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<h2> XX. Along Shore </h2>
<p>ONE DAY as I went along the shore beyond the old wharves and the newer,
high-stepped fabric of the steamer landing, I saw that all the boats were
beached, and the slack water period of the early afternoon prevailed.
Nothing was going on, not even the most leisurely of occupations, like
baiting trawls or mending nets, or repairing lobster pots; the very boats
seemed to be taking an afternoon nap in the sun. I could hardly discover a
distant sail as I looked seaward, except a weather-beaten lobster smack,
which seemed to have been taken for a plaything by the light airs that
blew about the bay. It drifted and turned about so aimlessly in the wide
reach off Burnt Island, that I suspected there was nobody at the wheel, or
that she might have parted her rusty anchor chain while all the crew were
asleep.</p>
<p>I watched her for a minute or two; she was the old Miranda, owned by some
of the Caplins, and I knew her by an odd shaped patch of newish duck that
was set into the peak of her dingy mainsail. Her vagaries offered such an
exciting subject for conversation that my heart rejoiced at the sound of a
hoarse voice behind me. At that moment, before I had time to answer, I saw
something large and shapeless flung from the Miranda's deck that splashed
the water high against her black side, and my companion gave a satisfied
chuckle. The old lobster smack's sail caught the breeze again at this
moment, and she moved off down the bay. Turning, I found old Elijah
Tilley, who had come softly out of his dark fish-house, as if it were a
burrow.</p>
<p>"Boy got kind o' drowsy steerin' of her; Monroe he hove him right
overboard; 'wake now fast enough," explained Mr. Tilley, and we laughed
together.</p>
<p>I was delighted, for my part, that the vicissitudes and dangers of the
Miranda, in a rocky channel, should have given me this opportunity to make
acquaintance with an old fisherman to whom I had never spoken. At first he
had seemed to be one of those evasive and uncomfortable persons who are so
suspicious of you that they make you almost suspicious of yourself. Mr.
Elijah Tilley appeared to regard a stranger with scornful indifference.
You might see him standing on the pebble beach or in a fish-house doorway,
but when you came nearer he was gone. He was one of the small company of
elderly, gaunt-shaped great fisherman whom I used to like to see leading
up a deep-laden boat by the head, as if it were a horse, from the water's
edge to the steep slope of the pebble beach. There were four of these
large old men at the Landing, who were the survivors of an earlier and
more vigorous generation. There was an alliance and understanding between
them, so close that it was apparently speechless. They gave much time to
watching one another's boats go out or come in; they lent a ready hand at
tending one another's lobster traps in rough weather; they helped to clean
the fish or to sliver porgies for the trawls, as if they were in close
partnership; and when a boat came in from deep-sea fishing they were never
too far out of the way, and hastened to help carry it ashore, two by two,
splashing alongside, or holding its steady head, as if it were a willful
sea colt. As a matter of fact no boat could help being steady and way-wise
under their instant direction and companionship. Abel's boat and Jonathan
Bowden's boat were as distinct and experienced personalities as the men
themselves, and as inexpressive. Arguments and opinions were unknown to
the conversation of these ancient friends; you would as soon have expected
to hear small talk in a company of elephants as to hear old Mr. Bowden or
Elijah Tilley and their two mates waste breath upon any form of trivial
gossip. They made brief statements to one another from time to time. As
you came to know them you wondered more and more that they should talk at
all. Speech seemed to be a light and elegant accomplishment, and their
unexpected acquaintance with its arts made them of new value to the
listener. You felt almost as if a landmark pine should suddenly address
you in regard to the weather, or a lofty-minded old camel make a remark as
you stood respectfully near him under the circus tent.</p>
<p>I often wondered a great deal about the inner life and thought of these
self-contained old fishermen; their minds seemed to be fixed upon nature
and the elements rather than upon any contrivances of man, like politics
or theology. My friend, Captain Bowden, who was the nephew of the eldest
of this group, regarded them with deference; but he did not belong to
their secret companionship, though he was neither young nor talkative.</p>
<p>"They've gone together ever since they were boys, they know most
everything about the sea amon'st them," he told me once. "They was always
just as you see 'em now since the memory of man."</p>
<p>These ancient seafarers had houses and lands not outwardly different from
other Dunnet Landing dwellings, and two of them were fathers of families,
but their true dwelling places were the sea, and the stony beach that
