By Heman White Chaplin
“Wonder ’f Eph’s got back; they
say his sentence run out yisterday.”
The speaker, John Doane, was a sunburnt
fisherman, one of a circle of well-salted individuals
who sat, some on chairs, some on boxes and barrels,
around the stove in a country store.
“Yes,” said Captain Seth,
a middle-aged little man with ear-rings; “he
come on the stage to-noon. Would n’t hardly
speak a word, Jim says. Looked kind o’
sot and sober.”
“Wall,” said the first
speaker, “I only hope he won’t go to burnin’
us out of house and home, same as he burnt up Eliphalet’s
barn. I was ruther in hopes he ’d ‘a’
made off West. Seems to me I should, in his place,
hevin’ ben in State’s-prison.”
“Now, I allers hed quite
a parcel o’ sympathy for Eph,” said a short,
thickset coasting captain, who sat tilted back in a
three-legged chair, smoking lazily. “You
see, he wa’n’t but about twenty-one or
two then, and he was allers a mighty high-strung
boy; and then Eliphalet did act putty ha’sh,
foreclosin’ on Eph’s mother, and turnin’
her out o’ the farm in winter, when everybody
knew she could ha’ pulled through by waitin.’
Eph sot great store by the old lady, and I expect he
was putty mad with Eliphalet that night.”
“I allers,” said
Doane, “approved o’ his plan o’ leadin’
out all the critters, ’fore he touched off the
barn. ’T ain’t everybody ’t
would hev taken pains to do that. But all the
same, I tell Sarai ‘t I feel kind o’ skittish,
nights, to hev to turn in, feelin’ ’t there’s
a convict in the place.”
“I hain’t got no barn
to burn,” said Captain Seth; “but if he
allots my hen-house to the flames, I hope he’ll
lead out the hens and hitch ’em to the apple-trees,
same’s he did Eliphalet’s critters.
Think he ought to deal ekally by all.”
A mild general chuckle greeted this
sally, cheered by which the speaker added, —
“Thought some o’ takin’
out a policy o’ insurance on my cockerel.”
“Trade’s lookin’
up, William,” said Captain Seth to the storekeeper,
as some one was heard to kick the snow off his boots
on the door-step. “Somebody ’s found
he’s got to hev a shoestring ’fore mornin’.”
The door opened, and closed behind
a strongly-made man of twenty-six or seven, of homely
features, with black hair, in clothes which he had
outgrown. It was a bitter night, but he had no
coat over his flannel jacket. He walked straight
down the store, between the dry-goods counters, to
the snug corner at the rear, where the knot of talkers
sat; nodded, without a smile, to each of them, and
then asked the storekeeper for some simple articles
of food, which he wished to buy. It was Eph.
While the purchases were being put
up, an awkward silence prevailed, which the oil-suits
hanging on the walls, broadly displaying their arms
and legs, seemed to mock, in dumb show.
Nothing was changed, to Eph’s
eyes, as he looked about. Even the handbill of
familiar pattern —
“Standing Wood for Sale.
Apply to J. Carter,
Admin’r,”
seemed to have always been there.
The village parliament remained spellbound.
Mr. Adams tied up the purchases, and mildly inquired, —
“Shall I charge this?”
Not that he was anxious to open an
account, but that he would probably have gone to the
length of selling Eph a barrel of molasses “on
tick” rather than run any risk of offending
so formidable a character.
“No,” said Eph; “I will pay for
the things.”
And having put the packages into a
canvas bag, and selected some fish-hooks and lines
from the show-case, where they lay environed by jack-knives,
jews-harps, and gum-drops, — dear to the eyes
of childhood, — he paid what was due, said
“Good-night, William,” to the storekeeper,
and walked steadily out into the night.
“Wall,” said the skipper,
“I am surprised! I strove to think o’
suthin’ to say, all the time he was here, but
I swow I couldn’t think o’ nothin’.
I could n’t ask him if it seemed good to git
home, nor how the thermometer had varied in different
parts o’ the town where he ’d been.
