Excerpt
Captain Ahab was neither my first husband nor
my last. Yet, looking up--into the clouds--I conjure him there: his gray-white
hair; his gathered brow; and the zaggy mark; I saw it when lying with him by
candlelight and, also, taking our bliss on the sunny moor among curly-cup gumweed
and lamb's ear. I see a zaggy shadow in the rifting clouds. That mark started
like lightning at Ahab's temple and ran not all the way to his heel (as some
thought) but ended at Ahab's heart.
That pull of cloud--tapered and blunt at one
end and frayed at the other--seems the cottony representation of his ivory leg.
But I will not see him all dismembered and scattered in heaven's blue--that
would be no kind, reconstructive vision; no, intact, lofty and sailing, though
his shape is changeable. Yesterday, when I tilted my face to the sky, I imaged
not the full figure but only his cloudy head, a portrait, glancing back at me
over his shoulder.
What weather is in Ahab's face?
For me, now, as it ever was in life, at least
when he was looking at me alone and had no other person in view, his visage is
mild--with a brightness in it, even be it a wild, white, blown-about
brightness. Now, as I look at those billowed clouds, I see the Pequod. I
half-raise my hand to bid good-bye, as it was that last day from the east-most
edge of Nantucket Island, when, with a wave and then a steadfast, longing look,
till the sails were only a white dot, and then a blankness of ocean--then--a
glitter-- I wished his ship and him Godspeed.
Nantucket! The home where first I found my body, my
feet not so much being pulled into this sandy beach as seeking downward, toes
better than roots; then, my mind, built not to chart this blue swell of heaving ocean, but the night sky, where the stars themselves, I do believe, heave and float and spin in fiery passions of their own; Nantucket!--home, finally, of my soul, found on a platform eight-by-eight, the wooden widow's walk perched like a pulpit atop my house. These three gears of myself--body, mind, and soul--mesh here on this small island-- Nantucket! Then, why, when I look into the mild, day sky, do the clouds scramble, like letters in the alphabet, and spell not Nantucket, but that first home, Kentucky? And those clouds that did bulge with the image of Ahab show me the map of that state, flat across the bottom and all billowed at the top? I did not consult Ahab about my decision to spend my pregnancy in a rough Kentucky cabin with my mother, instead of staying in the gracious home of a captain's wife on Nantucket. But I wrote him, of course, and sent the letter after him on the ship called the Dove, so he could imagine me aright. That time spent with my mother outdoors in the sweet summer and golden Kentucky autumn was augmented by our indoor companionship of sewing baby smocks and cooking and reading again those great works of literature my mother had brought with her to the
wilderness, green-bound books I had read as a child or she had read to me.
Sometimes my mother and I stood and looked at
our faces together in the oval mirror she had brought with her from the East.
Along with her library chest of books, the mirror with its many-stepped molding
distinguished our frontier cabin from others. Thus, elegantly framed, my mother
and I made a double portrait of ourselves for memory, by looking in the mirror.
When in early December the labor began but
tried in vain to progress, my mother went from our cabin, driving the old mare
in the black buggy through a six-inch crust of snow, for the doctor. In my
travail, I scarcely noticed her leaving. When my mother did not come home and
did not come home, and the pains were near unbearable and the chill was
creeping across the cabin floor and into my feet as I paced, I grasped the
feather bed from my bunk and flung it atop her bed. In desperation, between
spasms, I gathered all the gaudy quilts in the house, and then leaving the
latchstring out so that I would not have to venture from my nest when she
returned, I took to my childbirth bed. There, softness of two mattresses
comforted me from beneath and warmth of myriad quilts, a cacophony of colors,
warmed me from above, but still I worked my feet and legs and twisted my back.
Despite the heat of my labor, I could feel my
nose turning to ice, long and sharp as a church steeple all glazed with frost.
Parsnip! I thought of; frozen and funny--a vegetable on my face! I chortled and
then prayed, wondering if prayer and laughter gurgled up, sometime, from the
same spring. Let nose be parsnip, parsnip be steeple, steeple be nose-whatever
that protuberance, it is frozen to the very cartilage. Warm it! Save me, gods
and saints! Wild and crazed by pain, my thoughts leaped about in antic dance,
circling one picture after another. Nose! Steeple! Parsnip! My desperate,
laughing prayer from within that quilted hump below its parsnip was only that I
should be delivered and nothing at all for the welfare of the rest of the
world. I wanted to wait for my mother's return and I was afraid because I had
little idea of how to catch the baby. So even as I prayed, I prayed against
myself, that time would not pass nor take me any closer to the port of
motherhood. I thought of Ahab, as if his ship were wallowing, going neither
forward nor drifting back but immobile in a confused sea.
Copyright © 1999 Sena Jeter Naslund
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