The Ship of Stars eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 271 pages of information about The Ship of Stars.

The Ship of Stars eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 271 pages of information about The Ship of Stars.
Taffy’s workmen came trudging along the track where the short turf and gentians grew between the wheel-ruts; and in the evening went trudging back, the level sun flashing on their empty dinner-cans.  The eight souls left behind had one common gospel—­ Cleanliness.  Very little dust found its way thither; but the salt, spray-laden air kept them constantly polishing window-panes and brass-work.  To wash, to scour, to polish, grew into the one absorbing business of life.  They had no gossip; even in their own dwellings they spoke but little; their speech shrank and dwindled away in the continuous roar of the sea.  But from morning to night, mechanically, they washed and scoured and polished.  Paper was not whiter than the deal table and dresser which Humility scrubbed daily with soap and water, and once a week with lemon-juice as well.  Never was cleaner linen to sight and smell than that which she pegged out by the furze-brake on the ridge.  All the life of the small colony, though lonely, grew wholesome as it was simple of purpose in cottages thus sweetened and kept sweet by limewash and the salt wind.

And through it moved the forlorn figure of Lizzie Pezzack’s child.  Somehow Lizzie had taught the boy to walk, with the help of a crutch, as early as most children; but the wind made cruel sport with his first efforts in the open, knocking the crutch from under him at every third step, and laying him flat.  The child had pluck, however; and when autumn came round again, could face a fairly stiff breeze.

It was about this time that word came of the Trinity Board’s intention to replace the old lighthouse with one upon the outer rock.  For the Chief Engineer had visited it and decided that Taffy was right.  To be sure no mention was made of Taffy in his report; but the great man took the first opportunity to offer him the post of foreman of the works, so there was certainly nothing to be grumbled at.  The work did not actually start until the following spring; for the rock, to receive the foundations, had to be bored some feet below high-water level, and this could only be attempted on calm days or when a southerly wind blew from the high land well over the workmen’s heads, leaving the inshore water smooth.  On such days Taffy, looking up from his work, would catch sight of a small figure on the cliff-top leaning aslant to the wind and watching.

For the child was adventurous and took no account of his lameness.  Perhaps if he thought of it at all, having no chance to compare himself with other children, he accepted his lameness as a condition of childhood—­something he would grow out of.  His mother could not keep him indoors; he fidgeted continually.  But he would sit or stand quiet by the hour on the cliff-top watching the men as they drilled and fixed the dynamite, and waiting for the bang of it.  Best of all, however, were the days when his grandfather allowed him inside the light-house, to clamber about the staircase and ladders, to watch the oiling and trimming of the great lantern, and the ships moving slowly on the horizon.  He asked a thousand questions about them.

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Project Gutenberg
The Ship of Stars from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.