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V. Captain Littlepage IT was a long
time after this; an hour was very long in that coast town where nothing stole
away the shortest minute. I had lost myself completely in work, when I heard
footsteps outside. There was a steep footpath between the upper and the lower
road, which I climbed to shorten the way, as the children had taught me, but I
believed that Mrs. Todd would find it inaccessible, unless she had occasion to
seek me in great haste. I wrote on, feeling like a besieged miser of time,
while the footsteps came nearer, and the sheep-bell tinkled away in haste as if
someone had shaken a stick in its wearer's face. Then I looked, and saw Captain
Littlepage passing the nearest window; the next moment he tapped politely at
the door. "Come
in, sir," I said, rising to meet him; and he entered, bowing with much
courtesy. I stepped down from the desk and offered him a chair by the window,
where he seated himself at once, being sadly spent by his climb. I returned to
my fixed seat behind the teacher's desk, which gave him the lower place of a
scholar. "You
ought to have the place of honor, Captain Littlepage," I said. "A
happy, rural seat of various views," he quoted, as
he gazed out into the sunshine and up the long wooded shore. Then he glanced at
me, and looked all about him as pleased as a child. "My
quotation was from Paradise Lost: the greatest of poems, I suppose you
know?" and I nodded. "There's nothing that ranks, to my mind, with
Paradise Lost; it's all lofty, all lofty," he continued. "Shakespeare
was a great poet; he copied life, but you have to put up with a great deal of
low talk." I now
remembered that Mrs. Todd had told me one day that Captain Littlepage had
overset his mind with too much reading; she had also made dark reference to his
having "spells" of some unexplainable nature. I could not help
wondering what errand had brought him out in search of me. There was something
quite charming in his appearance: it was a face thin and delicate with
refinement, but worn into appealing lines, as if he had suffered from
loneliness and misapprehension. He looked, with his careful precision of dress,
as if he were the object of cherishing care on the part of elderly unmarried
sisters, but I knew Mari' Harris to be a very common-place, inelegant person,
who would have no such standards; it was plain that the captain was his own
attentive valet. He sat looking at me expectantly. I could not help thinking
that, with his queer head and length of thinness, he was made to hop along the
road of life rather than to walk. The captain was very grave indeed, and I bade
my inward spirit keep close to discretion. "Poor
Mrs. Begg has gone," I ventured to say. I still wore my Sunday gown by way
of showing respect. "She has
gone," said the captain, — "very easy at the last, I was informed;
she slipped away as if she were glad of the opportunity." I thought of
the Countess of Carberry, and felt that history repeated itself. "She was
one of the old stock," continued Captain Littlepage, with touching
sincerity. "She was very much looked up to in this town, and will be
missed." I wondered,
as I looked at him, if he had sprung from a line of ministers; he had the
refinement of look and air of command which are the heritage of the old
ecclesiastical families of New England. But as Darwin says in his
autobiography, "there is no such king as a sea-captain; he is greater even
than a king or a schoolmaster!" Captain
Littlepage moved his chair out of the wake of the sunshine, and still sat
looking at me. I began to be very eager to know upon what errand he had come. "It may
be found out some o' these days," he said earnestly. "We may know it
all, the next step; where Mrs. Begg is now, for instance. Certainty, not
conjecture, is what we all desire." "I
suppose we shall know it all some day," said I. "We
shall know it while yet below," insisted the captain, with a flush of
impatience on his thin cheeks. "We have not looked for truth in the right
direction. I know what I speak of; those who have laughed at me little know how
much reason my ideas are based upon." He waved his hand toward the village
below. "In that handful of houses they fancy that they comprehend the
universe." I smiled, and
waited for him to go on. "I am an
old man, as you can see," he continued, "and I have been a shipmaster
the greater part of my life, — forty-three years in all. You may not think it,
but I am above eighty years of age." He did not
look so old, and I hastened to say so. "You
must have left the sea a good many years ago, then, Captain Littlepage?" I
said. "I
should have been serviceable at least five or six years more," he answered.
"My acquaintance with certain — my experience upon a certain occasion, I
might say, gave rise to prejudice. I do not mind telling you that I chanced to
learn of one of the greatest discoveries that man has ever made." Now we were
approaching dangerous ground, but a sudden sense of his sufferings at the hands
of the ignorant came to my help, and I asked to hear more with all the
deference I really felt. A swallow flew into the schoolhouse at this moment as
if a kingbird were after it, and beat itself against the walls for a minute,
and escaped again to the open air; but Captain Littlepage took no notice
whatever of the flurry. "I had a
valuable cargo of general merchandise from the London docks to Fort Churchill,
a station of the old company on Hudson's Bay," said the captain earnestly.
