
- 128 pages
- English
- ePUB (mobile friendly)
- Available on iOS & Android
eBook - ePub
A White Heron and Other Stories
About this book
Writing in wonderfully descriptive and fluent prose, Sarah Orne Jewett, best-known for The Country of the Pointed Firs, was early encouraged by her father to write not about things, but to "write the things themselves just as they are." That she did so is clearly evident in this collection of sensitively written stories, regional sketches that celebrate the past, full of clearly delineated characters and carefully detailed natural and domestic settings.
Her luminous descriptions of the landscape are apparent in the title story, commonly regarded as her finest single tale. Other stories focus on the rural lives of elderly women and their attempts to live with dignity and security. In "The Town Poor," the characters are resilient in their poverty and compassionate towards those in need. Themes of female friendship in "The Dulham Ladies" and "Miss Tempy's Watchers" are characteristic. This volume also includes "The Foreigner," "Miss Peck's Promotion," "The Passing of Sister Barsett," "Miss Esther's Guest," "The Guests of Mrs. Timms," and "The Courting of Sister Wisby."
Widely regarded as the most distinguished American regionalist writer of the 19th century, Sarah Orne Jewett has been rediscovered and acknowledged as an American master. This outstanding collection of her short fiction will delight students of literature and women's studies as well as general readers.
Her luminous descriptions of the landscape are apparent in the title story, commonly regarded as her finest single tale. Other stories focus on the rural lives of elderly women and their attempts to live with dignity and security. In "The Town Poor," the characters are resilient in their poverty and compassionate towards those in need. Themes of female friendship in "The Dulham Ladies" and "Miss Tempy's Watchers" are characteristic. This volume also includes "The Foreigner," "Miss Peck's Promotion," "The Passing of Sister Barsett," "Miss Esther's Guest," "The Guests of Mrs. Timms," and "The Courting of Sister Wisby."
Widely regarded as the most distinguished American regionalist writer of the 19th century, Sarah Orne Jewett has been rediscovered and acknowledged as an American master. This outstanding collection of her short fiction will delight students of literature and women's studies as well as general readers.
Frequently asked questions
Yes, you can cancel anytime from the Subscription tab in your account settings on the Perlego website. Your subscription will stay active until the end of your current billing period. Learn how to cancel your subscription.
At the moment all of our mobile-responsive ePub books are available to download via the app. Most of our PDFs are also available to download and we're working on making the final remaining ones downloadable now. Learn more here.
Perlego offers two plans: Essential and Complete
- Essential is ideal for learners and professionals who enjoy exploring a wide range of subjects. Access the Essential Library with 800,000+ trusted titles and best-sellers across business, personal growth, and the humanities. Includes unlimited reading time and Standard Read Aloud voice.
- Complete: Perfect for advanced learners and researchers needing full, unrestricted access. Unlock 1.4M+ books across hundreds of subjects, including academic and specialized titles. The Complete Plan also includes advanced features like Premium Read Aloud and Research Assistant.
We are an online textbook subscription service, where you can get access to an entire online library for less than the price of a single book per month. With over 1 million books across 1000+ topics, weâve got you covered! Learn more here.
Look out for the read-aloud symbol on your next book to see if you can listen to it. The read-aloud tool reads text aloud for you, highlighting the text as it is being read. You can pause it, speed it up and slow it down. Learn more here.
Yes! You can use the Perlego app on both iOS or Android devices to read anytime, anywhere â even offline. Perfect for commutes or when youâre on the go.
Please note we cannot support devices running on iOS 13 and Android 7 or earlier. Learn more about using the app.
Please note we cannot support devices running on iOS 13 and Android 7 or earlier. Learn more about using the app.
Yes, you can access A White Heron and Other Stories by Sarah Orne Jewett in PDF and/or ePUB format, as well as other popular books in Literatur & Altertumswissenschaften. We have over one million books available in our catalogue for you to explore.
Information
The Foreigner
I
ONE EVENING, at the end of August, in Dunnet Landing, I heard Mrs. Toddâs firm footstep crossing the small front entry outside my door, and her conventional cough which served as a heraldâs trumpet, or a plain New England knock, in the harmony of our fellowship.
