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XXII. A Dunnet Shepherdess I. EARLY one morning at Dunnet Landing, as if it
were still night, I waked, suddenly startled by a spirited conversation beneath
my window. It was not one of Mrs. Todd's morning soliloquies; she was not
addressing her plants and flowers in words of either praise or blame. Her voice
was declamatory though perfectly good-humored, while the second voice, a man's,
was of lower pitch and somewhat deprecating. The sun was just above the
sea, and struck straight across my room through a crack in the blind. It was a
strange hour for the arrival of a guest, and still too soon for the general run
of business, even in that tiny eastern haven where daybreak fisheries and early
tides must often rule the day. The man's voice suddenly
declared itself to my sleepy ears. It was Mr. William Blackett's. "Why, sister
Almiry," he protested gently, "I don't need none o' your
nostrums!" "Pick me a small
han'ful," she commanded. "No, no, a small han'ful, I said, —
o' them large pennyr'yal sprigs! I go to all the trouble an' cossetin' of 'em
just so as to have you ready to meet such occasions, an' last year, you may
remember, you never stopped here at all the day you went up country. An' the
frost come at last an' blacked it. I never saw any herb that so objected to gardin
ground; might as well try to flourish mayflowers in a common front yard. There,
you can come in now, an' set and eat what breakfast you've got patience for.
I've found everything I want, an' I'll mash 'em up an' be all ready to put 'em
on." I heard such a pleading note
of appeal as the speakers went round the corner of the house, and my curiosity
was so demanding, that I dressed in haste, and joined my friends a little
later, with two unnoticed excuses of the beauty of the morning, and the early
mail boat. William's breakfast had been slighted; he had taken his cup of tea
and merely pushed back the rest on the kitchen table. He was now sitting in a
helpless condition by the side window, with one of his sister's purple calico
aprons pinned close about his neck. Poor William was meekly submitting to being
smeared, as to his countenance, with a most pungent and unattractive lotion of
pennyroyal and other green herbs which had been hastily pounded and mixed with
cream in the little white stone mortar. I had to cast two or three
straightforward looks at William to reassure myself that he really looked happy
and expectant in spite of his melancholy circumstances, and was not being
overtaken by retribution. The brother and sister seemed to be on delightful terms
with each other for once, and there was something of cheerful anticipation in
their morning talk. I was reminded of Medea's anointing Jason before the great
episode of the iron bulls, but to-day William really could not be going up
country to see a railroad for the first time. I knew this to be one of his
great schemes, but he was not fitted to appear in public, or to front an
observing world of strangers. As I appeared he essayed to rise, but Mrs. Todd
pushed him back into the chair. "Set where you be till
it dries on," she insisted. "Land sakes, you'd think he'd get over
bein' a boy some time or 'nother, gettin' along in years as he is. An' you'd
think he'd seen full enough o' fish, but once a year he has to break loose like
this, an' travel off way up back o' the Bowden place — far out o' my beat, 't
is — an' go a trout fishin'!" Her tone of amused scorn was
so full of challenge that William changed color even under the green streaks. "I want some
change," he said, looking at me and not at her. "'T is the prettiest
little shady brook you ever saw." "If he ever fetched
home more 'n a couple o' minnies, 't would seem worth while," Mrs. Todd
concluded, putting a last dab of the mysterious compound so perilously near her
brother's mouth that William flushed again and was silent. A little later I witnessed
his escape, when Mrs. Todd had taken the foolish risk of going down cellar.
There was a horse and wagon outside the garden fence, and presently we stood
where we could see him driving up the hill with thoughtless speed. Mr. Todd
said nothing, but watched him affectionately out of sight. "It serves to keep the
mosquitoes off," she said, and a moment later it occurred to my slow mind
that she spoke of the pennyroyal lotion. "I don't know sometimes but
William's kind of poetical," she continued, in her gentlest voice.
