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<h2> Chapter XXXVII </h2>
<h3> The Journey in Despair </h3>
<p>HETTY was too ill through the rest of that day for any questions to be
addressed to her—too ill even to think with any distinctness of the
evils that were to come. She only felt that all her hope was crushed, and
that instead of having found a refuge she had only reached the borders of
a new wilderness where no goal lay before her. The sensations of bodily
sickness, in a comfortable bed, and with the tendance of the good-natured
landlady, made a sort of respite for her; such a respite as there is in
the faint weariness which obliges a man to throw himself on the sand
instead of toiling onward under the scorching sun.</p>
<p>But when sleep and rest had brought back the strength necessary for the
keenness of mental suffering—when she lay the next morning looking
at the growing light which was like a cruel task-master returning to urge
from her a fresh round of hated hopeless labour—she began to think
what course she must take, to remember that all her money was gone, to
look at the prospect of further wandering among strangers with the new
clearness shed on it by the experience of her journey to Windsor. But
which way could she turn? It was impossible for her to enter into any
service, even if she could obtain it. There was nothing but immediate
beggary before her. She thought of a young woman who had been found
against the church wall at Hayslope one Sunday, nearly dead with cold and
hunger—a tiny infant in her arms. The woman was rescued and taken to
the parish. "The parish!" You can perhaps hardly understand the effect of
that word on a mind like Hetty's, brought up among people who were
somewhat hard in their feelings even towards poverty, who lived among the
fields, and had little pity for want and rags as a cruel inevitable fate
such as they sometimes seem in cities, but held them a mark of idleness
and vice—and it was idleness and vice that brought burdens on the
parish. To Hetty the "parish" was next to the prison in obloquy, and to
ask anything of strangers—to beg—lay in the same far-off
hideous region of intolerable shame that Hetty had all her life thought it
impossible she could ever come near. But now the remembrance of that
wretched woman whom she had seen herself, on her way from church, being
carried into Joshua Rann's, came back upon her with the new terrible sense
that there was very little now to divide HER from the same lot. And the
dread of bodily hardship mingled with the dread of shame; for Hetty had
the luxurious nature of a round soft-coated pet animal.</p>
<p>How she yearned to be back in her safe home again, cherished and cared for
as she had always been! Her aunt's scolding about trifles would have been
music to her ears now; she longed for it; she used to hear it in a time
when she had only trifles to hide. Could she be the same Hetty that used
to make up the butter in the dairy with the Guelder roses peeping in at
the window—she, a runaway whom her friends would not open their
doors to again, lying in this strange bed, with the knowledge that she had
no money to pay for what she received, and must offer those strangers some
of the clothes in her basket? It was then she thought of her locket and
ear-rings, and seeing her pocket lie near, she reached it and spread the
contents on the bed before her. There were the locket and ear-rings in the
little velvet-lined boxes, and with them there was a beautiful silver
thimble which Adam had bought her, the words "Remember me" making the
ornament of the border; a steel purse, with her one shilling in it; and a
small red-leather case, fastening with a strap. Those beautiful little
ear-rings, with their delicate pearls and garnet, that she had tried in
her ears with such longing in the bright sunshine on the 30th of July! She
had no longing to put them in her ears now: her head with its dark rings
of hair lay back languidly on the pillow, and the sadness that rested
about her brow and eyes was something too hard for regretful memory. Yet
she put her hands up to her ears: it was because there were some thin gold
rings in them, which were also worth a little money. Yes, she could surely
get some money for her ornaments: those Arthur had given her must have
cost a great deal of money. The landlord and landlady had been good to
her; perhaps they would help her to get the money for these things.</p>
<p>But this money would not keep her long. What should she do when it was
gone? Where should she go? The horrible thought of want and beggary drove
her once to think she would go back to her uncle and aunt and ask them to
forgive her and have pity on her. But she shrank from that idea again, as
she might have shrunk from scorching metal. She could never endure that