âOh, please come in!â I cried, for it had been so still in the house that I supposed my friend and hostess had gone to see one of her neighbors. The first cold northeasterly storm of the season was blowing hard outside. Now and then there was a dash of great raindrops and a flick of wet lilac leaves against the window, but I could hear that the sea was already stirred to its dark depths, and the great rollers were coming in heavily against the shore. One might well believe that Summer was coming to a sad end that night, in the darkness and rain and sudden access of autumnal cold. It seemed as if there must be danger offshore among the outer islands.
âOh, there!â exclaimed Mrs. Todd, as she entered. âI know nothing ainât ever happened out to Green Island since the world began, but I always do worry about mother in these great gales. You know those tidal waves occur sometimes down to the West Indies, and I get dwellinâ on âem so I canât set still in my chair, nor knit a common row to a stocking. William might get mooning, out in his small boât, and not observe how the sea was making, anâ meet with some accident. Yes, I thought Iâd come in and set with you if you waânât busy. No, I never feel any concern about âem in winter âcause then theyâre prepared, and all ashore and everything snug. William ought to keep help, as I tell him; yes, he ought to keep help.â
I hastened to reassure my anxious guest by saying that Elijah Tilley had told me in the afternoon, when I came along the shore past the fish houses, that Johnny Bowden and the Captain were out at Green Island; he had seen them beating up the bay, and thought they must have put into Burnt Island cove, but one of the lobstermen brought word later that he saw them hauling out at Green Island as he came by, and Captain Bowden pointed ashore and shook his head to say that he did not mean to try to get in. âThe old Miranda just managed it, but she will have to stay at home a day or two and put new patches in her sail,â I ended, not without pride in so much circumstantial evidence.
Mrs. Todd was alert in a moment. âThen theyâll all have a very pleasant evening,â she assured me, apparently dismissing all fears of tidal waves and other sea-going disasters. âI was urging Alick Bowden to go ashore some day and see mother before cold weather. Heâs her own nephew; she sets a great deal by him. And Johnnyâs a great chum oâ Williamâs; donât you know the first day we had Johnny out âlong of us, he took anâ give William his money to keep for him that heâd been a-savinâ, and William showed it to me anâ was so affected I thought he was goinâ to shed tears? âTwas a dollar anâ eighty cents; yes, theyâll have a beautiful eveninâ all together, and likeâs not the seaâll be flat as a doorstep come morning.â
I had drawn a large wooden rocking-chair before the fire, and Mrs. Todd was sitting there jogging herself a little, knitting fast, and wonderfully placid of countenance. There came a fresh gust of wind and rain, and we could feel the small wooden house rock and hear it creak as if it were a ship at sea.
âLord, here the great breakers!â exclaimed Mrs. Todd. âHow they pound!âthere, there! I always run of an idea that he sea knows anger these nights and gets full oâ fight. I can hear the rote4 oâ them old black ledges way down the thoroughfare. Calls up all those stormy verses in the Book oâ Psalms; David he knew how old sea-goinâ folks have to quake at the heart.â
I thought as I had never thought before of such anxieties. The families of sailors and coastwise adventurers by sea must always be worrying about somebody, this side of the world or the other. There was hardly one of Mrs. Toddâs elder acquaintances, men or women, who had not at some time or other made a sea voyage, and there was often no news until the voyagers themselves came back to bring it.
âThereâs a roaring high overhead, and a roaring in the deep sea,â said Mrs. Todd solemnly, âand they battle together nights like this. No, I couldnât sleep; some women folks always goes right to bed anâ to sleep, soâs to forget, butât ainât my way. Well, itâs a blessinâ we donât all feel alike; thereâs hardly any of our folks at sea to worry about, nowadays, but I canât help my feelinâs, anâ I got thinking of mother all alone, if William had happened to be out lobsterinâ and couldnât make the cove gettinâ back.â
âThey will have a pleasant evening,â I repeated. âCaptain Bowden is the best of good company.â
âMotherâll make him some pancakes for his supper, likeâs not,â said Mrs. Todd, clicking her knitting needles and giving a pull at her yarn. Just then the old cat pushed open the unlatched door and came straight toward her mistressâs lap. She was regarded severely as she stepped about and turned on the broad expanse, and then made herself into a round cushion of fur, but was not openly admonished. There was another great blast of wind overhead, and a puff of smoke came down the chimney.
