9-A.
The Sea and the Desert
The light-house lamps were still
burning, though now with a silvery lustre, when I rose to see the sun come
out of the Ocean; for he still rose eastward of us; but I was convinced
that he must have come out of a dry bed beyond that stream, though he seemed
to come out of the water.
"The sun once more touched the fields,
Mounting to heaven from the fair flowing
Deep-running Ocean."
Now we saw countless sails of mackerel fishers abroad
on the deep, one fleet in the north just pouring round the Cape, another
standing down toward Chatham, and our host's son went off to join some
lagging member of the first which had not yet left the Bay.
Before we left the light-house we were obliged to
anoint our shoes faithfully with tallow, for walking on the beach, in the
salt water and the sand, had turned them red and crisp. To counterbalance
this, I have remarked that the sea-shore, even where muddy, as it is not
here, is singularly clean; for notwithstanding the spattering of the water
and mud and squirting of the clams while walking to and from the boat,
your best black pants retain no stain nor dirt, such as they would acquire
from walking in the country.
We have heard that a few days after this, when the
Provincetown Bank was robbed, speedy emissaries from Provincetown made
particular inquiries concerning us at this light-house. Indeed, they traced
us all the way down the Cape, and concluded that we came by this unusual
route down the back side and on foot, in order that we might discover a
way to get off with our booty when we had committed the robbery. The Cape
is so long and narrow, and so bare withal, that it is wellnigh impossible
for a stranger to visit it without the knowledge of its inhabitants generally,
unless he is wrecked on to it in the night. So, when this robbery occurred,
all their suspicions seem to have at once centered on us two travellers
who had just passed down it. If we had not chanced to leave the Cape so
soon, we should probably have been arrested. The real robbers were two
young men from Worcester County who travelled with a centre-bit, and are
said to have done their work very neatly. But the only bank that we pried
into was the great Cape Cod sand-bank, and we robbed it only of an old
French crown piece, some shells and pebbles, and the materials of this
story.
Again we took to the beach for another day (October
13), walking along the shore of the resounding sea, determined to get it
into us. We wished to associate with the Ocean until it lost the pond-like
look which it wears to a countryman. We still thought that we could see
the other side. Its surface was still more sparkling than the day before,
and we beheld "the countless smilings of the ocean waves"; though some
of them were pretty broad grins, for still the wind blew and the billows
broke in foam along the beach. The nearest beach to us on the other side,
whither we looked, due east, was on the coast of Galicia, in Spain, whose
capital is Santiago, though by old poets' reckoning it should have been
Atlantis or the Hesperides; but heaven is found to be farther west now.
At first we were abreast of that part of Portugal entre Douro e Mino,
and then Galicia and the port of Pontevedra opened to us as we walked along;
but we did not enter, the breakers ran so high. The bold headland of Cape
Finisterre, a little north of east, jutted toward us next, with its vain
brag, for we flung back,--"Here is Cape Cod,--Cape Land's-Beginning." A
little indentation toward the north,--for the land loomed to our imaginations
by a common mirage,--we knew was the Bay of Biscay, and we sang:--
"There we lay, till next day,
In the Bay of Biscay O!"
A little south of east was Palos, where Columbus weighed
anchor, and farther yet the pillars which Hercules set up; concerning which
when we inquired at the top of our voices what was written on them,--for
we had the morning sun in our faces, and could not see distinctly,--the
inhabitants shouted Ne plus ultra (no more beyond), but the wind
bore to us the truth only, plus ultra (more beyond), and over the
Bay westward was echoed ultra (beyond). We spoke to them through
the surf about the Far West, the true Hesperia, [Greek text] or
end of the day, the This Side Sundown, where the sun was extinguished in
the Pacific, and we advised them to pull up stakes and plant those
pillars of theirs on the shore of California, whither all our folks were
gone,--the only ne plus ultra now. Whereat they looked crestfallen
on their cliffs, for we had taken the wind out of all their sails.
We could not perceive that any of their leavings
washed up here, though we picked up a child's toy, a small dismantled boat,
which may have been lost at Pontevedra.