edged its familiar shore, and the fish-houses, where much salt brine from
the mackerel kits had soaked the very timbers into a state of brown
permanence and petrifaction. It had also affected the old fishermen's hard
complexions, until one fancied that when Death claimed them it could only
be with the aid, not of any slender modern dart, but the good serviceable
harpoon of a seventeenth century woodcut.</p>
<p>Elijah Tilley was such an evasive, discouraged-looking person,
heavy-headed, and stooping so that one could never look him in the face,
that even after his friendly exclamation about Monroe Pennell, the lobster
smack's skipper, and the sleepy boy, I did not venture at once to speak
again. Mr. Tilley was carrying a small haddock in one hand, and presently
shifted it to the other hand lest it might touch my skirt. I knew that my
company was accepted, and we walked together a little way.</p>
<p>"You mean to have a good supper," I ventured to say, by way of
friendliness.</p>
<p>"Goin' to have this 'ere haddock an' some o' my good baked potatoes; must
eat to live," responded my companion with great pleasantness and open
approval. I found that I had suddenly left the forbidding coast and come
into the smooth little harbor of friendship.</p>
<p>"You ain't never been up to my place," said the old man. "Folks don't come
now as they used to; no, 'tain't no use to ask folks now. My poor dear she
was a great hand to draw young company."</p>
<p>I remembered that Mrs. Todd had once said that this old fisherman had been
sore stricken and unconsoled at the death of his wife.</p>
<p>"I should like very much to come," said I. "Perhaps you are going to be at
home later on?"</p>
<p>Mr. Tilley agreed, by a sober nod, and went his way bent-shouldered and
with a rolling gait. There was a new patch high on the shoulder of his old
waistcoat, which corresponded to the renewing of the Miranda's mainsail
down the bay, and I wondered if his own fingers, clumsy with much deep-sea
fishing, had set it in.</p>
<p>"Was there a good catch to-day?" I asked, stopping a moment. "I didn't
happen to be on the shore when the boats came in."</p>
<p>"No; all come in pretty light," answered Mr. Tilley. "Addicks an' Bowden
they done the best; Abel an' me we had but a slim fare. We went out 'arly,
but not so 'arly as sometimes; looked like a poor mornin'. I got nine
haddick, all small, and seven fish; the rest on 'em got more fish than
haddick. Well, I don't expect they feel like bitin' every day; we l'arn to
humor 'em a little, an' let 'em have their way 'bout it. These plaguey
dog-fish kind of worry 'em." Mr. Tilley pronounced the last sentence with
much sympathy, as if he looked upon himself as a true friend of all the
haddock and codfish that lived on the fishing grounds, and so we parted.</p>
<p>Later in the afternoon I went along the beach again until I came to the
foot of Mr. Tilley's land, and found his rough track across the
cobblestones and rocks to the field edge, where there was a heavy piece of
old wreck timber, like a ship's bone, full of tree-nails. From this a
little footpath, narrow with one man's treading, led up across the small
green field that made Mr. Tilley's whole estate, except a straggling
pasture that tilted on edge up the steep hillside beyond the house and
road. I could hear the tinkle-tankle of a cow-bell somewhere among the
spruces by which the pasture was being walked over and forested from every
side; it was likely to be called the wood lot before long, but the field
was unmolested. I could not see a bush or a brier anywhere within its
walls, and hardly a stray pebble showed itself. This was most surprising
in that country of firm ledges, and scattered stones which all the walls
that industry could devise had hardly begun to clear away off the land. In
the narrow field I noticed some stout stakes, apparently planted at random
in the grass and among the hills of potatoes, but carefully painted yellow
and white to match the house, a neat sharp-edged little dwelling, which
looked strangely modern for its owner. I should have much sooner believed
that the smart young wholesale egg merchant of the Landing was its
occupant than Mr. Tilley, since a man's house is really but his larger
body, and expresses in a way his nature and character.</p>
<p>I went up the field, following the smooth little path to the side door. As
for using the front door, that was a matter of great ceremony; the long
grass grew close against the high stone step, and a snowberry bush leaned
over it, top-heavy with the weight of a morning-glory vine that had
managed to take what the fishermen might call a half hitch about the
door-knob. Elijah Tilley came to the side door to receive me; he was
knitting a blue yarn stocking without looking on, and was warmly dressed
for the season in a thick blue flannel shirt with white crockery buttons,
a faded waistcoat and trousers heavily patched at the knees. These were
not his fishing clothes. There was something delightful in the grasp of
his hand, warm and clean, as if it never touched anything but the
comfortable woolen yarn, instead of cold sea water and slippery fish.</p>
