The Harbor Part 5
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"The business side of war," he said. "And when you've seen that side of it you know how rotten a big war is! Men in the North made millions by sending such rotten meat to the front that we had to live on the people down South, we had to go into their farms and plantations and plunder defenseless women and children of all they had to eat! That's war! And war is filthy stinking camps where men die of fever and scurvy like flies--and war is field hospitals so rotten in their management that you see the wounded in long lines--packed together like b.l.o.o.d.y sardines--bleeding to death for the lack of care! When they're dead you dig big trenches and you pile 'em in like dogs! In time of war remember peace--and then you'll be ashamed you're there!"
For a moment I was struck dumb with surprise. What was this strange fire deep down within my father's soul that could give out such a flash?
Confusedly I wondered. A sudden idea crossed my mind.
"But if that's how you feel," I retorted, "why are you always talking about the battles.h.i.+ps we need? You want a big navy----"
"Yes," he snapped, "to keep this country _out_ of war! If you live long enough you'll see what I mean--remember then what I'm telling you! This country needs a navy so big she can trade wherever she likes and make other nations leave her alone! But she doesn't want war! Sixty One was enough! Some day when you get a man's eyes in your head you'll see what that did to this harbor!"
I had it now, the cause of all his curious wrath! War had hurt his harbor! How or why I did not care. Could this harbor of his stand nothing heroic? Patriotism, religion, love--must they all be shoved aside to make way for his dull business?
About a year later I was torn for months between two careers. Should I become a great musician or a famous writer? The idea of writing came to me first, I got it from "Pendennis," and for a time it took hold so hard I thought I was nicely settled for life. But then my mother read aloud "The Lives of Great Musicians," and within a few weeks the piano lessons which for years I had thought so dull became an absorbing pa.s.sion. My mother bought me a photograph of one of the Beethoven portraits, and around it over my desk I tacked up pictures of famous pianists that I cut from magazines. I went to concerts in New York. Better still, my teacher secured me admittance to some orchestra rehearsals, where like a real professional, all mere amateurs shut out, I could sit in the dark and listen, and shut my eyes and hold my head between my hands. I was composing! After a month or two of this feverish life I remember the pride with which I wrote "Opus 38" over my last composition. My rapidity was astounding!
But one day my teacher, a kind tactful German, told me that Beethoven, when he was composing, had not always shut himself up in a room and scowled with both hands to his head, as in the portrait of him I had, but had rather gone out into the world.
"The Master found his music," he said, "by listening to the life close around him."
"He did?" I became uneasy at once, for again I felt myself being pushed toward that eternal harbor.
"If I were you," my relentless monitor went on, "and desired to become in music the great voice of my country"--I looked at him quickly but saw no smile--"I should watch the great s.h.i.+ps down there below, I should listen to them with an artist's ears. They are here from all over the world, these s.h.i.+ps, they are manned by men of all nations. I should listen to the songs of these men. I have heard," he added reflectively, "that some of their songs are centuries old. Beethoven gathered only the folk songs of his country. But you in your city of all nations might gather the folk songs of all the seas."
I turned quickly. I had been walking the room.
"I have heard the sailors sing," I said, "ever since I was a little kid out there in the garden." I scowled in the effort to search my soul, my artist's soul. "Yes," I added triumphantly, "and sometimes it brought a lump in my throat!"
"Ah! Now you are a musician!"
"I will see what I can do," I said.
So again I tackled the harbor. By day it was quite impossible, all toots and blares, the most frightful discords--but at night its vulgar loudness was toned down sufficiently so that a fellow with artist's ears could really stand listening to its life, especially if I did not go too close but listened from my window. Here with uglier sounds subdued I could catch low voices, s.n.a.t.c.hes of song and now and then a chorus. "The folk songs of the Seven Seas!" How that phrase took hold of me!
I went for information to an old dock watchman who had been a sailor.
"Songs? Why sure!" he answered. "It must be the chanties ye mean."
"Chanties?"
"That's it. I've been told the word's French."
"Oh! Chanter!"
