Joanna the Hermit, from "The Country of the Pointed Firs": chapters 13 & 14, by Sarah Orne Jewett (1910)
American writer Sara Orne Jewett (1849-1909) described Maine and New England mores in her novel The Country of the Pointed Firs (first published 1910). Two chapters highlight the story of a woman recluse or hermit, and give a 19th-century flavor to the motive of a hermit of the day, of what would compel a woman to live alone in the harsh climate of a Maine island.
In chapter 13 Joanna is mentioned in the context of strange personalities, her being "a nun or hermit person lived out there for years all alone on Shell-heap Island ..." who left the world because of requited love. "There was something mediaeval in the behavior of poor Joanna Todd under a disappointment of the heart."
CHAPTER 13. POOR JOANNA
One evening my ears caught a mysterious allusion which Mrs. Todd made to
Shell-heap Island. It was a chilly night of cold northeasterly rain, and I made
a fire for the first time in the Franklin stove in my room, and begged my two
housemates to come in and keep me company. The weather had convinced Mrs. Todd
that it was time to make a supply of cough-drops, and she had been bringing
forth herbs from dark and dry hiding-places, until now the pungent dust and odor
of them had resolved themselves into one mighty flavor of spearmint that came
from a simmering caldron of syrup in the kitchen. She called it done, and well
done, and had ostentatiously left it to cool, and taken her knitting-work
because Mrs. Fosdick was busy with hers. They sat in the two rocking-chairs, the
small woman and the large one, but now and then I could see that Mrs. Todd's
thoughts remained with the cough-drops. The time of gathering herbs was nearly
over, but the time of syrups and cordials had begun.
The heat of the open fire made us a little drowsy, but something in the way Mrs.
Todd spoke of Shell-heap Island waked my interest. I waited to see if she would
say any more, and then took a roundabout way back to the subject by saying what
was first in my mind: that I wished the Green Island family were there to spend
the evening with us, Mrs. Todd's mother and her brother William.
Mrs. Todd smiled, and drummed on the arm of the rocking-chair. "Might scare
William to death," she warned me; and Mrs. Fosdick mentioned her intention of
going out to Green Island to stay two or three days, if the wind didn't make too
much sea.
"Where is Shell-heap Island?" I ventured to ask, seizing the opportunity.
"Bears nor'east somewheres about three miles from Green Island; right off-shore,
I should call it about eight miles out," said Mrs. Todd. "You never was there,
dear; 't is off the thoroughfares, and a very bad place to land at best."
"I should think 't was," agreed Mrs. Fosdick, smoothing down her black silk
apron. "'Tis a place worth visiting when you once get there. Some o' the old
folks was kind o' fearful about it. 'T was 'counted a great place in old Indian
times; you can pick up their stone tools 'most any time if you hunt about.
There's a beautiful spring o' water, too. Yes, I remember when they used to tell
queer stories about Shell-heap Island. Some said 't was a great bangeing-place
for the Indians, and an old chief resided there once that ruled the winds; and
others said they'd always heard that once the Indians come down from up country
an' left a captive there without any bo't, an' 't was too far to swim across to
Black Island, so called, an' he lived there till he perished."
"I've heard say he walked the island after that, and sharp-sighted folks could
see him an' lose him like one o' them citizens Cap'n Littlepage was acquainted
with up to the north pole," announced Mrs. Todd grimly. "Anyway, there was
Indians -- you can see their shell-heap that named the island; and I've heard
myself that 't was one o' their cannibal places, but I never could believe it.
There never was no cannibals on the coast o' Maine. All the Indians o' these
regions are tame-looking folks."
"Sakes alive, yes!" exclaimed Mrs. Fosdick. "Ought to see them painted
savages I've seen when I was young out in the South Sea Islands! That was the
time for folks to travel, 'way back in the old whalin' days!"
"Whalin' must have been dull for a lady, hardly ever makin' a lively port, and
not takin' in any mixed cargoes," said Mrs. Todd. "I never desired to go a
whalin' voyage myself."
