Saturday, December 31, 2011

The Crow's Nest 2



The Crow's Nest
2


            I began in the home with a telephone call from the mother.  Their telephone was a wall mounted crank telephone then.  A local operator assisted the call and the conversation.  As the era of the crank had vanished except in interior Maine, the operator had a singular relationship when contacting the outer world from the village especially with elderly people. 
            The wall mounted telephone was just past the door that lead to the “front part” of the house.  This position excluded the telephone from the living area of the home and defined it’s usage to the formal front business section of the home.  This formal front faced the street.  The door by the telephone marked the boundary of the house that defined the mother and the daughter’s usage within the whole.  Simply, they lived in the back and did their business in the front.
            This “front part” (their words) must be understood well.  The “living” part of the home was the older and original sections of the home dating from the 1780’s.  To this original home was added, in the 1820’s, a full, classic and New England grade perfect Greek Revival “addition” that was, in fact, a whole home… of the latest and most fashionable style.  So perfect and so formal was this abutment that it never was fully assimilated by the family as being part of the original homestead.  The… always closed… door from the older home into the newer addition forever represented a border line to the “front part”. 
            From the street, the front part began with the front door and it’s perfect Greek Revival Doric pillared porch.  This porch reach toward the main street of the village.  It was abutted by a full grown sugar maple tree on it’s left and a full grown American Horse Chestnut tree on it’s right.  Visitors such as myself were received at this front door… only.  Local visitors and family friends were received at the kitchen door.  These visitors walked past the front door, back into the yard and through the shed door open between the barn and the house to the concealed from view kitchen door at the rear side of the home… only.
            I would walk up a flat stone path to a single step onto the front porch.  I would walk two more steps to the front door.  I would push a primitive electric door bell button that would set off a loud buzzer while I faced… and never used… a beautiful cast iron Grecian door knock that had obviously been “there” “since it (the addition) was made”.  To my right were the perfectly poised requisite three New England style slat back “porch rockers” and a small companion table… all painted in an old and deep forest green paint.  Before them stood a row of large earthenware flower pots with their just modestly tended Geraniums.  Stylistically flawless, the whole porch was “just modestly tended” JUST PERFECTLY so as to assure that “these people are real local Mainers” who have lived “here” “forever” and not someone who moved here “from away” (out of state).
            The door bell would be answered very slowly.  I would hear the mother begin her expedition from her kitchen through the “living” house to the “front part” door.  I would hear this door open… and close.  I would hear her continuing up the “front hall” to the front door, hear her turn the key she kept in the door lock and this door lock unlock.  Then I would hear her turn the ancient door knob (that I would watch turn on my side), hear her pull upon the… slightly stuck at bottom… perfect large Greek Revival door… painted in old whitewash.  The opening door would pop and then very gradually recede to reveal her face peeking through a crack to assure it was me.  Then she would swing the door fully open.
            “Come in come in thank you for coming so promptly” was always said as one sentence and then IN I was following behind her “up” the “front hall” a mere twelve feet to turn right into a most… stunningly untouched circa 1825 Maine full Empire style decorated and never ever altered ever… front parlor.
            At this moment it must be denoted that two spaces need description; the “front hall” and “front parlor”.  This is not a tedious exercise.  This is part of the tale.  Way up above and at the very top of this “front part” of the home was the crow’s nest.  WAY, WAY up above the front door was a …perfectly proportioned, centered and matching Greek Revival window that looks out over all of the main street of the village.  Behind this window was … the crow’s nest.  It is the scale… and it’s perfectly preserved time capsule state… that must be conveyed to understand this home, the “front part”, the first floor spaces, the stairs ascending, the upstairs rooms, the stairs to the attic, the attic and, finally, the crow’s nest.
            We will wind our way there with description and tale merged.



Wednesday, December 28, 2011

The Crow's Nest





The Crow’s Nest

1

             At the top of the attic stairs; at the very top of the home, there was a room.  This room was called “The Crow’s Nest”.  There was a homemade hand painted sign on the closed door that said “The Crow’s Nest”.  Several painted crows surrounded this title.  This painted sign had been made on an old stiff paper shirt board.  It was now warped and chipped from dangling from it’s single tack.  Eventually I removed the sign and sold it.  That was after a thirty year association with the sign and the room.
            The name; “The Crow’s Nest’s” came from the woman whose room this was.  She derived the “crow’s nest” from her mother who had once had a pet crow.  The pet crow’s name was Simon.  That name came from “Simple Simon”, the poem.  The Mother had named the crow when she was thirteen.  She had captured the baby crow, raised it and… exhibited it at a local northern Maine fair.  She exhibited Simon annually for over a half decade.
            Simon, although a docile and loyal pet, ranged free from the Mother’s family farm in northern Maine.  Coming and going as he chose, he excelled in one single passion; the gathering of small shiny objects.  No quality valuation contributed to Simon’s collecting passion.  Only shiny and size.  He had to be able to carry his discovery off and be able to hide it in his plunder trove.
            The plunder trove was the rotten hollow that formed a deep dish at the top of a large and tall corner fence post at the upper end of the back pasture near the gate.  From her childhood bedroom in the farm house the mother could see Simon tending and guarding his plunder trove.
            The varied objects Simon found and hid in the fence post top were a continuing saga and intrigue.  Most were rudimentary and unsatisfying such as a shiny new tack, a copper wire piece or a bottle cap.  Other objects were very intriguing and down right …evil.  Simon purloined a sterling silver thimble with someone’s initials on it.  One day a silver plated woman’s wristwatch appeared.  A silver bead necklace suggested that Simon hopped in the open widow of a home and hunted on a woman’s dressing table.  A silver watch chain and a tiny silver cigar clipper, it too with engraved initials, suggested Simon had no gender sensitivity in his collecting.  These finer items never ceased to entertain the mother when she inspected Simon’s fence post but also… they bothered.  It was obvious to the mother that Simon had stolen these items and that could only lead to trouble if he were found out  That consideration lead to a very ridged policy of the Mother never ever disturbing Simon’s fence post and that… was just fine by Simon.
            Simon met his end by purloining a small silver match case covering a box of matches.  He open the match box with his beak, pecked the matches and they blew up in his face, instantly blinding him, causing him to fall of the fence post and be found dead at it’s base by the mother.  She buried Simon at the base of his fence post, did not disturb his plunder and waited.  For the rest of her girlhood she would periodically check Simon’s plunder.  It was always the same.  Even after she’d grown, moved away, married, had growing children of her own and only rarely returned to home, she always would slip away and check Simon’s plunder.  On one visit home, the fence post top was empty.  Simon’s plunder was gone.