Everything seemed to fetch right up standin’
to the State’s-prison.”
“I was just goin’ to say,
‘How’d ye leave everybody?’”
said Doane; “but that kind o’ seemed to
bring up them he ’d left. I felt real bad,
though, to hev the feller go off ‘thout none
on us speakin’ to him. He ’s got
a hard furrer to plough; and yet I don’t s’pose
there ’s much harm in him, ’f Eliphalet
only keeps quiet.”
“Eliphalet!” said a young
sailor, contemptuously. “No fear o’
him! They say he ‘s so sca’t of Eph
he hain’t hardly swallowed nothin’ for
a week.”
“But where will he live?”
asked a short, curly-haired young man, whom Eph had
seemed not to recognize. It was the new doctor,
who, after having made his way through college and
the great medical school in Boston, had, two years
before, settled in this village.
“I believe,” said Mr.
Adams, rubbing his hands, “that he wrote to Joshua
Carr last winter, when his mother died, not to let
the little place she left, on the Salt Hay Road; and
I understand that he is going to make his home there.
It is an old house, you know, and not worth much, but
it is weather-tight, I should say.”
“Speakin’ of his writin’
to Joshua,” said Doane, “I have heard such
a sound as that he used to shine up to Joshua’s
Susan, years back. But that ‘s all ended
now. You won’t catch Susan marryin’
no jailbirds.”
“But how will he live?”
said the doctor. “Will anybody give him
work?”
“Let him alone for livin’,”
said Doane. “He can ketch more fish than
any other two men in the place allers
seemed to kind o’ hev a knack o’ whistlin’
’em right into the boat. And then Nelson
Briggs, that settled up his mother’s estate,
allows he ’s got over a hundred and ten dollars
for him, after payin’ debts and all probate expenses.
That and the place is all he needs to start on.”
“I will go to see him,”
said the doctor to himself, as he went out upon the
requisition of a grave man in a red tippet, who had
just come for him. “He does n’t look
so very dangerous, and I think he can be tamed.
I remember that his mother told me about him.”
Late that night, returning from his
seven miles’ drive, as he left the causeway,
built across a wide stretch of salt-marsh, crossed
the rattling plank bridge, and ascended the hill,
he saw a light in the cottage window, where he had
often been to attend Aunt Lois. “I will
stop now,” said he. And, tying his horse
to the front fence, he went toward the kitchen door.
As he passed the window, he glanced in. A lamp
was burning on the table. On a settle, lying upon
his face, was stretched the convict, his arms beneath
his head. The canvas bag lay on the floor beside
him. “I will not disturb him now,”
said the doctor.
A few days later Dr. Burt was driving
in his sleigh with his wife along the Salt Hay Road.
It was a clear, crisp winter forenoon. As they
neared Eph’s house, he said, —
“Mary, suppose I lay siege to
the fort this morning. I see a curl of smoke
rising from the little shop in the barn. He must
be making himself a jimmy or a dark-lantern to break
into our vegetable cellar with.”
“Well,” said she, “I
think it would be a good plan; only, you know, you
must be very, very careful not to hint, even in the
faintest way, at his imprisonment. You mustn’t
so much as suspect that he has ever been away
from the place. People hardly dare to speak to
him, for fear he will see some reference to his having
been in prison, and get angry.”
“You shall see my sly tact,”
said her husband, laughing. “I will be
as innocent as a lamb. I will ask him why I have
not seen him at the Sabbath-school this winter.”
“You may make fun,” said
she, “but you will end by taking my advice, all
the same. Now, do be careful what you say.”
“I will,” he replied.
“I will compose my remarks carefully upon the
back of an envelope and read them to him, so as to
be absolutely sure. I will leave on his mind
an impression that I have been in prison, and that
he was the judge that tried me.”
He drove in at the open gate, hitched
his horse in a warm corner by the kitchen door, and
then stopped for a moment to enjoy the view. The
situation of the little house, half a mile from any
other, was beautiful in summer, but it was bleak enough
in winter. In the small front dooryard stood
three lofty, wind-blown poplars, all heading away from
the sea, and between them you could look down the bay
or across the salt-marshes, while in the opposite
direction were to be seen the roofs and the glittering
spires of the village.