"You'd think if anything could cure him of it, 't would be the fish
business." It was only twenty minutes
past six on a summer morning, but we both sat down to rest as if the activities
of the day were over. Mrs. Todd rocked gently for a time, and seemed to be
lost, though not poorly, like Macbeth, in her thoughts. At last she resumed
relations with her actual surroundings. "I shall now put my lobster on.
They'll make us a good supper," she announced. "Then I can let the
fire out for all day; give it a holiday, same's William. You can have a little
one now, nice an' hot, if you ain't got all the breakfast you want. Yes, I'll
put the lobsters on. William was very thoughtful to bring 'em over; William is
thoughtful; if he only had a spark o' ambition, there be few could match
him." This unusual concession was
afforded a sympathetic listener from the depths of the kitchen closet. Mrs.
Todd was getting out her old iron lobster pot, and began to speak of prosaic
affairs. I hoped that I should hear something more about her brother and their
island life, and sat idly by the kitchen window looking at the morning glories
that shaded it, believing that some flaw of wind might set Mrs. Todd's mind on
its former course. Then it occurred to me that she had spoken about our supper
rather than our dinner, and I guessed that she might have some great scheme
before her for the day. When I had loitered for some
time and there was no further word about William, and at last I was conscious
of receiving no attention whatever, I went away. It was something of a
disappointment to find that she put no hindrance in the way of my usual morning
affairs, of going up to the empty little white schoolhouse on the hill where I
did my task of writing. I had been almost sure of a holiday when I discovered
that Mrs. Todd was likely to take one herself; we had not been far afield to
gather herbs and pleasures for many days now, but a little later she had
silently vanished. I found my luncheon ready on the table in the little entry,
wrapped in its shining old homespun napkin, and as if by way of special
consolation, there was a stone bottle of Mrs. Todd's best spruce beer, with a
long piece of cod line wound round it by which it could be lowered for coolness
into the deep schoolhouse well. I walked away with a dull
supply of writing-paper and these provisions, feeling like a reluctant child
who hopes to be called back at every step. There was no relenting voice to be
heard, and when I reached the schoolhouse, I found that I had left an open
window and a swinging shutter the day before, and the sea wind that blew at
evening had fluttered my poor sheaf of papers all about the room. So the day did not begin
very well, and I began to recognize that it was one of the days when nothing
could be done without company. The truth was that my heart had gone trouting
with William, but it would have been too selfish to say a word even to one's
self about spoiling his day. If there is one way above another of getting so
close to nature that one simply is a piece of nature, following a primeval
instinct with perfect self-forgetfulness and forgetting everything except the
dreamy consciousness of pleasant freedom, it is to take the course of a shady
trout brook. The dark pools and the sunny shallows beckon one on; the wedge of
sky between the trees on either bank, the speaking, companioning noise of the
water, the amazing importance of what one is doing, and the constant sense of
life and beauty make a strange transformation of the quick hours. I had a
sudden memory of all this, and another, and another. I could not get myself
free from "fishing and wishing." At that moment I heard the
unusual sound of wheels, and I looked past the high-growing thicket of
wild-roses and straggling sumach to see the white nose and meagre shape of the
Caplin horse; then I saw William sitting in the open wagon, with a small
expectant smile upon his face. "I've got two
lines," he said. "I was quite a piece up the road. I thought perhaps
't was so you'd feel like going." There was enough excitement
for most occasions in hearing William speak three sentences at once. Words
seemed but vain to me at that bright moment. I stepped back from the
schoolhouse window with a beating heart. The spruce-beer bottle was not yet in
the well, and with that and my luncheon, and Pleasure at the helm, I went out
into the happy world. The land breeze as blowing, and, as we turned away, I saw
a flutter of white go past the window as I left the schoolhouse and my
morning's work to their neglected fate. One seldom gave way to a
cruel impulse to look at an ancient seafaring William, but one felt as if he
were a growing boy; I only hope that he felt much the same about me. He did not
wear the fishing clothes that belonged to his sea-going life, but a strangely
shaped old suit of tea-colored linen garment that might have been brought home
years ago from Canton or Bombay. William had a peculiar way of giving silent
assent when one spoke, but of answering your unspoken thoughts as if they
reached him better than words. "I find them very easy," he said,
frankly referring to the clothes. "Father had them in his old
sea-chest." The antique fashion, a
quaint touch of foreign grace and even imagination about the cut were very
pleasing; if ever Mr. William Blackett had faintly resembled an old beau, it
was upon that day. He now appeared to feel as if everything had been explained
between us, as if everything were quite understood; and we drove for some
distance without finding it necessary to speak again about anything. At last,
when it must have been a little past nine o'clock, he stopped the horse beside
a small farmhouse, and nodded when I asked if I should get down from the wagon.