The Cape became narrower and narrower as we approached
its wrist between Truro and Provincetown, and the shore inclined more decidedly
to the west. At the head of East Harbor Creek, the Atlantic is separated
but by half a dozen rods of sand from the tide-waters of the Bay. From
the Clay Pounds the bank flatted off for the last ten miles to the extremity
at Race Point, though the highest parts, which are called "islands" from
their appearance at a distance on the sea, were still seventy or eighty
feet above the Atlantic, and afforded a good view of the latter, as well
as a constant view of the Bay, there being no trees nor a hill sufficient
to interrupt it. Also the sands began to invade the land more and more,
until finally they had entire possession from sea to sea, at the narrowest
part. For three or four miles between Truro and Provincetown there were
no inhabitants from shore to shore, and there were but three or four houses
for twice that distance.
As we plodded along, either by the edge of the ocean,
where the sand was rapidly drinking up the last wave that wet it, or over
the sand-hills of the bank, the mackerel fleet continued to pour round
the Cape north of us, ten or fifteen miles distant, in countless numbers,
schooner after schooner, till they made a city on the water. They were
so thick that many appeared to be afoul of one another; now all standing
on this tack, now on that. We saw how well the New-Englanders had followed
up Captain John Smith's suggestions with regard to the fisheries, made
in 1616,--to what a pitch they had carried "this contemptible trade of
fish," as he significantly styles it, and were now equal to the Hollanders
whose example he holds up for the English to emulate; notwithstanding that
"in this faculty," as he says, "the former are so naturalized, and of their
vents so certainly acquainted, as there is no likelihood they will ever
be paralleled, having two or three thousand busses, flat-bottoms, sword-pinks,
todes, and such like, that breeds them sailors, mariners, soldiers, and
merchants, never to be wrought out of that trade and fit for any other."
We thought that it would take all these names and
more to describe the numerous craft which we saw. Even then, some years
before our "renowned sires" with their "peerless dames" stepped on Plymouth
Rock, he wrote: "Newfoundland doth yearly freight neir eight hundred sail
of ships with a silly, lean, skinny, poor-john, and cor fish," though all
their supplies must be annually transported from Europe. Why not plant
a colony here then, and raise those supplies on the spot? "Of all the four
parts of the world," says he, "that I have yet seen, not inhabited, could
I have but means to transport a colony, I would rather live here than anywhere.
And if it did not maintain itself, were we but once indifferently well
fitted, let us starve." Then "fishing before your doors," you "may every
night sleep quietly ashore, with good cheer and what fires you will, or,
when you please, with your wives and family." Already he anticipates "the
new towns in New England in memory of their old,"--and who knows what may
be discovered in the "heart and entrails" of the land, "seeing even the
very edges," etc., etc.
All this has been accomplished, and more, and where
is Holland now? Verily the Dutch have taken it. There was no long interval
between the suggestion of Smith and the eulogy of Burke.
Still one after another the mackerel schooners hove
in sight round the head of the Cape, "whitening all the sea road," and
we watched each one for a moment with an undivided interest. It seemed
a pretty sport. Here in the country it is only a few idle boys or loafers
that go a-fishing on a rainy day; but there it appeared as if every able-bodied
man and helpful boy in the Bay had gone out on a pleasure excursion in
their yachts, and all would at last land and have a chowder on the Cape.
The gazetteer tells you gravely how many of the men and boys of these towns
are engaged in the whale, cod, and mackerel fishery, how many go to the
banks of Newfoundland, or the coast of Labrador, the Straits of Belle Isle
or the Bay of Chaleurs (Shalore the sailors call it); as if I were to reckon
up the number of boys in Concord who are engaged during the summer in the
perch, pickerel, bream, horn-pout, and shiner fishery, of which no one
keeps the statistics,--though I think that it is pursued with as much profit
to the moral and intellectual man (or boy), and certainly with less danger
to the physical one.
One of my playmates, who was apprenticed to a printer,
and was somewhat of a wag, asked his master one afternoon if he might go
a-fishing, and his master consented. He was gone three months. When he
came back, he said that he had been to the Grand Banks, and went to setting
type again as if only an afternoon had intervened.
I confess I was surprised to find that so many men
spent their whole day, ay, their whole lives almost, a-fishing. It is remarkable
what a serious business men make of getting their dinners, and how universally
shiftlessness and a grovelling taste take refuge in a merely ant-like industry.
Better go without your dinner, I thought, than be thus everlastingly fishing
for it like a cormorant. Of course, viewed from the shore, our pursuits
in the country appear not a whit less frivolous.
