
A storm‑kissed cove on the northern coast frames a modest schoolhouse that doubles as a Sunday chapel, its battered windows opening to clouds that race across a midsummer sky. The plaintive call of a fog‑horn, a gift from the late Melchias Tibbitts, drifts over the sea‑worn schooner “Martha B. Fuller,” anchoring the rhythm of daily life for the residents of the Basin. Here, Elder Skates presides over a simple gathering, urging anyone—whether from the distant Point, the Crooked River, or the low‑lying Basins—to lead the congregation in song, a modest plea that reveals the community’s quiet yearning for connection.
Amid the modest crowd, Vesty arrives to help Elvine with her baby, while seasoned locals trade weary jokes about medicine, milk, and the harsh summer liquor laws that drive tourists elsewhere. The dialogue, steeped in regional dialect, paints a portrait of resilient people whose lives are intertwined with the sea, the schoolhouse, and each other, hinting at the personal challenges and small triumphs that will shape their summer together.
Language
en
Duration
~5 hours (337K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Al Haines
Release date
2007-05-15
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
Subjects

1856–1935
Best known for lively, sharply observed stories of Cape Cod life, this late-19th-century novelist turned local characters and coastal customs into warm, memorable fiction. Her work helped make regional storytelling popular with readers far beyond New England.
View all books