6. The
Beach Again
Our way to the high sand-bank, which
I have described as extending all along the coast, led, as usual, through
patches of Bayberry bushes, which straggled into the sand. This, next to
the Shrub-oak, was perhaps the most common shrub thereabouts. I was much
attracted by its odoriferous leaves and small gray berries which are clustered
about the short twigs, just below the last year's growth. I know of but
two bushes in Concord, and they, being staminate plants, do not bear fruit.
The berries gave it a venerable appearance, and they smelled quite spicy,
like small confectionery. Robert Beverley, in his "History of Virginia,"
published in 1705, states that: "at the mouth of their rivers, and all
along upon the sea and bay, and near many of their creeks and swamps, grows
the myrtle, bearing a berry, of which they make a hard brittle wax, of
a curious green color, which by refining becomes almost transparent. Of
this they make candles, which are never greasy to the touch nor melt with
lying in the hottest weather; neither does the snuff of these ever offend
the smell, like that of a tallow candle; but, instead of being disagreeable,
if an accident puts a candle out, it yields a pleasant fragrancy to all
that are in the room; insomuch that nice people often put them out on purpose
to have the incense of the expiring snuff. The melting of these berries
is said to have been first found out by a surgeon in New England, who performed
wonderful things with a salve made of them." From the abundance of berries
still hanging on the bushes, we judged that the inhabitants did not generally
collect them for tallow, though we had seen a piece in the house we had
just left. I have since made some tallow myself. Holding a basket beneath
the bare twigs in April, I rubbed them together between my hands and thus
gathered about a quart in twenty minutes, to which were added enough to
make three pints, and I might have gathered them much faster with a suitable
rake and a large shallow basket. They have little prominences like those
of an orange all creased in tallow, which also fills the interstices down
to the stone. The oily part rose to the top, making it look like a savory
black broth, which smelled much like balm or other herb tea. You let it
cool, then skim off the tallow from the surface, melt this again and strain
it. I got about a quarter of a pound weight from my three pints, and more
yet remained within the berries. A small portion cooled in the form of
small flattish hemispheres, like crystallizations, the size of a kernel
of corn (nuggets I called them as I picked them out from amid the berries).
Loudon says, that "cultivated trees are said to yield more wax than those
that are found wild." If you get any pitch on your hands in the pine-woods
you have only to rub some of these berries between your hands to start
it off. But the ocean was the grand fact there, which made us forget both
bayberries and men.
To-day the air was beautifully clear, and the sea
no longer dark and stormy, though the waves still broke with foam along
the beach, but sparkling and full of life. Already that morning I had seen
the day break over the sea as if it came out of its bosom:--
"The saffron-robed
Dawn rose in haste from the streams
Of Ocean, that
she might bring light to immortals and to mortals"
The sun rose visibly at such a distance over the
sea, that the cloud-bank in the horizon, which at first concealed him,
was not perceptible until he had risen high behind it, and plainly broke
and dispersed it, like an arrow. But as yet I looked at him as rising over
land, and could not, without an effort, realize that he was rising over
the sea. Already I saw some vessels on the horizon, which had rounded the
Cape in the night, and were now well on their watery way to other lands.
We struck the beach again in the south part of Truro.
In the early part of the day, while it was flood tide, and the beach was
narrow and soft, we walked on the bank, which was very high here, but not
so level as the day before, being more interrupted by slight hollows. The
author of the Description of the Eastern Coast says of this part, that
"the bank is very high and steep. From the edge of it west, there is a
strip of sand a hundred yards in breadth. Then succeeds low brushwood,
a quarter of a mile wide, and almost impassable. After which comes a thick
perplexing forest, in which not a house is to be discovered. Seamen, therefore,
though the distance between these two hollows (Newcomb's and Brush Hollows)
is great, must not attempt to enter the wood, as in a snow-storm they must
undoubtedly perish." This is still a true description of the country, except
that there is not much high wood left.
There were many vessels, like gulls, skimming over
the surface of the sea, now half concealed in its troughs, their dolphin-strikers
ploughing the water, now tossed on the top of the billows. One, a barque
standing down parallel with the coast, suddenly furled her sails, came
to anchor, and swung round in the wind, near us, only half a mile from
the shore. At first we thought that her captain wished to communicate with
us, and perhaps we did not regard the signal of distress, which a mariner
would have understood, and he cursed us for cold-hearted wreckers who turned
our backs on him. For hours we could still see her anchored there behind
us, and we wondered how she could afford to loiter so long in her course.
