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'One day,' the
registrar continued, 'Georgy was ambling out of Melchester on a
miserable screw, the fair being just over, when he saw in front of
him a fine-looking, young farmer riding out of the town in the same
direction. He was mounted on a good strong handsome animal, worth
fifty guineas if worth a crown. When they were going up Bissett
Hill, Georgy made it his business to overtake the young farmer.
They passed the time o' day to one another; Georgy spoke of the
state of the roads, and jogged alongside the well-mounted stranger
in very friendly conversation. The farmer had not been inclined to
say much to Georgy at first, but by degrees he grew quite affable
too – as friendly as Georgy was toward him. He told Crookhill that
he had been doing business at Melchester fair, and was going on as
far as Shottsford-Forum that night, so as to reach Casterbridge
market the next day. When they came to WoodyatesInn they stopped to
bait their horses, and agreed to drink together; with this they got
more friendly than ever, and on they went again. Before they had
nearly reached Shottsford it came on to rain, and as they were now
passing through the village of Trantridge, and it was quite dark,
Georgy persuaded the young farmer to go no further that night; the
rain would most likely give them a chill. For his part he had heard
that the little inn here was comfortable, and he meant to stay. At
last the young farmer agreed to put up there also; and they
dismounted, and entered, and had a good supper together, and talked
over their affairs like men who had known and proved each other a
long time. When it was the hour for retiring they went upstairs to
a double-bedded room which GeorgyCrookhill had asked the landlord
to let them share, so sociable were they.
'Before they fell asleep they talked across the room, about one
thing and another, running from this to that till the conversation
turned upon disguises, and changing clothes for particular ends.
The farmer told Georgy that he had often heard tales of people
doing it; but Crookhill professed to be very ignorant of all such
tricks; and soon the young farmer sank into slumber.
'Early in the morning, while the tall young farmer was still asleep
(I tell the story as 'twas told me), honest Georgy crept out of his
bed by stealth, and dressed himself in the farmer's clothes, in the
pockets of the said clothes being the farmer's money. Now though
Georgy particularly wanted the farmer's nice clothes and nice
horse, owing to a little transaction at the fair which made it
desirable that he should not be too easily recognized, his desires
had their bounds: he did not wish to take his young friend's money,
at any rate more of it than was necessary for paying his bill. This
he abstracted, and leaving the farmer's purse containing the rest
on the bedroom table, went downstairs. The inn folks had not
particularly noticed the faces of their customers, and the one or
two who were up at this hour had no thought but that Georgy was the
farmer; so when he had paid the bill very liberally, and said he
must be off, no objection was made to his getting the farmer's
horse saddled for himself; and he rode away upon it as if it were
his own.
'About half an hour after the young farmer awoke, and looking
across the room saw that his friend Georgy had gone away in clothes
which didn't belong to him, and had kindly left for himself the
seedy ones worn by Georgy. At this he sat up in a deep thought for
some time, instead of hastening to give an alarm. "The money, the
money is gone," he said to himself, "and that's bad. But so are the
clothes."
'He then looked upon the table and saw that the money, or most of
it, had been left behind.
' "Ha, ha, ha!" he cried, and began to dance about the room. "Ha,
ha, ha!" he said again, and made beautiful smiles to himself in the
shaving glass and in the brass candlestick; and then swung about
his arms for all the world as if he were going through the sword
exercise.
'When he had dressed himself in Georgy's clothes and gone
downstairs, he did not seem to mind at all that they took him for
the other; and even when he saw that he had been left a bad horse
for a good one, he was not inclined to cry out. They told him his
friend had paid the bill, at which he seemed much pleased, and
without waiting for breakfast he mounted Georgy’s horse and rode
away likewise, choosing the nearest by-lane in preference to the
high-road, without knowing that Georgy had chosen that by-lane
also.
'He had not trotted more than two miles in the personal character
of GeorgyCrookhill when, suddenly rounding a bend that the lane
made thereabout, he came upon a man struggling in the hands of two
village constables. It was his friend Georgy, the borrower of his
clothes and horse. But so far was the young farmer from showing any
alacrity in rushing forward to claim his property that he would
have turned the poor beast he rode into the wood adjoining, if he
had not been already perceived.