“It is social for him here,
to say the least,” said the doctor, as he turned
and walked alone to the shop. He opened the door
and went in. It was a long, low lean-to, such
as farmers often furnish for domestic work with a
carpenter’s bench, a grindstone, and a few simple
tools. It was lighted by three square windows
above the bench. An air-tight stove, projecting
its funnel through a hole in one of the panes, gave
out a cheerful crackling.
Eph, in his shirt-sleeves, his hands
in his pockets, was standing, his back against the
bench, surveying, with something of a mechanic’s
eye, the frame of a boat which was set up on the floor.
He looked up and colored slightly.
The doctor took out a cigarette, lit it, sat down
on the bench, and smoked, clasping one knee in his
hands and eying the boat.
“Centre-board?” he asked, at length.
“Yes,” said Eph.
“Cat-rig?”
“Yes.”
“Going fishing?”
“Yes.”
“Alone?”
“Yes.”
“I was brought up to sail a
boat,” said the doctor, “and I go fishing
in summer — when I get a chance. I shall
try your boat, some time.”
No reply.
“The timbers aren’t seasoned,
are they? They look like pitch-pine, just out
of the woods. Won’t they warp?”
“No. Pitch-pine goes right
in, green. I s’pose the pitch keeps it,
if it’s out of the sun.”
“Where did you cut it?”
Eph colored a little.
“In my back lot.”
The doctor smoked on calmly, and studied the boat.
“I don’t know as I know you,” said
Eph, relaxing a little.
“Good reason,” said the
doctor. “I ’ve only been here
two years;” and after a moment’s pause,
he added: “I am the doctor here, now.
You ’ve heard of my father, Dr. Burt, of
Broad River?”
Eph nodded assent; everybody knew
him, all through the country, — a fatherly
old man, who rode on long journeys at everybody’s
call, and never sent in his bills.
The visitor had a standing with Eph at once.
“Doctors never pick at folks,”
he said to himself — “at any rate, not
old Dr. Burt’s son.
“I used to come here to see
your mother,” said the doctor, “when she
was sick. She used to talk a great deal about
you, and said she wanted me to get acquainted with
you, when your time was out.”
Eph started, but said nothing.
“She was a good woman, Aunt
Lois,” added the doctor; “one of the best
women I ever saw.”
“I don’t want anybody
to bother himself on my account,” said Eph.
“I ask no favors.”
“You will have to take favors,
though,” said the doctor, “before the
winter is over. You will be careless and get sick;
you have been living for a long time entirely in-doors,
with regular hours and work and food. Now you
are going to live out-of-doors, and get your own meals,
irregularly. You did n’t have on a thick
coat the other night, when I saw you at the store.”
“I haven’t got any that’s
large enough for me,” said Eph, a little less
harshly, “and I ’ve got to keep my
money for other things.”
“Then look out and wear flannel
shirts enough,” said the doctor, “if you
want to be independent. But before I go, I want
to go into the house. I want my wife to see Aunt
Lois’s room, and the view from the west window;”
and he led the way to the sleigh.
Eph hesitated a moment, and then followed him.
“Mary, this is Ephraim Morse.
We are going in to see the Dutch tiles I have told
you of.”
She smiled as she held out her mittened
hand to Eph, who took it awkwardly.
The square front room, which had been
originally intended for a keeping-room, but had been
Aunt Lois’s bedroom, looked out from two windows
upon the road, and from two upon the rolling, tumbling
bay, and the shining sea beyond. A tall clock,
with a rocking ship above the face, ticked in the
corner. The painted floor with bright rag mats,
the little table with a lacquer work-box, the stiff
chairs and the old-fashioned bedstead, the china ornaments
upon the mantel-piece, the picture of “The Emeline
G. in the Harbor of Canton,” were just as they
had been when the patient invalid had lain there, looking
from her pillow out to sea. In twelve rude tiles,
set around the open fireplace, the Hebrews were seen
in twelve stages of their escape from Egypt. It
would appear from this representation that they had
not restricted their borrowings to the jewels of their
oppressors, but had taken for the journey certain
Dutch clothing of the fashion of the seventeenth century.
