Our August life rushes by, in Oldport,
as if we were all shot from the mouth of a cannon,
and were endeavoring to exchange visiting-cards on
the way. But in September, when the great hotels
are closed, and the bronze dogs that guarded the portals
of the Ocean House are collected sadly in the music
pavilion, nose to nose; when the last four-in-hand
has departed, and a man may drive a solitary horse
on the avenue without a pang,-then we know
that “the season” is over. Winter
is yet several months away,-months of the
most delicious autumn weather that the American climate
holds. But to the human bird of passage all that
is not summer is winter; and those who seek Oldport
most eagerly for two months are often those who regard
it as uninhabitable for the other ten.
The Persian poet Saadi says that in
a certain region of Armenia, where he travelled, people
never died the natural death. But once a year
they met on a certain plain, and occupied themselves
with recreation, in the midst of which individuals
of every rank and age would suddenly stop, make a
reverence to the west, and, setting out at full speed
toward that part of the desert, be seen no more.
It is quite in this fashion that guests disappear
from Oldport when the season ends. They also are
apt to go toward the west, but by steamboat. It
is pathetic, on occasion of each annual bereavement,
to observe the wonted looks and language of despair
among those who linger behind; and it needs some fortitude
to think of spending the winter near such a Wharf of
Sighs.
But we console ourselves. Each
season brings its own attractions. In summer
one may relish what is new in Oldport, as the liveries,
the incomes, the manners. There is often a delicious
freshness about these exhibitions; it is a pleasure
to see some opulent citizen in his first kid gloves.
His new-born splendor stands in such brilliant relief
against the confirmed respectability of the “Old
Stone Mill,” the only thing on the Atlantic
shore which has had time to forget its birthday!
But in winter the Old Mill gives the tone to the society
around it; we then bethink ourselves of the crown
upon our Trinity Church steeple, and resolve that
the courtesies of a bygone age shall yet linger here.
Is there any other place in America where gentlemen
still take off their hats to one another on the public
promenade? The hat is here what it still is in
Southern Europe,-the lineal successor of
the sword as the mark of a gentleman. It is noticed
that, in going from Oldport to New York or Boston,
one is liable to be betrayed by an over-flourish of
the hat, as is an Arkansas man by a display of the
bowie-knife.
Winter also imparts to these spacious
estates a dignity that is sometimes wanting in summer.
I like to stroll over them during this epoch of desertion,
just as once, when I happened to hold the keys of a
church, it seemed pleasant to sit, on a week-day, among
its empty pews. The silent walls appeared to
hold the pure essence of the prayers of a generation,
while the routine and the ennui had vanished all away.
One may here do the same with fashion as there with
devotion, extracting its finer flavors, if such there
be, unalloyed by vulgarity or sin. In the winter
I can fancy these fine houses tenanted by a true nobility;
all the sons are brave, and all the daughters virtuous.
These balconies have heard the sighs of passion without
selfishness; those cedarn alleys have admitted only
vows that were never broken. If the occupant
of the house be unknown, even by name, so much the
better. And from homes more familiar, what lovely
childish faces seem still to gaze from the doorways,
what graceful Absences (to borrow a certain poet’s
phrase) are haunting those windows!
There is a sense of winter quiet that
makes a stranger soon feel at home in Oldport, while
the prospective stir of next summer precludes all
feeling of stagnation. Commonly, in quiet places,
one suffers from the knowledge that everybody would
prefer to be unquiet; but nobody has any such longing
here. Doubtless there are aged persons who deplore
the good old times when the Oldport mail-bags were
larger than those arriving at New York. But if
it were so now, what memories would there be to talk
about? If you wish for “Syrian peace, immortal
leisure,”-a place where no grown
person ever walks rapidly along the street, and where
few care enough for rain to open an umbrella or walk
faster,-come here.
My abode is on a broad, sunny street,
with a few great elms overhead, and with large old
houses and grass-banks opposite. There is so little
snow that the outlook in the depth of winter is often
merely that of a paler and leafless summer, and a
soft, springlike sky almost always spreads above.
Past the window streams an endless sunny panorama (for
the house fronts the chief thoroughfare between country
and town),-relics of summer équipages
in faded grandeur; great, fragrant hay-carts; vast
moving mounds of golden straw; loads of crimson onions;
heaps of pale green cabbages; piles of gray tree-prunings,
looking as if the patrician trees were sending their
superfluous wealth of branches to enrich the impoverished
orchards of the Poor Farm; wagons of sea-weed just
from the beach, with bright, moist hues, and dripping
with sea-water and sea-memories, each weed an argosy,
bearing its own wild histories. At this season,
the very houses move, and roll slowly by, looking
round for more lucrative quarters next season.