I once sailed three miles on a mackerel cruise myself.
It was a Sunday evening after a very warm day in which there had been frequent
thunder-showers, and I had walked along the shore from Cohasset to Duxbury.
I wished to get over from the last place to Clark's Island, but no boat
could stir, they said, at that stage of the tide, they being left high
on the mud. At length I learned that the tavern-keeper, Winsor, was going
out mackerelling with seven men that evening, and would take me. When there
had been due delay, we one after another straggled down to the shore in
a leisurely manner, as if waiting for the tide still, and in India-rubber
boots, or carrying our shoes in our hands, waded to the boats, each of
the crew bearing an armful of wood, and one a bucket of new potatoes besides.
Then they resolved that each should bring one more armful of wood, and
that would be enough. They had already got a barrel of water, and had some
more in the schooner. We shoved the boats a dozen rods over the mud and
water till they floated, then rowing half a mile to the vessel climbed
aboard, and there we were in a mackerel schooner, a fine stout vessel of
forty-three tons, whose name I forget. The baits were not dry on the hooks.
There was the mill in which they ground the mackerel, and the trough to
hold it, and the long-handled dipper to cast it overboard with; and already
in the harbor we saw the surface rippled with schools of small mackerel,
the real Scomber vernalis. The crew proceeded leisurely to weigh
anchor and raise their two sails, there being a fair but very slight wind;--and
the sun now setting clear and shining on the vessel after the thunder-showers,
I thought that I could not have commenced the voyage under more favorable
auspices. They had four dories and commonly fished in them, else they fished
on the starboard side aft where their lines hung ready, two to a man. The
boom swung round once or twice, and Winsor cast overboard the foul juice
of mackerel mixed with rain-water which remained in his trough, and then
we gathered about the helmsman and told stories. I remember that the compass
was affected by iron in its neighborhood and varied a few degrees. There
was one among us just returned from California, who was now going as passenger
for his health and amusement. They expected to be gone about a week, to
begin fishing the next morning, and to carry their fish fresh to Boston.
They landed me at Clark's Island, where the Pilgrims landed, for my companions
wished to get some milk for the voyage. But I had seen the whole of it.
The rest was only going to sea and catching the mackerel. Moreover, it
was as well that I did not remain with them, considering the small quantity
of supplies they had taken.
Now I saw the mackerel fleet on its fishing-ground,
though I was not at first aware of it. So my experience was complete.
It was even more cold and windy to-day than before,
and we were frequently glad to take shelter behind a sand-hill. None of
the elements were resting. On the beach there is a ceaseless activity,
always something going on, in storm and in calm, winter and summer, night
and day. Even the sedentary man here enjoys a breadth of view which is
almost equivalent to motion. In clear weather the laziest may look across
the Bay as far as Plymouth at a glance, or over the Atlantic as far as
human vision reaches, merely raising his eyelids; or if he is too lazy
to look after all, he can hardly help hearing the ceaseless dash
and roar of the breakers. The restless ocean may at any moment cast up
a whale or a wrecked vessel at your feet. All the reporters in the world,
the most rapid stenographers, could not report the news it brings. No creature
could move slowly where there was so much life around. The few wreckers
were either going or coming, and the ships and the sand-pipers, and the
screaming gulls overhead; nothing stood still but the shore. The little
beach-birds trotted past close to the water's edge, or paused but an instant
to swallow their food, keeping time with the elements. I wondered how they
ever got used to the sea, that they ventured so near the waves. Such tiny
inhabitants the land brought forth! except one fox. And what could a fox
do, looking on the Atlantic from that high bank? What is the sea to a fox?
Sometimes we met a wrecker with his cart and dog,--and his dog's faint
bark at us wayfarers, heard through the roaring of the surf, sounded ridiculously
faint. To see a little trembling dainty-footed cur stand on the margin
of the ocean, and ineffectually bark at a beach-bird, amid the roar of
the Atlantic! Come with design to bark at a whale, perchance! That sound
will do for farmyards. All the dogs looked out of place there, naked and
as if shuddering at the vastness; and I thought that they would not have
been there had it not been for the countenance of their masters. Still
less could you think of a cat bending her steps that way, and shaking her
wet foot over the Atlantic; yet even this happens sometimes, they tell
me. In summer I saw the tender young of the Piping Plover, like chickens
just hatched, mere pinches of down on two legs, running in troops, with
a faint peep, along the edge of the waves. I used to see packs of half-wild
dogs haunting the lonely beach on the south shore of Staten Island, in
New York Bay, for the sake of the carrion there cast up; and I remember
that once, when for a long time I had heard a furious barking in the tall
grass of the marsh, a pack of half a dozen large dogs burst forth on to
the beach, pursuing a little one which ran straight to me for protection,
and I afforded it with some stones, though at some risk to myself; but
the next day the little one was the first to bark at me. Under these circumstances
I could not but remember the words of the poet:--
"Blow blow, thou winter wind
Thou art not so unkind
As his ingratitude;
Thy tooth is not so keen,
Because thou art not seen,
Although thy breath be rude.
