“The fields breathe sweet,
the daisies kiss our feet,
Young lovers meet, old wives a-sunning sit;
In every street these tunes our ears do greet -
Cuckoo, jug-jug, pu-wee, to-witta-woo!
Spring, the sweet Spring.”
At two o’clock on May morning
a fishing-boat, with a small row-boat in tow, stole
up the harbour between the lights of the vessels that
lay at anchor. She came on a soundless tide,
with her sprit-mainsail wide and drawing, and her
foresail flapping idle; and although her cuddy-top
and gunwale glistened wet with a recent shower, the
man who steered her looked over his shoulder at the
waning moon, and decided that the dawn would be a
fine one. A furlong below the Town Quay he left
the tiller and lowered sail: two furlongs above,
he dropped anchor: then, having made all ship-shape,
he lit a pipe and pulled an enormous watch from his
fob. The vessels he had passed since entering
the harbour’s mouth seemed one and all asleep.
But a din of horns, kettles, and tea-trays, and a
wild tattoo of door-knockers, sounded along the streets
behind the stores and houses that lined the water-side.
Already the town-boys were ushering in the month of
May.
The man waited until the half-hour
chimed over the ’long-shore roofs from the church-tower
up the hill; set his watch with care; and sat down
to wait for the sun. Upon the wooded cliff that
faces the town the birds were waking; and by-and-bye,
from the three small quays came the sound of voices
laughing, and then a boat or two stealing out of the
shadow, each crowded with boys and maids. Before
the dawn grew red above the cliff where the birds
sang, a dozen boats had gone by him on their way up
the river, the chatter and broken laughter returning
down its dim reaches long after the rowers had passed
out of sight.
For some moments longer he watched
the broadening daylight, till the sun, mounting above
the cliff, blazed on the watch he had again pulled
out and now shut with a brisk snap. His round,
shaven face, still boyish in middle age, wore the
shadow of a solemn responsibility. He clambered
out into the small boat astern, and, casting loose,
pulled towards a bright patch of colour in the grey
shore wall: a blue quay-door overhung with ivy.
The upper windows of the cottage behind it were draped
with snowy muslin, and its walls, coated with recent
whitewash, shamed its neighbours to right and left.
As the boat dropped under this blue quay-door, its upper flap
opened softly, and a voice as softly said -
“Thank you kindly, John.
And how d’ye do this May morning?”
“Charming,” the man answered
frankly. “Handsome weather ’tis, to
be sure.”
He looked up and smiled at her, like a lover.
“I needn’t to ask how
you be; for you’m looking sweet as blossom,”
he went on.
And yet the woman that smiled down
on him was fifty years old at least. Her hair,
which usually lay in two flat bands, closely drawn
over the temples, had for this occasion been worked
into waves by curling-papers, and twisted in front
of either ear, into that particular ringlet locally
called a kiss-me-quick. But it was streaked with
grey, and the pinched features wore the tint of pale
ivory.
“D’ye think you can clamber
down the ladder, Sarah? The tide’s fairly
high.”
“I’m afraid I’ll be showing my ankles.”
“I was hoping so. Wunnerful
ankles you’ve a-got, Sarah, and a wunnerful
cage o’ teeth. Such extremities ’d
well beseem a king’s daughter, all glorious
within!”
Sarah Blewitt pulled open the lower
flap of the door and set her foot on the ladder.
She wore a white print gown beneath her cloak, and
a small bonnet of black straw decorated with sham
cowslips. The cloak, hitching for a moment on
the ladder’s side, revealed a beaded reticule
that hung from her waist, and clinked as she descended.
“I reckon there’s scarce
an inch of paint left on my front door,” she
observed, as the man steadied her with an arm round
her waist, and settled her comfortably in the stern-sheets.
He unshipped his oars and began to pull.
“Ay. I heard ’em
whackin’ the door with a deal o’ tow-row.
They was going it like billy-O when I came past the
Town Quay. But one mustn’ complain, May-mornin’s.”
“I wasn’ complaining,”
said the woman; “I was just remarking. How’s
Maria?”
“She’s nicely, thank you.”
“And the children?”
“Brave.”
“I’ve put up sixpennyworth
of nicey in four packets - that’s one
apiece - and I’ve written the name on
each, for you to take home to ’em.”
She fumbled in her reticule and produced
the packets. The peppermint-drops and brandy-balls
were wrapped in clean white paper, and the names written
in a thin Italian hand. John thanked her and
stowed them in his trousers pockets.
“You’ll give my love to
Maria? I take it very kindly her letting you
come for me like this.”
“Oh, as for that - ”
began John, and broke off; “I don’t call
to mind that ever I saw a more handsome morning for
the time o’ year.”
They had made this expedition together
more than a score of times, and always found the same
difficulty in conversing. The boat moved easily
past the town, the jetties above it, and the vessels
that lay off them awaiting their cargoes; it turned
the corner and glided by woods where the larches were
green, the sycamores dusted with bronze, the wild
cherry-trees white with blossom, and all voluble.
