Ireland’s Crystal & Crafts 558 Congress street, Portland | 207 773-5832 Year round lodging in the center of Blue Hill “Extraordinary hospitality.” Five Course Wine Dinners on Mon. & Tues. Serving breakfast 7 days a week in season. 40 Union Street, Blue Hill, Maine (207) 374-2844 W W W . B L U E H I L L I N N . C O M Get a free estimate today! 207-221-6600 www.greencleanmaine.com Greater Portland’s Green Cleaning Service Home and Small Business Weekly and Bi-Weekly S e p t e m b e r 2 0 1 7 1 0 7 Stepping from the barn, “I enjoy seeing evidence of fences,” Anna says, where she can sense the ghosts of livestock on either side. “I like to follow the beautiful walkway that goes to the shore.” Then the Cove lifts its curtain: “You see Mt. Desert, which is absolutely beautiful. I think of sunsets and how the stones lift with light under the water–the water is so clear, and the stones are so pretty when the setting sun plays off the rocks. Then there’s the dock. Beyond that, you see deeper into the cove, which is all woods.” A nna has a dreamy career in Char- lotte, North Carolina, “translating English into Spanish, and Spanish back into English.” Like E.B. White, “I am about words all day long.” There’s a pause. “This is my parents’ house, not mine.” Suddenly I feel an impulse to ask her, a visitor for three decades, a figure for all of us, “What do you call this house when you visit?” I’m looking for a fresh narra- tive that addresses this second, right now. I hope she won’t call it the E.B. White house. It’s the only hope a new buyer will have, because each of us deserves to be more than a custodian. “We’ve had it for 30 years now. These are our memories now. I call it Maine. When we talk about it, say, on the telephone, we say, ‘When are you going to Maine?’” She’s silent for a moment. “If we’re in Maine, we call it home.” n Taxes are $16,341.84. Regarding the late Joel White (1930-1997), boat designer, who grew up in this house and crafted exquisitely spare wooden boats the way his father wrote stories: “Mr. White was born in Mount Vernon, N.Y., the son of the essayist and author E. B. White and his wife, Katharine, who was fiction editor of The New Yorker. The family moved to a farm in North Brooklin, Me., in the mid-1930s, and the son became immersed in a lifelong love of sailing Maine’s coastal wa- ters. He built a 19-foot boat named Martha, in honor of his daughter, that his father sailed after adding his own touch–carved dolphins, four on each side of the bow, decorated in gold.” –The New York Times The Wooden Boat Connection