"Freeze, freeze, thou bitter sky,
Thou dost not bite so nigh
As benefits forgot;
Though thou the waters warp,
Thy sting is not so sharp
As friend remembered not."
Sometimes, when I was approaching the carcass of a horse
or ox which lay on the beach there, where there was no living creature
in sight, a dog would unexpectedly emerge from it and slink away with a
mouthful of offal.
The sea-shore is a sort of neutral ground, a most
advantageous point from which to contemplate this world. It is even a trivial
place. The waves forever rolling to the land are too far-travelled and
untamable to be familiar. Creeping along the endless beach amid the sun-squawl
and the foam, it occurs to us that we, too, are the product of sea-slime.
It is a wild, rank place, and there is no flattery
in it. Strewn with crabs, horse-shoes, and razor-clams, and whatever the
sea casts up,--a vast morgue, where famished dogs may range in packs,
and crows come daily to glean the pittance which the tide leaves them.
The carcasses of men and beasts together lie stately up upon its shelf,
rotting and bleaching in the sun and waves, and each tide turns them in
their beds, and tucks fresh sand under them. There is naked Nature,--inhumanly
sincere, wasting no thought on man, nibbling at the cliffy shore where
gulls wheel amid the spray.
We saw this forenoon what, at a distance, looked
like a bleached log with a branch still left on it. It proved to be one
of the principal bones of a whale, whose carcass, having been stripped
of blubber at sea and cut adrift, had been washed up some months before.
It chanced that this was the most conclusive evidence which we met with
to prove, what the Copenhagen antiquaries assert, that these shores were
the Furdustrandas, which Thorhall, the companion of Thorfinn during
his expedition to Vinland in 1007, sailed past in disgust. It appears that
after they had left the Cape and explored the country about Straum-Fiordr
(Buzzards' Bay!), Thorhall, who was disappointed at not getting any wine
to drink there, determined to sail north again in search of Vinland. Though
the antiquaries have given us the original Icelandic, I prefer to quote
their translation, since theirs is the only Latin which I know to have
been aimed at Cape Cod.
"Cum parati erant, sublato
velo, cecinit Thorhallus:
Eò redeamus, ubi conterranei
sunt nostri! faciamus aliter,
expansi arenosi peritum,
lata navis explorare curricula:
dum procellam incitantes gladii
moræ impatientes, qui terram
collaudant, Furdustrandas
inhabitant et coquunt balænas."
In other words: "When they were ready and their sail hoisted, Thorhall
sang: Let us return thither where our fellow-countrymen are. Let us make
a bird (1) skilful to fly through
the heaven of sand,(2) to explore
the broad track of ships; while warriors who impel to the tempest of swords,(3)
who praise the land, inhabit Wonder-Strands, and cook whales." And
so he sailed north past Cape Cod, as the antiquaries say, "and was shipwrecked
on to Ireland."
Though once there were more whales cast up here,
I think that it was never more wild than now. We do not associate the idea
of antiquity with the ocean, nor wonder how it looked a thousand years
ago, as we do of the land, for it was equally wild and unfathomable always.
The Indians have left no traces on its surface, but it is the same to the
civilized man and the savage. The aspect of the shore only has changed.
The ocean is a wilderness reaching round the globe, wilder than a Bengal
jungle, and fuller of monsters, washing the very wharves of our cities
and the gardens of our sea-side residences. Serpents, bears, hyenas, tigers,
rapidly vanish as civilization advances, but the most populous and civilized
city cannot scare a shark far from its wharves. It is no further advanced
than Singapore, with its tigers, in this respect. The Boston papers had
never told me that there were seals in the harbor. I had always associated
these with the Esquimaux and other outlandish people. Yet from the parlor
windows all along the coast you may see families of them sporting on the
flats. They were as strange to me as the merman would be. Ladies who never
walk in the woods, sail over the sea. To go to sea! Why, it is to have
the experience of Noah,--to realize the deluge. Every vessel is an ark.