"You can steer about northeast right across the pasture," he said,
looking from under the eaves of his hat with an expectant smile. "I always
leave the team here." I helped to unfasten the
harness, and William led the horse away to the barn. It was a poor-looking
little place, and a forlorn woman looked at us through the window before she
appeared at the door. I told her that Mr. Blackett and I came up from the
Landing to go fishing. "He keeps a-comin', don't he?" she answered,
with a funny little laugh, to which I was at a loss to find answer. When he
joined us, I could not see that he took notice of her presence in any way,
except to take an armful of dried salt fish from a corded stack in the back of
the wagon which had been carefully covered with a piece of old sail. We had
left a wake of their pungent flavor behind us all the way. I wondered what was
going to become of the rest of them and some fresh lobsters which were also
disclosed to view, but he laid the present gift on the doorstep without a word,
and a few minutes later, when I looked back as we crossed the pasture, the fish
were being carried into the house. I could not see any signs of
a trout brook until I came close upon it in the bushy pasture, and presently we
struck into the low woods of straggling spruce and fir mixed into a tangle of
swamp maples and alders which stretched away on either hand up and down stream.
We found an open place in the pasture where some taller trees seemed to have
been overlooked rather than spared. The sun was bright and hot by this time,
and I sat down in the shade while William produced his lines and cut and
trimmed us each a slender rod. I wondered where Mrs. Todd was spending the
morning, and if later she would think that pirates had landed and captured me
from the schoolhouse. The brook was giving that
live, persistent call to a listener that trout brooks always make; it ran with
a free, swift current even here, where it crossed an apparently level piece of
land. I saw two unpromising, quick barbel chase each other upstream from bank to
bank as we solemnly arranged our hooks and sinkers. I felt that William's
glances changed from anxiety to relief when he found that I was used to such
gear; perhaps he felt that we must stay together if I could not bait my own
hook, but we parted happily, full of a pleasing sense of companionship. William had pointed me up
the brook, but I chose to go down, which was only fair because it was his day,
though one likes as well to follow and see where a brook goes as to find one's
way to the places it comes from, and its tiny springs and headwaters, and in
this case trout were not to be considered. William's only real anxiety was lest
I might suffer from mosquitoes. His own complexion was still strangely impaired
by its defenses, but I kept forgetting it, and looking to see if we were
treading fresh pennyroyal underfoot, so efficient was Mrs. Todd's remedy. I was
conscious, after we parted, and I turned to see if he were already fishing, and
saw him wave his hand gallantly as he went away, that our friendship had made a
great gain. The moment that I began to
fish the brook, I had a sense of its emptiness; when my bait first touched the
water and went lightly down the quick stream, I knew that there was nothing to
lie in wait for it. It is the same certainty that comes when one knocks at the
door of an empty house, a lack of answering consciousness and of possible
response; it is quite different if there is any life within. But it was a
lovely brook, and I went a long way through woods and breezy open pastures, and
found a forsaken house and overgrown farm, and laid up many pleasures for
future joy and remembrance. At the end of the morning I came back to our
meeting-place hungry and without any fish. William was already waiting, and we
did not mention the matter of trout. We ate our luncheons with good appetites,
and William brought our two stone bottles of spruce beer from the deep place in
the brook where he had left them to cool. Then we sat awhile longer in peace
and quietness on the green banks. As for William, he looked
more boyish than ever, and kept a more remote and juvenile sort of silence.