Or was she a smuggler who had chosen that wild beach to land her cargo
on? Or did they wish to catch fish, or paint their vessel? Erelong other
barks, and brigs, and schooners, which had in the mean while doubled the
Cape, sailed by her in the smacking breeze, and our consciences were relieved.
Some of these vessels lagged behind, while others steadily went ahead.
We narrowly watched their rig and the cut of their jibs, and how they walked
the water, for there was all the difference between them that there is
between living creatures. But we wondered that they should be remembering
Boston and New York and Liverpool, steering for them, out there; as if
the sailor might forget his peddling business on such a grand highway.
They had perchance brought oranges from the Western Isles; and were they
carrying back the peel? We might as well transport our old traps across
the ocean of eternity. Is that but another "trading flood," with
its blessed isles? Is Heaven such a harbor as the Liverpool docks?
Still held on without a break, the inland barrens
and shrubbery, the desert and the high sand-bank with its even slope, the
broad white beach, the breakers, the green water on the bar, and the Atlantic
Ocean; and we traversed with delight new reaches of the shore; we took
another lesson in sea-horses' manes and sea-cows' tails, in sea-jellies
and sea-clams, with our new-gained experience. The sea ran hardly less
than the day before. It seemed with every wave to be subsiding, because
such was our expectation, and yet when hours had elapsed we could see no
difference. But there it was, balancing itself, the restless ocean by our
side, lurching in its gait. Each wave left the sand all braided or woven,
as it were, with a coarse woof and warp, and a distinct raised edge to
its rapid work. We made no haste, since we wished to see the ocean at our
leisure, and indeed that soft sand was no place in which to be in a hurry,
for one mile there was as good as two elsewhere. Besides, we were obliged
frequently to empty our shoes of the sand which one took in in climbing
or descending the bank.
As we were walking close to the water's edge this
morning, we turned round, by chance, and saw a large black object which
the waves had just cast up on the beach behind us, yet too far off for
us to distinguish what it was; and when we were about to return to it,
two men came running from the bank, where no human beings had appeared
before, as if they had come out of the sand, in order to save it before
another wave took it. As we approached, it took successively the form of
a huge fish, a drowned man, a sail or a net, and finally of a mass of tow-cloth,
part of the cargo of the Franklin, which the men loaded into a cart.
Objects on the beach, whether men or inanimate things,
look not only exceedingly grotesque, but much larger and more wonderful
than they actually are. Lately, when approaching the sea-shore several
degrees south of this, I saw before me, seemingly half a mile distant,
what appeared like bold and rugged cliffs on the beach, fifteen feet high,
and whitened by the sun and waves; but after a few steps it proved to be
low heaps of rages,--part of the cargo of a wrecked vessel,--scarcely more
than a foot in height. Once also it was my business to go in search of
the relics of a human body, mangled by sharks, which had just been cast
up, a week after a wreck, having got the direction from a light-house:
I should find it a mile or two distant over the sand, a dozen rods from
the water, covered with a cloth, by a stick stuck up. I expected that I
must look very narrowly to find so small an object, but the sandy beach,
half a mile wide, and stretching farther than the eye could reach, was
so perfectly smooth and bare, and the mirage toward the sea so magnifying,
that when I was half a mile distant the insignificant sliver which marked
the spot looked like a bleached spar, and the relics were as conspicuous
as if they lay in state on that sandy plain, or a generation had labored
to pile up their cairn there. Close at hand they were simply some bones
with a little flesh adhering to them, in fact, only a slight inequality
in the sweep of the shore. There was nothing at all remarkable about them,
and they were singularly inoffensive both to the senses and the imagination.
But as I stood there they grew more and more imposing. They were alone
with the beach and the sea, whose hollow roar seemed addressed to them,
and I was impressed as if there was an understanding between them and the
ocean which necessarily left me out, with my snivelling sympathies. That
dead body had taken possession of the shore, and reigned over it as no
living one could, in the name of a certain majesty which belonged to it.
We afterward saw many small pieces of tow-cloth washed
up, and I learn that it continued to be found in good condition, even as
late as November in that year, half a dozen bolts at a time.
We eagerly filled our pockets with the smooth round
pebbles which in some places, even here, were thinly sprinkled over the
sand, together with flat circular shells (Scutellæ?); but,
as we had read, when they were dry they had lost their beauty, and at each
sitting we emptied our pockets again of the least remarkable, until our
collection was well culled. Every material was rolled into the pebble form
by the waves; not only stones of various kinds, but the hard coal which
some vessel had dropped, bits of glass, and in one instance a mass of peat
three feet long, where there was nothing like it to be seen for many miles.