shame before her uncle and aunt, before Mary Burge, and the servants at
the Chase, and the people at Broxton, and everybody who knew her. They
should never know what had happened to her. What could she do? She would
go away from Windsor—travel again as she had done the last week, and
get among the flat green fields with the high hedges round them, where
nobody could see her or know her; and there, perhaps, when there was
nothing else she could do, she should get courage to drown herself in some
pond like that in the Scantlands. Yes, she would get away from Windsor as
soon as possible: she didn't like these people at the inn to know about
her, to know that she had come to look for Captain Donnithorne. She must
think of some reason to tell them why she had asked for him.</p>
<p>With this thought she began to put the things back into her pocket,
meaning to get up and dress before the landlady came to her. She had her
hand on the red-leather case, when it occurred to her that there might be
something in this case which she had forgotten—something worth
selling; for without knowing what she should do with her life, she craved
the means of living as long as possible; and when we desire eagerly to
find something, we are apt to search for it in hopeless places. No, there
was nothing but common needles and pins, and dried tulip-petals between
the paper leaves where she had written down her little money-accounts. But
on one of these leaves there was a name, which, often as she had seen it
before, now flashed on Hetty's mind like a newly discovered message. The
name was—Dinah Morris, Snowfield. There was a text above it,
written, as well as the name, by Dinah's own hand with a little pencil,
one evening that they were sitting together and Hetty happened to have the
red case lying open before her. Hetty did not read the text now: she was
only arrested by the name. Now, for the first time, she remembered without
indifference the affectionate kindness Dinah had shown her, and those
words of Dinah in the bed-chamber—that Hetty must think of her as a
friend in trouble. Suppose she were to go to Dinah, and ask her to help
her? Dinah did not think about things as other people did. She was a
mystery to Hetty, but Hetty knew she was always kind. She couldn't imagine
Dinah's face turning away from her in dark reproof or scorn, Dinah's voice
willingly speaking ill of her, or rejoicing in her misery as a punishment.
Dinah did not seem to belong to that world of Hetty's, whose glance she
dreaded like scorching fire. But even to her Hetty shrank from beseeching
and confession. She could not prevail on herself to say, "I will go to
Dinah": she only thought of that as a possible alternative, if she had not
courage for death.</p>
<p>The good landlady was amazed when she saw Hetty come downstairs soon after
herself, neatly dressed, and looking resolutely self-possessed. Hetty told
her she was quite well this morning. She had only been very tired and
overcome with her journey, for she had come a long way to ask about her
brother, who had run away, and they thought he was gone for a soldier, and
Captain Donnithorne might know, for he had been very kind to her brother
once. It was a lame story, and the landlady looked doubtfully at Hetty as
she told it; but there was a resolute air of self-reliance about her this
morning, so different from the helpless prostration of yesterday, that the
landlady hardly knew how to make a remark that might seem like prying into
other people's affairs. She only invited her to sit down to breakfast with
them, and in the course of it Hetty brought out her ear-rings and locket,
and asked the landlord if he could help her to get money for them. Her
journey, she said, had cost her much more than she expected, and now she
had no money to get back to her friends, which she wanted to do at once.</p>
<p>It was not the first time the landlady had seen the ornaments, for she had
examined the contents of Hetty's pocket yesterday, and she and her husband
had discussed the fact of a country girl having these beautiful things,
with a stronger conviction than ever that Hetty had been miserably deluded
by the fine young officer.</p>
<p>"Well," said the landlord, when Hetty had spread the precious trifles
before him, "we might take 'em to the jeweller's shop, for there's one not
far off; but Lord bless you, they wouldn't give you a quarter o' what the
things are worth. And you wouldn't like to part with 'em?" he added,
looking at her inquiringly.</p>
<p>"Oh, I don't mind," said Hetty, hastily, "so as I can get money to go
back."</p>
<p>"And they might think the things were stolen, as you wanted to sell 'em,"
he went on, "for it isn't usual for a young woman like you to have fine
jew'llery like that."</p>
<p>The blood rushed to Hetty's face with anger. "I belong to respectable
