Forty Two: Far From The Madding Crowd: Thomas Hardy - Joseph & His Burden: Buck's Head
A wall bounded the site of Casterbridge Union House. A long portion of the site was unwalled at the end. Here stood a gable, and it was covered by ivy, and a small door stood beyond the expanse of dark green leaves. The sill of the door was three or four feet above the ground. The ruts on the ground beneath indicated that the door was meant for vehicles carrying goods and passengers; it was not for pedestrians. The entry and exit by the door was only at rare intervals: tufts of grass were growing undisturbed in the chinks of the sill. The clock on the tower of St George's Church pointed at three minutes to three, and a blue spring wagon, picked out with red [1] containing boughs and flowers turned from the highroad and halted on this side of the gable. The chimes were yet stammering out a shattered form of Malbrook [2]; Joseph Poorgrass rang the bell, and received direction to back his wagon against the high door under the gable. The door then opened, and a plain elm coffin ...