The scenery, too, was much like that about Leyden.
“I think,” said the doctor’s
wife, “that the painter was just a little absent-minded
when he put in that beer-barrel. And a wharf,
by the Red Sea!”
“I wish you would conclude to
rig your boat with a new sail,” said the doctor,
as he took up the reins, at parting. “There
is n’t a boat here that ’s kept clean,
and I should like to hire yours once or twice a week
in summer, if you keep her as neat as you do your house.
Come in and see me some evening, and we ’ll
talk it over.”
Eph built his boat, and, in spite
of his evident dislike of visitors, the inside finish
and the arrangements of the little cabin were so ingenious
and so novel that everybody had to pay him a visit.
True to his plan of being independent,
he built in the side of the hill, near his barn, by
a little gravelly pond, an ice-house, and with the
hardest labor filled it, all by himself. With
this supply, he would not have to go to the general
wharf at Sandy Point to sell his fish, with the other
men, but could pack and ship them himself. And
he could do better, in this way, he thought, even
after paying for teaming them to the cars.
The knowing ones laughed to see that,
from asking no advice, he had miscalculated and laid
in three times as much as he could use.
“Guess Eph cal’lates to
fish with two lines in each hand an’ another
’n his teeth,” said Mr. Wing. “He
‘s plannin’ out for a great lay o’
fish.”
The spring came slowly on, and the
first boat that went out that season was Eph’s.
That day was one of unmixed delight to him. What
a sense of absolute freedom, when he was fairly out
beyond the lightship, with the fresh swiftness of
the wind in his face! What an exquisite consciousness
of power and control, as his boat went beating through
the long waves! Two or three men from another
village sailed across his wake. His boat lay
over, almost showing her keel, now high out of water,
now settling between the waves, while Eph stood easily
in the stern, in his shirt-sleeves, backing against
the tiller, smoking a pipe, and ranging the waters
with his eyes.
“Takes it natural ag’in,
don’t he? Stands as easy as ef he was loafin’
on a wharf,” said one of the observers.
“Expect it ’s quite a treat to be out.
But they do say he ‘s gittin’ everybody’s
good opinion. They looked for a reg’-lar
ruffi’n when he come home, — cuttin’
nets, killin’ cats, chasin’ hens, gittin’
drunk! They say Eliphalet Wood didn’t hardly
dare to go où’ doors for a month, ‘thout
havin’ his hired man along. But he ’s
turned out as peaceful as a little gal.”
One June day, as Eph was slitting
blue-fish at the little pier which he had built on
the bay shore, near his rude ice-house, two men came
up.
“Hullo, Eph!”
“Hullo!”
“We ‘ve got about
sick, tradin’ down to the wharf; we can’t
git no fair show. About one time in three, they
tell us they don’t want our fish, and won’t
take ’em unless we heave ’em in for next
to nothin’, — and we know there ain’t
no sense in it. So we just thought we ’d
slip down and see ’f you would n’t take
’em, seein’s you ’ve got ice,
and send ’em up with yourn.”
Eph was taken all aback with this
mark of confidence. The offer must be declined.
It evidently sprang from some mere passing vexation.
“I can’t buy fish,”
said he. “I have no scales to weigh ’em.”
“Then send ourn in separate
berrels,” said one of the men.
“But I haven’t any money
to pay you,” he said. “I only get
my pay once a month.”
“We’ll git tick at William’s,
and you can settle ’th us when you git your
pay.”
“Well,” said he, unable
to refuse, “I ’ll take ’em, if you
say so.”
Before the season was over, he had
still another customer, and could have had three or
four more, if he had had ice enough. He felt strongly
inclined that fall to build a larger icehouse; and
although he was a little afraid of bringing ridicule
upon himself in case no fish should be brought to
him the next summer, he decided to do so, on the assurance
of three or four men that they meant to come to him.