We saw no fences as we walked the beach, no birchen
riders,
highest of rails, projecting into the sea to keep the cows from wading
round, nothing to remind us that man was proprietor of the shore. Yet a
Truro man did tell us that owners of land on the east side of that town
were regarded as owning the beach, in order that they might have the control
of it so far as to defend themselves against the encroachments of the sand
and the beach-grass,--for even this friend is sometimes regarded as a foe;
but he said that this was not the case on the Bay side. Also I have seen
in sheltered parts of the Bay temporary fences running to low-water mark,
the posts being set in sills or sleepers placed transversely.
After we had been walking many hours, the mackerel
fleet still hovered in the northern horizon nearly in the same direction,
but farther off, hull down. Though their sails were set they never sailed
away, nor yet came to anchor, but stood on various tacks as close together
as vessels in a haven, and we, in our ignorance, thought that they were
contending patiently with adverse winds, beating eastward; but we learned
afterward that they were even then on their fishing-ground, and that they
caught mackerel without taking in their mainsails or coming to anchor,
"a smart breeze" (thence called a mackerel breeze) being, as one says,
"considered most favorable" for this purpose. We counted about two hundred
sail of mackerel fishers within one small arc of the horizon, and a nearly
equal number had disappeared southward. Thus they hovered about the extremity
of the Cape, like moths round a candle; the lights at Race Point and Long
Point being bright candles for them at night,--and at this distance they
looked fair and white, as if they had not yet flown into the light, but
nearer at hand afterward, we saw how some had formerly singed their wings
and bodies.
A village seems thus, where its able-bodied men are
all ploughing the ocean together, as a common field. In North Truro the
women and girls may sit at their doors, and see where their husbands and
brothers are harvesting their mackerel fifteen or twenty miles off, on
the sea, with hundreds of white harvest wagons, just as in the country
the farmers' wives sometimes see their husbands working in a distant hill-side
field. But the sound of no dinner-horn can reach the fisher's ear.
Having passed the narrowest part of the waist of
the Cape, though still in Truro, for this township is about twelve miles
long on the shore, we crossed over to the Bay side, not half a mile distant,
in order to spend the noon on the nearest shrubby sand-hill in Provincetown,
called Mount Ararat, which rises one hundred feet above the ocean. On our
way thither we had occasion to admire the various beautiful forms and colors
of the sand, and we noticed an interesting mirage, which I have since found
that Hitchcock also observed on the sands of the Cape. We were crossing
a shallow valley in the Desert, where the smooth and spotless sand sloped
upward by a small angle to the horizon on every side, and at the lowest
part was a long chain of clear but shallow pools. As we were approaching
these for a drink in a diagonal direction across the valley, they appeared
inclined at a slight but decided angle to the horizon, though they were
plainly and broadly connected with one another, and there was not the least
ripple to suggest a current; so that by the time we had reached a convenient
part of one we seemed to have ascended several feet. They appeared to lie
by magic on the side of the vale, like a mirror left in a slanting position.
It was a very pretty mirage for a Provincetown desert, but not amounting
to what, in Sanscrit, is called "the thirst of the gazelle," as there was
real water here for a base, and we were able to quench our thirst after
all.
Professor Rafn, of Copenhagen, thinks that the mirage
which I noticed, but which an old inhabitant of Provincetown, to whom I
mentioned it, had never seen nor heard of, had something to do with the
name "Furdustrandas," i. e. Wonder-Strands, given, as I have said, in the
old Icelandic account of Thorfinn's expedition to Vinland in the year 1007,
to a part of the coast on which he landed. But these sands are more remarkable
for their length than for their mirage, which is common to all deserts,
and the reason for the name which the Northmen themselves give,--"because
it took a long time to sail by them,"--is sufficient and more applicable
to these shores. However, if you should sail all the way from Greenland
to Buzzard's Bay along the coast, you would get sight of a good many sandy
beaches. But whether Thor-finn saw the mirage here or not, Thor-eau, one
of the same family, did; and perchance it was because Lief the Lucky had,
in a previous voyage, taken Thor-er and his people off the rock in the
middle of the sea, that Thor-eau was born to see it.