"I used to return feelin' very slack an' behind the times, 't is true," explained Mrs. Fosdick, "but 't was excitin', an' we always done extra well, and felt rich when we did get ashore. I liked the variety. There, how times have changed; how few seafarin' families there are left! What a lot o' queer folks there used to be about here, anyway, when we was young, Almiry. Everybody's just like everybody else, now; nobody to laugh about, and nobody to cry about."
They converse about the odd characters who have passed through their locale, and then:
"I was talking o' poor Joanna the other day. I hadn't thought of her for a
great while," said Mrs. Fosdick abruptly. "Mis' Brayton an' I recalled her as we
sat together sewing. She was one o' your peculiar persons, wa'n't she? Speaking
of such persons," she turned to explain to me, "there was a sort of a nun or
hermit person lived out there for years all alone on Shell-heap Island. Miss
Joanna Todd, her name was, -- a cousin o' Almiry's late husband."
I expressed my interest, but as I glanced at Mrs. Todd I saw that she was
confused by sudden affectionate feeling and unmistakable desire for reticence.
"I never want to hear Joanna laughed about," she said anxiously.
"Nor I," answered Mrs. Fosdick reassuringly. "She was crossed in love, -- that was all the matter to begin with; but as I look back, I can see that Joanna was one doomed from the first to fall into a melancholy. She retired from the world for good an' all, though she was a well-off woman. All she wanted was to get away from folks; she thought she wasn't fit to live with anybody, and wanted to be free. Shell-heap Island come to her from her father, and first thing folks knew she'd gone off out there to live, and left word she didn't want no company. 'T was a bad place to get to, unless the wind an' tide were just right; 't was hard work to make a landing."
"What time of year was this?" I asked.
"Very late in the summer," said Mrs. Fosdick. "No, I never could laugh at Joanna, as some did. She set everything by the young man, an' they were going to marry in about a month, when he got bewitched with a girl 'way up the bay, and married her, and went off to Massachusetts. He wasn't well thought of, -- there were those who thought Joanna's money was what had tempted him; but she'd given him her whole heart, an' she wa'n't so young as she had been. All her hopes were built on marryin', an' havin' a real home and somebody to look to; she acted just like a bird when its nest is spoilt. The day after she heard the news she was in dreadful woe, but the next she came to herself very quiet, and took the horse and wagon, and drove fourteen miles to the lawyer's, and signed a paper givin' her half of the farm to her brother. They never had got along very well together, but he didn't want to sign it, till she acted so distressed that he gave in. Edward Todd's wife was a good woman, who felt very bad indeed, and used every argument with Joanna; but Joanna took a poor old boat that had been her father's and loaded in a few things, and off she put all alone, with a good land breeze, right out to sea. Edward Todd ran down to the beach, an' stood there cryin' like a boy to see her go, but she was out o' hearin'. She never stepped foot on the mainland again long as she lived."
"How large an island is it? How did she manage in winter?" I asked.
"Perhaps thirty acres, rocks and all," answered Mrs. Todd, taking up the
story gravely. "There can't be much of it that the salt spray don't fly over in
storms. No, 't is a dreadful small place to make a world of; it has a different
look from any of the other islands, but there's a sheltered cove on the south
side, with mud-flats across one end of it at low water where there's excellent
clams, and the big shell-heap keeps some o' the wind off a little house her
father took the trouble to build when he was a young man. They said there was an
old house built o' logs there before that, with a kind of natural cellar in the
rock under it. He used to stay out there days to a time, and anchor a little
sloop he had, and dig clams to fill it, and sail up to Portland. They said the
dealers always gave him an extra price, the clams were so noted. Joanna used to
go out and stay with him. They were always great companions, so she knew just
what 't was out there. There was a few sheep that belonged to her brother an'
her, but she bargained for him to come and get them on the edge o' cold weather.
