'You will do better by speaking for yourself.'

'Very well. Now, Marian, remember--nothing about HIM if I get the

place. I don't wish to bring his name down to the dirt.'

Marian, who was really a trustworthy girl though of coarser grain

than Tess, promised anything she asked.

'This is pay-night,' she said, 'and if you were to come with me you

would know at once. I be real sorry that you are not happy; but 'tis

because he's away, I know. You couldn't be unhappy if he were here,

even if he gie'd ye no money--even if he used you like a drudge.'

'That's true; I could not!'

They walked on together and soon reached the farmhouse, which was

almost sublime in its dreariness. There was not a tree within sight;

there was not, at this season, a green pasture--nothing but fallow

and turnips everywhere, in large fields divided by hedges plashed to

unrelieved levels.

Tess waited outside the door of the farmhouse till the group of

workfolk had received their wages, and then Marian introduced her.

The farmer himself, it appeared, was not at home, but his wife, who

represented him this evening, made no objection to hiring Tess, on

her agreeing to remain till Old Lady-Day. Female field-labour was

seldom offered now, and its cheapness made it profitable for tasks

which women could perform as readily as men.

Having signed the agreement, there was nothing more for Tess to do

at present than to get a lodging, and she found one in the house at

whose gable-wall she had warmed herself. It was a poor subsistence

that she had ensured, but it would afford a shelter for the winter

at any rate.

That night she wrote to inform her parents of her new address, in

case a letter should arrive at Marlott from her husband. But she

did not tell them of the sorriness of her situation: it might have

brought reproach upon him.

XLIII

There was no exaggeration in Marian's definition of Flintcomb-Ash

farm as a starve-acre place. The single fat thing on the soil was

Marian herself; and she was an importation. Of the three classes of

village, the village cared for by its lord, the village cared for by

itself, and the village uncared for either by itself or by its lord

(in other words, the village of a resident squires's tenantry, the

village of free- or copy-holders, and the absentee-owner's village,

farmed with the land) this place, Flintcomb-Ash, was the third.

But Tess set to work. Patience, that blending of moral courage with

physical timidity, was now no longer a minor feature in Mrs Angel

Clare; and it sustained her.

The swede-field in which she and her companion were set hacking was

a stretch of a hundred odd acres in one patch, on the highest ground

of the farm, rising above stony lanchets or lynchets--the outcrop of

siliceous veins in the chalk formation, composed of myriads of loose

white flints in bulbous, cusped, and phallic shapes. The upper half

of each turnip had been eaten off by the live-stock, and it was the

business of the two women to grub up the lower or earthy half of the

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