<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_XXX" id="CHAPTER_XXX"></SPAN>CHAPTER XXX</h2>
<h3>THE LAUNCH OF THE ARIEL</h3>
<p><span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_290" id="Page_290"></SPAN></span>In the plain, simple regions we are describing,—where
the sea is the great avenue of active life, and the pine forests
are the great source of wealth,—ship-building is an
engrossing interest, and there is no fête that calls forth the
community like the launching of a vessel. And no wonder;
for what is there belonging to this workaday world
of ours that has such a never-failing fund of poetry and
grace as a ship? A ship is a beauty and a mystery wherever
we see it: its white wings touch the regions of the
unknown and the imaginative; they seem to us full of the
odors of quaint, strange, foreign shores, where life, we
fondly dream, moves in brighter currents than the muddy,
tranquil tides of every day.</p>
<p>Who that sees one bound outward, with her white
breasts swelling and heaving, as if with a reaching expectancy,
does not feel his own heart swell with a longing impulse
to go with her to the far-off shores? Even at dingy,
crowded wharves, amid the stir and tumult of great cities,
the coming in of a ship is an event that never can lose its
interest. But on these romantic shores of Maine, where
all is so wild and still, and the blue sea lies embraced in
the arms of dark, solitary forests, the sudden incoming of
a ship from a distant voyage is a sort of romance. Who
that has stood by the blue waters of Middle Bay, engirdled
as it is by soft slopes of green farming land, interchanged
here and there with heavy billows of forest-trees, or rocky,
pine-crowned promontories, has not felt that sense of seclu<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_291" id="Page_291"></SPAN></span>sion
and solitude which is so delightful? And then what
a wonder! There comes a ship from China, drifting in
like a white cloud,—the gallant creature! how the waters
hiss and foam before her! with what a great free, generous
plash she throws out her anchors, as if she said a cheerful
"Well done!" to some glorious work accomplished! The
very life and spirit of strange romantic lands come with
her; suggestions of sandal-wood and spice breathe through
the pine-woods; she is an oriental queen, with hands full
of mystical gifts; "all her garments smell of myrrh and
cassia, out of the ivory palaces, whereby they have made
her glad." No wonder men have loved ships like birds,
and that there have been found brave, rough hearts that in
fatal wrecks chose rather to go down with their ocean love
than to leave her in the last throes of her death-agony.</p>
<p>A ship-building, a ship-sailing community has an unconscious
poetry ever underlying its existence. Exotic ideas
from foreign lands relieve the trite monotony of life; the
ship-owner lives in communion with the whole world, and
is less likely to fall into the petty commonplaces that infest
the routine of inland life.</p>
<p>Never arose a clearer or lovelier October morning than
that which was to start the Ariel on her watery pilgrimage.
Moses had risen while the stars were yet twinkling over
their own images in Middle Bay, to go down and see that
everything was right; and in all the houses that we know
in the vicinity, everybody woke with the one thought of
being ready to go to the launching.</p>
<p>Mrs. Pennel and Mara were also up by starlight, busy
over the provisions for the ample cold collation that was to
be spread in a barn adjoining the scene,—the materials
for which they were packing into baskets covered with nice
clean linen cloths, ready for the little sail-boat which lay
within a stone's throw of the door in the brightening dawn,
her white sails looking rosy in the advancing light.<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_292" id="Page_292"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>It had been agreed that the Pennels and the Kittridges
should cross together in this boat with their contributions
of good cheer.</p>
<p>The Kittridges, too, had been astir with the dawn, intent
on their quota of the festive preparations, in which Dame
Kittridge's housewifely reputation was involved,—for it
had been a disputed point in the neighborhood whether she
or Mrs. Pennel made the best doughnuts; and of course,
with this fact before her mind, her efforts in this line had
been all but superhuman.</p>
<p>The Captain skipped in and out in high feather,—occasionally
pinching Sally's cheek, and asking if she were
going as captain or mate upon the vessel after it was
launched, for which he got in return a fillip of his sleeve
or a sly twitch of his coat-tails, for Sally and her old father
were on romping terms with each other from early childhood,
a thing which drew frequent lectures from the always
exhorting Mrs. Kittridge.</p>
<p>"Such levity!" she said, as she saw Sally in full chase
after his retreating figure, in order to be revenged for some
sly allusions he had whispered in her ear.</p>
<p>"Sally Kittridge! Sally Kittridge!" she called, "come
back this minute. What are you about? I should think
your father was old enough to know better."</p>
<p>"Lawful sakes, Polly, it kind o' renews one's youth to
get a new ship done," said the Captain, skipping in at another
door. "Sort o' puts me in mind o' that <i>I</i> went out
cap'en in when I was jist beginning to court you, as somebody
else is courtin' our Sally here."</p>
<p>"Now, father," said Sally, threateningly, "what did I
tell you?"</p>
<p>"It's really <i>lemancholy</i>," said the Captain, "to think
how it does distress gals to talk to 'em 'bout the fellers,
when they ain't thinkin' o' nothin' else all the time.
