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                     DRIFT FROM TWO SHORES 



 DRIFT FROM TWO 

                 SHORES 



                    by BRET HARTE 



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DRIFT FROM TWO SHORES 



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                                 DRIFT FROM TWO SHORES 



            THE MAN ON THE BEACH 



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       He lived beside a river that emptied into a great ocean。              The narrow 

strip of land that lay between him and the estuary was covered at high tide 

by a shining film of water察at low tide with the cast´up offerings of sea and 

shore。     Logs   yet   green察  and   saplings   washed   away   from   inland   banks察

battered   fragments   of   wrecks   and   orange   crates   of   bamboo察  broken   into 

tiny rafts yet odorous with their lost freight察lay in long successive curves察 

´ the fringes and overlappings of the sea。            At high noon the shadow of a 

seagull's    wing察   or  a  sudden     flurry   and   gray   squall   of  sand´    pipers察

themselves but shadows察was all that broke the monotonous glare of the 

level sands。 

     He   had   lived   there   alone   for   a   twelvemonth。    Although   but   a   few 

miles from a thriving settlement察during that time his retirement had never 

been    intruded    upon察   his  seclusion    remained     unbroken。     In    any   other 

community he might have been the subject of rumor or criticism察but the 

miners     at  Camp    Rogue     and   the  traders   at  Trinidad    Head察  themselves 

individual and eccentric察were profoundly indifferent to all other forms of 

eccentricity   or   heterodoxy   that   did   not   come   in   contact   with   their   own。 

And certainly there was no form of eccentricity less aggressive than that of 

a hermit察had they chosen to give him that appellation。                But they did not 

even do that察probably from lack of interest or perception。               To the various 

traders who supplied his small wants he was known as ;Kernel察─ Judge察─

and    ;Boss。;     To    the   general   public    ;The    Man    on   the   Beach;    was 

considered a sufficiently distinguishing title。           His name察his   occupation察

rank察or antecedents察nobody cared to inquire。             Whether this arose from a 

fear of reciprocal inquiry and interest察or from the profound indifference 

before referred to察I cannot say。 

     He did not look like a hermit。         A man yet young察erect察well´ dressed察

clean´shaven察with a low voice察and a smile half melancholy察half cynical察

was   scarcely   the   conventional   idea   of   a   solitary。  His   dwelling察  a   rude 



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                                  DRIFT FROM TWO SHORES 



improvement on a fisherman's cabin察had all the severe exterior simplicity 

of   frontier   architecture察  but   within   it   was   comfortable   and   wholesome。 

Three     roomsa     kitchen察   a  living   room察   and   a  bedroomwere        all  it 

contained。 

     He had lived there long enough to see the dull monotony of one season 

lapse   into   the   dull   monotony   of   the   other。  The   bleak   northwest   trade´ 

winds had brought him mornings of staring sunlight and nights of fog and 

silence。     The warmer southwest trades had brought him clouds察rain察and 

the transient glories of quick grasses and odorous beach blossoms。                     But 

summer or winter察wet or dry season察on one side rose always the sharply 

defined hills with their changeless background of evergreens察on the other 

side stretched always the illimitable ocean as sharply defined against the 

horizon察and as unchanging in its hue。             The onset of spring and autumn 

tides察  some    changes     among     his  feathered    neighbors察   the   footprints   of 

certain wild animals along the river's bank察and the hanging out of party´ 

colored signals from the wooded hillside far inland察helped him to record 

the   slow   months。     On   summer   afternoons察  when   the   sun   sank   behind   a 

bank   of   fog   that察  moving   solemnly   shoreward察  at   last   encompassed   him 

and blotted out sea and sky察his isolation was complete。                 The damp gray 

sea that flowed above and around and about him always seemed to shut 

out   an   intangible   world beyond察 and   to be   the only  real   presence。        The 

booming   of   breakers   scarce   a   dozen   rods   from   his   dwelling   was   but   a 

vague   and   unintelligible   sound察  or   the   echo   of   something   past   forever。 

Every morning when the sun tore away the misty curtain he awoke察dazed 

and bewildered察as upon a new world。              The first sense of oppression over察

he came to love at last this subtle spirit of oblivion察and at night察when its 

cloudy wings were folded over his cabin察he would sit alone with a sense 

of   security   he   had   never   felt   before。 On   such   occasions   he   was   apt   to 

leave his door open察and listen as for footsteps察for what might not come to 

him out of this vague察nebulous world beyond拭                Perhaps even SHEfor 

this strange solitary was not insane nor visionary。             He was never in spirit 

alone。     For    night   and   day察  sleeping   or   waking察   pacing    the   beach   or 

crouching over his driftwood fire察a woman's face was always before him察 

´the face for whose sake and for cause of whom he sat there alone。                      He 



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saw it in the morning sunlight察it was her white hands that were lifted from 

the   crested   breakers察  it   was   the   rustling   of   her   skirt   when   the   sea   wind 

swept   through   the   beach   grasses察  it   was   the   loving   whisper   of   her   low 

voice   when   the   long   waves   sank   and   died   among   the   sedge   and   rushes。 

She was as omnipresent as sea and sky and level sand。                      Hence when the 

fog wiped them away察she seemed to draw closer to him in the darkness。 

On one or two more gracious nights in midsummer察when the influence of 

the fervid noonday sun was still felt on the heated sands察the warm breath 

of the fog touched his cheek as if it had been hers察and the tears started to 

his eyes。 

     Before   the   fogs   camefor   he   arrived   there   in   winterhe   had   found 

surcease      and   rest   in  the  steady    glow    of   a  lighthouse     upon    the   little 

promontory  a   league   below  his   habitation。          Even   on   the   darkest   nights察

and in the tumults of storm察it spoke to him of a patience that was enduring 

and a steadfastness that was immutable。 Later on he found a certain dumb 

companionship   in   an   uprooted   tree察  which察  floating   down   the   river察  had 

stranded hopelessly upon his beach察but in the evening had again drifted 

away。      Rowing across the estuary a day or two afterward察he recognized 

the tree again from a ;blaze; of the settler's axe still upon its trunk。                    He 

was not surprised a week later to find the same tree in the sands before his 

dwelling察  or   that   the   next   morning   it   should   be   again   launched   on   its 

purposeless wanderings。            And so察impelled  by  wind or   tide察 but   always 

haunting his seclusion察he would meet it voyaging up the river at the flood察

or   see   it   tossing   among   the   breakers   on   the   bar察  but   always   with     the 

confidence   of   its   returning   sooner   or   later   to   an   anchorage   beside   him。 

After the third month of his self´imposed exile察he was forced into a more 

human   companionship察  that   was   brief   but   regular。           He   was   obliged   to 

have menial assistance。          While he might have eaten his bread ;in sorrow; 

carelessly      and    mechanically察      if  it  had   been     prepared     for   him察   the 

occupation        of   cooking      his   own     food     brought      the   vulgarity     and 

materialness of existence so near to his morbid sensitiveness that he could 

not eat the meal he had himself prepared。               He did not yet wish to die察and 

when starvation or society seemed to be the only alternative察he chose the 

latter。    An Indian woman察so hideous as to scarcely suggest humanity察at 



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                                   DRIFT FROM TWO SHORES 



stated   times   performed   for   him  these offices。        When   she   did not   come察

which was not infrequent察he did not eat。 

     Such was the mental and physical condition of the Man on the Beach 

on 

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