<p>"What are the painted stakes for, down in the field?" I hastened to ask,
and he came out a step or two along the path to see; and looked at the
stakes as if his attention were called to them for the first time.</p>
<p>"Folks laughed at me when I first bought this place an' come here to
live," he explained. "They said 'twa'n't no kind of a field privilege at
all; no place to raise anything, all full o' stones. I was aware 'twas
good land, an' I worked some on it—odd times when I didn't have
nothin' else on hand—till I cleared them loose stones all out. You
never see a prettier piece than 'tis now; now did ye? Well, as for them
painted marks, them's my buoys. I struck on to some heavy rocks that
didn't show none, but a plow'd be liable to ground on 'em, an' so I
ketched holt an' buoyed 'em same's you see. They don't trouble me no
more'n if they wa'n't there."</p>
<p>"You haven't been to sea for nothing," I said laughing.</p>
<p>"One trade helps another," said Elijah with an amiable smile. "Come right
in an' set down. Come in an' rest ye," he exclaimed, and led the way into
his comfortable kitchen. The sunshine poured in at the two further
windows, and a cat was curled up sound asleep on the table that stood
between them. There was a new-looking light oilcloth of a tiled pattern on
the floor, and a crockery teapot, large for a household of only one
person, stood on the bright stove. I ventured to say that somebody must be
a very good housekeeper.</p>
<p>"That's me," acknowledged the old fisherman with frankness. "There ain't
nobody here but me. I try to keep things looking right, same's poor dear
left 'em. You set down here in this chair, then you can look off an' see
the water. None on 'em thought I was goin' to get along alone, no way, but
I wa'n't goin' to have my house turned upsi' down an' all changed about;
no, not to please nobody. I was the only one knew just how she liked to
have things set, poor dear, an' I said I was goin' to make shift, and I
have made shift. I'd rather tough it out alone." And he sighed heavily, as
if to sigh were his familiar consolation.</p>
<p>We were both silent for a minute; the old man looked out the window, as if
he had forgotten I was there.</p>
<p>"You must miss her very much?" I said at last.</p>
<p>"I do miss her," he answered, and sighed again. "Folks all kep' repeatin'
that time would ease me, but I can't find it does. No, I miss her just the
same every day."</p>
<p>"How long is it since she died?" I asked.</p>
<p>"Eight year now, come the first of October. It don't seem near so long.
I've got a sister that comes and stops 'long o' me a little spell, spring
an' fall, an' odd times if I send after her. I ain't near so good a hand
to sew as I be to knit, and she's very quick to set everything to rights.
She's a married woman with a family; her son's folks lives at home, an' I
can't make no great claim on her time. But it makes me a kind o' good
excuse, when I do send, to help her a little; she ain't none too well off.
Poor dear always liked her, and we used to contrive our ways together.
'Tis full as easy to be alone. I set here an' think it all over, an' think
considerable when the weather's bad to go outside. I get so some days it
feels as if poor dear might step right back into this kitchen. I keep
a-watchin' them doors as if she might step in to ary one. Yes, ma'am, I
keep a-lookin' off an' droppin' o' my stitches; that's just how it seems.
I can't git over losin' of her no way nor no how. Yes, ma'am, that's just
how it seems to me."</p>
<p>I did not say anything, and he did not look up.</p>
<p>"I git feelin' so sometimes I have to lay everything by an' go out door.
She was a sweet pretty creatur' long's she lived," the old man added
mournfully. "There's that little rockin' chair o' her'n, I set an' notice
it an' think how strange 'tis a creatur' like her should be gone an' that
chair be here right in its old place."</p>
<p>"I wish I had known her; Mrs. Todd told me about your wife one day," I
said.</p>
<p>"You'd have liked to come and see her; all the folks did," said poor
Elijah. "She'd been so pleased to hear everything and see somebody new
that took such an int'rest. She had a kind o' gift to make it pleasant for
folks. I guess likely Almiry Todd told you she was a pretty woman,
especially in her young days; late years, too, she kep' her looks and come
to be so pleasant lookin'. There, 'tain't so much matter, I shall be done
afore a great while. No; I sha'n't trouble the fish a great sight more."</p>
<p>The old widower sat with his head bowed over his knitting, as if he were
hastily shortening the very thread of time. The minutes went slowly by. He
stopped his work and clasped his hands firmly together. I saw he had
forgotten his guest, and I kept the afternoon watch with him. At last he
looked up as if but a moment had passed of his continual loneliness.</p>
<p>"Yes, ma'am, I'm one that has seen trouble," he said, and began to knit
again.</p>
<p>The visible tribute of his careful housekeeping, and the clean bright room
which had once enshrined his wife, and now enshrined her memory, was very