Nobody else had such a chance, — a pond right
by the shore.
One evening there was a knock at the
door of Eliphalet Wood, the owner of the burned barn.
Eliphalet went to the door, but turned pale at seeing
Eph there.
“Oh, come in, come in!”
he panted. “Glad to see you. Walk in.
Have a chair. Take a seat. Sit down.”
But he thought his hour had come:
he was alone in the house, and there was no neighbor
within call.
Eph took out a roll of bills, counted
out eighty dollars, laid the money on the table, and
said quietly, —
“Give me a receipt on account.”
When it was written he walked out, leaving Eliphalet
stupefied.
Joshua Carr was at work, one June
afternoon, by the roadside, in front of his low cottage,
by an enormous pile of poles, which he was shaving
down for barrel-hoops, when Eph appeared.
“Hard at it, Joshua!” he said.
“Yes, yes!” said Joshua,
looking up through his steel-bowed spectacles.
“Hev to work hard to make a livin’ — though
I don’t know’s I ought to call it hard,
neither; and yet it is ruther hard, too; but then,
on t’ other hand, ’t ain’t so hard
as a good many other things — though there
is a good many jobs that’s easier. That’s
so! that ’s so!
’Must we be kerried
to the skies
On feathery beds of
ease?’
Though I don’t know’s
I ought to quote a hymn on such a matter; but then — I
don’ know’s there’s any partic’lar
harm in’t, neither.”
Eph sat down on a pile of shavings
and chewed a sliver; and the old man kept on at his
work.
“Hoop-poles goin’ up and
hoops goin’ down,” he continued. “Cur’us,
ain’t it? But then, I don’ know as
‘tis; woods all bein’ cut off — poles
gittin’ scurcer — hoops bein’
shoved in from Down East. That don’t seem
just right, now, does it? But then, other folks
must make a livin’, too. Still, I should
think they might take up suthin’ else; and yet,
they might say that about me. Understand, I don’t
mean to say that they actually do say so; I don’t
want to run down any man unless I know — ”
“I can’t stand this,”
said Eph to himself; “I don’t wonder that
they always used to put Joshua off at the first port,
when he tried to go coasting. They said he talked
them crazy with nothing.
“I ’ll go into the house
and see Aunt Lyddy,” he said aloud. “I
’m loafing, this afternoon.”
“All right! all right!”
said Joshua. “Lyddy ’ll be glad to
see you — that is, as glad as she would be
to see anybody,” he added, reaching out for
a pole. “Now, I don’t s’pose
that sounds very well; but still, you know how she
is — she allers likes to hev folks to
talk, and then she’s allers sayin’
talkin’ wears on her; but I ought not to say
that to you, because she allers likes to see
you — that is, as much as she likes to see
anybody. In fact, I think, on the whole — ”
“Well, I’ll take my chances,”
said Eph, laughing; and he opened the gate and went
in.
Joshua’s wife, whom everybody
called Aunt Lyddy, was rocking in a high-backed-chair
in the kitchen, and knitting. It was currently
reported that Joshua’s habit of endlessly retracting
and qualifying every idea and modification of an idea
which he advanced, so as to commit himself to nothing,
was the effect of Aunt Lyddy’s careful revision.
“I s’pose she thought
’t was fun to be talked deef when they was courtin’,”
Captain Seth had once sagely remarked. “Prob’ly
it sounded then like a putty piece on a seraphine;
but I allers cal’lated she ’d git
her fill of it, sooner or later. You most gin’lly
git your fill o’ one tune.”
“How are you this afternoon,
Aunt Lyddy?” asked Eph, walking in without knocking,
and sitting down near her.
“So as to be able to keep about,”
she replied. “It is a great mercy I ain’t
afflicted with falling out of my chair, like Hepsy
Jones, ain’t it?”
“I ’ve brought you
some oysters,” he said. “I set the
basket down on the door-step. I just took them
out of the water myself from the bed I planted to
the west of the water-fence.”