They can't even laugh without sayin' he-he-he!"<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_293" id="Page_293"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>"Now, father, you know I've told you five hundred
times that I don't care a cent for Moses Pennel,—that
he's a hateful creature," said Sally, looking very red and
determined.</p>
<p>"Yes, yes," said the Captain, "I take that ar's the reason
you've ben a-wearin' the ring he gin you and them
ribbins you've got on your neck this blessed minute, and
why you've giggled off to singin'-school, and Lord knows
where with him all summer,—that ar's clear now."</p>
<p>"But, father," said Sally, getting redder and more earnest,
"I don't care for him really, and I've told him so.
I keep telling him so, and he will run after me."</p>
<p>"Haw! haw!" laughed the Captain; "he will, will he?
Jist so, Sally; that ar's jist the way your ma there talked
to me, and it kind o' 'couraged me along. I knew that
gals always has to be read back'ard jist like the writin' in
the Barbary States."</p>
<p>"Captain Kittridge, will you stop such ridiculous talk?"
said his helpmeet; "and jist carry this 'ere basket of cold
chicken down to the landin' agin the Pennels come round
in the boat; and you must step spry, for there's two more
baskets a-comin'."</p>
<p>The Captain shouldered the basket and walked toward
the sea with it, and Sally retired to her own little room to
hold a farewell consultation with her mirror before she
went.</p>
<p>You will perhaps think from the conversation that you
heard the other night, that Sally now will cease all thought
of coquettish allurement in her acquaintance with Moses,
and cause him to see by an immediate and marked change
her entire indifference. Probably, as she stands thoughtfully
before her mirror, she is meditating on the propriety
of laying aside the ribbons he gave her—perhaps she will
alter that arrangement of her hair which is one that he
himself particularly dictated as most becoming to the char<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_294" id="Page_294"></SPAN></span>acter
of her face. She opens a little drawer, which looks
like a flower garden, all full of little knots of pink and blue
and red, and various fancies of the toilet, and looks into
it reflectively. She looses the ribbon from her hair and
chooses another,—but Moses gave her that too, and said,
she remembers, that when she wore that "he should know
she had been thinking of him." Sally is Sally yet—as
full of sly dashes of coquetry as a tulip is of streaks.</p>
<p>"There's no reason I should make myself look like a
fright because I don't care for him," she says; "besides,
after all that he has said, he ought to say more,—he
ought at least to give me a chance to say no,—he <i>shall</i>,
too," said the gypsy, winking at the bright, elfish face in
the glass.</p>
<p>"Sally Kittridge, Sally Kittridge," called her mother,
"how long will you stay prinkin'?—come down this
minute."</p>
<p>"Law now, mother," said the Captain, "gals must prink
afore such times; it's as natural as for hens to dress their
feathers afore a thunder-storm."</p>
<p>Sally at last appeared, all in a flutter of ribbons and
scarfs, whose bright, high colors assorted well with the
ultramarine blue of her dress, and the vivid pomegranate
hue of her cheeks. The boat with its white sails flapping
was balancing and courtesying up and down on the waters,
and in the stern sat Mara; her shining white straw hat
trimmed with blue ribbons set off her golden hair and pink
shell complexion. The dark, even penciling of her eyebrows,
and the beauty of the brow above, the brown
translucent clearness of her thoughtful eyes, made her face
striking even with its extreme delicacy of tone. She was
unusually animated and excited, and her cheeks had a rich
bloom of that pure deep rose-color which flushes up in fair
complexions under excitement, and her eyes had a kind of
intense expression, for which they had always been remark<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_295" id="Page_295"></SPAN></span>able.