Yes, she desired him to come for the sheep; an' his wife thought perhaps
Joanna'd return, but he said no, an' loaded the boat with warm things an' what
he thought she'd need through the winter. He come home with the sheep an' left
the other things by the house, but she never so much as looked out o' the
window. She done it for a penance. She must have wanted to see Edward by that
time."
Mrs. Fosdick was fidgeting with eagerness to speak.
"Some thought the first cold snap would set her ashore, but she always remained," concluded Mrs. Todd soberly.
"Talk about the men not having any curiosity!" exclaimed Mrs. Fosdick
scornfully. "Why, the waters round Shell-heap Island were white with sails all
that fall. 'T was never called no great of a fishin'-ground before. Many of 'em
made excuse to go ashore to get water at the spring; but at last she spoke to a
boat-load, very dignified and calm, and said that she'd like it better if they'd
make a practice of getting water to Black Island or somewheres else and leave
her alone, except in case of accident or trouble.
"But there was one man who had always set everything by her from a boy. He'd
have married her if the other hadn't come about an' spoilt his chance, and he
used to get close to the island, before light, on his way out fishin', and throw
a little bundle 'way up the green slope front o' the house. His sister told me
she happened to see, the first time, what a pretty choice he made o' useful
things that a woman would feel lost without. He stood off fishin', and could see
them in the grass all day, though sometimes she'd come out and walk right by
them. There was other boats near, out after mackerel. But early next morning his
present was gone. He didn't presume too much, but once he took her a nice firkin
o' things he got up to Portland, and when spring come he landed her a hen and
chickens in a nice little coop. There was a good many old friends had Joanna on
their minds."
"Yes," said Mrs. Todd, losing her sad reserve in the growing sympathy of these reminiscences. "How everybody used to notice whether there was smoke out of the chimney! The Black Island folks could see her with their spy-glass, and if they'd ever missed getting some sign o' life they'd have sent notice to her folks. But after the first year or two Joanna was more and more forgotten as an every-day charge. Folks lived very simple in those days, you know," she continued, as Mrs. Fosdick's knitting was taking much thought at the moment.
"I expect there was always plenty of driftwood thrown up, and a poor failin' patch of spruces covered all the north side of the island, so she always had something to burn. She was very fond of workin' in the garden ashore, and that first summer she began to till the little field out there, and raised a nice parcel o' potatoes. She could fish, o' course, and there was all her clams an' lobsters. You can always live well in any wild place by the sea when you'd starve to death up country, except 't was berry time. Joanna had berries out there, blackberries at least, and there was a few herbs in case she needed them. Mullein in great quantities and a plant o' wormwood I remember seeing once when I stayed there, long before she fled out to Shell-heap. Yes, I recall the wormwood, which is always a planted herb, so there must have been folks there before the Todds' day. A growin' bush makes the best gravestone; I expect that wormwood always stood for somebody's solemn monument. Catnip, too, is a very endurin' herb about an old place."
"But what I want to know is what she did for other things," interrupted Mrs. Fosdick. "Almiry, what did she do for clothin' when she needed to replenish, or risin' for her bread, or the piece-bag that no woman can live long without?"
"Or company," suggested Mrs. Todd. "Joanna was one that loved her friends.
There must have been a terrible sight o' long winter evenings that first year."
"There was her hens," suggested Mrs. Fosdick, after reviewing the melancholy
situation. "She never wanted the sheep after that first season. There wasn't no
proper pasture for sheep after the June grass was past, and she ascertained the
fact and couldn't bear to see them suffer; but the chickens done well. I
remember sailin' by one spring afternoon, an' seein' the coops out front o' the
house in the sun. How long was it before you went out with the minister? You
were the first ones that ever really got ashore to see Joanna."
I had been reflecting upon a state of society which admitted such personal
freedom and a voluntary hermitage. There was something mediaeval in the behavior
of poor Joanna Todd under a disappointment of the heart. The two women had drawn
closer together, and were talking on, quite unconscious of a listener.