Once I wondered how he had come to be so curiously wrinkled, forgetting,
absent-mindedly, to recognize the effects of time. He did not expect any one
else to keep up a vain show of conversation, and so I was silent as well as he.
I glanced at him now and then, but I watched the leaves tossing against the sky
and the red cattle moving in the pasture. "I don't know's we need head for
home. It's early yet," he said at last, and I was as startled as if one of
the gray firs had spoken. "I guess I'll go
up-along and ask after Thankful Hight's folks," he continued.
"Mother'd like to get word;" and I nodded a pleased assent. William led the way across
the pasture, and I followed with a deep sense of pleased anticipation. I do not
believe that my companion had expected me to make any objection, but I knew
that he was gratified by the easy way that his plans for the day were being
seconded. He gave a look at the sky to see if there were any portents, but the
sky was frankly blue; even the doubtful morning haze had disappeared. We went northward along a
rough, clayey road, across a bare-looking, sunburnt country full of tiresome
long slopes where the sun was hot and bright, and I could not help observing
the forlorn look of the farms. There was a great deal of pasture, but it looked
deserted, and I wondered afresh why the people did not raise more sheep when
that seemed the only possible use to make of their land. I said so to Mr.
Blackett, who gave me a look of pleased surprise. "That's what She always
maintains," he said eagerly. "She's right about it, too; well, you'll
see!" I was glad to find myself approved, but I had not the least idea
whom he meant, and waited until he felt like speaking again. A few minutes later we drove
down a steep hill and entered a large tract of dark spruce woods. It was
delightful to be sheltered from the afternoon sun, and when we had gone some
distance in the shade, to my great pleasure William turned the horse's head toward
some bars, which he let down, and I drove through into one of those narrow,
still, sweet-scented by-ways which seem to be paths rather than roads. Often we
had to put aside the heavy drooping branches which barred the way, and once,
when a sharp twig struck William in the face, he announced with such spirit
that somebody ought to go through there with an axe, that I felt unexpectedly
guilty. So far as I now remember, this was William's only remark all the way
through the woods to Thankful Hight's folks, but from time to time he pointed
or nodded at something which I might have missed: a sleepy little owl snuggled
into the bend of a branch, or a tall stalk of cardinal flowers where the
sunlight came down at the edge of a small, bright piece of marsh. Many times,
being used to the company of Mrs. Todd and other friends who were in the habit
of talking, I came near making an idle remark to William, but I was for the
most part happily preserved; to be with him only for a short time was to live
on a different level, where thoughts served best because they were thoughts in
common; the primary effect upon our minds of the simple things and beauties
that we saw. Once when I caught sight of a lovely gay pigeon-woodpecker eyeing
us curiously from a dead branch, and instinctively turned toward William, he
gave an indulgent, comprehending nod which silenced me all the rest of the way.
The wood-road was not a place for common noisy conversation; one would
interrupt the birds and all the still little beasts that belonged there. But it
was mortifying to find how strong the habit of idle speech may become in one's
self. One need not always be saying something in this noisy world. I grew
conscious of the difference between William's usual fashion of life and mine;
for him there were long days of silence in a sea-going boat, and I could
believe that he and his mother usually spoke very little because they so
perfectly understood each other. There was something peculiarly unresponding
about their quiet island in the sea, solidly fixed into the still foundations
of the world, against whose rocky shores the sea beats and calls and is
unanswered. We were quite half an hour
going through the woods; the horse's feet made no sound on the brown, soft
track under the dark evergreens. I thought that we should come out at last into
more pastures, but there was no half-wooded strip of land at the end; the high
woods grew squarely against an old stone wall and a sunshiny open field, and we
came out suddenly into broad daylight that startled us and even startled the
horse, who might have been napping as he walked, like an old soldier. The field
sloped up to a low unpainted house that faced the east. Behind it were long,
frost-whitened ledges that made the hill, with strips of green turf and bushes
between. It was the wildest, most Titanic sort of pasture country up there;
there was a sort of daring in putting a frail wooden house before it, though it
might have the homely field and honest woods to front against. You thought of the
elements and even of possible volcanoes as you looked up the stony heights.