All the deep secluded yearning of repressed nature
was looking out of them, giving that pathos which every
one has felt at times in the silence of eyes.</p>
<p>"Now bless that ar gal," said the Captain, when he saw
her. "Our Sally here's handsome, but she's got the real
New-Jerusalem look, she has—like them in the Revelations
that wears the fine linen, clean and white."</p>
<p>"Bless you, Captain Kittridge! don't be a-makin' a fool
of yourself about no girl at your time o' life," said Mrs.
Kittridge, speaking under her breath in a nipping, energetic
tone, for they were coming too near the boat to speak
very loud.</p>
<p>"Good mornin', Mis' Pennel; we've got a good day,
and a mercy it is so. 'Member when we launched the
North Star, that it rained guns all the mornin', and the
water got into the baskets when we was a-fetchin' the
things over, and made a sight o' pester."</p>
<p>"Yes," said Mrs. Pennel, with an air of placid satisfaction,
"everything seems to be going right about this vessel."</p>
<p>Mrs. Kittridge and Sally were soon accommodated with
seats, and Zephaniah Pennel and the Captain began trimming
sail. The day was one of those perfect gems of days
which are to be found only in the jewel-casket of October,
a day neither hot nor cold, with an air so clear that every
distant pine-tree top stood out in vivid separateness, and
every woody point and rocky island seemed cut out in
crystalline clearness against the sky. There was so brisk
a breeze that the boat slanted quite to the water's edge on
one side, and Mara leaned over and pensively drew her
little pearly hand through the water, and thought of the
days when she and Moses took this sail together—she in
her pink sun-bonnet, and he in his round straw hat, with
a tin dinner-pail between them; and now, to-day the ship
of her childish dreams was to be launched. That launch<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_296" id="Page_296"></SPAN></span>ing
was something she regarded almost with superstitious
awe. The ship, built on one element, but designed to
have its life in another, seemed an image of the soul,
framed and fashioned with many a weary hammer-stroke in
this life, but finding its true element only when it sails out
into the ocean of eternity. Such was her thought as she
looked down the clear, translucent depths; but would it
have been of any use to try to utter it to anybody?—to
Sally Kittridge, for example, who sat all in a cheerful rustle
of bright ribbons beside her, and who would have shown
her white teeth all round at such a suggestion, and said,
"Now, Mara, who but you would have thought of that?"</p>
<p>But there are souls sent into this world who seem to
have always mysterious affinities for the invisible and the
unknown—who see the face of everything beautiful
through a thin veil of mystery and sadness. The Germans
call this yearning of spirit home-sickness—the dim remembrances
of a spirit once affiliated to some higher sphere, of
whose lost brightness all things fair are the vague reminders.
As Mara looked pensively into the water, it seemed
to her that every incident of life came up out of its depths
to meet her. Her own face reflected in a wavering image,
sometimes shaped itself to her gaze in the likeness of the
pale lady of her childhood, who seemed to look up at her
from the waters with dark, mysterious eyes of tender longing.
Once or twice this dreamy effect grew so vivid that
she shivered, and drawing herself up from the water, tried
to take an interest in a very minute account which Mrs.
Kittridge was giving of the way to make corn-fritters which
should taste exactly like oysters. The closing direction
about the quantity of mace Mrs. Kittridge felt was too
sacred for common ears, and therefore whispered it into
Mrs. Pennel's bonnet with a knowing nod and a look from
her black spectacles which would not have been bad for a
priestess of Dodona in giving out an oracle. In this secret<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_297" id="Page_297"></SPAN></span>
direction about the <i>mace</i> lay the whole mystery of corn-oysters;
and who can say what consequences might ensue
from casting it in an unguarded manner before the world?</p>
<p>And now the boat which has rounded Harpswell Point
is skimming across to the head of Middle Bay, where the
new ship can distinctly be discerned standing upon her
ways, while moving clusters of people were walking up
and down her decks or lining the shore in the vicinity.
