the woman who had first won away her
lover, and next ruined and deprived her of her heart's treasure her little
son. When the assize week drew on, and Jack had to stand his trial, Harriet did
not appear in the case at all, which was allowed to
take its course, Mrs. Palmley testifying to the
general facts of the burglary. Whether Harriet would have come forward if Jack
had appealed to her is not known; possibly she would
have done it for pity's sake; but Jack was too proud to ask a single favour of a girl who had jilted him; and he let her alone.
The trial was a short one, and the death sentence was passed.
'The day o' young
Jack's execution was a cold dusty Saturday in March. He was so boyish and slim
that they were obliged in mercy to hang him in the heaviest fetters kept in the
jail, lest his heft should not break his neck, and they weighed so upon him
that he could hardly drag himself up to the drop. At that time
the government was not strict about burying the body of an executed person
within the precincts of the prison, and at the earnest prayer of his poor
mother his body was allowed to be brought home. All the
parish waited at their cottage doors in the evening for its arrival: I remember
how, as a very little girl, I stood by my mother's side. About
'As for Harriet,
she and her lover were married in due time; but by all account her life was no
jocund one. She and her good-man found that they could not live comfortably at Longpuddle, by reason of her connection with Jack's
misfortunes, and they settled in a distant town, and were no more heard of by
us; Mrs. Palmley, too, found it advisable to join 'em shortly after. The dark-eyed, gaunt old Mrs. Winter,
remembered by the emigrant gentleman here, was, as you will have foreseen, the
Mrs. Winter of this story; and I can well call to mind how lonely she was, how
afraid the children were of her, and how she kept herself as a stranger among
us, though she lived so long.'
'Longpuddle has had her sad experiences as well as her sunny
ones,' said Mr. Lackland.
'Yes, yes. But I
am thankful to say not many like that, though good and bad have lived among
us.'
'There was Georgy Crookhill he was one of
the shady sort, as I have reason to know,' observed
the registrar, with the manner of a man who would like to ha'e
his say also.
'I used to hear
what he was as a boy at school.'
'Well, as he began
so he went on. It never got so far as a hanging matter with him, to be sure;
but he had some narrow escapes of penal servitude; and once it was a case of
the biter bit.'
Go on to next story "Incident in the Life of Mr. George Crookhill"