What flecks the outer gray beyond
The sundown’s golden trail?
The white flash of a sea-bird’s wing,
Or gleam of slanting sail?
Let young eyes watch from Neck and Point,
And sea-worn elders pray,--
The ghost of what was once a ship
Is sailing up the bay!
Let young eyes watch from Neck and Point,
And sea-worn elders pray,--
The ghost of what was once a ship
Is sailing up the bay!
--From the poem The Dead Ship of
Harpswell by John Greenleaf Whittier
The story of the fate of the
Sarah Soule, a ghost ship, is immortalized in the poem above. Many people have
seen this phantom “Schooner of Harpswell.” It is described as a “breathtaking
sight” as it glides along, fully rigged and under sail in the late afternoon
light. It then just vanishes into a rising fog.
Beginnings
Two industrious young men,
George Leverett and Charles Jose both in their early twenties set sail from
Portland, Maine one day in 1812 with the intent to prosper in the Indies trade.
At this time one could trade: cod, lumber, molasses, and coffee for rum in the
Indies-- and make a fortune in the process.
Their destination was Soule
Boatyard in South Freeport where they hoped to have their own vessel built. But
during the construction of their new ship, the two men had an unforeseen event
happen.
They met Sarah Soule, the boat
builder’s daughter--a local beauty. In a cruel fate, both men fell in love
at first sight. Not surprisingly, this caused a rift in their friendship. Both George
and Charles avidly pursued her, but in the end, Sarah preferred George. The two friends got into a heated argument with Charles trying to hurl George
into a nearby river.
The two were now steadfast
enemies. Charles disappeared, and George waited for the ship to be finished. He
named it after his fiancé, the Sarah Soule.
Despite his luck in love, George met ill fortune at every turn. He had to overcome several “strange
obstacles” in his preparations for his wedding, and after the ship was completed, he found it hard to find a crew.
But determined, George finally
sailed out of Portland harbor fully loaded with cargo and an able-bodied crew
headed for the West Indies. Within days George spotted a black craft that flew
no flag following his ship.
What George did not know is the ship was the Don Pedro, and her captain was George’s rival in love, Charles
Jose.
Sarah Soule’s crew became
more and more uneasy as this black ship trailed them for weeks like a dark
storm cloud. They petitioned Captain Leverett to way anchor in Nassau to report
their pursuer to the British Admiralty.
Leverett agreed and set the
appropriate course. But the Sarah Soule never reached the harbor for when
Charles Jose saw where they were headed, he opened fire upon his
exfriend’s ship. All on board perished except Charles Leverett. His unarmed
vessel was heavily damaged, but it did not sink.
Charles, blinded by bitterness was not
satisfied with just the destruction of the Sarah Soule, he boarded the ship with his
men, and they looted her. Then they lashed George to the ship’s mainmast and set
her out to sea as they returned to their own ship.
What happens next in this
story is similar to what happens in The Rime of
the Ancient Mariner. A post about this epic poem is here.
Leverett knowing he faced
certain death, was amazed to see his dead crew arise and take their posts one by
one. They set a course for home as Leverett lost consciousness.
On a cold, bleak November day, a fully rigged schooner that appeared to be “wrecked” was seen as it sailed with accuracy along the channel. This ship then came to an abrupt stop in Casco Bay, but oddly no anchor was lowered.
The witnesses then watched as an unearthly crew silently lowered an unconscious man into a boat. They rowed
this boat ashore and laid him on a rock, they placed what looked like a logbook
next to him.
Again in eerie silence, this
crew then returned to the strange ship. A dense fog enveloped the harbor, and the
vessel disappeared within seconds.
This unconscious man was
immediately identified as George Leverett. He recovered enough to tell his
strange tale, but he never went out to sea again.
In another version it was
actually, the witnesses who untied Leverett’s unconscious body from the mast and
brought him ashore.
People said after this
that the Sarah Soule returned several more times in the afternoon mists to Casco Bay near Harpswell.
The last recorded sighting of
the Sarah Soule was in the 1880s.
It was a bright summer
day as a houseguest sat on a lawn near the water. He looked seaward, and along the horizon, he spotted a large schooner under full sail. The sun glistened off its canvas. He watched
as it headed for the bay.
He called several others over
to take a look but as they watched, the ship just vanished into the afternoon mist.
Some take comfort in the fact
there have been no recent sightings of the Sarah Soule. They hope that its weary crew has been able to finally make homeport for the last time.
Here is the link to John Greenleaf Whittier's entire poem, The Dead Ship of Harpswell.
Here is the link to John Greenleaf Whittier's entire poem, The Dead Ship of Harpswell.
2 comments:
Thanks for sharing this truly sad yet spooky story. I've read about many ghost ships, but I had never heard about the Sarah Souls. I hope the ghostly crew has finally sailed their ship over to the Other Side and are finally at peace. 🙏
I love the poem too. It's so eerie and spooky. 🎃
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