
On the quiet southeastern coast of Massachusetts lies a modest village, its single winding street spilling out to the sea where old wharves and salt‑work ruins whisper of a bustling past. The landscape is dotted with weather‑worn barns, willow‑shaded graves, and the lingering scent of brine, painting a portrait of a place that has gently slipped into memory.
At the heart of this community is James Parsons, a man in his sixties whose very speech seems drawn from the rolling tides. Once a daring seafarer who rescued crews from winter storms and faced cannibals on distant seas, he now tends oyster beds and cranberry marshes, his language still flavored with nautical terms—he “heaves” even a bucket of ashes. His immaculate appearance and quiet dignity make him a living bridge between the village’s maritime heritage and its present calm.
The narrator promises to recount a simple, yet profoundly affecting incident within the Parsons family, an event that will ripple through the village’s modest history and reveal the enduring influence of a man whose life is still guided by the rhythm of the ocean.
Full title
By The Sea 1887
Language
en
Duration
~1 hours (59K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by David Widger
Release date
2007-10-12
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
1847–1924
A Boston lawyer who also wrote fiction and essays, he moved between the worlds of law, public service, and literary writing. His work reflects the broad interests of a 19th-century author comfortable with both courtroom argument and magazine prose.
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