Suddenly I saw that a region of what I had thought gray stones was slowly
moving, as if the sun was making my eyesight unsteady. "There's the
sheep!" exclaimed William, pointing eagerly. "You see the
sheep?" and sure enough, it was a great company of woolly backs, which
seemed to have taken a mysterious protective resemblance to the ledges
themselves. I could discover but little chance for pasturage on that high
sunburnt ridge, but the sheep were moving steadily in a satisfied way as they
fed along the slopes and hollows. "I never have seen half
so many sheep as these, all summer long!" I cried with admiration. "There ain't so
many," answered William soberly. "It's a great sight. They do so well
because they 're shepherded, but you can't beat sense into some folks." "You mean that somebody
stays and watches them?" I asked. "She observed years ago
in her readin' that they don't turn out their flocks without protection
anywhere but in the State o' Maine," returned William. "First thing
that put it into her mind was a little old book mother's got; she read it one
time when she come out to the Island. They call it the' shepherd o' Salisbury
Plain.' 'T wasn't the purpose o' the book to most, but when she read it,
'There, Mis' Blackett!' she said, 'that's where we've all lacked sense; our
Bibles ought to have taught us that what sheep need is a shepherd.' You see
most folks about here gave up sheep-raisin' years ago 'count o' the dogs. So she
gave up school-teachin' and went out to tend her flock, and has shepherded ever
since, an' done well." For William, this approached
an oration. He spoke with enthusiasm, and I shared the triumph of the moment.
"There she is now!" he exclaimed, in a different tone, as the tall
figure of a woman came following the flock and stood still on the ridge,
looking toward us as if her eyes had been quick to see a strange object in the
familiar emptiness of the field. William stood up in the wagon, and I thought he
was going to call or wave his hand to her, but he sat down again more clumsily
than if the wagon had made the familiar motion of a boat, and we drove on
toward the house. It was a most solitary place
to live, — a place where one might think that a life could hide itself. The
thick woods were between the farm and the main road, and as one looked up and
down the country, there was no other house in sight. "Potatoes look
well," announced William. "The old folks used to say that there
wa'n't no better land outdoors than the Hight field." I found myself possessed of
a surprising interest in the shepherdess, who stood far away in the hill
pasture with her great flock, like a figure of Millet's, high against the sky. Everything about the old
farmhouse was clean and orderly, as if the green dooryard were not only swept,
but dusted. I saw a flock of turkeys stepping off carefully at a distance, but
there was not the usual untidy flock of hens about the place to make everything
look in disarray. William helped me out of the wagon as carefully as if I had
been his mother, and nodded toward the open door with a reassuring look at me;
but I waited until he had tied the horse and could lead the way, himself. He
took off his hat just as we were going in, and stopped for a moment to smooth
his thin gray hair with his hand, by which I saw that we had an affair of some
ceremony. We entered an old-fashioned country kitchen, the floor scrubbed into
unevenness, and the doors well polished by the touch of hands. In a large chair
facing the window there sat a masterful-looking old woman with the features of
a warlike Roman emperor, emphasized by a bonnet-like black cap with a band of
green ribbon. Her sceptre was a palmleaf fan. William crossed the room
toward her, and bent his head close to her ear. "Feelin' pretty well
to-day, Mis' Hight?" he asked, with all the voice his narrow chest could
muster. "No, I ain't, William.
