She soon found that whistling to the bullfinches in
Mrs d’Urberville’s room was no such onerous
business when she had regained the art, for she had
caught from her musical mother numerous airs that
suited those songsters admirably. A far more
satisfactory time than when she practised in the garden
was this whistling by the cages each morning.
Unrestrained by the young man’s presence she
threw up her mouth, put her lips near the bars, and
piped away in easeful grace to the attentive listeners.
Mrs d’Urberville slept in a large four-post
bedstead hung with heavy damask curtains, and the
bullfinches occupied the same apartment, where they
flitted about freely at certain hours, and made little
white spots on the furniture and upholstery.
Once while Tess was at the window where the cages
were ranged, giving her lesson as usual, she thought
she heard a rustling behind the bed. The old
lady was not present, and turning round the girl had
an impression that the toes of a pair of boots were
visible below the fringe of the curtains. Thereupon
her whistling became so disjointed that the listener,
if such there were, must have discovered her suspicion
of his presence. She searched the curtains every
morning after that, but never found anybody within
them. Alec d’Urberville had evidently
thought better of his freak to terrify her by an ambush
of that kind.
X
Every village has its idiosyncrasy, its constitution,
often its own code of morality. The levity of
some of the younger women in and about Trantridge
was marked, and was perhaps symptomatic of the choice
spirit who ruled The Slopes in that vicinity.
The place had also a more abiding defect; it drank
hard. The staple conversation on the farms around
was on the uselessness of saving money; and smock-frocked
arithmeticians, leaning on their ploughs or hoes, would
enter into calculations of great nicety to prove that
parish relief was a fuller provision for a man in
his old age than any which could result from savings
out of their wages during a whole lifetime.
The chief pleasure of these philosophers lay in going
every Saturday night, when work was done, to Chaseborough,
a decayed market-town two or three miles distant;
and, returning in the small hours of the next morning,
to spend Sunday in sleeping off the dyspeptic effects
of the curious compounds sold to them as beer by the
monopolizers of the once-independent inns.
For a long time Tess did not join in the weekly pilgrimages.
But under pressure from matrons not much older than
herself—for a field-man’s wages being
as high at twenty-one as at forty, marriage was early
here—Tess at length consented to go.
Her first experience of the journey afforded her
more enjoyment than she had expected, the hilariousness
of the others being quite contagious after her monotonous
attention to the poultry-farm all the week. She
went again and again. Being graceful and interesting,
standing moreover on the momentary threshold of womanhood,
her appearance drew down upon her some sly regards
from loungers in the streets of Chaseborough; hence,
though sometimes her journey to the town was made independently,
she always searched for her fellows at nightfall,
to have the protection of their companionship homeward.