"Poor Joanna!" said Mrs. Todd again, and sadly shook her head as if there were
things one could not speak about.
"I called her a great fool," declared Mrs. Fosdick, with spirit, "but I pitied
her then, and I pity her far more now. Some other minister would have been a
great help to her -- one that preached self-forgetfulness and doin' for others
to cure our own ills; but Parson Dimmick was a vague person, well meanin', but
very numb in his feelin's. I don't suppose at that troubled time Joanna could
think of any way to mend her troubles except to run off and hide."
"Mother used to say she didn't see how Joanna lived without having nobody to do
for, getting her own meals and tending her own poor self day in an' day out,"
said Mrs. Todd sorrowfully.
"There was the hens," repeated Mrs. Fosdick kindly. "I expect she soon came to
makin' folks o' them. No, I never went to work to blame Joanna, as some did. She
was full o' feeling, and her troubles hurt her more than she could bear. I see
it all now as I couldn't when I was young."
Mrs. Todd relates how she was invited by Mr. Dimmick, the local minister, to accompany him in a small boat to go to the island and see Joanna, in the context of her being a "member of the church" and that Joanna "might wish to have him consider her spiritual state." Mrs. Todd was dubious, but Joanna was her cousin, after all. Arriving soon enough, they noticed the profusion of flowers before the dwelling, and then Joanna appeared at the door.
CHAPTER 14. THE HERMITAGE
The narrative is interrupted when someone at the door inquires for Mrs. Todd's help with a sick child. The narrator reflects on the custom of neighborliness in those parts, except that "for the poor hermit Joanna there was no neighbor on a winter night." The conversation resumes.
"How did she look?" demanded Mrs. Fosdick, without preface, as our large hostess returned to the little room with a mist about her from standing long in the wet doorway, and the sudden draught of her coming beat out the smoke and flame from the Franklin stove. "How did poor Joanna look?"
"She was the same as ever, except I thought she looked smaller," answered Mrs. Todd after thinking a moment; perhaps it was only a last considering thought about her patient.
"Yes, she was just the same, and looked very nice, Joanna did. I had been married since she left home, an' she treated me like her own folks. I expected she'd look strange, with her hair turned gray in a night or somethin', but she wore a pretty gingham dress I'd often seen her wear before she went away; she must have kept it nice for best in the afternoons. She always had beautiful, quiet manners. I remember she waited till we were close to her, and then kissed me real affectionate, and inquired for Nathan before she shook hands with the minister, and then she invited us both in.
'T was the same little house her father had built him when he was a bachelor, with one livin'-room, and a little mite of a bedroom out of it where she slept, but 't was neat as a ship's cabin. There was some old chairs, an' a seat made of a long box that might have held boat tackle an' things to lock up in his fishin' days, and a good enough stove so anybody could cook and keep warm in cold weather. I went over once from home and stayed 'most a week with Joanna when we was girls, and those young happy days rose up before me. Her father was busy all day fishin' or clammin'; he was one o' the pleasantest men in the world, but Joanna's mother had the grim streak, and never knew what 't was to be happy. The first minute my eyes fell upon Joanna's face that day I saw how she had grown to look like Mis' Todd. 'T was the mother right over again."
"Oh dear me!" said Mrs. Fosdick.
"Joanna had done one thing very pretty. There was a little piece o' swamp on the island where good rushes grew plenty, and she 'd gathered 'em, and braided some beautiful mats for the floor and a thick cushion for the long bunk. She'd showed a good deal of invention; you see there was a nice chance to pick up pieces o' wood and boards that drove ashore, and she'd made good use o' what she found. There wasn't no clock, but she had a few dishes on a shelf, and flowers set about in shells fixed to the walls, so it did look sort of homelike, though so lonely and poor. I couldn't keep the tears out o' my eyes, I felt so sad. I said to myself, I must get mother to come over an' see Joanna; the love in mother's heart would warm her, an' she might be able to advise."