Never have I seen real estate made so transportable
as in Oldport. The purchaser, after finishing
and furnishing to his fancy, puts his name on the door,
and on the fence a large white placard inscribed “For
sale”. Then his household arrangements
are complete, and he can sit down to enjoy himself.
By a side-glance from our window,
one may look down an ancient street, which in some
early epoch of the world’s freshness received
the name of Spring Street. A certain lively lady,
addicted to daring Scriptural interpretations, thinks
that there is some mistake in the current versions
of Genesis, and that it was Spring Street which was
created in the beginning, and the heavens and earth
at some subsequent period. There are houses in
Spring Street, and there is a confectioner’s
shop; but it is not often that a sound comes across
its rugged pavements, save perchance (in summer) the
drone of an ancient hand-organ, such as might have
been devised by Adam to console his Eve when Paradise
was lost. Yet of late the desecrating hammer
and the ear-piercing saw have entered that haunt of
ancient peace. May it be long ere any such invasion
reaches those strange little wharves in the lower town,
full of small, black, gambrel-roofed houses, with
projecting eaves that might almost serve for piazzas.
It is possible for an unpainted wooden building to
assume, in this climate, a more time-worn aspect than
that of any stone; and on these wharves everything
is so old, and yet so stunted, you might fancy that
the houses had been sent down there to play during
their childhood, and that nobody had ever remembered
to fetch them back.
The ancient aspect of things around
us, joined with the softening influences of the Gulf
Stream, imparts an air of chronic languor to the special
types of society which here prevail in winter,-as,
for instance, people of leisure, trades-people living
on their summer’s gains, and, finally, fishermen.
Those who pursue this last laborious calling are always
lazy to the eye, for they are on shore only in lazy
moments. They work by night or at early dawn,
and by day they perhaps lie about on the rocks, or
sit upon one heel beside a fish-house door. I
knew a missionary who resigned his post at the Isles
of Shoals because it was impossible to keep the Sunday
worshippers from lying at full length on the seats.
Our boatmen have the same habit, and there is a certain
dreaminess about them, in whatever posture. Indeed,
they remind one quite closely of the German boatman
in Uhland, who carried his reveries so far as to accept
three fees from one passenger.
But the truth is, that in Oldport
we all incline to the attitude of repose. Now
and then a man comes here, from farther east, with
the New England fever in his blood, and with a pestilent
desire to do something. You hear of him, presently,
proposing that the Town Hall should be repainted.
Opposition would require too much effort, and the
thing is done. But the Gulf Stream soon takes
its revenge on the intruder, and gradually repaints
him also, with its own soft and mellow tints.
In a few years he would no more bestir himself to fight
for a change than to fight against it.
It makes us smile a little, therefore,
to observe that universal delusion among the summer
visitors, that we spend all winter in active preparations
for next season. Not so; we all devote it solely
to meditations on the season past. I observe
that nobody in Oldport ever believes in any coming
summer. Perhaps the tide is turned, we think,
and people will go somewhere else. You do not
find us altering our houses in December, or building
out new piazzas even in March. We wait till the
people have actually come to occupy them. The
preparation for visitors is made after the visitors
have arrived. This may not be the way in which
things are done in what are called “smart business
places.” But it is our way in Oldport.
It is another delusion to suppose
that we are bored by this long epoch of inactivity.
Not at all; we enjoy it. If you enter a shop in
winter, you will find everybody rejoiced to see you-as
a friend; but if it turns out that you have come as
a customer, people will look a little disappointed.
It is rather inconsiderate of you to make such demands
out of season. Winter is not exactly the time
for that sort of thing. It seems rather to violate
the conditions of the truce. Could you not postpone
the affair till next July? Every country has its
customs; I observe that in some places, New York for
instance, the shopkeepers seem rather to enjoy a “field-day”
when the sun and the customers are out. In Oldport,
on the contrary, men’s spirits droop at such
times, and they go through their business sadly.
They force themselves to it during the summer, perhaps,-for
one must make some sacrifices,-but in winter
it is inappropriate as strawberries and cream.
The same spirit of repose pervades
the streets. Nobody ever looks in a hurry, or
as if an hour’s delay would affect the thing
in hand. The nearest approach to a mob is when
some stranger, thinking himself late for the train
(as if the thing were possible), is tempted to run
a few steps along the sidewalk. On such an occasion
I have seen doors open, and heads thrust out.