moving to me; he had no thought for any one else or for any other place. I
began to see her myself in her home,—a delicate-looking, faded
little woman, who leaned upon his rough strength and affectionate heart,
who was always watching for his boat out of this very window, and who
always opened the door and welcomed him when he came home.</p>
<p>"I used to laugh at her, poor dear," said Elijah, as if he read my
thought. "I used to make light of her timid notions. She used to be
fearful when I was out in bad weather or baffled about gittin' ashore. She
used to say the time seemed long to her, but I've found out all about it
now. I used to be dreadful thoughtless when I was a young man and the fish
was bitin' well. I'd stay out late some o' them days, an' I expect she'd
watch an' watch an' lose heart a-waitin'. My heart alive! what a supper
she'd git, an' be right there watchin' from the door, with somethin' over
her head if 'twas cold, waitin' to hear all about it as I come up the
field. Lord, how I think o' all them little things!"</p>
<p>"This was what she called the best room; in this way," he said presently,
laying his knitting on the table, and leading the way across the front
entry and unlocking a door, which he threw open with an air of pride. The
best room seemed to me a much sadder and more empty place than the
kitchen; its conventionalities lacked the simple perfection of the humbler
room and failed on the side of poor ambition; it was only when one
remembered what patient saving, and what high respect for society in the
abstract go to such furnishing that the little parlor was interesting at
all. I could imagine the great day of certain purchases, the bewildering
shops of the next large town, the aspiring anxious woman, the clumsy
sea-tanned man in his best clothes, so eager to be pleased, but at ease
only when they were safe back in the sailboat again, going down the bay
with their precious freight, the hoarded money all spent and nothing to
think of but tiller and sail. I looked at the unworn carpet, the glass
vases on the mantelpiece with their prim bunches of bleached swamp grass
and dusty marsh rosemary, and I could read the history of Mrs. Tilley's
best room from its very beginning.</p>
<p>"You see for yourself what beautiful rugs she could make; now I'm going to
show you her best tea things she thought so much of," said the master of
the house, opening the door of a shallow cupboard. "That's real chiny, all
of it on those two shelves," he told me proudly. "I bought it all myself,
when we was first married, in the port of Bordeaux. There never was one
single piece of it broke until— Well, I used to say, long as she
lived, there never was a piece broke, but long at the last I noticed she'd
look kind o' distressed, an' I thought 'twas 'count o' me boastin'. When
they asked if they should use it when the folks was here to supper, time
o' her funeral, I knew she'd want to have everything nice, and I said
'certain.' Some o' the women they come runnin' to me an' called me, while
they was takin' of the chiny down, an' showed me there was one o' the cups
broke an' the pieces wropped in paper and pushed way back here, corner o'
the shelf. They didn't want me to go an' think they done it. Poor dear! I
had to put right out o' the house when I see that. I knowed in one minute
how 'twas. We'd got so used to sayin' 'twas all there just's I fetched it
home, an' so when she broke that cup somehow or 'nother she couldn't frame
no words to come an' tell me. She couldn't think 'twould vex me, 'twas her
own hurt pride. I guess there wa'n't no other secret ever lay between us."</p>
<p>The French cups with their gay sprigs of pink and blue, the best tumblers,
an old flowered bowl and tea caddy, and a japanned waiter or two adorned
the shelves. These, with a few daguerreotypes in a little square pile, had
the closet to themselves, and I was conscious of much pleasure in seeing
them. One is shown over many a house in these days where the interest may
be more complex, but not more definite.</p>
<p>"Those were her best things, poor dear," said Elijah as he locked the door
again. "She told me that last summer before she was taken away that she
couldn't think o' anything more she wanted, there was everything in the
house, an' all her rooms was furnished pretty. I was goin' over to the
Port, an' inquired for errands. I used to ask her to say what she wanted,
cost or no cost—she was a very reasonable woman, an' 'twas the place
where she done all but her extra shopping. It kind o' chilled me up when
she spoke so satisfied."</p>
<p>"You don't go out fishing after Christmas?" I asked, as we came back to
the bright kitchen.</p>
<p>"No; I take stiddy to my knitting after January sets in," said the old
seafarer. "'Tain't worth while, fish make off into deeper water an' you
can't stand no such perishin' for the sake o' what you get. I leave out a
few traps in sheltered coves an' do a little lobsterin' on fair days. The
young fellows braves it out, some on 'em; but, for me, I lay in my
winter's yarn an' set here where 'tis warm, an' knit an' take my comfort.