This was not the only mirage which I saw on the Cape.
That half of the beach next the bank is commonly level, or nearly so, while
the other slopes downward to the water. As I was walking upon the edge
of the bank in Wellfleet at sundown, it seemed to me that the inside half
of the beach sloped upward toward the water to meet the other, forming
a ridge ten or twelve feet high the whole length of the shore, but higher
always opposite to where I stood; and I was not convinced of the contrary
till I descended the bank, though the shaded outlines left by the waves
of a previous tide but half-way down the apparent declivity might
have taught me better. A stranger may easily detect what is strange to
the oldest inhabitant, for the strange is his province. The old oysterman,
speaking of gull-shooting, had said that you must aim under, when firing
down the bank.
A neighbor tells me that one August, looking through
a glass from Naushon to some vessels which were sailing along near Martha's
Vineyard, the water about them appeared perfectly smooth, so that they
were reflected in it, and yet their full sails proved that it must be rippled,
and they who were with him thought that it was a mirage, i. e. a
reflection from a haze.
From the above-mentioned sand-hill we overlooked
Provincetown and its harbor, now emptied of vessels, and also a wide expanse
of ocean. As we did not wish to enter Provincetown before night, though
it was cold and windy, we returned across the Deserts to the Atlantic side,
and walked along the beach again nearly to Race Point, being still greedy
of the sea influence. All the while it was not so calm as the reader may
suppose, but it was blow, blow, blow,--roar, roar, roar,--tramp, tramp,
tramp,--without interruption. The shore now trended nearly east and west.
Before sunset, having already seen the mackerel fleet returning into
the Bay, we left the sea-shore on the north of Provincetown, and made our
way across the Desert to the eastern extremity of the town. From the first
high sand-hill, covered with beach-grass and bushes to its top, on the
edge of the desert, we overlooked the shrubby hill and swamp country which
surrounds Provincetown on the north, and protects it, in some measure,
from the invading sand. Notwithstanding the universal barrenness, and the
contiguity of the desert, I never saw an autumnal landscape so beautifully
painted as this was.
It was like the richest rug imaginable spread over
an uneven surface; no damask nor velvet, nor Tyrian dye or stuffs, nor
the work of any loom, could ever match it. There was the incredibly bright
red of the Huckleberry, and the reddish brown of the Bayberry, mingled
with the bright and living green of small Pitch-Pines, and also the duller
green of the Bayberry, Boxberry, and Plum, the yellowish green of the Shrub
Oaks, and the various golden and yellow and fawn colored tints of the Birch
and Maple and Aspen,--each making its own figure, and, in the midst, the
few yellow sand-slides on the sides of the hills looked like the white
floor seen through rents in the rug.
Coming from the country as I did, and many autumnal
woods as I had seen, this was perhaps the most novel and remarkable sight
that I saw on the Cape. Probably the brightness of the tints was enhanced
by contrast with the sand which surrounded this track. This was a part
of the furniture of Cape Cod. We had for days walked up the long and bleak
piazza which runs along her Atlantic side, then over the sanded floor of
her halls, and now we were being introduced into her boudoir. The hundred
white sails crowding round Long Point into Provincetown Harbor, seen over
the painted hills in front, looked like toy ships upon a mantle-piece.
The peculiarity of this autumnal landscape consisted
in the lowness and thickness of the shrubbery, no less than in the brightness
of the tints. It was like a thick stuff of worsted or a fleece, and looked
as if a giant could take it up by the hem, or rather the tasselled fringe
which trailed out on the sand, and shake it, though it needed not to be
shaken. But no doubt the dust would fly in that case, for not a little
has accumulated underneath it. Was it not such an autumnal landscape as
this which suggested our high-colored rugs and carpets? Hereafter when
I look on a richer rug than usual, and study its figures, I shall think,
there are the huckleberry hills, and there the denser swamps of boxberry
and blueberry: there the shrub oak patches and the bayberries, there the
maples and the birches and the pines. What other dyes are to be compared
to these? They were warmer colors than I had associated with the New England
coast.
Thoreau's Notes:
1. I. e. a vessel.
2. The sea, which is arched
over its sandy bottom like heaven.
3. Battle.
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