Authors: Robert Crawford
And only the years that efface and destroy
Give us also the vision to see
What we owe for the future, the present, and past,
Fair Harvard, to thine and to thee.
77
Â
Twenty-first-century readers may hear in that penultimate line an anticipation of the opening of the first of
Four Quartets
, but for the Eliot family on 24 June 1910 there was the much more pressing matter of âa monster garden party'. Bands were âplaying in all parts of the grounds'.
78
For twenty-one-year-old Tom, who had managed to get his own way, there was summer, and the promise of Paris.
Â
B
EFORE
going to Paris, Tom went to Gloucester. That was his custom every summer, though often, with student friends, he voyaged beyond. So scanty are the records of these voyages, it is impossible to date most of them accurately, but they were important parts of his youth. Boyhood sailing lessons had given him both the assurance and dexterity necessary to handle a boat. With his âsensitive nature', he may have kept a good deal of his imaginative life to himself, but on the water he felt relaxed.
1
He and his brother loved to put the sailboat
Elsa
through her paces, tacking alertly on the waters off Eastern Point.
His confidence at Gloucester surprised Harvard classmates. Tinckom-Fernandez, who knew him well, recalled that âin his sophomore year he decided to complete his course in three years and take a master's degree'. Occasionally at âinitiations and punch nights', Tom came âto expand, in the midst of our hilarity, into his quiet, subtle humor'. Though friends like Howard Morris, relishing the Bolo poems, knew Tom's humour could be anything but subtle, Tinckom-Fernandez recalled him in thoughtful mood: âHe was always ready to lay his book aside and fill his pipe. With his analytical mind his curiosity was insatiable as to the meanings and motives in the literary and social currents of our day. He was always the commentator, never the gusty talker, and seemed to cultivate even then a scholarly detachment.' Yet in vacation time, visiting Tom at the Downs âin a quiet, charming family circle of parents and sisters', Tinckom-Fernandez was impressed by how his friend âused to take me sailing in his catboat, and he could handle a sheet with the best in Gloucester'.
2
He and Tom kept in touch, even after âTinck' set off for Europe in 1913, the year he married. Tom saw him off from the Boston docks. They corresponded for a time, but their letters are lost. So is all Tom's correspondence with his closest sailing partner, Harold Peters. Their maritime exploits are recorded in written fragments and photographs. Tom's sense of the sea pervades his poetry. Some of his coastal cruising, especially while he was younger, was along the granite shore of Cape Ann, or past the Dry Salvages, familiar, he later explained, as âa group of three rocks off the eastern corner of Cape Ann, Massachusetts, with a beacon: convenient for laying a course to the eastward, Maine, or Nova Scotia'.
3
This was the direction he liked to sail in, though sometimes, too, he seems to have headed south towards John Robinson's Salem, or Marblehead. According to Leon Little, Harold âPete' Peters introduced Tom
to small-boat cruising and they made many cruises together between Marblehead and the Canadian border. The most spectacular episode of any in these cruises was when, in a 19-foot knockabout, before the days of power, they rounded Mt. Desert Rock in a dungeon of fog, a rough sea and a two-reef breeze. The log book, the next day, shows a sketch of Tom in the tender in a heavy wind unmooring from an enormous pile mooring at Duck Island. The title of the sketch is âHeroic work by the swab.' They had spent an uncomfortable night at that mooring and had decided in spite of the continuing fog, wind and heavy sea, to leave there for Mt. Desert and a protected harbour. So, now with three reefs, they headed inshore and finally anchored at the little land-locked harbour of Somesville. The last entry in the log for that day was âAshore for supper at Somes House, $1, excellent.'
4
This voyage to what is now part of Acadia National Park was probably Tom's most dangerous. Mount Desert Rock is a remote, treeless island with a nineteenth-century lighthouse and keeper's accommodation. Peters had cruised that part of Maine since at least 1908, when his name and that of Chuck Cobb, another of Tom's Harvard acquaintances, appear in the register of the old inn in the village of North Haven.
5
In 1909 Tom postcarded his mother to say he was having a âpleasant and lazy' time in âvery warm weather' not far from âNorth Haven'.