All the great rivers of the globe are annually, if not constantly, discharging
great quantities of lumber, which drifts to distant shores. I have also
seen very perfect pebbles of brick, and bars of Castile soap from a wreck
rolled into perfect cylinders, and still spirally streaked with red, like
a barber's pole. When a cargo of rags is washed ashore, every old pocket
and bag-like recess will be filled to bursting with sand by being rolled
on the beach; and on one occasion, the pockets in the clothing of the wrecked
being thus puffed up, even after they had been ripped open by wreckers,
deluded me into the hope of identifying them by the contents. A pair of
gloves looked exactly as if filled by a hand. The water in such clothing
is soon wrung out and evaporated, but the sand, which works itself into
every seam, is not so easily got rid of. Sponges, which are picked up on
the shore, as is well known, retain some of the sand of the beach to the
latest day, in spite of every effort to extract it.
I found one stone on the top of the bank, of a dark
gray color, shaped exactly like a giant clam (Mactra solidissima),
and of the same size; and, what was more remarkable, one half of the outside
had shelled off and lay near it, of the same form and depth with one of
the valves of this clam, while the other half was loose, leaving a solid
core of a darker color within it. I afterward saw a stone resembling a
razor clam, but it was a solid one. It appeared as if the stone, in the
process of formation, had filled the mould which a clam-shell furnished;
or the same law that shaped the clam had made a clam of stone. Dead clams,
with shells full of sand, are called sand clams. There were many of the
large clam-shells filled with sand; and sometimes one valve was separately
filled exactly even, as if it had been heaped and then scraped. Even among
the many small stones on the top of the bank, I found one arrow-head.
Beside the giant clam and barnacles, we found on
the shore a small clam (Mesodesma arctata), which I dug with my
hands in numbers on the bars, and which is sometimes eaten by the inhabitants,
in the absence of the Mya arenaria, on this side. Most of their
empty shells had been perforated by some foe. Also, the--
Astarte castanea.
The Edible Mussel (Mytilus edulis) on the
few rocks, and washed up in curious bunches of forty or fifty, held together
by its rope-like byssus.
The Scollop Shell (Pecten concentricus), used
for card-racks and pin-cushions.
Cockles, or Cuckoos (Natica heros), and their
remarkable nidus, called "sand-circle," looking like the top of
a stone jug without the stopple, and broken on one side, or like a flaring
dickey made of sand-paper. Also,
Cancellaria Couthouyi (?), and
Periwinkles (?) (Fusus decemcostatus).
We afterward saw some other kinds on the Bay side.
Gould states that this Cape "has hitherto proved a barrier to the migrations
of many species of Mollusca."...."Of the one hundred and ninety-seven species
[which he described in 1840 as belonging to Massachusetts], eighty-three
do not pass to the South shore, and fifty are not found on the North shore
of the Cape."
Among Crustacea, there were the shells of Crabs and
Lobsters, often bleached quite white high up the beach; Sea or Beach Fleas
(Amphipoda); and the cases of the Horse-shoe Crab, or Saucepan Fish
(Limulus Polyphæmus), of which we saw many alive on the Bay
side, where they feed pigs on them. Their tails were used as arrow-heads
by the Indians.
Of Radiata, there were the Sea Chestnut or Egg (Echinus
granulatus), commonly divested of its spines; flat circular shells
(Scutella parma?) covered with chocolate-colored spines, but becoming
smooth and white, with five petal-like figures; a few Star-fishes or Five-fingers
(Asterias rubens); and Sun-fishes or Sea-jellies (Aureliæ).
There was also at least one species of Sponge.
The plants which I noticed here and there on the
pure sandy shelf, between the ordinary high-water mark and the foot of
the bank, were Sea Rocket (Cakile Americana), Saltwort (Salsola
kali), Sea Sandwort (Honkenya peploides), Sea Burdock (Xanthium
echinatum), Sea-side Spurge (Euphorbia polygonifolia); also,
Beach Grass (Arundo, Psamma, or Calamagrostis arenaria),
Sea-side Golden-rod (Solidago sempervirens), and the Beach Pea (Lathyrus
maritimus).
Sometimes we helped a wrecker turn over a larger
log than usual, or we amused ourselves with rolling stones down the bank,
but we rarely could make one reach the water, the beach was so soft and
wide; or we bathed in some shallow within a bar, where the sea covered
us with sand at every flux, though it was quite cold and windy. The ocean
there is commonly but a tantalizing prospect in hot weather, for with all
that water before you, there is, as we were afterward told, no bathing
on the Atlantic side, on account of the undertow and the rumor of sharks.