Here I have to set," she answered coldly, but she gave an inquiring glance
over his shoulder at me. "This is the young lady
who is stopping with Almiry this summer," he explained, and I approached
as if to give the countersign. She offered her left hand with considerable
dignity, but her expression never seemed to change for the better. A moment
later she said that she was pleased to meet me, and I felt as if the worst were
over. William must have felt some apprehension, while I was only ignorant, as
we had come across the field. Our hostess was more than disapproving, she was
forbidding; but I was not long in suspecting that she felt the natural
resentment of a strong energy that has been defeated by illness and made the
spoil of captivity. "Mother well as usual
since you was up last year?" and William replied by a series of cheerful
nods. The mention of dear Mrs. Blackett was a help to any conversation. "Been fishin',
ashore," he explained, in a somewhat conciliatory voice. "Thought
you'd like a few for winter," which explained at once the generous freight
we had brought in the back of the wagon. I could see that the offering was no
surprise, and that Mrs. Hight was interested. "Well, I expect they
're good as the last," she said, but did not even approach a smile. She
kept a straight, discerning eye upon me. "Give the lady a
cheer," she admonished William, who hastened to place close by her side
one of the straight-backed chairs that stood against the kitchen wall. Then he
lingered for a moment like a timid boy. I could see that he wore a look of
resolve, but he did not ask the permission for which he evidently waited. "You can go search for
Esther," she said, at the end of a long pause that became anxious for both
her guests. "Esther'd like to see her;" and William in his pale
nankeens disappeared with one light step and was off. "Don't speak too loud,
it jars a person's head," directed Mrs. Hight plainly. "Clear an'
distinct is what reaches me best. Any news to the Landin'?" I was happily furnished with
the particulars of a sudden death, and an engagement of marriage between a
Caplin, a seafaring widower home from his voyage, and one of the younger
Harrises; and now Mrs. Hight really smiled and settled herself in her chair. We
exhausted one subject completely before we turned to the other. One of the
returning turkeys took an unwarrantable liberty, and, mounting the doorstep,
came in and walked about the kitchen without being observed by its strict
owner; and the tin dipper slipped off its nail behind us and made an
astonishing noise, and jar enough to reach Mrs. Hight's inner ear and make her
turn her head to look at it; but we talked straight on. We came at last to
understand each other upon such terms of friendship that she unbent her
majestic port and complained to me as any poor old woman might of the hardships
of her illness. She had already fixed various dates upon the sad certainty of
the year when she had the shock, which had left her perfectly helpless except
for a clumsy left hand which fanned and gestured, and settled and resettled the
folds of her dress, but could do no comfortable time-shortening work. "Yes 'm, you can feel
sure I use it what I can," she said severely. "'T was a long spell
before I could let Esther go forth in the mornin' till she'd got me up an'
dressed me, but now she leaves things ready overnight and I get 'em as I want
'em with my light pair o' tongs, and I feel very able about helpin' myself to
what I once did. Then when Esther returns, all she has to do is to push me out
here into the kitchen. Some parts o' the year Esther stays out all night, them
moonlight nights when the dogs are apt to be after the sheep, but she don't use
herself as hard as she once had to. She's well able to hire somebody, Esther
is, but there, you can't find no hired man that wants to git up before five
o'clock nowadays; 't ain't as 't was in my time. They 're liable to fall
asleep, too, and them moonlight nights she's so anxious she can't sleep, and
out she goes. There's a kind of a fold, she calls it, up there in a sheltered
spot, and she sleeps up in a little shed she's got, — built it herself for lambin'
time and when the poor foolish creatur's gets hurt or anything. I've never seen
it, but she says it's in a lovely spot and always pleasant in any weather. You
see off, other side of the ridge, to the south'ard, where there's houses. I
used to think some time I'd get up to see it again, and all them spots she
lives in, but I sha'n't now. I 'm beginnin' to go back; an' 't ain't
surprisin'. I've kind of got used to disappointments," and the poor soul
drew a deep sigh. It was long before we
noticed the lapse of time; I not only told every circumstance known to me of
