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XXI. The Backward View.
AT last it
was the time of late summer, when the house was cool and damp in the morning,
and all the light seemed to come through green leaves; but at the first step
out of doors the sunshine always laid a warm hand on my shoulder, and the
clear, high sky seemed to lift quickly as I looked at it. There was no autumnal
mist on the coast, nor any August fog; instead of these, the sea, the sky, all
the long shore line and the inland hills, with every bush of bay and every
fir-top, gained a deeper color and a sharper clearness. There was something
shining in the air, and a kind of lustre on the water and the pasture grass, —
a northern look that, except at this moment of the year, one must go far to
seek. The sunshine of a northern summer was coming to its lovely end. The days were
few then at Dunnet Landing, and I let each of them slip away unwillingly as a
miser spends his coins. I wished to have one of my first weeks back again, with
those long hours when nothing happened except the growth of herbs and the course
of the sun. Once I had not even known where to go for a walk; now there were
many delightful things to be done and done again, as if I were in London. I
felt hurried and full of pleasant engagements, and the days flew by like a
handful of flowers flung to the sea wind. At last I had
to say good-by to all my Dunnet Landing friends, and my homelike place in the
little house, and return to the world in which I feared to find myself a
foreigner. There may be restrictions to such a summer's happiness, but the ease
that belongs to simplicity is charming enough to make up for whatever a simple
life may lack, and the gifts of peace are not for those who live in the thick
of battle. I was to take
the small unpunctual steamer that went down the bay in the afternoon, and I sat
for a while by my window looking out on the green herb garden, with regret for
company. Mrs. Todd had hardly spoken all day except in the briefest and most
disapproving way; it was as if we were on the edge of a quarrel. It seemed
impossible to take my departure with anything like composure. At last I heard a
footstep, and looked up to find that Mrs. Todd was standing at the door. "I've
seen to everything now," she told me in an unusually loud and
business-like voice. "Your trunks are on the w'arf by this time. Cap'n
Bowden he come and took 'em down himself, an' is going to see that they're safe
aboard. Yes, I've seen to all your 'rangements," she repeated in a gentler
tone. "These things I've left on the kitchen table you'll want to carry by
hand; the basket needn't be returned. I guess I shall walk over towards the
Port now an' inquire how old Mis' Edward Caplin is." I glanced at
my friend's face, and saw a look that touched me to the heart. I had been sorry
enough before to go away. "I guess
you'll excuse me if I ain't down there to stand around on the w'arf and see you
go," she said, still trying to be gruff. "Yes, I ought to go over and
inquire for Mis' Edward Caplin; it's her third shock, and if mother gets in on
Sunday she'll want to know just how the old lady is." With this last word
Mrs. Todd turned and left me as if with sudden thought of something she had
forgotten, so that I felt sure she was coming back, but presently I heard her
go out of the kitchen door and walk down the path toward the gate. I could not
part so; I ran after her to say good-by, but she shook her head and waved her
hand without looking back when she heard my hurrying steps, and so went away
down the street. When I went
in again the little house had suddenly grown lonely, and my room looked empty
as it had the day I came. I and all my belongings had died out of it, and I
knew how it would seem when Mrs. Todd came back and found her lodger gone. So
we die before our own eyes; so we see some chapters of our lives come to their
natural end. I found the
little packages on the kitchen table. There was a quaint West Indian basket
which I knew its owner had valued, and which I had once admired; there was an
affecting provision laid beside it for my seafaring supper, with a neatly tied
bunch of southernwood and a twig of bay, and a little old leather box which
held the coral pin that Nathan Todd brought home to give to poor Joanna. There was
still an hour to wait, and I went up the hill just above the schoolhouse and
sat there thinking of things, and looking off to sea, and watching for the boat
to come in sight. I could see Green Island, small and darkly wooded at that
distance; below me were the houses of the village with their apple-trees and
bits of garden ground. Presently, as I looked at the pastures beyond, I caught
a last glimpse of Mrs. Todd herself, walking slowly in the footpath that led
along, following the shore toward the Port. At such a distance one can feel the
large, positive qualities that control a character. Close at hand, Mrs. Todd
seemed able and warm-hearted and quite absorbed in her bustling industries, but
her distant figure looked mateless and appealing, with something about it that
was strangely self-possessed and mysterious. Now and then she stooped to pick
something, — it might have been her favorite pennyroyal, — and at last I lost
sight of her as she slowly crossed an open space on one of the higher points of
land, and disappeared again behind a dark clump of juniper and the pointed
firs. As I came
away on the little coastwise steamer, there was an old sea running which made
the surf leap high on all the rocky shores. I stood on deck, looking back, and
watched the busy gulls agree and turn, and sway together down the long slopes
of air, then separate hastily and plunge into the waves. The tide was setting
in, and plenty of small fish were coming with it, unconscious of the silver
flashing of the great birds overhead and the quickness of their fierce beaks.
The sea was full of life and spirit, the tops of the waves flew back as if they
were winged like the gulls themselves, and like them had the freedom of the
wind. Out in the main channel we passed a bent-shouldered old fisherman bound
for the evening round among his lobster traps. He was toiling along with short
oars, and the dory tossed and sank and tossed again with the steamer's waves. I
saw that it was old Elijah Tilley, and though we had so long been strangers we
had come to be warm friends, and I wished that he had waited for one of his mates,
it was such hard work to row along shore through rough seas and tend the traps
alone. As we passed I waved my hand and tried to call to him, and he looked up
and answered my farewells by a solemn nod. The little town, with the tall masts
of its disabled schooners in the inner bay, stood high above the flat sea for a
few minutes then it sank back into the uniformity of the coast, and became
indistinguishable from the other towns that looked as if they were crumbled on
the furzy-green stoniness of the shore. The small outer islands of the bay were covered among the ledges with turf that looked as fresh as the early grass; there had been some days of rain the week before, and the darker green of the sweet-fern was scattered on all the pasture heights. It looked like the beginning of summer ashore, though the sheep, round and warm in their winter wool, betrayed the season of the year as they went feeding along the slopes in the low afternoon sunshine. Presently the wind began to blow and we struck out seaward to double the long sheltering headland of the cape, and when I looked back again, the islands and the headland had run together and Dunnet Landing and all its coasts were lost to sight. |