At the light-house both in Eastham and Truro, the only houses quite on
the shore, they declared, the next year, that they would not bathe there
"for any sum," for they sometimes saw the sharks tossed up and quiver for
a moment on the sand. Others laughed at these stories, but perhaps they
could afford to because they never bathed anywhere. One old wrecker told
us that he killed a regular man-eating shark fourteen feet long, and hauled
him out with his oxen, where we had bathed; and another, that his father
caught a smaller one of the same kind that was stranded there, by standing
him up on his snout so that the waves could not take him. They will tell
you tough stories of sharks all over the Cape, which I do not presume to
doubt utterly,--how they will sometimes upset a boat, or tear it in pieces,
to get at the man in it. I can easily believe in the undertow, but I have
no doubt that one shark in a dozen years is enough to keep up the reputation
of a beach a hundred miles long. I should add, however, that in July we
walked on the bank here a quarter of a mile parallel with a fish about
six feet in length, possibly a shark, which was prowling slowly along within
two rods of the shore. It was of a pale brown color, singularly film-like
and indistinct in the water, as if all nature abetted this child of ocean,
and showed many darker transverse bars or rings whenever it came to the
surface. It is well known that different fishes even of the same species
are colored by the water they inhabit. We saw it go into a little cove
or bathing-tub, where we had just been bathing, where the water was only
four or five feet deep at that time, and after exploring it go slowly out
again; but we continued to bathe there, only observing first from the bank
if the cove was preoccupied. We thought that the water was fuller of life,
more a rated perhaps than that of the Bay, like soda-water, for we were
as particular as young salmon, and the expectation of encountering a shark
did not subtract anything from its life-giving qualities.
Sometimes we sat on the wet beach and watched the
beach birds, sand-pipers, and others, trotting along close to each wave,
and waiting for the sea to cast up their breakfast. The former (Charadrius
melodus) ran with great rapidity and then stood stock still remarkably
erect and hardly to be distinguished from the beach. The wet sand was covered
with small skipping Sea Fleas, which apparently make a part of their food.
These last are the little scavengers of the beach, and are so numerous
that they will devour large fishes, which have been cast up, in a very
short time. One little bird not larger than a sparrow,--it may have been
a Phalarope,--would alight on the turbulent surface where the breakers
were five or six feet high, and float buoyantly there like a duck, cunningly
taking to its wings and lifting itself a few feet through the air over
the foaming crest of each breaker, but sometimes outriding safely a considerable
billow which hid it some seconds, when its instinct told it that it would
not break. It was a little creature thus to sport with the ocean, but it
was as perfect a success in its way as the breakers in theirs. There was
also an almost uninterrupted line of coots rising and falling with the
waves, a few rods from the shore, the whole length of the Cape. They made
as constant a part of the ocean's border as the pads or pickerel-weed do
of that of a pond. We read the following as to the Storm Petrel (Thalassidroma
Wilsonii), which is seen in the Bay as well as on the outside. "The
feathers on the breast of the Storm Petrel are, like those of all swimming
birds, water-proof; but substances not susceptible of being wetted with
water are, for that very reason, the best fitted for collecting oil from
its surface. That function is performed by the feathers on the breast of
the Storm Petrels as they touch on the surface; and though that may not
be the only way in which they procure their food, it is certainly that
in which they obtain great part of it. They dash along till they have loaded
their feathers and then they pause upon the wave and remove the oil with
their bills."
Thus we kept on along the gently curving shore, seeing
two or three miles ahead at once,--along this ocean side-walk, where there
was none to turn out for, with the middle of the road the highway of nations
on our right, and the sand cliffs of the Cape on our left. We saw this
forenoon a part of the wreck of a vessel, probably the Franklin,
a large piece fifteen feet square, and still freshly painted. With a grapple
and a line we could have saved it, for the waves repeatedly washed it within
cast, but they as often took it back. It would have been a lucky haul for
some poor wrecker, for I have been told that one man who paid three or
four dollars for a part of the wreck of that vessel, sold fifty or sixty
dollars' worth of iron out of it. Another, the same who picked up the Captain's
valise with the memorable letter in it, showed me, growing in his garden,
many pear and plum trees which washed ashore from her, all nicely tied
up and labelled, and he said that he might have got five hundred dollars
worth; for a Mr. Bell was importing the nucleus of a nursery to be established
near Boston. His turnip-seed came from the same source. Also valuable spars
from the same vessel and from the Cactus lay in his yard. In short the
inhabitants visit the beach to see what they have caught as regularly as
a fisherman his weir or a lumberer his boom; the Cape is their boom. I
heard of one who had recently picked up twenty barrels of apples in good
condition, probably a part of a deck load thrown over in a storm.