All sorts of gossiping and neighborly chit-chat is being interchanged
in the little world assembling there.</p>
<p>"I hain't seen the Pennels nor the Kittridges yet," said
Aunt Ruey, whose little roly-poly figure was made illustrious
in her best cinnamon-colored dyed silk. "There's
Moses Pennel a-goin' up that ar ladder. Dear me, what
a beautiful feller he is! it's a pity he ain't a-goin' to
marry Mara Lincoln, after all."</p>
<p>"Ruey, do hush up," said Miss Roxy, frowning sternly
down from under the shadow of a preternatural black straw
bonnet, trimmed with huge bows of black ribbon, which
head-piece sat above her curls like a helmet. "Don't be
a-gettin' sentimental, Ruey, whatever else you get—and
talkin' like Miss Emily Sewell about match-makin'; I can't
stand it; it rises on my stomach, such talk does. As to
that ar Moses Pennel, folks ain't so certain as they thinks
what he'll do. Sally Kittridge may think he's a-goin' to
have her, because he's been a-foolin' round with her all
summer, and Sally Kittridge may jist find she's mistaken,
that's all."</p>
<p>"Yes," said Miss Ruey, "I 'member when I was a girl
my old aunt, Jerushy Hopkins, used to be always a-dwellin'
on this Scripture, and I've been havin' it brought up to
me this mornin': 'There are three things which are too
wonderful for me, yea, four, which I know not: the way
of an eagle in the air, the way of a serpent upon a rock,
the way of a ship in the sea, and the way of a man with a<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_298" id="Page_298"></SPAN></span>
maid.' She used to say it as a kind o' caution to me when
she used to think Abram Peters was bein' attentive to me.
I've often reflected what a massy it was that ar never
come to nothin', for he's a poor drunken critter now."</p>
<p>"Well, for my part," said Miss Roxy, fixing her eyes
critically on the boat that was just at the landing, "I
should say the ways of a maid with a man was full as particular
as any of the rest of 'em. Do look at Sally Kittridge
now. There's Tom Hiers a-helpin' her out of the
boat; and did you see the look she gin Moses Pennel as
she went by him? Wal', Moses has got Mara on his arm
anyhow; there's a gal worth six-and-twenty of the other.
Do see them ribbins and scarfs, and the furbelows, and the
way that ar Sally Kittridge handles her eyes. She's one
that one feller ain't never enough for."</p>
<p>Mara's heart beat fast when the boat touched the shore,
and Moses and one or two other young men came to assist
in their landing. Never had he looked more beautiful
than at this moment, when flushed with excitement and
satisfaction he stood on the shore, his straw hat off, and his
black curls blowing in the sea-breeze. He looked at Sally
with a look of frank admiration as she stood there dropping
her long black lashes over her bright cheeks, and coquettishly
looking out from under them, but she stepped forward
with a little energy of movement, and took the offered
hand of Tom Hiers, who was gazing at her too with undisguised
rapture, and Moses, stepping into the boat, helped
Mrs. Pennel on shore, and then took Mara on his arm,
looking her over as he did so with a glance far less assured
and direct than he had given to Sally.</p>
<p>"You won't be afraid to climb the ladders, Mara?"
said he.</p>
<p>"Not if you help me," she said.</p>
<p>Sally and Tom Hiers had already walked on toward the
vessel, she ostentatiously chatting and laughing with him.<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_299" id="Page_299"></SPAN></span>
Moses's brow clouded a little, and Mara noticed it. Moses
thought he did not care for Sally; he knew that the little
hand that was now lying on his arm was the one he wanted,
and yet he felt vexed when he saw Sally walk off triumphantly
with another. It was the dog-in-the-manger feeling
which possesses coquettes of both sexes. Sally, on all
former occasions, had shown a marked preference for him,
and professed supreme indifference to Tom Hiers.</p>
<p>"It's all well enough," he said to himself, and he
helped Mara up the ladders with the greatest deference and
tenderness. "This little woman is worth ten such girls as
Sally, if one only could get her heart. Here we are on
our ship, Mara," he said, as he lifted her over the last
barrier and set her down on the deck. "Look over there,
do you see Eagle Island? Did you dream when we used
to go over there and spend the day that you ever would
be on <i>my</i> ship, as you are to-day? You won't be afraid,
will you, when the ship starts?"</p>
<p>"I am too much of a sea-girl to fear on anything that
sails in water," said Mara with enthusiasm. "What a
splendid ship! how nicely it all looks!"</p>
<p>"Come, let me take you over it," said Moses, "and
show you my cabin."</p>
<p>Meanwhile the graceful little vessel was the subject of
various comments by the crowd of spectators below, and
the clatter of workmen's hammers busy in some of the last
preparations could yet be heard like a shower of hail-stones
under her.</p>
<p>"I hope the ways are well greased," said old Captain
Eldritch. "'Member how the John Peters stuck in her
ways for want of their being greased?"</p>
<p>"Don't you remember the Grand Turk, that keeled over
five minutes after she was launched?" said the quavering
voice of Miss Ruey; "there was jist such a company of
thoughtless young creatures aboard as there is now."<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_300" id="Page_300"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>"Well, there wasn't nobody hurt," said Captain Kittridge.