folks," she said; "I'm not a thief."</p>
<p>"No, that you aren't, I'll be bound," said the landlady; "and you'd no
call to say that," looking indignantly at her husband. "The things were
gev to her: that's plain enough to be seen."</p>
<p>"I didn't mean as I thought so," said the husband, apologetically, "but I
said it was what the jeweller might think, and so he wouldn't be offering
much money for 'em."</p>
<p>"Well," said the wife, "suppose you were to advance some money on the
things yourself, and then if she liked to redeem 'em when she got home,
she could. But if we heard nothing from her after two months, we might do
as we liked with 'em."</p>
<p>I will not say that in this accommodating proposition the landlady had no
regard whatever to the possible reward of her good nature in the ultimate
possession of the locket and ear-rings: indeed, the effect they would have
in that case on the mind of the grocer's wife had presented itself with
remarkable vividness to her rapid imagination. The landlord took up the
ornaments and pushed out his lips in a meditative manner. He wished Hetty
well, doubtless; but pray, how many of your well-wishers would decline to
make a little gain out of you? Your landlady is sincerely affected at
parting with you, respects you highly, and will really rejoice if any one
else is generous to you; but at the same time she hands you a bill by
which she gains as high a percentage as possible.</p>
<p>"How much money do you want to get home with, young woman?" said the
well-wisher, at length.</p>
<p>"Three guineas," answered Hetty, fixing on the sum she set out with, for
want of any other standard, and afraid of asking too much.</p>
<p>"Well, I've no objections to advance you three guineas," said the
landlord; "and if you like to send it me back and get the jewellery again,
you can, you know. The Green Man isn't going to run away."</p>
<p>"Oh yes, I'll be very glad if you'll give me that," said Hetty, relieved
at the thought that she would not have to go to the jeweller's and be
stared at and questioned.</p>
<p>"But if you want the things again, you'll write before long," said the
landlady, "because when two months are up, we shall make up our minds as
you don't want 'em."</p>
<p>"Yes," said Hetty indifferently.</p>
<p>The husband and wife were equally content with this arrangement. The
husband thought, if the ornaments were not redeemed, he could make a good
thing of it by taking them to London and selling them. The wife thought
she would coax the good man into letting her keep them. And they were
accommodating Hetty, poor thing—a pretty, respectable-looking young
woman, apparently in a sad case. They declined to take anything for her
food and bed: she was quite welcome. And at eleven o'clock Hetty said
"Good-bye" to them with the same quiet, resolute air she had worn all the
morning, mounting the coach that was to take her twenty miles back along
the way she had come.</p>
<p>There is a strength of self-possession which is the sign that the last
hope has departed. Despair no more leans on others than perfect
contentment, and in despair pride ceases to be counteracted by the sense
of dependence.</p>
<p>Hetty felt that no one could deliver her from the evils that would make
life hateful to her; and no one, she said to herself, should ever know her
misery and humiliation. No; she would not confess even to Dinah. She would
wander out of sight, and drown herself where her body would never be
found, and no one should know what had become of her.</p>
<p>When she got off this coach, she began to walk again, and take cheap rides
in carts, and get cheap meals, going on and on without distinct purpose,
yet strangely, by some fascination, taking the way she had come, though
she was determined not to go back to her own country. Perhaps it was
because she had fixed her mind on the grassy Warwickshire fields, with the
bushy tree-studded hedgerows that made a hiding-place even in this
leafless season. She went more slowly than she came, often getting over
the stiles and sitting for hours under the hedgerows, looking before her
with blank, beautiful eyes; fancying herself at the edge of a hidden pool,
low down, like that in the Scantlands; wondering if it were very painful
to be drowned, and if there would be anything worse after death than what
she dreaded in life. Religious doctrines had taken no hold on Hetty's
mind. She was one of those numerous people who have had godfathers and
godmothers, learned their catechism, been confirmed, and gone to church
every Sunday, and yet, for any practical result of strength in life, or
trust in death, have never appropriated a single Christian idea or
Christian feeling. You would misunderstand her thoughts during these
wretched days, if you imagined that they were influenced either by