Though there are wreck-masters appointed to look
after valuable property which must be advertised, yet undoubtedly a great
deal of value is secretly carried off. But are we not all wreckers contriving
that some treasure may be washed up on our beach, that we may secure it,
and do we not infer the habits of these Nauset and Barnegat wreckers, from
the common modes of getting a living?
The sea, vast and wild as it is, bears thus the waste
and wrecks of human art to its remotest shore. There is no telling what
it may not vomit up. It lets nothing lie; not even the giant clams which
cling to its bottom. It is still heaving up the tow-cloth of the Franklin,
and perhaps a piece of some old pirate's ship, wrecked more than a hundred
years ago, comes ashore to-day. Some years since, when a vessel was wrecked
here which had nutmegs in her cargo, they were strewn all along the beach,
and for a considerable time were not spoiled by the salt water. Soon afterward,
a fisherman caught a cod which was full of them. Why, then, might not the
Spice-Islanders shake their nutmeg-trees into the ocean, and let all nations
who stand in need of them pick them up? However, after a year, I found
that the nutmegs from the Franklin had become soft.
You might make a curious list of articles which fishes
have swallowed,--sailors' open clasp-knives, and bright tin snuff-boxes,
not knowing what was in them,--and jugs, and jewels, and Jonah. The other
day I came across the following scrap in a newspaper.
"A RELIGIOUS FISH.--A
short time ago, mine host Stewart, of the Denton Hotel, purchased a rock-fish,
weighing about sixty pounds. On opening it he found in it a certificate
of membership of the M. E. Church, which we read as follows:--
Member
Methodist E. Church.
Founded A. D. 1784.
Quarterly Ticket
18
Minister.
'For our light affliction, which is but for a moment,
worketh for us a far more exceeding and eternal weight of glory.'--2
Cor. iv. 17.
'O what are all
my sufferings here,
If, Lord, thou count me meet
With that enraptured
host t' appear,
And worship at thy feet.'
"The paper was of course in a crumpled and wet condition,
but on exposing it to the sun, and ironing the kinks out of it, it became
quite legible.--Denton (Md.) Journal."
From time to time we saved a wreck ourselves, a box
or barrel, and set it on its end, and appropriated it with crossed sticks;
and it will lie there perhaps, respected by brother wreckers, until some
more violent storm shall take it, really lost to man until wrecked again.
We also saved, at the cost of wet feet only, a valuable cord and buoy,
part of a seine, with which the sea was playing, for it seemed ungracious
to refuse the least gift which so great a personage offered you. We brought
this home and still use it for a garden line. I picked up a bottle half
buried in the wet sand, covered with barnacles, but stoppled tight, and
half full of red ale, which still smacked of juniper,--all that remained
I fancied from the wreck of a rowdy world,--that great salt sea on the
one hand, and this little sea of ale on the other, preserving their separate
characters. What if it could tell us its adventures over countless ocean
waves! Man would not be man through such ordeals as it had passed. But
as I poured it slowly out on to the sand, it seemed to me that man himself
was like a half-emptied bottle of pale ale, which Time had drunk so far,
yet stoppled tight for a while, and drifting about in the ocean of circumstances;
but destined erelong to mingle with the surrounding waves, or be spilled
amid the sands of a distant shore.
In the summer I saw two men fishing for Bass hereabouts.
Their bait was a bullfrog, or several small frogs in a bunch, for want
of squid. They followed a retiring wave and whirling their lines round
and round their heads with increasing rapidity, threw them as far as they
could into the sea; then retreating, sat down, flat on the sand, and waited
for a bite. It was literally (or littorally) walking down to the
shore, and throwing your line into the Atlantic. I should not have known
what might take hold of the other end, whether Proteus or another. At any
rate, if you could not pull him in, why, you might let him go without being
pulled in yourself. And they knew by experience that it would be
a Striped Bass, or perhaps a Cod, for these fishes play along near the
shore.
