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<h2> IV. At the Schoolhouse Window </h2>
<p>ONE DAY I reached the schoolhouse very late, owing to attendance upon the
funeral of an acquaintance and neighbor, with whose sad decline in health
I had been familiar, and whose last days both the doctor and Mrs. Todd had
tried in vain to ease. The services had taken place at one o'clock, and
now, at quarter past two, I stood at the schoolhouse window, looking down
at the procession as it went along the lower road close to the shore. It
was a walking funeral, and even at that distance I could recognize most of
the mourners as they went their solemn way. Mrs. Begg had been very much
respected, and there was a large company of friends following to her
grave. She had been brought up on one of the neighboring farms, and each
of the few times that I had seen her she professed great dissatisfaction
with town life. The people lived too close together for her liking, at the
Landing, and she could not get used to the constant sound of the sea. She
had lived to lament three seafaring husbands, and her house was decorated
with West Indian curiosities, specimens of conch shells and fine coral
which they had brought home from their voyages in lumber-laden ships. Mrs.
Todd had told me all our neighbor's history. They had been girls together,
and, to use her own phrase, had "both seen trouble till they knew the best
and worst on 't." I could see the sorrowful, large figure of Mrs. Todd as
I stood at the window. She made a break in the procession by walking
slowly and keeping the after-part of it back. She held a handkerchief to
her eyes, and I knew, with a pang of sympathy, that hers was not affected
grief.</p>
<p>Beside her, after much difficulty, I recognized the one strange and
unrelated person in all the company, an old man who had always been
mysterious to me. I could see his thin, bending figure. He wore a narrow,
long-tailed coat and walked with a stick, and had the same "cant to
leeward" as the wind-bent trees on the height above.</p>
<p>This was Captain Littlepage, whom I had seen only once or twice before,
sitting pale and old behind a closed window; never out of doors until now.
Mrs. Todd always shook her head gravely when I asked a question, and said
that he wasn't what he had been once, and seemed to class him with her
other secrets. He might have belonged with a simple which grew in a
certain slug-haunted corner of the garden, whose use she could never be
betrayed into telling me, though I saw her cutting the tops by moonlight
once, as if it were a charm, and not a medicine, like the great fading
bloodroot leaves.</p>
<p>I could see that she was trying to keep pace with the old captain's
lighter steps. He looked like an aged grasshopper of some strange human
variety. Behind this pair was a short, impatient, little person, who kept
the captain's house, and gave it what Mrs. Todd and others believed to be
no proper sort of care. She was usually called "that Mari' Harris" in
subdued conversation between intimates, but they treated her with anxious
civility when they met her face to face.</p>
<p>The bay-sheltered islands and the great sea beyond stretched away to the
far horizon southward and eastward; the little procession in the
foreground looked futile and helpless on the edge of the rocky shore. It
was a glorious day early in July, with a clear, high sky; there were no
clouds, there was no noise of the sea. The song sparrows sang and sang, as
if with joyous knowledge of immortality, and contempt for those who could
so pettily concern themselves with death. I stood watching until the
funeral procession had crept round a shoulder of the slope below and
disappeared from the great landscape as if it had gone into a cave.</p>
<p>An hour later I was busy at my work. Now and then a bee blundered in and
took me for an enemy; but there was a useful stick upon the teacher's
desk, and I rapped to call the bees to order as if they were unruly
scholars, or waved them away from their riots over the ink, which I had
bought at the Landing store, and discovered to be scented with bergamot,
as if to refresh the labors of anxious scribes. One anxious scribe felt
very dull that day; a sheep-bell tinkled near by, and called her wandering
wits after it. The sentences failed to catch these lovely summer cadences.
For the first time I began to wish for a companion and for news from the
outer world, which had been, half unconsciously, forgotten. Watching the
funeral gave one a sort of pain. I began to wonder if I ought not to have
walked with the rest, instead of hurrying away at the end of the services.
Perhaps the Sunday gown I had put on for the occasion was making this
disastrous change of feeling, but I had now made myself and my friends
remember that I did not really belong to Dunnet Landing.</p>
<p>I sighed, and turned to the half-written page again.</p>
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