religious fears or religious hopes.</p>
<p>She chose to go to Stratford-on-Avon again, where she had gone before by
mistake, for she remembered some grassy fields on her former way towards
it—fields among which she thought she might find just the sort of
pool she had in her mind. Yet she took care of her money still; she
carried her basket; death seemed still a long way off, and life was so
strong in her. She craved food and rest—she hastened towards them at
the very moment she was picturing to herself the bank from which she would
leap towards death. It was already five days since she had left Windsor,
for she had wandered about, always avoiding speech or questioning looks,
and recovering her air of proud self-dependence whenever she was under
observation, choosing her decent lodging at night, and dressing herself
neatly in the morning, and setting off on her way steadily, or remaining
under shelter if it rained, as if she had a happy life to cherish.</p>
<p>And yet, even in her most self-conscious moments, the face was sadly
different from that which had smiled at itself in the old specked glass,
or smiled at others when they glanced at it admiringly. A hard and even
fierce look had come in the eyes, though their lashes were as long as
ever, and they had all their dark brightness. And the cheek was never
dimpled with smiles now. It was the same rounded, pouting, childish
prettiness, but with all love and belief in love departed from it—the
sadder for its beauty, like that wondrous Medusa-face, with the
passionate, passionless lips.</p>
<p>At last she was among the fields she had been dreaming of, on a long
narrow pathway leading towards a wood. If there should be a pool in that
wood! It would be better hidden than one in the fields. No, it was not a
wood, only a wild brake, where there had once been gravel-pits, leaving
mounds and hollows studded with brushwood and small trees. She roamed up
and down, thinking there was perhaps a pool in every hollow before she
came to it, till her limbs were weary, and she sat down to rest. The
afternoon was far advanced, and the leaden sky was darkening, as if the
sun were setting behind it. After a little while Hetty started up again,
feeling that darkness would soon come on; and she must put off finding the
pool till to-morrow, and make her way to some shelter for the night. She
had quite lost her way in the fields, and might as well go in one
direction as another, for aught she knew. She walked through field after
field, and no village, no house was in sight; but there, at the corner of
this pasture, there was a break in the hedges; the land seemed to dip down
a little, and two trees leaned towards each other across the opening.
Hetty's heart gave a great heat as she thought there must be a pool there.
She walked towards it heavily over the tufted grass, with pale lips and a
sense of trembling. It was as if the thing were come in spite of herself,
instead of being the object of her search.</p>
<p>There it was, black under the darkening sky: no motion, no sound near. She
set down her basket, and then sank down herself on the grass, trembling.
The pool had its wintry depth now: by the time it got shallow, as she
remembered the pools did at Hayslope, in the summer, no one could find out
that it was her body. But then there was her basket—she must hide
that too. She must throw it into the water—make it heavy with stones
first, and then throw it in. She got up to look about for stones, and soon
brought five or six, which she laid down beside her basket, and then sat
down again. There was no need to hurry—there was all the night to
drown herself in. She sat leaning her elbow on the basket. She was weary,
hungry. There were some buns in her basket—three, which she had
supplied herself with at the place where she ate her dinner. She took them
out now and ate them eagerly, and then sat still again, looking at the
pool. The soothed sensation that came over her from the satisfaction of
her hunger, and this fixed dreamy attitude, brought on drowsiness, and
presently her head sank down on her knees. She was fast asleep.</p>
<p>When she awoke it was deep night, and she felt chill. She was frightened
at this darkness—frightened at the long night before her. If she
could but throw herself into the water! No, not yet. She began to walk
about that she might get warm again, as if she would have more resolution
then. Oh how long the time was in that darkness! The bright hearth and the
warmth and the voices of home, the secure uprising and lying down, the
familiar fields, the familiar people, the Sundays and holidays with their
simple joys of dress and feasting—all the sweets of her young life
rushed before her now, and she seemed to be stretching her arms towards
them across a great gulf. She set her teeth when she thought of Arthur.