"We were delayed in lading, and baffled by head winds and a heavy tumbling
sea all the way north-about and across. Then the fog kept us off the coast; and
when I made port at last, it was too late to delay in those northern waters
with such a vessel and such a crew as I had. They cared for nothing, and idled
me into a fit of sickness; but my first mate was a good, excellent man, with no
more idea of being frozen in there until spring than I had, so we made what
speed we could to get clear of Hudson's Bay and off the coast. I owned an
eighth of the vessel, and he owned a sixteenth of her. She was a full-rigged
ship, called the Minerva, but she was getting old and leaky. I meant it should
be my last v'y'ge in her, and so it proved. She had been an excellent vessel in
her day. Of the cowards aboard her I can't say so much." "Then
you were wrecked?" I asked, as he made a long pause. "I
wa'n't caught astern o' the lighter by any fault of mine," said the
captain gloomily. "We left Fort Churchill and run out into the Bay with a
light pair o' heels; but I had been vexed to death with their red-tape rigging
at the company's office, and chilled with stayin' on deck an' tryin' to hurry
up things, and when we were well out o' sight o' land, headin' for Hudson's
Straits, I had a bad turn o' some sort o' fever, and had to stay below. The
days were getting short, and we made good runs, all well on board but me, and
the crew done their work by dint of hard driving." I began to
find this unexpected narrative a little dull. Captain Littlepage spoke with a
kind of slow correctness that lacked the longshore high flavor to which I had
grown used; but I listened respectfully while he explained the winds having
become contrary, and talked on in a dreary sort of way about his voyage, the
bad weather, and the disadvantages he was under in the lightness of his ship,
which bounced about like a chip in a bucket, and would not answer the rudder or
properly respond to the most careful setting of sails. "So
there we were blowin' along anyways," he complained; but looking at me at
this moment, and seeing that my thoughts were unkindly wandering, he ceased to
speak. "It was
a hard life at sea in those days, I am sure," said I, with redoubled
interest. "It was
a dog's life," said the poor old gentleman, quite reassured, "but it
made men of those who followed it. I see a change for the worse even in our own
town here; full of loafers now, small and poor as 'tis, who once would have
followed the sea, every lazy soul of 'em. There is no occupation so fit for
just that class o' men who never get beyond the fo'cas'le. I view it, in
addition, that a community narrows down and grows dreadful ignorant when it is
shut up to its own affairs, and gets no knowledge of the outside world except
from a cheap, unprincipled newspaper. In the old days, a good part o' the best
men here knew a hundred ports and something of the way folks lived in them.
They saw the world for themselves, and like's not their wives and children saw
it with them. They may not have had the best of knowledge to carry with 'em
sight-seein', but they were some acquainted with foreign lands an' their laws,
an' could see outside the battle for town clerk here in Dunnet; they got some
sense o' proportion. Yes, they lived more dignified, and their houses were
better within an' without. Shipping's a terrible loss to this part o' New
England from a social point o' view, ma'am." "I have
thought of that myself," I returned, with my interest quite awakened.
"It accounts for the change in a great many things, — the sad
disappearance of sea-captains, — doesn't it?" "A
shipmaster was apt to get the habit of reading," said my companion,
brightening still more, and taking on a most touching air of unreserve. "A
captain is not expected to be familiar with his crew, and for company's sake in
dull days and nights he turns to his book. Most of us old shipmasters came to
know 'most everything about something; one would take to readin' on farming
topics, and some were great on medicine, — but Lord help their poor crews! — or
some were all for history, and now and then there'd be one like me that gave
his time to the poets. I was well acquainted with a shipmaster that was all for
bees an' beekeepin'; and if you met him in port and went aboard, he'd sit and
talk a terrible while about their havin' so much information, and the money
that could be made out of keepin' 'em. He was one of the smartest captains that
ever sailed the seas, but they used to call the Newcastle, a great bark he
commanded for many years, Tuttle's beehive. There was old Cap'n Jameson: he had
notions of Solomon's Temple, and made a very handsome little model of the same,
right from the Scripture measurements, same's other sailors make little ships
and design new tricks of rigging and all that. No, there's nothing to take the
place of shipping in a place like ours. These bicycles offend me dreadfully;
they don't afford no real opportunities of experience such as a man gained on a
voyage. No: when folks left home in the old days they left it to some purpose,
and when they got home they stayed there and had some pride in it. There's no
large-minded way of thinking now: the worst have got to be best and rule
everything; we're all turned upside down and going back year by year." "Oh no,
Captain Littlepage, I hope not," said I, trying to soothe his feelings. There was a silence in the schoolhouse, but we could hear the noise of the water on a beach below. It sounded like the strange warning wave that gives notice of the turn of the tide. A late golden robin, with the most joyful and eager of voices, was singing close by in a thicket of wild roses. |