âThis makes me think oâ the night Misâ Capân Tolland died,â said Mrs. Todd, half to herself. âFolks used to say these gales only blew when somebodyâs a-dyinâ, or the devil was a-cominâ for his own, but the worst man I ever knew died a real pretty morninâ in June.â
âYou have never told me any ghost stories,â said I; and such was the gloomy weather and the influence of the night that I was instantly filled with reluctance to have this suggestion followed. I had not chosen the best of moments; just before I spoke we had begun to feel as cheerful as possible. Mrs. Todd glanced doubtfully at the cat and then at me, with a strange absent look, and I was really afraid that she was going to tell me something that would haunt my thoughts on every dark stormy night as long as I lived.
âNever mind now; tell me to-morrow by daylight, Mrs. Todd,â I hastened to say, but she still looked at me full of doubt and deliberation.
âGhost stories!â she answered. âYes, I donât know but Iâve heard a plenty of âem first anâ last. I was just sayinâ to myself that this is like the night Misâ Capân Tolland died. âTwas the great line storm in September all of thirty, or maybe forty, year ago. I ainât one that keeps much account oâ time.â
âTolland? Thatâs a name I have never heard in Dunnet,â I said.
âThen you havenât looked well about the old part oâ the buryinâ ground, noâtheast corner,â replied Mrs. Todd. âAll their women folks lies there; the seaâs got most oâ the men. They were a known family oâ shipmasters in early times. Mother had a mate, Ellen Tolland, that she mourns to this day; died right in her bloom with quick consumption, but the rest oâ that family was all boys but one, and older than she, anâ they lived hard seafarinâ lives anâ all died hard. They were called very smart seamen. Iâve heard that when the youngest went into one oâ the old shippinâ houses in Boston, the head oâ the firm called out to him: âDid you say Tolland from Dunnet? Thatâs recommendation enough for any vessel!â There was some oâ them old shipmasters as tough as iron, anâ they had the name oâ usinâ their crews very severe, but there waânât a man that wouldnât rather sign with âem anâ take his chances, than with the slack ones that didnât know how to meet accidents.â
II
There was so long a pause, and Mrs. Todd still looked so absentminded, that I was afraid she and the cat were growing drowsy together before the fire, and I should have no reminiscences at all. The wind struck the house again, so that we both started in our chairs and Mrs. Todd gave a curious, startled look at me. The cat lifted her head and listened too, in the silence that followed, while after the wind sank we were more conscious than ever of the awful roar of the sea. The house jarred now and then, in a strange, disturbing way.
âYes, theyâll have a beautiful evening out to the island,â said Mrs. Todd again; but she did not say it gayly. I had not seen her before in her weaker moments.
âWho was Mrs. Captain Tolland?â I asked eagerly, to change the current of our thoughts.
âI never knew her maiden name; if I ever heard it, Iâve gone anâ forgot; ât would mean nothing to me,â answered Mrs. Todd.
âShe was a foreigner, anâ he met with her out in the Island oâ Jamaica. They said sheâd been left a widow with property. Land knows what become of it; she was French born, anâ her first husband was a Portugee, or somethinâ.â
I kept silence now, a poor and insufficient question being worse than none.
