An Old Town By the Sea eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 77 pages of information about An Old Town By the Sea.

An Old Town By the Sea eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 77 pages of information about An Old Town By the Sea.

To come back to the wharves.  I do not know of any spot with such a fascinating air of dreams and idleness about it as the old wharf at the end of Court Street.  The very fact that it was once a noisy, busy place, crowded with sailors and soldiers—­in the war of 1812—­gives an emphasis to the quiet that broods over it to-day.  The lounger who sits of a summer afternoon on a rusty anchor fluke in the shadow of one of the silent warehouses, and look on the lonely river as it goes murmuring past the town, cannot be too grateful to the India trade for having taken itself off elsewhere.

What a slumberous, delightful, lazy place it is!  The sunshine seems to lie a foot deep on the planks of the dusty wharf, which yields up to the warmth a vague perfume of the cargoes of rum, molasses, and spice that used to be piled upon it.  The river is as blue as the inside of a harebell.  The opposite shore, in the strangely shifting magic lights of sky and water, stretches along like the silvery coast of fairyland.  Directly opposite you is the navy yard, and its neat officers’ quarters and workshops and arsenals, and its vast shiphouses, in which the keel of many a famous frigate has been laid.  Those monster buildings on the water’s edge, with their roofs pierced with innumerable little windows, which blink like eyes in the sunlight, and the shiphouses.  On your right lies a cluster of small islands,—­there are a dozen or more in the harbor—­on the most extensive of which you see the fading-away remains of some earthworks thrown up in 1812.  Between this—­Trefethren’s Island—­and Peirce’s Island lie the Narrows.  Perhaps a bark or a sloop-of-war is making up to town; the hulk is hidden amoung the islands, and the topmasts have the effect of sweeping across the dry land.  On your left is a long bridge, more than a quarter of a mile in length, set upon piles where the water is twenty or thirty feet deep, leading to the navy yard and Kittery—­the Kittery so often the theme of Whittier’s verse.

This is a mere outline of the landscape that spreads before you.  Its changeful beauty of form and color, with the summer clouds floating over it, is not to be painted in words.  I know of many a place where the scenery is more varied and striking; but there is a mandragora quality in the atmosphere here that holds you to the spot, and makes the half-hours seem like minutes.  I could fancy a man sitting on the end of that old wharf very contentedly for two or three years, provided it could be always in June.

Perhaps, too, one would desire it to be always high water.  The tide falls from eight to twelve feet, and when the water makes out between the wharves some of the picturesqueness makes out also.  A corroded section of stovepipe mailed in barnacles, or the skeleton of a hoopskirt protruding from the tide mud like the remains of some old-time wreck, is apt to break the enchantment.

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An Old Town By the Sea from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.