From time to time we sat under the lee of a sand-hill
on the bank, thinly covered with coarse beach-grass, and steadily gazed
on the sea, or watched the vessels going south, all Blessings of the Bay
of course. We could see a little more than half a circle of ocean, besides
the glimpses of the Bay which we got behind us; the sea there was not wild
and dreary in all respects, for there were frequently a hundred sail in
sight at once on the Atlantic. You can commonly count about eighty in a
favorable summer day, and pilots sometimes land and ascend the bank to
look out for those which require their services. These had been waiting
for fair weather, and had come out of Boston Harbor together. The same
is the case when they have been assembled in the Vineyard Sound, so that
you may see but few one day, and a large fleet the next. Schooners with
many jibs and stay-sails crowded all the sea road; square-rigged vessels
with their great height and breadth of canvas were ever and anon appearing
out of the far horizon, or disappearing and sinking into it. Here and there
a pilot-boat was towing its little boat astern toward some distant foreigner
who had just fired a gun, the echo of which along the shore sounded like
the caving of the bank. We could see the pilot looking through his glass
toward the distant ship which was putting back to speak with him. He sails
many a mile to meet her; and now she puts her sails aback, and communicates
with him alongside,--sends some important message to the owners, and then
bids farewell to these shores for good and all; or, perchance a propeller
passed and made fast to some disabled craft, or one that had been becalmed,
whose cargo of fruit might spoil. Though silently, and for the most part
incommunicatively, going about their business, they were, no doubt, a source
of cheerfulness and a kind of society to one another.
To-day it was the Purple Sea, an epithet which I
should not before have accepted. There were distinct patches of the color
of a purple grape with the bloom rubbed off. But first and last the sea
is of all colors. Well writes Gilpin concerning "the brilliant hues which
are continually playing on the surface of a quiet ocean," and this was
not too turbulent at a distance from the shore. "Beautiful," says he, "no
doubt in a high degree are those glimmering tints which often invest the
tops of mountains; but they are mere coruscations compared with these marine
colors, which are continually varying and shifting into each other in all
the vivid splendor of the rainbow, through the space often of several leagues."
Commonly, in calm weather, for half a mile from the shore, where the bottom
tinges it, the sea is green, or greenish, as are some ponds; then blue
for many miles, often with purple tinges, bounded in the distance by a
light almost silvery stripe; beyond which there is generally a dark-blue
rim, like a mountain ridge in the horizon, as if, like that, it owed its
color to the intervening atmosphere. On another day it will be marked with
long streaks, alternately smooth and rippled, light-colored and dark, even
like our inland meadows in a freshet, and showing which way the wind sets.
Thus we sat on the foaming shore, looking on the
wine-colored ocean,--
[Original text consists of letters from the Greek alphabet]
Here and there was a darker spot on its surface,
the shadow of a cloud, though the sky was so clear that no cloud would
have been noticed otherwise, and no shadow would have been seen on the
land, where a much smaller surface is visible at once. So, distant clouds
and showers may be seen on all sides by a sailor in the course of a day,
which do not necessarily portend rain where he is. In July we saw similar
dark-blue patches where schools of Menhaden rippled the surface, scarcely
to be distinguished from the shadows of clouds. Sometimes the sea was spotted
with them far and wide, such is its inexhaustible fertility. Close at hand
you see their back fin, which is very long and sharp, projecting two or
three inches above water. From time to time also we saw the white bellies
of the Bass playing along the shore.
It was a poetic recreation to watch those distant
sails steering for half fabulous ports, whose very names are a mysterious
music to our ears: Fayal, and Babel-mandel, ay, and Chagres, and Panama,--bound
to the famous Bay of San Francisco, and the golden streams of Sacramento
and San Joaquin, to Feather River and the American Fork, where Sutter's
Fort presides, and inland stands the City de los Angeles. It is remarkable
that men do not sail the sea with more expectation. Nothing remarkable
was ever accomplished in a prosaic mood. The heroes and discoverers have
found true more than was previously believed, only when they were expecting
and dreaming of something more than their contemporaries dreamed of, or
even themselves discovered, that is, when they were in a frame of mind
fitted to behold the truth. Referred to the world's standard, they are
always insane. Even savages have indirectly surmised as much. Humboldt,
speaking of Columbus approaching the New World, says: "The grateful coolness
of the evening air, the ethereal purity of the starry firmament, the balmy
fragrance of flowers, wafted to him by the land breeze, all led him to
suppose (as we are told by Herrera, in the Decades) that he was approaching
the garden of Eden, the sacred abode of our first parents. The Orinoco
seemed to him one of the four rivers which, according to the venerable
tradition of the ancient world, flowed from Paradise, to water and divide
the surface of the earth, newly adorned with plants." So even the expeditions
for the discovery of El Dorado, and of the Fountain of Youth, led to real,
if not compensatory discoveries.
