"Nay, my son, not quite to heaven, for sure the blessed book tells us that there will be no more sea there;" and the woman looked out over the heaving expanse of grey-blue water wit
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"Nay, my son, not quite to heaven, for sure the blessed book tells us that there will be no more sea there;" and the woman looked out over the heaving expanse of grey-blue water with a strange soft wistfulness in her big grey eyes. One would have said to look at her then that she had known what it meant to lose those near and dear to her through the hungry cruel sea, as indeed in her young life [ 10 ]she had done; for she was an Irish woman, and had lived all her young life beside the wild coast of Galway, and many of those who bore her name had found a last resting-place beneath the heaving tossing waves. Therefore it was small wonder if she had come to look forward to that bright land beyond the moaning waves, of which it has been expressly said that "there shall be no more sea."
Pat the Lighthouse Boy转载自网络,转载至本站只是为了让更多读者阅读欣赏,本站愿与您一起共建良好的阅读环境!
天下书楼内容均来自互联网,如不慎侵害您的权益,请联系网页底部邮箱,我们将尽快删除。
- CHAPTER I LONE ROCK LIGHTHOUSE
- CHAPTER II "SURLY JIM"
- CHAPTER III AN ODD PAIR
- CHAPTER IV LONE ROCK IN FOG AND STORM
- CHAPTER V A TERRIBLE NIGHT
- CHAPTER VI JIM'S EXPLOIT
- CHAPTER VII THE LITTLE PRINCE
- CHAPTER VIII "POOR JIM!"
- CHAPTER IX HELP FROM SHORE