“I always heard you was a great
fisherman,” said Aunt Lyddy, “but I had
no idea you would ever come here and boast of being
able to catch oysters. Poor things! How
could they have got away? But why don’t
you bring them in? They won’t be afraid
of me, will they?”
He stepped to the door and brought
in a peck basket full of large, black, twisted shells,
and with a heavy clasp-knife proceeded to open one,
and took out a great oyster, which he held up on the
point of the blade.
“Try it,” he said; and
then Aunt Lyddy, after she had swallowed it, laughed
to think what a tableau they had made, — a
man who had been in the State prison standing over
her with a great knife! And then she laughed
again.
“What are you laughing at?” he said.
“It popped into my head, supposing
Susan should have looked in at the south window and
Joshua in at the door, when you was feeding out that
oyster to me, what they would have thought!”
Eph laughed too; and, surely enough,
just then a stout, light-haired, rather plain-looking
young woman came up to the south window and leaned
in. She had on a sun-bonnet, which had not prevented
her from securing a few choice freckles. She
had been working with a trowel in her flower-garden.
“What’s the matter?”
she said, nodding easily to Eph. “What do
you two always find to laugh about?”
“Ephraim was feeding me with
spoon-meat,” said Aunt Lyddy, pointing to the
basket, which looked like a basket of anthracite coal.
“It looks like spoon-meat!”
said Susan, and then she laughed too. “I
’ll roast some of them for supper,” she
added, — “a new way that I know.”
Eph was not invited to stay to supper,
but he stayed, none the less: that was always
understood.
“Well, well, well!” said
Joshua, coming to the door-step, and washing his hands
and arms just outside, in a tin basin. “I
thought I see you set down a parcel of oysters — but
there was sea-weed over ’em, and I don’
know’s I could have said they was oysters; but
then, if the square question had been put to me, ’Mr.
Carr, be them oysters or be they not?’ I s’pose
I should have said they was; still, if they ’d
asked me how I knew — ”
“Come, come, father!”
said Aunt Lyddy, “do give poor Ephraim a little
peace. Why don’t you just say you thought
they were oysters, and done with it?”
“Say I thought they was?”
he replied, innocently. “I knew well enough
they was — that is — knew? No,
I did n’t know, but — ”
Aunt Lyddy, with an air of mock resignation,
gave up, while Joshua endeavored to fix, to a hair,
the exact extent of his knowledge.
Eph smiled; but he remembered what
would have made him pardon, a thousand times over,
the old man’s garrulousness. He remembered
who alone had never failed, once a year, to visit
a certain prisoner, at the cost of a long and tiresome
journey, and who had written to that homesick prisoner
kind and cheering letters, and had sent him baskets
of simple dainties for holidays.
Susan bustled about, and made a fire
of crackling sticks, and began to roast the oysters
in a way that made a most savory smell. She set
the table, and then sat down at the melodeon, while
she was waiting, and sang a hymn; for she was of a
musical turn, and was one of the choir. Then
she jumped up and took out the steaming oysters, and
they all sat down.
“Well, well, well!” said
her father; “these be good! I did n’t
s’pose you hed any very good oysters in your
bed, Ephraim. But there, now — I don’t
s’pose I ought to have said that; that was n’t
very polite; but what I meant was, I did n’t
s’pose you hed any that was real good — though
I don’ know but I ’ve said about the
same thing, now. Well, any way, these be splendid;
they ’re full as good as those co-hogs we had
t’other night.”
“Quahaugs!” said Susan.
“The idea of comparing these oysters with quahaugs!”
“Well, well! that’s so!”
said her father. “I did n’t say right,
did I, when I said that! Of course, there ain’t
no comparison — that is — no
comparison? Why, of course, they is a comparison
between everything, — but then, cohogs don’t
really compare with oysters! That’s true!”
And then he paused to eat a few.
He was silent so long at this occupation that they
all laughed.