Every little bird seemed ready to burst his throat
that morning with the deal he had to say. But
these two - the man especially - had
nothing to say, yet ached for words.
“Nance Treweek’s married,”
the woman managed to tell him at last.
“I was thinking it likely, by
the way she carried on last Maying.”
“That wasn’ the man.
She’ve kept company with two since him, and
mated with a fourth man altogether - quite
a different sort, in the commercial traveller line.”
“Did he wear a seal weskit?”
“Well, he might have; but not to my knowledge.
What makes you ask?”
“Because I used to know a Johnny
Fortnight that wore one in these parts; and I thought
it might be he, belike.”
“Jim had a greater gift o’
speech than you can make pretence to,” said
the woman abruptly. “I often wonder that
of two twin-brothers one should be so glib and t’other
so mum-chance.”
“’Tis the Lord’s
ways,” the man answered, resting on his oars.
“Will you be dabblin’ your feet as usual,
Sarah?”
“Why not?”
He turned the boat’s nose to
a small landing-place cut in the solid rock, where
a straight pathway dived between hazel-bushes and appeared
again twenty feet above, winding inland around the
knap of a green hill. Here he helped her to disembark,
and waited with his back to the shore. The spinster
behind the hazel screen pulled off shoes and stockings,
and paddled about for a minute in the dewy grass that
fringed the meadow’s lower slope. Then,
drawing a saucer from her reticule, she wrung some
dew into it and bathed her face. Ten minutes
later she re-appeared on the river’s bank.
“A happy May, John!”
“A happy May to you, Sarah!”
John stepped out beside her, and making
his boat fast, followed her up the narrow path and
around the shoulder of the steep meadow. They
overed a stile, then a second, and were among pink
slopes of orchards in bloom. Ahead of them a
church tower rose out of soft billows of apple-blossom,
and above the tower a lark was singing. A child
came along the footpath from the village with two garlands
mounted cross-wise on a pole and looped together with
strings of painted birds’ eggs. John gave
him a penny for his show.
“Here’s luck to your lass!” said
the wise child.
Sarah was pleased, and added a second
penny from her reticule. The boy spat on it for
luck, slipped it into his breeches pocket, and went
on his way skipping.
They stood still and looked after
him for some moments, out of pure pleasure in his
good humour; then descended among the orchards to the
village. Half-way up the street stood the inn,
the Flowing Source, with whitewashed front and fuchsia-trees
that reached to the first-floor windows; and before
it a well enclosed with a round stone wall, over which
the toadflax spread in a tangle. Around the well,
in the sunshine, were set a dozen or more small tables,
covered with white cloths, and two score at least
of young people eating bread and cream and laughing.
The landlady, a broad woman in a blue print gown,
and large apron, came forward.
“Why, Miss Sarah, I’d
nigh ’pon given you up. Your table’s
been spread this hour, an’ at last I was forced
to ask some o’ the young folks if you was dead
or no.”
“Why should I be dead more than another?”
“Well, well - in the
midst o’ life, we’re told. ‘Tisn’
only the ripe apples that the wind scatters.
He that comes by your side to-day is but twin-brother
to him that came wi’ you the first time I mind
’ee, seemin’ but yesterday. Eh, Miss
Sarah, but I envied ‘ee then, sittin’
wi’ hand in hand, an’ but one bite taken
out o’ your bread an’ cream; but I was
just husband-high myself i’ those days, an’
couldn’t make the men believe it.”
“Mary Ann Jacobs,” Miss
Sarah broke out, “if ’twas not for the
quality of your cream, I’d go a-mayin’
elsewhere, for I can truly say I hate your way of
talkin’ from the bottom of my soul.”
“Sarah,” said John, wiping
his mouth as he finished his bread and cream, “I’m
a glum man, as you well know; an’ why Providence
drowned poor Jim, when it might have taken his twin
image that hadn’ half his mouth - speech,
is past findin’ out. But ’tis generally
allowed that the grip o’ my hand is uncommon
like what Jim’s used to be; an’ when I
gets home to-night, the first thing my old woman’ll
be sure to ask is ’Did ‘ee give Sarah
poor Jim’s hand-clasp?’ - an’
what to say I shan’t know, unless you honours
me so far.”
“’Tis uncommon good of
Maria,” said the woman simply, and stole her
thin hand into his horny palm. She had done so,
in answer to the same speech, more than twenty times.
“Not at all,” said John.
His fingers closed over hers, and
rested so. All but a few of the mayers had risen
from the table, and were romping and chasing each
other back to the boats, for the majority were shop-girls
and apprentices, and must be back in time for business.
But Miss Sarah was in no hurry.
“Not yet,” she entreated,
as John’s grasp began to relax. He tightened
it again and waited, while she leant back, breathing
short, with half-closed eyes.
At length she said he might release her.
“I’m sure ’tis uncommon kind of
Maria,” she repeated.
“I don’t see where the
kindness comes in. Maria can have as good any
day o’ the year, an’ don’t appear
to value it to that extent.”
They walked back through the orchards
in silence. At Miss Sarah’s quay-door they
parted, and John hoisted sail for his home around the
corner of the coast.