The Country of the Pointed Firs by Sarah Orne Jewett (knowledgeable books to read .txt) ๐
Description
The Country of the Pointed Firs was first published in serial form in 1896 in The Atlantic, then later expanded into a novel.
The narrator, like Jewett, is a middle-aged female writer. She goes to the fictional coastal town of Dunnet Landing in Maine to find time and space to write. There she meets its residents, including her landlady, Mrs. Almira Todd, a widow and herbalist; she rents the empty schoolhouse as a place to write; and she sails with Mrs. Todd to meet Mrs. Toddโs brother and elderly mother. The Country of the Pointed Firs is not so much concerned with plot, but with placeโits rhythms, its people and its language. It captures the isolation, community and languishing of a small town.
It is often described as Jewettโs finest work, and one of the most influential works of American literary regionalism. Willa Cather considered it one of the most enduring American literary works of all time.
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- Author: Sarah Orne Jewett
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Captain Littlepage fell into a reverie.
โThen I had the good of my reading,โ he explained presently. โI had no books; the pastor spoke but little English, and all his books were foreign; but I used to say over all I could remember. The old poets little knew what comfort they could be to a man. I was well acquainted with the works of Milton, but up there it did seem to me as if Shakespeare was the king; he has his sea terms very accurate, and some beautiful passages were calming to the mind. I could say them over until I shed tears; there was nothing beautiful to me in that place but the stars above and those passages of verse.
โGaffett was always brooding and brooding, and talking to himself; he was afraid he should never get away, and it preyed upon his mind. He thought when I got home I could interest the scientific men in his discovery: but theyโre all taken up with their own notions; some didnโt even take pains to answer the letters I wrote. You observe that I said this crippled man Gaffett had been shipped on a voyage of discovery. I now tell you that the ship was lost on its return, and only Gaffett and two officers were saved off the Greenland coast, and he had knowledge later that those men never got back to England; the brig they shipped on was run down in the night. So no other living soul had the facts, and he gave them to me. There is a strange sort of a country โway up north beyond the ice, and strange folks living in it. Gaffett believed it was the next world to this.โ
โWhat do you mean, Captain Littlepage?โ I exclaimed. The old man was bending forward and whispering; he looked over his shoulder before he spoke the last sentence.
โTo hear old Gaffett tell about it was something awful,โ he said, going on with his story quite steadily after the moment of excitement had passed. โโโTwas first a tale of dogs and sledges, and cold and wind and snow. Then they begun to find the ice grow rotten; they had been frozen in, and got into a current flowing north, far up beyond Fox Channel, and they took to their boats when the ship got crushed, and this warm current took them out of sight of the ice, and into a great open sea; and they still followed it due north, just the very way they had planned to go. Then they struck a coast that wasnโt laid down or charted, but the cliffs were such that no boat could land until they found a bay and struck across under sail to the other side where the shore looked lower; they were scant of provisions and out of water, but they got sight of something that looked like a great town. โFor Godโs sake, Gaffett!โ said I, the first time he told me. โYou donโt mean a town two degrees farther north than ships had ever been?โ for heโd got their course marked on an old chart that heโd pieced out at the top; but he insisted upon it, and told it over and over again, to be sure I had it straight to carry to those who would be interested. There was no snow and ice, he said, after they had sailed some days with that warm current, which seemed to come right from under the ice that theyโd been pinched up in and had been crossing on
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