6
Leon Little, an experienced sailor, thought the trip Tom and Peters made âaround Mt. Desert Rock in the Lynx' was âcrazy'; the
Lynx
was probably the smallest sailboat ever to accomplish such a voyage without power.
7
Little was amazed Tom and Harold Peters had survived.
That they did so is a tribute to their seamanship and luck. An experienced sailor, Peters was naturally sporty in a way that Tom was not. Unsettled, he never married, and would go on to spend much of his life at sea. On a boat, both he and Tom fitted in. Tom liked the camaraderie of such voyages. They introduced him to characters very different from his Harvard professors, though the on-board food was no Signet dinner. When Peters and Leon Little made a trip on the
Lynx
together, Leon boasted they lived entirely on âbacon, beans, bread and bananas'.
8
A surviving photograph shows Tom in casual hat and short-sleeved shirt, at the wheel of a boat, steering while his companion (âprobably Harold Peters') smokes; there was ample liquid refreshment.
9
Though he remembered sleeping at Peters's mother's house, usually Tom and Peters slept on board the
Lynx
or, later, the
Arethusa
.
10
It is clear from Little's correspondence at Harvard that he expected Tom and Peters would have shared Bolovian compositions as part of their close association. Another of Tom's Harvard sailing pals, Clarence Little (also nicknamed âPete'), treasured memories of Columbo and Bolo verses.
At least among some of the young men of Tom's circle, these scurrilous poems were useful currency, but he was impressed when, in small-town Maine ports, he met old sailors whose vocabulary might be even more shocking. âAbout COARSENESS', he wrote, years later, to Ezra Pound, âI don't want to boast, so I wont tell you what Capn Eben Lake of Jonesport said to Capn Joe Tibbetts of East Machias about me.' Gleefully he mentioned âold Ike Carver of Mosquito Cove ⦠who fucked the whole of Marshall's Island in one night, at the age of 70'.
11
For the rest of his life he remembered meeting locals when he sailed to places such as Jonesport, Roque Island and Cutler, Maine. â(I shall never forget', he wrote in a parenthesis to Leon Little almost half a century later, âPete leading the Grand March at the Jonesport Summer Ball with Mrs. Willie Carver, you never saw anything more respectable) and Lakeman's (we never got to the Wolves, there were said to be some tough lads there)'.
12
Mrs Willie Carver, then in her forties, was Martha Guptill, married to Jonesport lobsterman William Carver and part of a local lobster-fishing family.
13
In the 1950s, remembering this incident, Tom tried to recall a ânautical ballad' that âstarts so magnificently: It was the schooner Lapwing / From Jonesport bore awayâ¦'
14
This was the ballad âCruise of the Lapwing', composed in 1870 by John Radley, a Jonesport commercial fisherman; it was still being sung by celebrated local balladeer and storyteller Joshua Alley in 1936 when he was ninety-three. It may well have been Alley's singing that Tom remembered from the early twentieth century:
The good schooner Lapwing, from Jonesport bears away
She being all spars and canvas, from her bows she heaves the spray
And as she passes through the Reach and down Kelley stand
We are going winter fishing to the Isle of Grand Manan.
The air is very cold and vapour o'er the ocean spread
With her lofty spars and canvas, she nobly leaps ahead
And by the wind and on her course, looks up for Cutler head.
Now in Cutler Harbor and safe at anchor rides
With plenty scope ahead of her, to stem the winter tides.
From there this ballad takes the
Lapwing
northwards, away from âgirls on shore' who are âmost jovial company, to pass away the time'. The boat enters stormy waters where âThe wind is fast a-canting, and blowing a half a gale'. Finding few fish, the voyagers reach an ice-scape: âthe ocean is one white sheet; the air is filled with snow and hail'. Here âamid the ice and snow' the crew hear of a race between schooners âdown by the Duck Islands'.
15
Though he seems never to have sailed in winter up into the ice, Tom loved to recall his adventures in the maritime world of such ballads, the milieu he had read about, too, in
Captains Courageous
. Grand Manan, an island between Maine and New Brunswick (familiar territory to Gloucester fishermen), was at the northern extremity of Tom's voyaging. Years later, recalling âthose places along the coast where Harold Peters and I used to cruise so regularly', he relished again âthe famous occasion on which Peters and I spent the night moored to a spar buoy on the lee shore of Duck Island during such a fog, combined with half a gale of wind'.