But ordinarily even the physicians drive slowly, as
if they wished to disguise their profession, or to
soothe the nerves of some patient who may be gazing
from a window.
Yet they are not to be censured, since
Death, their antagonist, here drives slowly too.
The number of the aged among us is surprising, and
explains some phenomena otherwise strange. You
will notice, for instance, that there are no posts
before the houses in Oldport to which horses may be
tied. Fashionable visitors might infer that every
horse is supposed to be attended by a groom.
Yet the tradition is, that there were once as many
posts here as elsewhere, but that they were removed
to get rid of the multitude of old men who leaned all
day against them. It obstructed the passing.
And these aged citizens, while permitted to linger
at their posts, were gossiping about men still older,
in earthly or heavenly habitations, and the sensation
of longevity went on accumulating indefinitely in
their talk. Their very disputes had a flavor
of antiquity, and involved the reputation of female
relatives to the third or fourth generation.
An old fisherman testified in our Police Court, the
other day, in narrating the progress of a street quarrel;
“Then I called him ’Polly Garter,’-that’s
his grandmother; and he called me ’Susy Reynolds,’-that’s
my aunt that’s dead and gone.”
In towns like this, from which the
young men mostly migrate, the work of life devolves
upon the venerable and the very young. When I
first came to Oldport, it appeared to me that every
institution was conducted by a boy and his grandfather.
This seemed the case, for instance, with the bank
that consented to assume the slender responsibility
of my deposits. It was further to be observed,
that, if the elder official was absent for a day,
the boy carried on the proceedings unaided; while
if the boy also wished to amuse himself elsewhere,
a worthy neighbor from across the way came in to fill
the places of both. Seeing this, I retained my
small hold upon the concern with fresh tenacity; for
who knew but some day, when the directors also had
gone on a picnic, the senior depositor might take
his turn at the helm? It may savor of self-confidence,
but it has always seemed to me, that, with one day’s
control of a bank, even in these degenerate times,
something might be done which would quite astonish
the stockholders.
Longer acquaintance has, however,
revealed the fact, that these Oldport institutions
stand out as models of strict discipline beside their
suburban compeers. A friend of mine declares that
he went lately into a country bank, nearby, and found
no one on duty. Being of opinion that there should
always be someone behind the counter of a bank, he
went there himself. Wishing to be informed as
to the resources of his establishment, he explored
desks and vaults, found a good deal of paper of different
kinds, and some rich veins of copper, but no cashier.
Going to the door again in some anxiety, he encountered
a casual school-boy, who kindly told him that he did
not know where the financial officer might be at the
precise moment of inquiry, but that half an hour before
he was on the wharf, fishing.
Death comes to the aged at last, however,
even in Oldport. We have lately lost, for instance,
that patient old postman, serenest among our human
antiquities, whose deliberate tread might have imparted
a tone of repose to Broadway, could any imagination
have transferred him thither. Through him the
correspondence of other days came softened of all
immediate solicitude. Ere it reached you, friends
had died or recovered, debtors had repented, creditors
grown kind, or your children had paid your debts.
Perils had passed, hopes were chastened, and the most
eager expectant took calmly the missive from that tranquillizing
hand. Meeting his friends and clients with a step
so slow that it did not even stop rapidly, he, like
Tennyson’s Mariana, slowly
“From
his bosom drew
Old
letters.”
But a summons came at last, not to
be postponed even by him. One day he delivered
his mail as usual, with no undue precipitation; on
the next, the blameless soul was himself taken and
forwarded on some celestial route.
Irreparable would have seemed his
loss, did there not still linger among us certain
types of human antiquity that might seem to disprove
the fabled youth of America. One veteran I daily
meet, of uncertain age, perhaps, but with at least
that air of brevet antiquity which long years of unruffled
indolence can give. He looks as if he had spent
at least half a lifetime on the sunny slope of some
beach, and the other half in leaning upon his elbows
at the window of some sailor boarding-house.