recent events among the households of Mrs. Todd's neighborhood at the shore,
but Mrs. Hight became more and more communicative on her part, and went
carefully into the genealogical descent and personal experience of many
acquaintances, until between us we had pretty nearly circumnavigated the globe
and reached Dunnet Landing from an opposite direction to that in which we had
started. It was long before my own interest began to flag; there was a flavor
of the best sort in her definite and descriptive fashion of speech. It may be
only a fancy of my own that in the sound and value of many words, with their
lengthened vowels and doubled cadences, there is some faint survival on the
Maine coast of the sound of English speech of Chaucer's time. At last Mrs. Thankful Hight
gave a suspicious look through the window. "Where do you suppose
they be?" she asked me. "Esther must ha' been off to the far edge o'
everything. I doubt William ain't been able to find her; can't he hear their
bells? His hearin' all right?" William had heard some
herons that morning which were beyond the reach of my own ears, and almost
beyond eyesight in the upper skies, and I told her so. I was luckily preserved
by some unconscious instinct from saying that we had seen the shepherdess so
near as we crossed the field. Unless she had fled faster than Atalanta, William
must have been but a few minutes in reaching her immediate neighborhood. I now
discovered with a quick leap of amusement and delight in my heart that I had
fallen upon a serious chapter of romance. The old woman looked suspiciously at
me, and I made a dash to cover with a new piece of information; but she
listened with lofty indifference, and soon interrupted my eager statements. "Ain't William been
gone some considerable time?" she demanded, and then in a milder tone:
"The time has re'lly flown; I do enjoy havin' company. I set here alone a
sight o' long days. Sheep is dreadful fools; I expect they heard a strange step,
and set right off through bush an' brier, spite of all she could do. But
William might have the sense to return, 'stead o' searchin' about. I want to
inquire of him about his mother. What was you goin' to say? I guess you'll have
time to relate it." My powers of entertainment
were on the ebb, but I doubled my diligence and we went on for another
half-hour at least with banners flying, but still William did not reappear.
Mrs. Hight frankly began to show fatigue. "Somethin's happened,
an' he's stopped to help her," groaned the old lady, in the middle of what
I had found to tell her about a rumor of disaffection with the minister of a
town I merely knew by name in the weekly newspaper to which Mrs. Todd
subscribed. "You step to the door, dear, an' look if you can't see
'em." I promptly stepped, and once outside the house I looked anxiously in
the direction which William had taken. To my astonishment I saw all
the sheep so near that I wonder we had not been aware in the house of every
bleat and tinkle. And there, within a stone's-throw, on the first long gray
ledge that showed above the juniper, were William and the shepherdess engaged
in pleasant conversation. At first I was provoked and then amused, and a thrill
of sympathy warmed my whole heart. They had seen me and risen as if by magic; I
had a sense of being the messenger of Fate. One could almost hear their sighs
of regret as I appeared; they must have passed a lovely afternoon. I hurried
into the house with the reassuring news that they were not only in sight but
perfectly safe, with all the sheep. Mrs. Hight, like myself, was
spent with conversation, and had ceased even the one activity of fanning
herself. I brought a desired drink of water, and happily remembered some fruit
that was left from my luncheon. She revived with splendid vigor, and told me
the simple history of her later years since she had been smitten in the prime
of her life by the stroke of paralysis, and her husband had died and left her
alone with Esther and a mortgage on their farm. There was only one field of
good land, but they owned a great region of sheep pasture and a little
woodland. Esther had always been laughed at for her belief in sheep-raising
when one by one their neighbors were giving up their flocks, and when everything
had come to the point of despair she had raised all the money and bought all
the sheep she could, insisting that Maine lambs were as good as any, and that
there was a straight path by sea to Boston market. And by tending her flock
herself she had managed to succeed; she had made money enough to pay off the
mortgage five years ago, and now what they did not spend was safe in the bank.
"It has been stubborn work, day and night, summer and winter, an' now
she's beginnin' to get along in years," said the old mother sadly.