16
Eventually they had gone ashore and called at a dwelling.
Such voyaging could be dangerous. This strain of Tom's experience, mixed with and submerged beneath his reading, would permeate his mature poetry, whether in the âGull against the wind, in the windy straits / Of Belle Isle' in âGerontion' (the Strait of Belle Isle is between Quebec and Newfoundland), or in that long voyage âFrom the Dry Salvages to the eastern banks' on which âeverything' goes âwrong' in the drafts of
The Waste Land
. Tom cut most of that passage, which involved sailing away from âgirls and gin' onshore at âMarm Brown's joint' and voyaging beyond âthe farthest northern islands' to âa long white line', a white-out landscape of âbears' and âcracked ice'. In the end, he excised everything except the final, eerie drowning of âDeath by Water'. Re-imagined and modified, details there come from experiences he and his student friends had shared: âThe canned baked beans were only a putrid stench'. As in âThe Dry Salvages' itself, the vocabulary is that of a man familiar with sailing: âthe main gaffaws / Jammed ⦠A spar split ⦠then the garboard-strake began to leak'.
17
That leaking âgarboard strake' would recur in âMarina', a poem whose pencil manuscript draft locates its foggy setting âOff Roque Island' in Maine, and which still in its published version communicates wonderfully a sense of lying offshore in fog: âWhat seas what shores what grey rocks and what islands / What water lapping the bow'.
18
By the end of Tom's Harvard days Harold Peters was getting ready to set off on much more distant voyages. Capable yet boyish, he liked Tom, and may even have had a crush on him, but there is no evidence it was reciprocated. Later in life Tom realised that these voyages up the New England coast had become indelibly fixed in his memory. They were a valuable part of him that few of his subsequent friends knew about. His poetry alone shows how deeply such experiences affected him. His days at sea, watching the coast and the fog, or coming ashore to communities of lobstermen and yarners were in their way just as formative as his time spent in the classrooms of Irving Babbitt or hunched over the poems of Laforgue.
Tom's rounding of Mount Desert Rock might have resulted in his failing to come home. So, in a different sense, might his 1910 transatlantic voyaging. Long afterwards he made it clear that during the academic session 1910â11 he thought very seriously about âgiving up English and trying to settle down and scrape along in Paris and gradually write French', as had two earlier minor, Symbolist-affiliated American poets, âStuart Merrill and Vielé-Griffin'.
19
Such behaviour would have horrified his parents. He embarked on his first ever transatlantic journey in October 1910, in an era when the crossing took about a week. These voyages were phenomena in themselves. Alan Dale's
The Great Wet Way
, illustrated with comic sketches, gives a fine flavour of what passengers might expect. On board ship there was the chance to â“loaf” a bit'. Dale eavesdrops on typical on-board conversations. â“If I loved Parrus, I should think myself a very poor sort of American”, says one woman. “I tell you that Syracuse could give lessons to Parrus any day in the week. Parrus belongs to the past;
we
belong to the future.”'
20
This was not Tom's attitude. Instead, recalling 1910â11, he told a French audience, âTantôt Paris était le passé; tantôt tout l'avenir: et ces deux aspects se combinaient en un présent parfait' (Paris, on the one hand, was wholly the past; on the other, it was wholly the future; and these two aspects combined to make a perfect present).
21
If this magnificent European capital was vibrant, then even the journey there was exciting. According to Alan Dale, crossing the Atlantic in this era involved Americans in constant âflirtations' on board ship. Though some ânervous passengers' were âdistracted' by the âWagnerian
leit-motif
' of the fog horn, transatlantic sailing also furnished an abundance
of the sort of popular music Tom enjoyed: âThe banjo-soloist flourishes in mid-Atlantic ⦠They have a repertoire of awe-inspiring rag-time.' Passengers contributed their own songs, even when ill with
mal de mer
. Dale recalled a choir of twenty in deckchairs who âgave us the classic numbers of Vesta Victoria, Alice Lloyd, Vesta Tilley, Harry Lauder, and all the rest of the “vaudeville” nightingales of both sexes'.
22
A young poet with a keen satirical eye, Tom disembarked in Europe with no shortage of material. Paris, though, for all that he had read about it, was stimulatingly new.