“Well, well!” he said,
laying down his fork, and smiling innocently; “what
be you all laughin’ at? Not but what I allers
like to hev folks laugh — but then, I did
n’t see nothin’ to laugh at. Still,
perhaps they was suthin’ to laugh at that I
didn’t see; sometimes one man ’ll be lookin’
down into his plate, all taken up with his victuals,
and others, that’s lookin’ around the
room, may see the kittens frolickin’, or some
such thing. ’T ain’t the fust time
I ’ve known all hands to laugh all to once-t,
when I didn’t see nothin’.”
Susan helped him again, and secured another brief
respite.
“Ephraim,” said he, after
a while, “you ain’t skilled to cook oysters
like this, I don’t believe. You ought to
git married! I was sayin’ to Susan t’other
day — well, now, mother, hev I said anything
out o’ the way? Well, I don’t s’pose
’t was just my place to have said anything
about gitt’n’ married, to Ephraim, seein’s — ”
“Come, come, father,”
said Aunt Lyddy, “that’ll do, now.
You must let Ephraim alone, and not joke him about
such things.”
Meanwhile Susan had hastily gone into
the pantry to look for a pie, which she seemed unable
at once to find.
“Pie got adrift?” called
out Joshua. “Seems to me you don’t
hook on to it very quick. Now that looks good,”
he added, when she came out.
“That looks like cookin’!
All I meant was, ’t Ephraim ought not to be
doin’ his own cookin’ — that is,
’f you can call it cookin. But then, of
course, ‘tis cookin’ — there’s
all kinds o’ cookin’. I went cook
myself, when I was a boy.”
After supper, Aunt Lyddy sat down
to knit, and Joshua drew his chair up to an open window,
to smoke his pipe. In this vice Aunt Lyddy encouraged
him. The odor of Virginia tobacco was a sweet
savor in her nostrils. No breezes from Araby
ever awoke more grateful feelings than did the fragrance
of Uncle Joshua’s pipe. To Aunt Lyddy it
meant quiet and peace.
Susan and Eph sat down on the broad
flag door-stone, and talked quietly of the simple
news of the neighborhood, and of the days when they
used to go to school, and come home, always together.
“I did n’t much think
then,” said Eph, “that I should ever bring
up where I have, and get ashore before I was fairly
out to sea!”
“Jehiel’s schooner got
ashore on the bar, years ago,” said Susan, “and
yet they towed her off, and I saw her this morning,
from my chamber window, before sunrise, all sail set,
going by to the eastward.”
“I know what you mean,”
said Eph. “But here — I got mad
once, and I almost had a right to, and I can’t
get started again; I never shall. I can get a
living, of course; but I shall always be pointed out
as a jailbird, and could no more get any footing in
the world than Portuguese Jim.”
Portuguese Jim was the sole professional
criminal of the town, — a weak, good-natured,
knock-kneed vagabond, who stole hens, and spent every
winter in the House of Correction as an “idle
and disorderly person.”
Susan laughed outright at the picture.
Eph smiled too, but a little bitterly.
“I suppose it was more ugliness
than anything else,” he said, “that made
me come back here to live, where everybody knows I
’ve been in jail and is down on me.”
“They are not down on you,”
said Susan. “Nobody is down on you.
It ’s all your own imagination. And if
you had gone anywhere that you was a stranger, you
know that the first thing that you would have done
would have been to call a meeting and tell all the
people that you had burned down a man’s barn
and been in the State’s-prison, and that you
wanted them all to know it at the start; and you wouldn’t
have told them why you did it, and how young you was
then, and how Eliphalet treated your mother, and how
you was going to pay him for all he lost Here, everybody
knows that side of it. In fact,” she added,
with a little twinkle in her eye, “I have sometimes
had an idea that the main thing they don’t like
is, to see you saving every cent to pay to Eliphalet.”
“And yet it was on your say
that I took up that plan,” said Eph. “I
never thought of it till you asked me when I was going
to begin to pay him up.”
“And you ought to,” said
Susan. “He has a right to the money — and
then, you don’t want to be under obligations
to that man all your life. Now, what you want
to do is to cheer up and go around among folks.