"If Mis' Kittridge would let me, I'd be glad to
go aboard this 'ere, and be launched with 'em."</p>
<p>"I tell the Cap'n he's too old to be climbin' round and
mixin' with young folks' frolics," said Mrs. Kittridge.</p>
<p>"I suppose, Cap'n Pennel, you've seen that the ways is
all right," said Captain Broad, returning to the old subject.</p>
<p>"Oh yes, it's all done as well as hands can do it," said
Zephaniah. "Moses has been here since starlight this
morning, and Moses has pretty good faculty about such
matters."</p>
<p>"Where's Mr. Sewell and Miss Emily?" said Miss
Ruey. "Oh, there they are over on that pile of rocks;
they get a pretty fair view there."</p>
<p>Mr. Sewell and Miss Emily were sitting under a cedar-tree,
with two or three others, on a projecting point
whence they could have a clear view of the launching.
They were so near that they could distinguish clearly the
figures on deck, and see Moses standing with his hat off,
the wind blowing his curls back, talking earnestly to the
golden-haired little woman on his arm.</p>
<p>"It is a launch into life for him," said Mr. Sewell, with
suppressed feeling.</p>
<p>"Yes, and he has Mara on his arm," said Miss Emily;
"that's as it should be. Who is that that Sally Kittridge
is flirting with now? Oh, Tom Hiers. Well! he's good
enough for her. Why don't she take him?" said Miss
Emily, in her zeal jogging her brother's elbow.</p>
<p>"I'm sure, Emily, I don't know," said Mr. Sewell
dryly; "perhaps he won't be taken."</p>
<p>"Don't you think Moses looks handsome?" said Miss
Emily. "I declare there is something quite romantic and
Spanish about him; don't you think so, Theophilus?"</p>
<p>"Yes, I think so," said her brother, quietly looking,
externally, the meekest and most matter-of-fact of persons,<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_301" id="Page_301"></SPAN></span>
but deep within him a voice sighed, "Poor Dolores, be
comforted, your boy is beautiful and prosperous!"</p>
<p>"There, there!" said Miss Emily, "I believe she is
starting."</p>
<p>All eyes of the crowd were now fixed on the ship; the
sound of hammers stopped; the workmen were seen flying
in every direction to gain good positions to see her go,—that
sight so often seen on those shores, yet to which use
cannot dull the most insensible.</p>
<p>First came a slight, almost imperceptible, movement,
then a swift exultant rush, a dash into the hissing water,
and the air was rent with hurrahs as the beautiful ship
went floating far out on the blue seas, where her fairer life
was henceforth to be.</p>
<p>Mara was leaning on Moses's arm at the instant the ship
began to move, but in the moment of the last dizzy rush
she felt his arm go tightly round her, holding her so close
that she could hear the beating of his heart.</p>
<p>"Hurrah!" he said, letting go his hold the moment the
ship floated free, and swinging his hat in answer to the
hats, scarfs, and handkerchiefs, which fluttered from the
crowd on the shore. His eyes sparkled with a proud light
as he stretched himself upward, raising his head and throwing
back his shoulders with a triumphant movement. He
looked like a young sea-king just crowned; and the fact is
the less wonderful, therefore, that Mara felt her heart throb
as she looked at him, and that a treacherous throb of the
same nature shook the breezy ribbons fluttering over the
careless heart of Sally. A handsome young sea-captain,
treading the deck of his own vessel, is, in his time and
place, a prince.</p>
<p>Moses looked haughtily across at Sally, and then passed
a half-laughing defiant flash of eyes between them. He
looked at Mara, who could certainly not have known what
was in her eyes at the moment,—an expression that made<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_302" id="Page_302"></SPAN></span>
his heart give a great throb, and wonder if he saw aright:
but it was gone a moment after, as all gathered around in
a knot exchanging congratulations on the fortunate way in
which the affair had gone off. Then came the launching
in boats to go back to the collation on shore, where were
high merry-makings for the space of one or two hours: and
thus was fulfilled the first part of Moses Pennel's Saturday
afternoon prediction.</p>
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