âCapân John Tolland was the least smartest of any of âem, but he was full smart enough, anâ commanded a good brig at the time, in the sugar trade; heâd taken out a cargo oâ pine lumber to the islands from somewheres up the river, anâ had been loadinâ for home in the port oâ Kingston, anâ had gone ashore that afternoon for his papers, anâ remained afterwards âlong of three friends oâ his, shipmasters. They was havinâ their suppers together in a tavern; âtwas late in the eveninâ anâ they was more lively than usual, anâ felt boyish; and over opposite was another house full oâ company, real bright and pleasant lookinâ, with a lot oâ lights, anâ they heard somebody singinâ very pretty to a guitar. They waânât in no go-to-meetinâ condition, anâ one of âem, he slapped the table anâ said, âLeâ âs go over, anâ hear that lady sing!â anâ over they all went, good honest sailors, but three sheets in the wind, and stepped in as if they was invited, anâ made their bows inside the door, anâ asked if they could hear the music; they were all respectable well-dressed men. They saw the woman that had the guitar, anâ there was a company a-listeninâ, regular high binders all of âem; anâ there was a long table all spread out with big candlesticks like little trees oâ light, and a sight oâ glass anâ silver ware; anâ part oâ the men was young officers in uniform, anâ the colored folks was steppinâ round servinâ âem, anâ they had the lady singinâ. âTwas a wasteful scene, anâ a loud talkinâ company, anâ though they was three sheets in the wind themselves there waânât one oâ them capâns but had sense to perceive it. The others had pushed back their chairs, anâ their decanters anâ glasses was standinâ thick about, anâ they was teasinâ the one that was singinâ as if theyâd just got her in to amuse âem. But they quieted down; one oâ the young officers had beautiful manners, anâ invited the four capâns to join âem, very polite; âtwas a kind of public house, and after they all heard another song, he come to consult with âem whether they wouldnât git up and dance a hornpipe or somethinâ to the ladyâs music.
âThey was all elderly men anâ shipmasters, and owned property; two of âem was church members in good standinâ,â continued Mrs. Todd loftily, âanâ they wouldnât lend theirselves to no such kickshows as that, anâ spite oâ beinâ three sheets in the wind, as I have once observed; they waved aside the tumblers of wine the young officer was pourinâ out for âem so free-handed, and said they should rather be excused. Anâ when they all rose, still very dignified, as Iâve been well informed, and made their partinâ bows and was goinâ out, them young sports got round âem anâ tried to prevent âem, and they had to push anâ strive considerable, but out they come. There was this Capân Tolland and two Capân Bowdens, and the fourth was my own father.â (Mrs. Todd spoke slowly, as if to impress the value of her authority.) âTwo of them was very religious, upright men, but they would have their night off sometimes, all âo them old-fashioned capâns, when they was free of business and ready to leave port.
âAnâ they went back to their tavern anâ got their bills paid, anâ set down kind oâ mad with everybody by the front windows, mistrusting some oâ their tavern charges, likeâs not, by that time, anâ when they got tempered down, they watched the house over across, where the party was.
âThere was a kind of grove oâ trees between the house anâ the road, anâ they heard the guitar a-goinâ anâ a-stoppinâ short by turns, and pretty soon somebody began to screech, anâ they saw a white dress come runninâ out through the bushes, anâ tumbled over each other in their haste to offer help; anâ out she come, with the guitar, cryinâ into the street, and they just walked off four square with her amongst âem, down toward the wharves where they felt more to home. They couldnât make out at first what âtwas she spoke,âCapân Lorenzo Bowden was well acquainted in Havre anâ Bordeaux, anâ spoke a poor quality oâ French, anâ she knew a little mite oâ English, but not much; and they come somehow or other to discern that she was in real distress. Her husband and her children had died oâ yellow fever; theyâd all come up to Kingston from one oâ the far Windâard Islands to get passage on a steamer to France, anâ a negro had stole their money off her husband while he lay sick oâ the fever, anâ she had been befriended some, but the folks that knew about her had died too; it had been a dreadful run oâ the fever that season, anâ she fell at last to playinâ anâ singinâ for hire, and for what money theyâd throw to her around them harbor houses.
ââTwas a real hard case, anâ when them capâns made out about it, there waânât one that meant to take leave without helpinâ of her. They was pretty mellow, anâ whatever they might lack oâ prudence they moreân made up with charity: they didnât want to see anybody abused, anâ she was sort of a pretty woman, anâ they stopped in the street then anâ there anâ drew lots who should take her aboard, beinâ all bound home. Anâ the lot fell to Capân Jonathan Bowden who did act discouraged; his vessel had but small accommodations, though he could stow a big freight, anâ she was a dreadful slow sailer through beinâ square as a box, anâ his first wife, that was livinâ then, was a dreadful jealous woman. He threw himself right onto the mercy oâ Capân Tolland.â
Mrs. Todd indulged herself for a short time in a season of calm reflection.
âI always thought theyâd have done better, and more reasonable, to give her some money to pay her passage home to France, or wherever she may have wanted to go,â she continued.
I nodded and looked for the rest of the story.