"She's tended me 'long o' the sheep, an' she's been a good girl right
along, but she ought to have been a teacher;" and Mrs. Hight sighed
heavily and plied the fan again. We heard voices, and William
and Esther entered; they did not know that it was so late in the afternoon.
William looked almost bold, and oddly like a happy young man rather than an
ancient boy. As for Esther, she might have been Jeanne d'Arc returned to her
sheep, touched with age and gray with the ashes of a great remembrance. She
wore the simple look of sainthood and unfeigned devotion. My heart was moved by
the sight of her plain sweet face, weather-worn and gentle in its looks, her
thin figure in it close dress, and the strong hand that clasped a shepherd's
staff, and I could only hold William in new reverence; this silent
farmer-fisherman who knew, and he alone, the noble and patient heart that beat
within her breast. I am not sure that they acknowledged even to themselves that
they had always been lovers; they could not consent to anything so definite or
pronounced; but they were happy in being together in the world. Esther was
untouched by the fret and fury of life; she had lived in sunshine and rain
among her silly sheep, and been refined instead of coarsened, while her
touching patience with a ramping old mother, stung by the sense of defeat and
mourning her lost activities, had given back a lovely self-possession, and
habit of sweet temper. I had seen enough of old Mrs. Hight to know that nothing
a sheep might do could vex a person who was used to the uncertainties and
severities of her companionship. Mrs. Hight told her daughter
at once that she had enjoyed a beautiful call, and got a great many new things
to think of. This was said so frankly in my hearing that it gave a
consciousness of high reward, and I was indeed recompensed by the grateful look
in Esther's eyes. We did not speak much together, but we understood each other.
For the poor old woman did not read, and could not sew or knit with her
helpless hand, and they were far from any neighbors, while her spirit was as
eager in age as in youth, and expected even more from a disappointing world.
She had lived to see the mortgage paid and money in the bank, and Esther's
success acknowledged on every hand, and there were still a few pleasures left
in life. William had his mother, and Esther had hers, and they had not seen
each other for a year, though Mrs. Hight had spoken of a year's making no
change in William even at his age. She must have been in the far eighties
herself, but of a noble courage and persistence in the world she ruled from her
stiff-backed rocking-chair. William unloaded his gift of
dried fish, each one chosen with perfect care, and Esther stood by, watching
him, and then she walked across the field with us beside the wagon. I believed
that I was the only one who knew their happy secret, and she blushed a little
as we said good-by. "I hope you ain't goin'
to feel too tired, mother's so deaf; no, I hope you won't be tired," she
said kindly, speaking as if she well knew what tiredness was. We could hear the
neglected sheep bleating on the hill in the next moment's silence. Then she
smiled at me, a smile of noble patience, of uncomprehended sacrifice, which I
can never forget. There was all the remembrance of disappointed hopes, the
hardships of winter, the loneliness of single-handedness in her look, but I
understood, and I love to remember her worn face and her young blue eyes. "Good-by,
William," she said gently, and William said good-by, and gave her a quick
glance, but he did not turn to look back, though I did, and waved my hand as she
was putting up the bars behind us. Nor did he speak again until we had passed
through the dark woods and were on our way homeward by the main road. The grave
yearly visit had been changed from a hope into a happy memory. "You can see the sea
from the top of her pasture hill," said William at last. "Can you?" I
asked, with surprise. "Yes, it's very high
land; the ledges up there show very plain in clear weather from the top of our
island, and there's a high upstandin' tree that makes a landmark for the fishin'
grounds." And William gave a happy sigh. When we had nearly reached
the Landing, my companion looked over into the back of the wagon and saw that
the piece of sailcloth was safe, with which he had covered the dried fish.
"I wish we had got some trout," he said wistfully. "They always
appease Almiry, and make her feel 't was worth while to go." I stole a glance at William Blackett. We had not seen a solitary mosquito, but there was a dark stripe across his mild face, which might have been an old scar won long ago in battle. |