She cursed him, without knowing what her cursing would do. She wished he
too might know desolation, and cold, and a life of shame that he dared not
end by death.</p>
<p>The horror of this cold, and darkness, and solitude—out of all human
reach—became greater every long minute. It was almost as if she were
dead already, and knew that she was dead, and longed to get back to life
again. But no: she was alive still; she had not taken the dreadful leap.
She felt a strange contradictory wretchedness and exultation:
wretchedness, that she did not dare to face death; exultation, that she
was still in life—that she might yet know light and warmth again.
She walked backwards and forwards to warm herself, beginning to discern
something of the objects around her, as her eyes became accustomed to the
night—the darker line of the hedge, the rapid motion of some living
creature—perhaps a field-mouse—rushing across the grass. She
no longer felt as if the darkness hedged her in. She thought she could
walk back across the field, and get over the stile; and then, in the very
next field, she thought she remembered there was a hovel of furze near a
sheepfold. If she could get into that hovel, she would be warmer. She
could pass the night there, for that was what Alick did at Hayslope in
lambing-time. The thought of this hovel brought the energy of a new hope.
She took up her basket and walked across the field, but it was some time
before she got in the right direction for the stile. The exercise and the
occupation of finding the stile were a stimulus to her, however, and
lightened the horror of the darkness and solitude. There were sheep in the
next field, and she startled a group as she set down her basket and got
over the stile; and the sound of their movement comforted her, for it
assured her that her impression was right—this was the field where
she had seen the hovel, for it was the field where the sheep were. Right
on along the path, and she would get to it. She reached the opposite gate,
and felt her way along its rails and the rails of the sheep-fold, till her
hand encountered the pricking of the gorsy wall. Delicious sensation! She
had found the shelter. She groped her way, touching the prickly gorse, to
the door, and pushed it open. It was an ill-smelling close place, but
warm, and there was straw on the ground. Hetty sank down on the straw with
a sense of escape. Tears came—she had never shed tears before since
she left Windsor—tears and sobs of hysterical joy that she had still
hold of life, that she was still on the familiar earth, with the sheep
near her. The very consciousness of her own limbs was a delight to her:
she turned up her sleeves, and kissed her arms with the passionate love of
life. Soon warmth and weariness lulled her in the midst of her sobs, and
she fell continually into dozing, fancying herself at the brink of the
pool again—fancying that she had jumped into the water, and then
awaking with a start, and wondering where she was. But at last deep
dreamless sleep came; her head, guarded by her bonnet, found a pillow
against the gorsy wall, and the poor soul, driven to and fro between two
equal terrors, found the one relief that was possible to it—the
relief of unconsciousness.</p>
<p>Alas! That relief seems to end the moment it has begun. It seemed to Hetty
as if those dozen dreams had only passed into another dream—that she
was in the hovel, and her aunt was standing over her with a candle in her
hand. She trembled under her aunt's glance, and opened her eyes. There was
no candle, but there was light in the hovel—the light of early
morning through the open door. And there was a face looking down on her;
but it was an unknown face, belonging to an elderly man in a smock-frock.</p>
<p>"Why, what do you do here, young woman?" the man said roughly.</p>
<p>Hetty trembled still worse under this real fear and shame than she had
done in her momentary dream under her aunt's glance. She felt that she was
like a beggar already—found sleeping in that place. But in spite of
her trembling, she was so eager to account to the man for her presence
here, that she found words at once.</p>
<p>"I lost my way," she said. "I'm travelling—north'ard, and I got away
from the road into the fields, and was overtaken by the dark. Will you
tell me the way to the nearest village?"</p>
<p>She got up as she was speaking, and put her hands to her bonnet to adjust
