We were wet already, so we went into the Seaman's Bethel, a sort of pilgrimage to boredom we take from time to time. Nothing to do in there but think.
The inside is really spartan, which is piquant to a man like me, born and raised a papist. These were, after all, Quakers, who were not known for extravagance, unless you count their extravagant protestations against extravagance.
God was not an abstraction to the people in these pews. Men out on the horizonless ocean, and the families that waited for them, saw a real deity with a big fist or a big palm all the time. They gathered here to try to make heads or tails of the life of a man in a little boat on a great ocean.
Sticking pins in cetaceans half-way round the world was a dangerous business. You had to survive the fevers, the sharks, the weather, and just plain gravity to live long enough for a chance to get killed by the great beasts that once lit the world's lamps. The walls of the bethel are spangled with the cenotaphs of the men who kicked it the hard way.

I'm old enough to have drowned on that last one. And my uncle was a fisherman back then, too. Thank God I was too lazy to work for him.
4 comments:
My husband fished commercially in Alaska for 14 years. He lost 2 friends in Mar. 2008 when their boat sank off the Aleutians. Fishermen still die at sea, it just gets lost in the 24 hr news cycle. People who watch TV tend to think of those guys in terms of some TV show, but they're real people with families who miss them terribly.
Keep writing.
I was gonna quit, but now you've talked me out of it.
A great read.
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