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<h2> XV. On Shell-heap Island </h2>
<p>SOME TIME AFTER Mrs. Fosdick's visit was over and we had returned to our
former quietness, I was out sailing alone with Captain Bowden in his large
boat. We were taking the crooked northeasterly channel seaward, and were
well out from shore while it was still early in the afternoon. I found
myself presently among some unfamiliar islands, and suddenly remembered
the story of poor Joanna. There is something in the fact of a hermitage
that cannot fail to touch the imagination; the recluses are a sad kindred,
but they are never commonplace. Mrs. Todd had truly said that Joanna was
like one of the saints in the desert; the loneliness of sorrow will
forever keep alive their sad succession.</p>
<p>"Where is Shell-heap Island?" I asked eagerly.</p>
<p>"You see Shell-heap now, layin' 'way out beyond Black Island there,"
answered the captain, pointing with outstretched arm as he stood, and
holding the rudder with his knee.</p>
<p>"I should like very much to go there," said I, and the captain, without
comment, changed his course a little more to the eastward and let the reef
out of his mainsail.</p>
<p>"I don't know's we can make an easy landin' for ye," he remarked
doubtfully. "May get your feet wet; bad place to land. Trouble is I ought
to have brought a tag-boat; but they clutch on to the water so, an' I do
love to sail free. This gre't boat gets easy bothered with anything
trailin'. 'Tain't breakin' much on the meetin'-house ledges; guess I can
fetch in to Shell-heap."</p>
<p>"How long is it since Miss Joanna Todd died?" I asked, partly by way of
explanation.</p>
<p>"Twenty-two years come September," answered the captain, after reflection.
"She died the same year as my oldest boy was born, an' the town house was
burnt over to the Port. I didn't know but you merely wanted to hunt for
some o' them Indian relics. Long's you want to see where Joanna lived—No,
'tain't breakin' over the ledges; we'll manage to fetch across the shoals
somehow, 'tis such a distance to go 'way round, and tide's a-risin'," he
ended hopefully, and we sailed steadily on, the captain speechless with
intent watching of a difficult course, until the small island with its low
whitish promontory lay in full view before us under the bright afternoon
sun.</p>
<p>The month was August, and I had seen the color of the islands change from
the fresh green of June to a sunburnt brown that made them look like
stone, except where the dark green of the spruces and fir balsam kept the
tint that even winter storms might deepen, but not fade. The few wind-bent
trees on Shell-heap Island were mostly dead and gray, but there were some
low-growing bushes, and a stripe of light green ran along just above the
shore, which I knew to be wild morning-glories. As we came close I could
see the high stone walls of a small square field, though there were no
sheep left to assail it; and below, there was a little harbor-like cove
where Captain Bowden was boldly running the great boat in to seek a
landing-place. There was a crooked channel of deep water which led close
up against the shore.</p>
<p>"There, you hold fast for'ard there, an' wait for her to lift on the wave.
You'll make a good landin' if you're smart; right on the port-hand side!"
the captain called excitedly; and I, standing ready with high ambition,
seized my chance and leaped over to the grassy bank.</p>
<p>"I'm beat if I ain't aground after all!" mourned the captain despondently.</p>
<p>But I could reach the bowsprit, and he pushed with the boat-hook, while
the wind veered round a little as if on purpose and helped with the sail;
so presently the boat was free and began to drift out from shore.</p>
<p>"Used to call this p'int Joanna's wharf privilege, but 't has worn away in
the weather since her time. I thought one or two bumps wouldn't hurt us
none,—paint's got to be renewed, anyway,—but I never thought
she'd tetch. I figured on shyin' by," the captain apologized. "She's too
gre't a boat to handle well in here; but I used to sort of shy by in
Joanna's day, an' cast a little somethin' ashore—some apples or a
couple o' pears if I had 'em—on the grass, where she'd be sure to
see."</p>
<p>I stood watching while Captain Bowden cleverly found his way back to
deeper water. "You needn't make no haste," he called to me; "I'll keep
within call. Joanna lays right up there in the far corner o' the field.
There used to be a path led to the place. I always knew her well. I was
out here to the funeral."</p>
<p>I found the path; it was touching to discover that this lonely spot was
not without its pilgrims. Later generations will know less and less of
Joanna herself, but there are paths trodden to the shrines of solitude the
world over,—the world cannot forget them, try as it may; the feet of
the young find them out because of curiosity and dim foreboding; while the
old bring hearts full of remembrance. This plain anchorite had been one of
those whom sorrow made too lonely to brave the sight of men, too timid to
front the simple world she knew, yet valiant enough to live alone with her
poor insistent human nature and the calms and passions of the sea and sky.</p>
<p>The birds were flying all about the field; they fluttered up out of the
grass at my feet as I walked along, so tame that I liked to think they
kept some happy tradition from summer to summer of the safety of nests and
good fellowship of mankind. Poor Joanna's house was gone except the stones
of its foundations, and there was little trace of her flower garden except
a single faded sprig of much-enduring French pinks, which a great bee and
a yellow butterfly were befriending together. I drank at the spring, and
thought that now and then some one would follow me from the busy,
hard-worked, and simple-thoughted countryside of the mainland, which lay
dim and dreamlike in the August haze, as Joanna must have watched it many
a day. There was the world, and here was she with eternity well begun. In
the life of each of us, I said to myself, there is a place remote and
islanded, and given to endless regret or secret happiness; we are each the
uncompanioned hermit and recluse of an hour or a day; we understand our
fellows of the cell to whatever age of history they may belong.</p>
<p>But as I stood alone on the island, in the sea-breeze, suddenly there came
a sound of distant voices; gay voices and laughter from a pleasure-boat
that was going seaward full of boys and girls. I knew, as if she had told
me, that poor Joanna must have heard the like on many and many a summer
afternoon, and must have welcomed the good cheer in spite of hopelessness
and winter weather, and all the sorrow and disappointment in the world.</p>
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