Mother learnt me once when I was a lad; she was a beautiful knitter
herself. I was laid up with a bad knee, an' she said 'twould take up my
time an' help her; we was a large family. They'll buy all the folks can do
down here to Addicks' store. They say our Dunnet stockin's is gettin' to
be celebrated up to Boston,—good quality o' wool an' even knittin'
or somethin'. I've always been called a pretty hand to do nettin', but
seines is master cheap to what they used to be when they was all hand
worked. I change off to nettin' long towards spring, and I piece up my
trawls and lines and get my fishin' stuff to rights. Lobster pots they
require attention, but I make 'em up in spring weather when it's warm
there in the barn. No; I ain't one o' them that likes to set an' do
nothin'."</p>
<p>"You see the rugs, poor dear did them; she wa'n't very partial to
knittin'," old Elijah went on, after he had counted his stitches. "Our
rugs is beginnin' to show wear, but I can't master none o' them womanish
tricks. My sister, she tinkers 'em up. She said last time she was here
that she guessed they'd last my time."</p>
<p>"The old ones are always the prettiest," I said.</p>
<p>"You ain't referrin' to the braided ones now?" answered Mr. Tilley. "You
see ours is braided for the most part, an' their good looks is all in the
beginnin'. Poor dear used to say they made an easier floor. I go shufflin'
round the house same's if 'twas a bo't, and I always used to be stubbin'
up the corners o' the hooked kind. Her an' me was always havin' our jokes
together same's a boy an' girl. Outsiders never'd know nothin' about it to
see us. She had nice manners with all, but to me there was nobody so
entertainin'. She'd take off anybody's natural talk winter evenin's when
we set here alone, so you'd think 'twas them a-speakin'. There, there!"</p>
<p>I saw that he had dropped a stitch again, and was snarling the blue yarn
round his clumsy fingers. He handled it and threw it off at arm's length
as if it were a cod line; and frowned impatiently, but I saw a tear
shining on his cheek.</p>
<p>I said that I must be going, it was growing late, and asked if I might
come again, and if he would take me out to the fishing grounds someday.</p>
<p>"Yes, come any time you want to," said my host, "'tain't so pleasant as
when poor dear was here. Oh, I didn't want to lose her an' she didn't want
to go, but it had to be. Such things ain't for us to say; there's no yes
an' no to it."</p>
<p>"You find Almiry Todd one o' the best o' women?" said Mr. Tilley as we
parted. He was standing in the doorway and I had started off down the
narrow green field. "No, there ain't a better hearted woman in the State
o' Maine. I've known her from a girl. She's had the best o' mothers. You
tell her I'm liable to fetch her up a couple or three nice good mackerel
early tomorrow," he said. "Now don't let it slip your mind. Poor dear, she
always thought a sight o' Almiry, and she used to remind me there was
nobody to fish for her; but I don't rec'lect it as I ought to. I see you
drop a line yourself very handy now an' then."</p>
<p>We laughed together like the best of friends, and I spoke again about the
fishing grounds, and confessed that I had no fancy for a southerly breeze
and a ground swell.</p>
<p>"Nor me neither," said the old fisherman. "Nobody likes 'em, say what they
may. Poor dear was disobliged by the mere sight of a bo't. Almiry's got
the best o' mothers, I expect you know; Mis' Blackett out to Green Island;
and we was always plannin' to go out when summer come; but there, I
couldn't pick no day's weather that seemed to suit her just right. I never
set out to worry her neither, 'twa'n't no kind o' use; she was so pleasant
we couldn't have no fret nor trouble. 'Twas never 'you dear an' you
darlin'' afore folks, an' 'you divil' behind the door!"</p>
<p>As I looked back from the lower end of the field I saw him still standing,
a lonely figure in the doorway. "Poor dear," I repeated to myself half
aloud; "I wonder where she is and what she knows of the little world she
left. I wonder what she has been doing these eight years!"</p>
<p>I gave the message about the mackerel to Mrs. Todd.</p>
<p>"Been visitin' with 'Lijah?" she asked with interest. "I expect you had
kind of a dull session; he ain't the talkin' kind; dwellin' so much long
o' fish seems to make 'em lose the gift o' speech." But when I told her
that Mr. Tilley had been talking to me that day, she interrupted me
quickly.</p>
<p>"Then 'twas all about his wife, an' he can't say nothin' too pleasant
neither. She was modest with strangers, but there ain't one o' her old
friends can ever make up her loss. For me, I don't want to go there no
more. There's some folks you miss and some folks you don't, when they're
gone, but there ain't hardly a day I don't think o' dear Sarah Tilley. She
was always right there; yes, you knew just where to find her like a plain
flower. 'Lijah's worthy enough; I do esteem 'Lijah, but he's a ploddin'
man."</p>
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