We discerned vessels so far off, when once we began
to look, that only the tops of their masts in the horizon were visible,
and it took a strong intention of the eye, and its most favorable side,
to see them at all, and sometimes we doubted if we were not counting our
eyelashes. Charles Darwin states that he saw, from the base of the Andes,
"the masts of the vessels at anchor in the bay of Valparaiso, although
not less than twenty-six geographical miles distant," and that Anson had
been surprised at the distance at which his vessels were discovered from
the coast, without knowing the reason, namely, the great height of the
land and the transparency of the air. Steamers may be detected much farther
than sailing vessels, for, as one says, when their hulls and masts of wood
and iron are down, their smoky masts and streamers still betray them; and
the same writer, speaking of the comparative advantages of bituminous and
anthracite coal for war-steamers, states that: "From the ascent of the
columns of smoke above the horizon, the motions of the steamers in Calais
Harbor [on the coast of France] are at all times observable at Ramsgate
[on the English coast], from the first lighting of the fires to the putting
out at sea; and that in America the steamers burning the fat bituminous
coal can be tracked at sea at least seventy miles before the hulls become
visible, by the dense columns of black smoke pouring out of their chimneys,
and trailing along the horizon."
Though there were numerous vessels at this great
distance in the horizon on every side, yet the vast spaces between them,
like the spaces between the stars, far as they were distant from us, so
were they from one another--nay, some were twice as far from each other
as from us,--impressed us with a sense of the immensity of the ocean, the
"unfruitful ocean," as it has been called, and we could see what proportion
man and his works bear to the globe. As we looked off, and saw the water
growing darker and darker and deeper and deeper the farther we looked,
till it was awful to consider, and it appeared to have no relation to the
friendly land, either as shore or bottom,--of what use is a bottom if it
is out of sight, if it is two or three miles from the surface, and you
are to be drowned so long before you get to it, though it were made of
the same stuff with your native soil?--over that ocean, where, as the Veda
says, "there is nothing to give support, nothing to rest upon, nothing
to cling to," I felt that I was a land animal. The man in a balloon even
may commonly alight on the earth in a few moments, but the sailor's only
hope is that he may reach the distant shore. I could then appreciate the
heroism of the old navigator, Sir Humphrey Gilbert, of whom it is related,
that being overtaken by a storm when on his return from America, in the
year 1583, far northeastward from where we were, sitting abaft with a book
in his hand, just before he was swallowed up in the deep, he cried out
to his comrades in the Hind, as they came within hearing, "We are
as near to Heaven by sea as by land." I saw that it would not be easy to
realize.
On Cape Cod, the next most eastern land you hear
of is St. George's Bank (the fishermen tell of "Georges," "Cashus," and
other sunken lands which they frequent). Every Cape man has a theory about
George's Bank having been an island once, and in their accounts they gradually
reduce the shallowness from six, five, four, two fathoms, to somebody's
confident assertion that he has seen a mackerel-gull sitting on a piece
of dry land there. It reminded me, when I thought of the shipwrecks which
had taken place there, of the Isle of Demons, laid down off this coast
in old charts of the New World. There must be something monstrous, methinks,
in a vision of the sea bottom from over some bank a thousand miles from
the shore, more awful than its imagined bottomlessness; a drowned continent,
all livid and frothing at the nostrils, like the body of a drowned man,
which is better sunk deep than near the surface.
I have been surprised to discover from a steamer
the shallowness of Massachusetts Bay itself. Off Billingsgate Point I could
have touched the bottom with a pole, and I plainly saw it variously shaded
with sea-weed, at five or six miles from the shore. This is "The Shoal-ground
of the Cape," it is true, but elsewhere the Bay is not much deeper than
a country pond. We are told that the deepest water in the English Channel
between Shakespeare's Cliff and Cape Grinéz, in France, is one hundred
and eighty feet; and Guyot says that "the Baltic Sea has a depth of only
one hundred and twenty feet between the coasts of Germany and those of
Sweden," and "the Adriatic between Venice and Trieste has a depth of only
one hundred and thirty feet." A pond in my native town, only half a mile
long, is more than one hundred feet deep.
The ocean is but a larger lake. At midsummer you
may sometimes see a strip of glassy smoothness on it, a few rods in width
and many miles long, as if the surface there were covered with a thin pellicle
of oil, just as on a country pond; a sort of stand-still, you would say,
at the meeting or parting of two currents of air (if it does not rather
mark the unrippled steadiness of a current of water beneath), for sailors
tell of the ocean and land breeze meeting between the fore and aft sails
of a vessel, while the latter are full, the former being suddenly taken
aback. Daniel Webster, in one of his letters describing blue-fishing off
Martha's Vineyard, referring to those smooth places, which fishermen and
sailors call "slicks," says: "We met with them yesterday, and our boatman
made for them, whenever discovered. He said they were caused by the blue-fish
chopping up their prey. That is to say, those voracious fellows get into
a school of menhaden, which are too large to swallow whole, and they bite
them into pieces to suit their tastes. And the oil from this butchery,
rising to the surface, makes the `slick.'"