"No--chanty. An' the man that sings the verses, he's called the chantyman. He sings while the crew heaves on the ropes an' they all come in on the chorus. If he's a real good chantyman he makes up new verses every time, a kind of a yarn he spins while he sings."
Soon after this, toward the end of a warm, windy April night, I awoke and heard them singing. I jumped up and went to my window. From the dock next to my father's, over the line of warehouse roofs, I could see the immense white sails already slowly rising into the starlit night.
Quickly I threw on some clothes and hurried down to the docks. The waterfront was empty, swept clean of all that I disliked. Only overhead a few billowy clouds, the soft rush of the wind, a slight flush in the east, it was almost dawn. Here and there gleamed a light, red, green or yellow, with a phantom tug or barge around it, moving over the black of the water. Not silence but something richer was here--the confused mysterious murmuring, the creaking and the breathing of the sleeping port. And out of this those voices singing.
I drew nearer slowly. Hungrily I tried to take in the details of color and sound. And I felt suddenly such a deep delight as I had never dreamed of. To look around and listen and gather it into me and remember. This was great, no doubt about it--it fitted into all that was fine!
"This is really what I want to do--I'd like to learn to do it well--I'd like to do it all my life!"
Slower, more fearfully, I drew near. Would anything happen to spoil it all? There she lay, the long white s.h.i.+p, laden deep, settled low in the water. I could see the lines of little dark men heaving together at the ropes. Each time they hove they sang the refrain, which, no doubt, was centuries old, a song of the winds, the big bullies of the ocean, calling to each other as in some wild storm at sea they buffeted the tiny men who clung to the masts and spars of s.h.i.+ps:
"Blow the man down, bullies, Blow him right down!
Hey! Hey! Blow the man down!
Give us the time to blow the man down!"
But what were the verses? I could hear the plaintive tenor voice of the chantyman who sang them--now low and almost mournful, now pa.s.sionate, thrilling up into the night, as though yearning for all that was hid in the heavens. Could a man like that feel things like that? But what were the words he was singing, this yarn he was spinning in his song?
I came around by the foot of the slip and walked rapidly up the dockshed toward one of its wide hatchways. The singing had stopped, but as I drew close a rough voice broke the silence:
"Sing it again, Paddy!"
I looked out. Close by on the deck, in the hard blue glare of an arc-light, were some twenty men, dirty, greasy, ragged, sweating, all gripping the ropes and waiting for Paddy, who rolled his quid in his mouth, spat twice, and then began:
"As I went awalking down Paradise Street A pretty young maiden I chanced for to meet."
A heave on the ropes and a deafening roar:
"Blow the man down, bullies, Blow him right down!
Hey! Hey! Blow the man down!"
Again the solo voice, plaintiff and tender:
"By her build I took her for Dutch.
She was square in the stuns'l and bluff in the bow."
The rest was a detailed account of the night spent with the maiden. Roar on roar rose the boisterous chorus: "Blow the man down, bullies, blow him right down!" The big patched, dirty sails went jerking and flapping up toward the stars, which from here were so faint they could barely be seen. And the s.h.i.+p moved out on the harbor.
"There go the folk songs of the seas," I thought disgustedly, looking out on the water now showing itself grease-mottled in the first raw light of day.
I tried other songs with my artist's ears and found them all much like the first, the music like the very stars, the words like the grease and sc.u.m on the water. I was about giving up my search when I met my old friend, the watchman.
"Well, did ye find the chanties?" he asked.
"Yes," I said. "They can't be printed." His old eyes twinkled merrily:
"Of course they can't. An' _most_ songs an' stories can't. But I'll give ye a nice little song ye can print. It's the oldest chanty of 'em all.
I'll try to remember an' write it down."
Here is the song he gave me:
ROLLING HOME
To Australia's fair-haired maidens We will bid our last good-bye.
We are going home to England, We may never more see you.
Rolling home, rolling home, Rolling home across the sea, Rolling home to merry England, Rolling home dear land to thee.
The Harbor Part 5
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The Harbor Part 5 summary
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