John Casey - Spartina

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Spartina: краткое содержание, описание и аннотация

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Winner of the 1989 National Book Award. A classic tale of a man, a boat, and a storm,
is the lyrical and compassionate story of Dick Pierce, a commercial fisherman along the shores of Rhode Island's Narragansett Bay. A kind, sensitive, family man, he is also prone to irascible outbursts against the people he must work for, now that he can no longer make his living from the sea.
Pierce's one great passion, a fifty-foot fishing boat called
, lies unfinished in his back yard. Determined to get the funds he needs to buy her engine, he finds himself taking a foolish, dangerous risk. But his real test comes when he must weather a storm at sea in order to keep his dream alive. Moving and poetic,
is a masterly story of one man's ongoing struggle to find his place in the world

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“No,” Dick said. “To tell the truth, that time wasn’t bad for me. I liked all that work. I’d been bored in the Coast Guard. And I was glad I had at least that little piece of land left, and the house going up. And I had a son.”

Elsie said, “Yes. There was baby Charlie. I don’t envy my sister anymore except for her children. Last year I even went to an agency and asked about adopting.” Elsie laughed. “Now, there was an odd scene.…”

Dick said, “You better talk to Eddie Wormsley about that. He got his son back from his ex-wife when the kid was ten. Practically grown up, or so Eddie thought. The kid was a good kid too. But, my God … you talk to Eddie about that.”

Elsie said, “I talked to Mary Scanlon about it—”

Dick said, “Mary? Mary doesn’t have a kid.”

“No, no. She and I were joking about …” Elsie fluttered her hand and said, “Our spinsterhood. You see, she works evenings, I work days, so we were talking about sharing a daughter. Add a room for Mary out there.” Elsie gestured to the side. “And I’d move my room over to that side. And we’d get Miss Perry to be the honorary grandmother. We might keep some slots open for male relatives. My brother-in-law for rich uncle.” Elsie’s hands flickered back and forth with each idea. “And a black-sheep uncle … You think you might like that one? Rogue uncle …”

Dick laughed. “Mary Scanlon and you. That’d be a pair all right.”

“I don’t know why you say that,” Elsie said. “Mary speaks well of you. In fact she’s very fond of you.”

Dick said, “And I like Mary. I like Mary fine.”

“Then, what?”

Dick shook his head.

Elsie said, “Then it’s something about me!”

“No. I like you fine too. It’s the pair of you. I was thinking of some poor guy walking in here, he’d get skinned on two sides at once.”

“I don’t know why you say that. Mary and I could very well be the two nicest people for miles around—”

“That’s right. Could be.”

“But just because we’re independent women … Of course maybe you just feel threatened.”

Dick laughed. “That’s what I said — if the two of you got going, I surely would.”

“Well,” Elsie said. “So that’s what you think. I suppose you prefer women to be like Marie Van der Hoevel, little whispering voices, and tiny narrow feet, pale noodle legs. You probably can’t even tell she’s meaner than Mary and me put together.”

Dick checked himself. He didn’t want to get into talking about Parker and him mixing with Schuyler and Marie. Dick said, “No. But, then, I don’t know Marie. Just from the clambake. Didn’t look like she was having much fun.”

“Well, it’s her own fault,” Elsie said. “No, I shouldn’t say that. Schuyler’s impossible sometimes. But really I’m glad they’re both going to stay here. And that is a measure of how few friends I have left around here. There’s Mary Scanlon, but it’s hard to see her, the hours she has to work. So really my best friend is Miss Perry.… I really do love her, but … I grew up here, and everyone I knew then has moved away. New York, Boston … Away. I see my sister, but now that she and Jack have two children, it’s not the way it was. It’s still nice, but … One thing I admire about Miss Perry is her friendships. Of course her best friend died, old Mr. Hazard. But she has Captain Texeira.…”

Elsie stopped short, sank onto her elbows, her fingers on her forehead. “I suppose I’m afraid of being here the way Miss Perry is here. But at the same time I admire the way she’s here. And I want to stay here, I want to be here. I believe in staying here. It’s just so hard sometimes. Of course it’s my own fault.… I can be so difficult. I’m not really, I’m …” Elsie put her hands over her eyes, said “Oh shit,” and began to cry.

Dick was alarmed. He felt a sharp sympathy for Elsie, as quick as a piece of paper being ripped down the middle. He had no idea what to do. It seemed like years since May had her crying fits. Or since he’d been nice to May when she did cry.

Dick held out his napkin to Elsie. When it touched her hand she made a noise so much like a growl that he pulled back.

“I’m fine,” she said. “Give me that.” She wiped her eyes and blew her nose and went right on. “One thing I was thinking is that we ought to be able to do anything. I mean, compared with plants and animals, we can see the whole world. But everyone seems to end up … shriveled into a corner. Have you ever seen a water shrew? They’re little, smaller than my little finger. They’re almost blind. They have to eat and eat.… When they make a new nest, they have to scout the fastest way from their nest to the water so birds won’t catch them. They can only afford to feel out the path once. If there’s a stone in the way, they run around it, if there’s a twig, they hop over it. Then that’s their path. If you take away the stone and the twig, they still run around the place where the stone was, they still give a little hop where the twig was. They’re wonderful, but when they’re in their preprogrammed mode they’re just absurd. I like being an animal, but not that part. I mean, I’m grateful for being alive, I like having to do most of what I do, I just wish I wasn’t so … caught by … I don’t mind the real problems, the real rocks and twigs. It’s being in a maze of things that aren’t really there that makes me … it makes me sad for Miss Perry, it makes me sad about myself. When you live by yourself, you spend so much time going around rocks that aren’t there. You spend lots of time making sure you’re not something. That you’re not afraid, that you’re not lonely, that you’re not absurd.” Elsie looked up at him. She looked a little bewildered. She said, “Do you know what I mean?” She rolled her hand on the table so it touched his. The touch straightened his spine.

Tough little Elsie Buttrick. Far-off, fast-talking Elsie Buttrick, as quick and neat as a tern skimming the water. Dick had been alarmed to see her crumple, he was glad to see her rise again.

She stood up, picked up her coffee cup, put it back down, and shoved it aside. She took both his hands, and he floated to his feet. He bumped the corner of the table. When she touched his cheek, they were clear of the table, in the center of the room.

She said several things but he didn’t take them in. He felt weightless, but when their bones touched he felt their weight against each other, as though they were small boats at sea rising on the same swell, jostling, fendered by their flesh.

He had one complete sting of conscience when they drifted apart for an instant. Elsie shoved aside the red curtain and they floated through.

Elsie said, “It’s okay, it’s all right.” He didn’t say anything. His mouth felt numb, his hands felt numb, even though he could feel her transmitted through them. She was transmitting her skin, her teeth, her breath, and her odd fit of tears for herself. And her sixteen-year-old self from seventeen years before — it came back to him now on a single beam of memory that as she’d walked up to him she’d pulled at her swimsuit. He saw it again — as she’d crossed the boatyard, she’d slipped her fingers under the edge of her red swimsuit ridden up on her haunch and slid it down with a neat inside-out twist of her hand. And said she was sorry about his father’s death. Now she was only a step closer. She reached him now. He felt that everything that was happening and the sensations that were about to overcome him were as remote as that memory. Her sharper full-grown face was as remote as a star, light sent years ago reaching him now, fixing him on the surface of the sea.

23

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