"Oh no, Joanna was dreadful stern," said Mrs. Fosdick.
"We were all settin' down very proper, but Joanna would keep stealin' glances at me as if she was glad I come. She had but little to say; she was real polite an' gentle, and yet forbiddin'. The minister found it hard," confessed Mrs. Todd; "he got embarrassed, an' when he put on his authority and asked her if she felt to enjoy religion in her present situation, an' she replied that she must be excused from answerin', I thought I should fly. She might have made it easier for him; after all, he was the minister and had taken some trouble to come out, though 't was kind of cold an' unfeelin' the way he inquired. I thought he might have seen the little old Bible a-layin' on the shelf close by him, an' I wished he knew enough to just lay his hand on it an' read somethin' kind an' fatherly 'stead of accusin' her, an' then given poor Joanna his blessin' with the hope she might be led to comfort. He did offer prayer, but 't was all about hearin' the voice o' God out o' the whirlwind; and I thought while he was goin' on that anybody that had spent the long cold winter all alone out on Shell-heap Island knew a good deal more about those things than he did. I got so provoked I opened my eyes and stared right at him
"She didn't take no notice, she kep' a nice respectful manner towards him, and when there come a pause she asked if he had any interest about the old Indian remains, and took down some queer stone gouges and hammers off of one of her shelves and showed them to him same 's if he was a boy. He remarked that he'd like to walk over an' see the shell-heap; so she went right to the door and pointed him the way. I see then that she'd made her some kind o' sandal-shoes out o' the fine rushes to wear on her feet; she stepped light an' nice in 'em as shoes."
Mrs. Fosdick leaned back in her rocking-chair and gave a heavy sigh.
"I didn't move at first, but I'd held out just as long as I could," said Mrs. Todd, whose voice trembled a little. "When Joanna returned from the door, an' I could see that man's stupid back departin' among the wild rose bushes, I just ran to her an' caught her in my arms. I wasn't so big as I be now, and she was older than me, but I hugged her tight, just as if she was a child. 'Oh, Joanna dear,' I says, 'won't you come ashore an' live 'long o' me at the Landin', or go over to Green Island to mother's when winter comes? Nobody shall trouble you, an' mother finds it hard bein' alone. I can't bear to leave you here' -- and I burst right out crying. I'd had my own trials, young as I was, an' she knew it. Oh, I did entreat her; yes, I entreated Joanna."
"What did she say then?" asked Mrs. Fosdick, much moved.
"She looked the same way, sad an' remote through it all," said Mrs. Todd mournfully. "She took hold of my hand, and we sat down close together; 't was as if she turned round an' made a child of me. 'I haven't got no right to live with folks no more,' she said. 'You must never ask me again, Almiry: I've done the only thing I could do, and I've made my choice. I feel a great comfort in your kindness, but I don't deserve it. I have committed the unpardonable sin; you don't understand,' says she humbly. 'I was in great wrath and trouble, and my thoughts was so wicked towards God that I can't expect ever to be forgiven. I have come to know what it is to have patience, but I have lost my hope. You must tell those that ask how 't is with me,' she said, 'an' tell them I want to be alone.'
"I couldn't speak; no, there wa'n't anything I could say, she seemed so above everything common. I was a good deal younger then than I be now, and I got Nathan's little coral pin out o' my pocket and put it into her hand; and when she saw it and I told her where it come from, her face did really light up for a minute, sort of bright an' pleasant. 'Nathan an' I was always good friends; I'm glad he don't think hard of me,' says she. 'I want you to have it, Almiry, an' wear it for love o' both o' us,' and she handed it back to me. 'You give my love to Nathan, -- he's a dear good man,' she said; 'an' tell your mother, if I should be sick she mustn't wish I could get well, but I want her to be the one to come.'