He is hale and broad, with a head sunk between two
strong shoulders; his beard falls like snow upon his
breast, longer and longer each year, while his slumberous
thoughts seem to move slowly enough to watch it as
it grows. I always fancy that these meditations
have drifted far astern of the times, but are following
after, in patient hopelessness, as a dog swims behind
a boat. What knows he of the President’s
Message? He has just overtaken some remarkable
catch of mackerel in the year thirty-eight. His
hands lie buried fathom-deep in his pockets, as if
part of his brain lay there to be rummaged; and he
sucks at his old pipe as if his head, like other venerable
hulks, must be smoked out at intervals. His walk
is that of a sloth, one foot dragging heavily behind
the other. I meet him as I go to the post-office,
and on returning, twenty minutes later, I pass him
again, a little farther advanced. All the children
accost him, and I have seen him stop-no
great retardation indeed-to fondle in his
arms a puppy or a kitten. Yet he is liable to
excitement, in his way; for once, in some high debate,
wherein he assisted as listener, when one old man on
a wharf was doubting the assertion of another old
man about a certain equinoctial gale, I saw my friend
draw his right hand slowly and painfully from his
pocket, and let it fall by his side. It was really
one of the most emphatic gesticulations I ever saw,
and tended obviously to quell the rising discord.
It was as if the herald at a tournament had dropped
his truncheon, and the fray must end.
Women’s faces are apt to take
from old age a finer touch than those of men, and
poverty does not interfere with this, where there is
no actual exposure to the elements. From the
windows of these old houses there often look forth
delicate, faded countenances, to which belongs an air
of unmistakable refinement. Nowhere in America,
I fancy, does one see such counterparts of the reduced
gentlewoman of England,-as described, for
instance, in “Cranford,”-quiet
maiden ladies of seventy, with perhaps a tradition
of beauty and bellehood, and still wearing always a
bit of blue ribbon on their once golden curls,-this
headdress being still carefully arranged, each day,
by some handmaiden of sixty, so long a house-mate
as to seem a sister, though some faint suggestion of
wages and subordination may be still preserved.
Among these ladies, as in “Cranford,”
there is a dignified reticence in respect to money-matters,
and a courteous blindness to the small economies practised
by each other. It is not held good breeding, when
they meet in a shop of a morning, for one to seem
to notice what another buys.
These ancient ladies have coats of
arms upon their walls, hereditary damasks among their
scanty wardrobes, store of domestic traditions in
their brains, and a whole Court Guide of high-sounding
names at their fingers’ ends. They can
tell you of the supposed sister of an English queen,
who married an American officer and dwelt in Oldport;
of the Scotch Lady Janet, who eloped with her tutor,
and here lived in poverty, paying her washerwoman
with costly lace from her trunks; of the Oldport dame
who escaped from France at the opening of the Revolution,
was captured by pirates on her voyage to America, then
retaken by a privateer and carried into Boston, where
she took refuge in John Hancock’s house.
They can describe to you the Malbone Gardens, and,
as the night wanes and the embers fade, can give the
tale of the Phantom of Rough Point. Gliding farther
and farther into the past, they revert to the brilliant
historic period of Oldport, the successive English
and French occupations during our Revolution, and show
you gallant inscriptions in honor of their grandmothers,
written on the window-panes by the diamond rings of
the foreign officers.
The newer strata of Oldport society
are formed chiefly by importation, and have the one
advantage of a variety of origin which puts provincialism
out of the question. The mild winter climate and
the supposed cheapness of living draw scattered families
from the various Atlantic cities; and, coming from
such different sources, these visitors leave some
exclusiveness behind. The boast of heraldry, the
pomp of power, are doubtless good things to have in
one’s house, but are cumbrous to travel with.
Meeting here on central ground, partial aristocracies
tend to neutralize each other. A Boston family
comes, bristling with genealogies, and making the
most of its little all of two centuries. Another
arrives from Philadelphia, equally fortified in local
heraldries unknown in Boston.
A third from New York brings a briefer
pedigree, but more gilded. Their claims are incompatible;
but there is no common standard, and so neither can
have precedence. Since no human memory can retain
the great-grandmothers of three cities, we are practically
as well off as if we had no great-grandmothers at
all.
But in Oldport, as elsewhere, the
spice of conversation is apt to be in inverse ratio
to family tree and income-tax, and one can hear better
repartees among the boat-builders’ shops on Long
Wharf than among those who have made the grand tour.
All the world over, one is occasionally reminded of
the French officer’s verdict on the garrison
town where he was quartered, that the good society
was no better than the good society anywhere else,
but the bad society was capital. I like, for
instance, to watch the shoals of fishermen that throng
our streets in the early spring, inappropriate as
porpoises on land, or as Scott’s pirates in
peaceful Kirkwall,-unwieldy, bearded creatures
in oil-skin suits,-men who have never before
seen a basket-wagon or a liveried groom and, whose
first comments on the daintinesses of fashion are far
more racy than anything which fashion can say for itself.