it, and then laid hold of her basket.</p>
<p>The man looked at her with a slow bovine gaze, without giving her any
answer, for some seconds. Then he turned away and walked towards the door
of the hovel, but it was not till he got there that he stood still, and,
turning his shoulder half-round towards her, said, "Aw, I can show you the
way to Norton, if you like. But what do you do gettin' out o' the
highroad?" he added, with a tone of gruff reproof. "Y'ull be gettin' into
mischief, if you dooant mind."</p>
<p>"Yes," said Hetty, "I won't do it again. I'll keep in the road, if you'll
be so good as show me how to get to it."</p>
<p>"Why dooant you keep where there's a finger-poasses an' folks to ax the
way on?" the man said, still more gruffly. "Anybody 'ud think you was a
wild woman, an' look at yer."</p>
<p>Hetty was frightened at this gruff old man, and still more at this last
suggestion that she looked like a wild woman. As she followed him out of
the hovel she thought she would give him a sixpence for telling her the
way, and then he would not suppose she was wild. As he stopped to point
out the road to her, she put her hand in her pocket to get the six-pence
ready, and when he was turning away, without saying good-morning, she held
it out to him and said, "Thank you; will you please to take something for
your trouble?"</p>
<p>He looked slowly at the sixpence, and then said, "I want none o' your
money. You'd better take care on't, else you'll get it stool from yer, if
you go trapesin' about the fields like a mad woman a-thatway."</p>
<p>The man left her without further speech, and Hetty held on her way.
Another day had risen, and she must wander on. It was no use to think of
drowning herself—she could not do it, at least while she had money
left to buy food and strength to journey on. But the incident on her
waking this morning heightened her dread of that time when her money would
be all gone; she would have to sell her basket and clothes then, and she
would really look like a beggar or a wild woman, as the man had said. The
passionate joy in life she had felt in the night, after escaping from the
brink of the black cold death in the pool, was gone now. Life now, by the
morning light, with the impression of that man's hard wondering look at
her, was as full of dread as death—it was worse; it was a dread to
which she felt chained, from which she shrank and shrank as she did from
the black pool, and yet could find no refuge from it.</p>
<p>She took out her money from her purse, and looked at it. She had still
two-and-twenty shillings; it would serve her for many days more, or it
would help her to get on faster to Stonyshire, within reach of Dinah. The
thought of Dinah urged itself more strongly now, since the experience of
the night had driven her shuddering imagination away from the pool. If it
had been only going to Dinah—if nobody besides Dinah would ever know—Hetty
could have made up her mind to go to her. The soft voice, the pitying
eyes, would have drawn her. But afterwards the other people must know, and
she could no more rush on that shame than she could rush on death.</p>
<p>She must wander on and on, and wait for a lower depth of despair to give
her courage. Perhaps death would come to her, for she was getting less and
less able to bear the day's weariness. And yet—such is the strange
action of our souls, drawing us by a lurking desire towards the very ends
we dread—Hetty, when she set out again from Norton, asked the
straightest road northwards towards Stonyshire, and kept it all that day.</p>
<p>Poor wandering Hetty, with the rounded childish face and the hard,
unloving, despairing soul looking out of it—with the narrow heart
and narrow thoughts, no room in them for any sorrows but her own, and
tasting that sorrow with the more intense bitterness! My heart bleeds for
her as I see her toiling along on her weary feet, or seated in a cart,
with her eyes fixed vacantly on the road before her, never thinking or
caring whither it tends, till hunger comes and makes her desire that a
village may be near.</p>
<p>What will be the end, the end of her objectless wandering, apart from all
love, caring for human beings only through her pride, clinging to life
only as the hunted wounded brute clings to it?</p>
<p>God preserve you and me from being the beginners of such misery!</p>
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