âFather told mother,â said Mrs. Todd confidentially, âthat Capân Jonathan Bowden anâ Capân John Tolland had both taken a little more than usual; I wouldnât have you think, either, that they both wasnât the best oâ men, anâ they was solemn as owls, and argued the matter between âem, anâ waved aside the other two when they tried to put their oars in. Anâ spite oâ Capân Tollandâs beinâ a settled old bachelor they fixed it that he was to take the prize on his brig; she was a fast sailer, and there was a good spare cabin or two where heâd sometimes carried passengers, but heâd filled âem with bags oâ sugar on his own account anâ was loaded very heavy beside. He said heâd shift the sugar anâ get along somehow, anâ the last the other three capâns saw of the party was Capân John handing the lady into his boât, guitar and all, anâ off they all set towâds their ships with their men rowinâ âem in the bright moonlight down to Port Royal where the anchorage was, anâ where they all lay, goinâ out with the tide anâ morninâ wind at break oâ day. Anâ the others thought they heard music of the guitar, two oâ the boâts kept well together, but it may have come from another source.â
âWell; and then?â I asked eagerly after a pause. Mrs. Todd was almost laughing aloud over her knitting and nodding emphatically. We had forgotten all about the noise of the wind and sea.
âLord bless you! he come sailing into Portland with his sugar, all in good time, anâ they stepped right afore a justice oâ the peace, and Capân John Tolland come paradinâ home to Dunnet Landinâ a married man. He owned one oâ them thin, narrow-lookinâ houses with one room each side oâ the front door, and two slim black spruces spindlinâ up against the front windows to make it gloomy inside. There was no horse nor cattle of course, though he owned pasture land, anâ you could see rifts oâ light right through the barn as you drove by. And there was a good excellent kitchen, but his sister reigned over that; she had a right to two rooms, and took the kitchen anâ a bedroom that led out of it; anâ beinâ given no rights in the kitchen had angered the capân so they werenât on no kind oâ speakinâ terms. He preferred his old brig for comfort, but now and then, between voyages, heâd come home for a few days, just to show he was master over his part oâ the house, and show Eliza she couldnât commit no trespass.
âThey stayed a little while; âtwas pretty spring weather, anâ I used to see Capân John rollinâ by with his arms full oâ bundles from the store, lookinâ as pleased and important as a boy; anâ then they went right off to sea again, anâ was gone a good many months. Next time he left her to live there alone, after theyâd stopped at home together some weeks, anâ they said she suffered from beinâ at sea, but some said that the owners wouldnât have a woman aboard. âTwas before father was lost on that last voyage of his, anâ he and mother went up once or twice to see them. Father said there waânât a mite oâ harm in her, but somehow or other a sight oâ prejudice arose; it may have been caused by the remarks of Eliza anâ her feelinâs towâds her brother. Even my mother had no regard for Eliza Tolland. But mother asked the capânâs wife to come with her one eveninâ to a social circle, that was down to the meetinâ-house vestry, so sheâd get acquainted a little, anâ she appeared very pretty until they started to have some singinâ to the melodeon. Mariâ Harris anâ one oâ the younger Caplin girls undertook to sing a duet, anâ they sort oâ flatted, anâ she put her hands right up to her ears, and gave a little squeal, anâ went quick as could be anâ give âem the right notes, for she could read the music like plain print, anâ made âem try it over again. She was real willinâ anâ pleasant, but that didnât suit, anâ she made faces when they got it wrong. Anâ then there fell a dead calm, anâ we was all settinâ round prim as dishes, anâ my mother, that never expects ill feelinâ, asked her if she wouldnât sing somethinâ, anâ up she got,âpoor creaturâ, it all seems so different to me now,âanâ sung a lovely little song standinâ in the fl...
Table of contents
- DOVER THRIFT EDITIONS UNABRIDGED
- Title Page
- DOVER THRIFT EDITIONS
- Copyright Page
- Note
- Table of Contents
- A White Heron
- The Dulham Ladies
- Miss Tempyâs Watchers
- Miss Peckâs Promotion
- The Courting of Sister Wisby
- The Town Poor
- The Passing of Sister Barsett
- Miss Estherâs Guest
- The Guests of Mrs. Timms
- The Foreigner