' "Help, help, help!" cried the constables. "Assistance in the name
of the Crown!"
'The young farmer could do nothing but ride forward. "What's the
matter?" he inquired, as coolly as he could.
' "A deserter – a deserter!" said they. "One who's to be tried by
court martial and shot without parley. He deserted from the
Dragoons at Cheltenham some days ago, and was tracked; but the
search-party can't find him anywhere, and we told 'em if we met him
we'd hand him on to 'em forthwith. The day after he left the
barracks the rascal met a respectable farmer and made him drunk at
an inn, and told him what a fine soldier he would make, and coaxed
him to change clothes, to see how well a military uniform would
become him. This the simple farmer did; when our deserter said that
for a joke he would leave the room and go to the landlady, to see
if she would know him in that dress. He never came back, and Farmer
Jollice found himself in soldier's clothes, the money in his
pockets gone, and, when he got to the stable, his horse gone too."
' "A scoundrel!" says the young man in Georgy's clothes. "And is
this the wretched caitiff?" (pointing to Georgy).
' "No, no!" cries Georgy, as innocent as a babe of this matter of
the soldier's desertion. "He's the man! He was wearing Farmer
Jollice’s suit o'clothes, and he slept in the same room wi' me, and
brought up the subject of changing clothes, which put it into my
head to dress myself in his suit before he was awake. He's got on
mine!"
' "D'ye hear the villain?" groans the tall young man to the
constables. "Trying to get out of his crime by charging the first
innocent man with it that he sees! No, master soldier – that won't
do!"
' "No, no! That won't do!" the constables chimed in. "To have the
impudence to say such as that, when we caught him in the act
almost! But, thank God, we've got the handcuffs on him at last."
' "We have, thank God," said the tall young man. "Well, I must move
on. Good luck to ye with your prisoner! " And off he went, as fast
as his poor jade would carry him.
'The constables then, with Georgy handcuffed between 'em, and
leading the horse, marched off in the other direction, toward the
village where they had been accosted by the escort of soldiers sent
to bring the deserter back, Georgy groaning: "I shall be shot, I
shall be shot!" They had not gone more than a mile before they met
them.
' "Hoi, there!" says the head constable.
' "Hoi, yerself! says the corporal in charge.
' "We've got your man, says the constable.
' "Where? " says the corporal.
' "Here, between us," said the constable. "Only you don't recognize
him out o' uniform."
'The corporal looked at Georgy hard enough; then shook his head and
said he was not the absconder.
' "But the absconder changed clothes with Farmer Jollice, and took
his horse; and this man has em, d'ye see!"
' " 'Tis not our man," said the soldiers. He's a tall young fellow
with a mole on his right cheek, and a military bearing, which this
man decidedly has not."
' "I told the two officers of justice that 'twas the other!"
pleaded Georgy. "But they wouldn't believe me."
'And so it became clear that the missing dragoon was the tall young
farmer, and not GeorgyCrookhill – a fact which Farmer Jollice
himself corroborated when he arrived on the scene. As Georgy had
only robbed the robber, his sentence was comparatively light. The
deserter from the Dragoons was never traced: his double shift of
clothing having been of the greatest advantage to him in getting
off; though he left Georgy's horse behind him a few miles ahead,
having found the poor creature more hindrance than aid.
The man from abroad seemed to be less interested in the
questionable characters of Longpuddle and their strange adventures
than in the ordinary inhabitants and the ordinary events, though
his local fellow-travellers preferred the former as subjects of
discussion. He now for the first time asked concerning young
persons of the opposite sex – or rather those who had been young
when he left his native land. His informants, adhering to their own
opinion that the remarkable was better worth telling than the
ordinary, would not allow him to dwell upon the simple chronicles
of those who had merely come and gone. They asked him if he
remembered NettySargent.
'NettySargent – I do, just remember her. She was a young woman
living with her uncle when I left, if my childish recollection may
be trusted.'
'That was the maid. She was a oneyer, if you like, sir. Not any
harm in her, you know, but up to everything. You ought to hear how
she got the copyhold of her house extended. Oughtn't he, Mr. Day?'
'He ought, replied the world-ignored old painter.
'Tell him, Mr. Day. Nobody can do it better than you, and you know
the legal part better than some of us.'
Day apologized, and began: –