Blow the Man Down - A Romance of the Coast - Page 24/334

Now, Mister Macliver, you knows him quite well,

He comes upon deck and he cuts a great swell;

It's damn your eyes there and it's damn your eyes here,

And straight to the gangway he takes a broad sheer.

--La Pique "Come-all-ye."

Into Saturday Cove, all during that late afternoon, they came

surging--spars and tackle limned against the on-sweeping pall of the

gray fog--those wayfarers of the open main.

First to roll in past the ledgy portals of the haven were the venerable

sea-wagons--the coasters known as the "Apple-treers." Their weatherwise

skippers, old sea-dogs who could smell weather as bloodhounds sniff

trails, had their noses in the air in good season that day, and knew

that they must depend on a thinning wind to cuff them into port. One

after the other, barnacled anchors splashed from catheads, dragging

rusty chains from hawse-holes, and old, patched sails came sprawling

down with chuckle of sheaves and lisp of running rigging.

A 'long-coast shanty explains the nickname, "Apple-treers": O, what's the use of compass or a quadrant or a log?

Keep her loafin' on her mudhook in a norther or a fog.

But as soon's the chance is better, then well ratch her off once more,

Keepin' clost enough for bearings from the apple-trees ashore.

Therefore, the topsail schooners, the fore-and-afters, the Bluenose

blunt-prows, came in early before the fog smooched out the loom of

the trees and before it became necessary to guess at what the old card

compasses had to reveal on the subject of courses.

And so, along with the rest of the coastwise ragtag, which was seeking

harbor and holding-ground, came the ancient schooner Polly. Fog-masked

by those illusory mists, she was a shadow ship like the others; but,

more than the others, she seemed to be a ghost ship, for her lines and

her rig informed any well-posted mariner that she must be a centenarian;

with her grotesqueness accentuated by the fog pall, she seemed unreal--a

picture from the past.

She had an out-thrust of snub bow and an upcock of square stern, and

sag of waist--all of which accurately revealed ripe antiquity, just as

a bell-crowned beaver and a swallow-tail coat with brass buttons would

identify an old man in the ruck of newer fashions. She had seams like

the wrinkles in the parchment skin of extreme old age. She carried a

wooden figurehead under her bowsprit, the face and bust of a woman on

whom an ancient woodcarver had bestowed his notion of a beatific smile;

the result was an idiotic simper. The glorious gilding had been worn

off, the wood was gray and cracked. The Polly's galley was entirely

hidden under a deckload of shingles and laths in bunches; the

after-house was broad and loomed high above the rail in contrast to the

mere cubbies which were provided for the other fore-and-afters in the

flotilla which came ratching in toward Saturday Cove.