Why, now you ’re the only fish-buyer there is
that the men don’t watch when he ’s weighing
their fish. You’ll own up to that, for one
thing, won’t you?”
“Well, they are good fellows
that bring fish to me,” he said.
“They were n’t good fellows
when they traded at the great wharf,” said Susan.
“They had a quarrel down there once a week, regularly.”
“Well, suppose they do trust
me in that,” said Eph. “I can never
rub out that I ’ve been in State’s-prison.”
“You don’t want to rub
it out. You can’t rub anything out that’s
ever been; but you can do better than rub it out.”
“What do you mean?”
“Take things just the way they
are,” said Susan, “and show what can be
done. Perhaps you ’ll stake a new channel
out for others to follow in, that haven’t half
so much chance as you have. And that’s what
you will do, too,” she added.
“Susan!” he said, “if
there ’s anything I can ever do, in this world
or the next, for you or your folks, that’s all
I ask for, — the chance to do it. Your
folks and you shall never want for anything while I’m
alive.
“There’s one thing sure,”
he added, rising. “I’ll live by myself
and be independent of everybody, and make my way all
alone in the world; and if I can make ’em all
finally own up and admit that I’m honest with
’em, I’m satisfied. That’s
all I ’ll ever ask of anybody. But there’s
one thing that worries me sometimes, — that
is, whether I ought to come here so often. I
’m afraid, sometimes, that it ’ll hinder
your father from gettin’ work, or — something — for
you folks to be friends with me.”
“I think such things take care
of themselves,” said Susan, quietly. “If
a chip won’t float, let it sink.”
“Good-night,” said Eph;
and he walked off, and went home to his echoing house.
After that, his visits to Joshua’s became less
frequent.
It was a bright day in March, — one
of those which almost redeem the reputation of that
desperado of a month. Eph was leaning on his fence,
looking now down the bay and now to where the sun was
sinking in the marshes. He knew that all the
other men had gone to the town-meeting, where he had
had no heart to intrude himself, — that free
democratic parliament where he had often gone with
his father in childhood; where the boys, rejoicing
in a general assembly of their own, had played ball
outside, while the men debated gravely within.
He recalled the time when he himself had so proudly
given his first vote for President, and how his father
had introduced him then to friends from distant parts
of the town. He remembered how he had heard his
father speak there, and how respectfully everybody
had listened to him. That was in the long ago,
when they had lived at the great farm. And then
came the thought of the mortgage, and of Eliphalet’s
foreclosure, and —
“Hullo, Eph!”
It was one of the men from whom he
took fish, — a plain-spoken, sincere little
man.
“Why wa’n’t you down to town-meet’n’?”
“I was busy,” said Eph.
“How’d ye like the news?”
“What news?”
There was never any good news for him now.
“Hain’t heard who ’s elected town-clerk?”
“No.”
Had they elected Eliphalet, and so
expressed their settled distrust of him, and sympathy
for the man whom he had injured?
“Who is elected?” he asked harshly.
“You be!” said the man;
“went in flyin’, — all hands clappin’
and stompin’ their feet!”
An hour later the doctor drove up,
stopped, and walked toward the kitchen door.
As he passed the window, he looked in.
Eph was lying on his face, upon the
settle, as he had first seen him there, his arms beneath
his head.
“I will not disturb him now,” said the
doctor.
One breezy afternoon, in the following
summer, Captain Seth laid aside his easy every-day
clothes, and transformed himself into a stiff broadcloth
image, with a small silk hat and creaking boots.
So attired, he set out in a high open buggy, with
his wife, also in black, but with gold spectacles,
to the funeral of an aunt. As they pursued their
jog-trot journey along the Salt Hay Road, and came
to Ephraim Morse’s cottage, they saw Susan sitting
in a shady little porch at the front door, shelling
peas and looking down the bay.
“How is everything, Susan?”
called out Captain Seth; “’bout time for
Eph to be gitt’n’ in?”
“Yes,” she answered, nodding
and smiling, and pointing with a pea-pod; “that’s
our boat, just coming to the wharf, with her peak down.”