The Mayor of Casterbridge eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 438 pages of information about The Mayor of Casterbridge.

The Mayor of Casterbridge eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 438 pages of information about The Mayor of Casterbridge.

He repeated these things a hundred times a day.  During the whole period of his acquaintance with Lucetta he had never wished to claim her as his own so desperately as he now regretted her loss.  It was no mercenary hankering after her fortune that moved him, though that fortune had been the means of making her so much the more desired by giving her the air of independence and sauciness which attracts men of his composition.  It had given her servants, house, and fine clothing—­a setting that invested Lucetta with a startling novelty in the eyes of him who had known her in her narrow days.

He accordingly lapsed into moodiness, and at every allusion to the possibility of Farfrae’s near election to the municipal chair his former hatred of the Scotchman returned.  Concurrently with this he underwent a moral change.  It resulted in his significantly saying every now and then, in tones of recklessness, “Only a fortnight more!”—­“Only a dozen days!” and so forth, lessening his figures day by day.

“Why d’ye say only a dozen days?” asked Solomon Longways as he worked beside Henchard in the granary weighing oats.

“Because in twelve days I shall be released from my oath.”

“What oath?”

“The oath to drink no spirituous liquid.  In twelve days it will be twenty-one years since I swore it, and then I mean to enjoy myself, please God!”

Elizabeth-Jane sat at her window one Sunday, and while there she heard in the street below a conversation which introduced Henchard’s name.  She was wondering what was the matter, when a third person who was passing by asked the question in her mind.

“Michael Henchard have busted out drinking after taking nothing for twenty-one years!”

Elizabeth-Jane jumped up, put on her things, and went out.

33.

At this date there prevailed in Casterbridge a convivial custom—­scarcely recognized as such, yet none the less established.  On the afternoon of every Sunday a large contingent of the Casterbridge journeymen—­steady churchgoers and sedate characters—­having attended service, filed from the church doors across the way to the Three Mariners Inn.  The rear was usually brought up by the choir, with their bass-viols, fiddles, and flutes under their arms.

The great point, the point of honour, on these sacred occasions was for each man to strictly limit himself to half-a-pint of liquor.  This scrupulosity was so well understood by the landlord that the whole company was served in cups of that measure.  They were all exactly alike—­straight-sided, with two leafless lime-trees done in eel-brown on the sides—­one towards the drinker’s lips, the other confronting his comrade.  To wonder how many of these cups the landlord possessed altogether was a favourite exercise of children in the marvellous.  Forty at least might have been seen at these times in the large room, forming a ring round the margin of the great sixteen-legged oak table, like the monolithic circle of Stonehenge in its pristine days.  Outside and above the forty cups came a circle of forty smoke-jets from forty clay pipes; outside the pipes the countenances of the forty church-goers, supported at the back by a circle of forty chairs.

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The Mayor of Casterbridge from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.