At the Fishhouses: A Poem for a New Year

At the Fishhouses: A Poem for a New Year

I always had a daydream of

being a lighthouse keeper,

absolutely alone.

... So wrote the poet Elizabeth Bishop in correspondence with her friend, Robert Lowell. Bishop lived on islands and near the shore as often as she could: Nantucket and Cuttyhunk; Nova Scotia and Newfoundland; Key West, Florida; and North Haven Island in Penobscot Bay, midcoast Maine. At the Fishhouses is among our favorite poems here at World Ocean Observatory. In its richly-detailed mastery, it distills Bishop’s seaside meditations, evokes the clarity of meaning contained in personal encounters at the shore and with the ocean, and holds the reader and the listener in the space that lies between land and sea, a site of transience, mystery, and the sublime.


AT THE FISHHOUSES

Although it is a cold evening,

down by one of the fishhouses

an old man sits netting,

his net, in the gloaming almost invisible,

a dark purple-brown,

and his shuttle worn and polished.

The air smells so strong of codfish

it makes one’s nose run and one’s eyes water.

The five fishhouses have steeply peaked roofs

and narrow, cleated gangplanks slant up

to storerooms in the gables

for the wheelbarrows to be pushed up and down on.

All is silver: the heavy surface of the sea,

swelling slowly as if considering spilling over,

is opaque, but the silver of the benches,

the lobster pots, and masts, scattered

among the wild jagged rocks,

is of an apparent translucence

like the small old buildings with an emerald moss

growing on their shoreward walls.

The big fish tubs are completely lined

with layers of beautiful herring scales

and the wheelbarrows are similarly plastered

with creamy iridescent coats of mail,

with small iridescent flies crawling on them.

Up on the little slope behind the houses,

set in the sparse bright sprinkle of grass,

is an ancient wooden capstan,

cracked, with two long bleached handles

and some melancholy stains, like dried blood,

where the ironwork has rusted.

The old man accepts a Lucky Strike.

He was a friend of my grandfather.

We talk of the decline in the population

and of codfish and herring

while he waits for a herring boat to come in.

There are sequins on his vest and on his thumb.

He has scraped the scales, the principal beauty,

from unnumbered fish with that black old knife,

the blade of which is almost worn away.

Down at the water’s edge, at the place

where they haul up the boats, up the long ramp

descending into the water, thin silver

tree trunks are laid horizontally

across the gray stones, down and down

at intervals of four or five feet.

Cold dark deep and absolutely clear,

element bearable to no mortal,

to fish and to seals . . . One seal particularly

I have seen here evening after evening.

He was curious about me. He was interested in music;

like me a believer in total immersion,

so I used to sing him Baptist hymns.

I also sang “A Mighty Fortress Is Our God.”

He stood up in the water and regarded me

steadily, moving his head a little.

Then he would disappear, then suddenly emerge

almost in the same spot, with a sort of shrug

as if it were against his better judgment.

Cold dark deep and absolutely clear,

the clear gray icy water . . . Back, behind us,

the dignified tall firs begin.

Bluish, associating with their shadows,

a million Christmas trees stand

waiting for Christmas. The water seems suspended

above the rounded gray and blue-gray stones.

I have seen it over and over, the same sea, the same,

slightly, indifferently swinging above the stones,

icily free above the stones,

above the stones and then the world.

If you should dip your hand in,

your wrist would ache immediately,

your bones would begin to ache and your hand would burn

as if the water were a transmutation of fire

that feeds on stones and burns with a dark gray flame.

If you tasted it, it would first taste bitter,

then briny, then surely burn your tongue.

It is like what we imagine knowledge to be:

dark, salt, clear, moving, utterly free,

drawn from the cold hard mouth

of the world, derived from the rocky breasts

forever, flowing and drawn, and since

our knowledge is historical, flowing, and flown.???


Best wishes for the New Year, from the World Ocean Observatory team.


Copyright Credit

“At the Fishhouses” from The Complete Poems, 1927-1979 by Elizabeth Bishop. ? 1979, 1983 by Alice Helen Methfessel. Used by permission of Farrar, Straus and Giroux, LLC. All rights reserved. The Complete Poems (Farrar Straus and Giroux, 1983)

Nell Herrmann

Science Educator

1 个月

This is beautiful. Thank you for sharing.

John P Bucci

Research and Adjunct Professor University of New Hampshire Founding Director, Marine Microverse Institute

1 个月
gregory belanger

Co-founder/CSO at DeepLook Medical

1 个月

Peter - Thank for the reminder at the beginning of this new year, in this age of hyper-babble, of the allure of those quiet, liminal moments of "total immersion" found by the sea. Best wishes to W2O for 2025.

回复
Tom Parrett

Freelance science and technology writer for Newsweek

1 个月

One of the great American poems, quiet and resolute.

Bill Balboa

Executive Director at The Matagorda Bay Foundation

1 个月

Love this

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