Yet this same placid Ocean, as civil now as a city's
harbor, a place for ships and commerce, will erelong be lashed into sudden
fury, and all its caves and cliffs will resound with tumult. It will ruthlessly
heave these vessels to and fro, break them in pieces in its sandy or stony
jaws, and deliver their crews to sea-monsters. It will play with them like
sea-weed, distend them like dead frogs, and carry them about, now high,
now low, to show to the fishes, giving them a nibble. This gentle Ocean
will toss and tear the rag of a man's body like the father of mad bulls,
and his relatives may be seen seeking the remnants for weeks along the
strand. From some quiet inland hamlet they have rushed weeping to the unheard-of
shore, and now stand uncertain where a sailor has recently been buried
amid the sand-hills.
It is generally supposed that they who have long
been conversant with the Ocean can foretell, by certain indications, such
as its roar and the notes of sea-fowl, when it will change from calm to
storm; but probably no such ancient mariner as we dream of exists; they
know no more, at least, than the older sailors do about this voyage of
life on which we are all embarked. Nevertheless, we love to hear the sayings
of old sailors, and their accounts of natural phenomena, which totally
ignore, and are ignored by, science; and possibly they have not always
looked over the gunwale so long in vain. Kalm repeats a story which was
told him in Philadelphia by a Mr. Cock, who was one day sailing to the
West Indies in a small yacht, with an old man on board who was well acquainted
with those seas. "The old man sounding the depth, called to the mate to
tell Mr. Cock to launch the boats immediately, and to put a sufficient
number of men into them, in order to tow the yacht during the calm, that
they might reach the island before them as soon as possible, as within
twenty-four hours there would be a strong hurricane. Mr. Cock asked him
what reasons he had to think so; the old man replied, that on sounding,
he saw the lead in the water at a distance of many fathoms more than he
had seen it before; that therefore the water was become clear all of a
sudden, which he looked upon as a certain sign of an impending hurricane
in the sea." The sequel of the story is, that by good fortune, and by dint
of rowing, they managed to gain a safe harbor before the hurricane had
reached its height; but it finally raged with so much violence, that not
only many ships were lost and houses unroofed, but even their own vessel
in harbor was washed so far on shore that several weeks elapsed before
it could be got off.
The Greeks would not have called the ocean [Greek
text], or unfruitful, though it does not produce wheat, if they had
viewed it by the light of modern science, for naturalists now assert that
"the sea, and not the land, is the principal seat of life,"--though not
of vegetable life. Darwin affirms that "our most thickly inhabited forests
appear almost as deserts when we come to compare them with the corresponding
regions of the ocean." Agassiz and Gould tell us that "the sea teems with
animals of all classes, far beyond the extreme point of flowering plants";
but they add, that "experiments of dredging in very deep water have also
taught us that the abyss of the ocean is nearly a desert";--"so that modern
investigations," to quote the words of Desor, "merely go to confirm the
great idea which was vaguely anticipated by the ancient poets and philosophers,
that the Ocean is the origin of all things." Yet marine animals and plants
hold a lower rank in the scale of being than land animals and plants. "There
is no instance known," says Desor, "of an animal becoming aquatic in its
perfect state, after having lived in its lower stage on dry land," but
as in the case of the tadpole, "the progress invariably points towards
the dry land." In short, the dry land itself came through and out of the
water in its way to the heavens, for, "in going back through the geological
ages, we come to an epoch when, according to all appearances, the dry land
did not exist, and when the surface of our globe was entirely covered with
water." We looked on the sea, then, once more, not as [Greek text],
or unfruitful, but as it has been more truly called, the "laboratory of
continents."
Though we have indulged in some placid reflections
of late, the reader must not forget that the dash and roar of the waves
were incessant. Indeed, it would be well if he were to read with a large
conch-shell at his ear. But notwithstanding that it was very cold and windy
to-day, it was such a cold as we thought would not cause one to take cold
who was exposed to it, owing to the saltness of the air and the dryness
of the soil. Yet the author of the old Description of Wellfleet says: "The
atmosphere is very much impregnated with saline particles, which, perhaps,
with the great use of fish, and the neglect of cider and spruce-beer, may
be a reason why the people are more subject to sore mouths and throats
than in other places."
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