The life of our own fishermen and
pilots remains active, in its way, all winter; and
coasting vessels come and go in the open harbor every
day. The only schooner that is not so employed
is, to my eye, more attractive than any of them; it
is our sole winter guest, this year, of all the graceful
flotilla of yachts that helped to make our summer
moonlights so charming. While Europe seems in
such ecstasy over the ocean yacht-race, there lies
at anchor, stripped and dismantled, a vessel which
was excluded from the match, it is said, simply because
neither of the three competitors would have had a chance
against her. I like to look across the harbor
at the graceful proportions of this uncrowned victor
in the race she never ran; and to my eye her laurels
are the most attractive. She seems a fit emblem
of the genius that waits, while talent merely wins.
“Let me know,” said that fine, but unappreciated
thinker, Brownlee Brown,-“let me know
what chances a man has passed in contempt; not what
he has made, but what he has refused to make, reserving
himself for higher ends.”
All out-door work in winter has a
cheerful look, from the triumph of caloric it implies;
but I know none in which man seems to revert more
to the lower modes of being than in searching for seaclams.
One may sometimes observe a dozen men employed in
this way, on one of our beaches, while the cold wind
blows keenly off shore, and the spray drifts back
like snow over the green and sluggish surge. The
men pace in and out with the wave, going steadily
to and fro like a pendulum, ankle-deep in the chilly
brine, their steps quickened by hope or slackening
with despair. Where the maidens and children sport
and shout in summer, there in winter these heavy figures
succeed. To them the lovely crest of the emerald
billow is but a chariot for clams, and is valueless
if it comes in empty. Really, the position of
the clam is the more dignified, since he moves only
with the wave, and the immortal being in fish-boots
wades for him.
The harbor and the beach are thus
occupied in winter; but one may walk for many a mile
along the cliffs, and see nothing human but a few
gardeners, spreading green and white sea-weed as manure
upon the lawns. The mercury rarely drops to zero
here, and there is little snow; but a new-fallen drift
has just the same virgin beauty as farther inland,
and when one suddenly comes in view of the sea beyond
it, there is a sensation of summer softness.
The water is not then deep blue, but pale, with opaline
reflections. Vessels in the far horizon have the
same delicate tint, as if woven of the same liquid
material. A single wave lifts itself languidly
above a reef,-a white-breasted loon floats
near the shore,-the sea breaks in long,
indolent curves,-the distant islands swim
in a vague mirage. Along the cliffs hang great
organ-pipes of ice, distilling showers of drops that
glitter in the noonday sun, while the barer rocks
send up a perpetual steam, giving to the eye a sense
of warmth, and suggesting the comforts of fire.
Beneath, the low tide reveals long stretches of golden-brown
sea-weed, caressed by the lapping wave.
High winds bring a different scene.
Sometimes I fancy that in winter, with less visible
life upon the surface of the water, and less of unseen
animal life below it, there is yet more that seems
like vital force in the individual particles of waves.
Each separate drop appears more charged with desperate
and determined life. The lines of surf run into
each other more brokenly, and with less steady roll.
The low sun, too, lends a weird and jagged shadow
to gallop in before the crest of each advancing wave,
and sometimes there is a second crest on the shoulders
of the first, as if there were more than could be contained
in a single curve. Greens and purples are called
forth to replace the prevailing blue. Far out
at sea, great separate mounds of water rear themselves,
as if to overlook the tossing plain. Sometimes
these move onward and subside with their green hue
still unbroken, and again they curve into detached
hillocks of foam, white, multitudinous, side by side,
not ridged, but moving on like a mob of white horses,
neck overarching neck, breast crowded against breast.
Across those tumultuous waves I like
to watch, after sunset, the revolving light; there
is something about it so delicate and human. It
seems to bud or bubble out of the low, dark horizon;
a moment, and it is not, and then another moment,
and it is. With one throb the tremulous light
is born; with another throb it has reached its full
size, and looks at you, coy and defiant; and almost
in that instant it is utterly gone. You cannot
conceive yourself to be watching something which merely
turns on an axis; but it seems suddenly to expand,
a flower of light, or to close, as if soft petals
of darkness clasped it in. During its moments
of absence, the eye cannot quite keep the memory of
its precise position, and it often appears a hair-breadth
to the right or left of the expected spot. This
enhances the elfish and fantastic look, and so the
pretty game goes on, with flickering surprises, every
night and all night long. But the illusion of
the seasons is just as coquettish; and when next summer
comes to us, with its blossoms and its joys, it will
dawn as softly out of the darkness and as softly give
place to winter once more.