"Then she seemed to have said all she wanted to, as if she was done with the world, and we sat there a few minutes longer together. It was real sweet and quiet except for a good many birds and the sea rollin' up on the beach; but at last she rose, an' I did too, and she kissed me and held my hand in hers a minute, as if to say good-by; then she turned and went right away out o' the door and disappeared.
"The minister come back pretty soon, and I told him I was all ready, and we started down to the boat. He had picked up some round stones and things and was carrying them in his pocket-handkerchief; an' he sat down amidships without making any question, and let me take the rudder an' work the boat, an' made no remarks for some time, until we sort of eased it off speaking of the weather, an' subjects that arose as we skirted Black Island, where two or three families lived belongin' to the parish. He preached next Sabbath as usual, somethin' high soundin' about the creation, and I couldn't help thinkin' he might never get no further; he seemed to know no remedies, but he had a great use of words."
Mrs. Fosdick sighed again. "Hearin' you tell about Joanna brings the time right back as if 't was yesterday," she said. "Yes, she was one o' them poor things that talked about the great sin; we don't seem to hear nothing about the unpardonable sin now, but you may say 't was not uncommon then."
"I expect that if it had been in these days, such a person would be plagued to death with idle folks," continued Mrs. Todd, after a long pause. "As it was, nobody trespassed on her; all the folks about the bay respected her an' her feelings; but as time wore on, after you left here, one after another ventured to make occasion to put somethin' ashore for her if they went that way. I know mother used to go to see her sometimes, and send William over now and then with something fresh an' nice from the farm. There is a point on the sheltered side where you can lay a boat close to shore an' land anything safe on the turf out o' reach o' the water. There were one or two others, old folks, that she would see, and now an' then she 'd hail a passin' boat an' ask for somethin'; and mother got her to promise that she would make some sign to the Black Island folks if she wanted help. I never saw her myself to speak to after that day."
"I expect nowadays, if such a thing happened, she'd have gone out West to her uncle's folks or up to Massachusetts and had a change, an' come home good as new. The world's bigger an' freer than it used to be," urged Mrs. Fosdick.
"No," said her friend. "'T is like bad eyesight, the mind of such a person: if your eyes don't see right there may be a remedy, but there's no kind of glasses to remedy the mind. No, Joanna was Joanna, and there she lays on her island where she lived and did her poor penance. She told mother the day she was dyin' that she always used to want to be fetched inshore when it come to the last; but she'd thought it over, and desired to be laid on the island, if 't was thought right. So the funeral was out there, a Saturday afternoon in September.
"'T was a pretty day, and there wasn't hardly a boat on the coast within twenty miles that didn't head for Shell-heap cram-full o' folks, an' all real respectful, same's if she'd always stayed ashore and held her friends. Some went out o' mere curiosity, I don't doubt -- there's always such to every funeral; but most had real feelin', and went purpose to show it. She'd got most o' the wild sparrows as tame as could be, livin' out there so long among 'em, and one flew right in and lit on the coffin an' begun to sing while Mr. Dimmick was speakin'. He was put out by it, an' acted as if he didn't know whether to stop or go on. I may have been prejudiced, but I wasn't the only one thought the poor little bird done the best of the two."
"What became o' the man that treated her so, did you ever hear?" asked Mrs. Fosdick.
"I know he lived up to Massachusetts for a while. Somebody who came from the same place told me that he was in trade there an' doin' very well, but that was years ago."
"I never heard anything more than that; he went to the war in one o' the early regiments. No, I never heard any more of him," answered Mrs. Todd.
"Joanna was another sort of person, and perhaps he showed good judgment in marryin' somebody else, if only he'd behaved straightforward and manly. He was a shifty-eyed, coaxin' sort of man, that got what he wanted out o' folks, an' only gave when he wanted to buy, made friends easy and lost 'em without knowin' the difference. She'd had a piece o' work tryin' to make him walk accordin' to her right ideas, but she'd have had too much variety ever to fall into a melancholy. Some is meant to be the Joannas in this world, an' 't was her poor lot."
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