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Rough Shaking, A
Chapter 66. The End Of Clare Skymer's Boyhood
George MacDonald
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       _ Chapter LXVI. The end of Clare Skymer's boyhood
       His father had a hammock slung for him in the state-room; he could not be parted from him even when they slept.
       One night sir Harry, lying awake, heard a movement in the state-room, and got up. It was a still, star-lit night. The frigate was dreaming away northward with all sail set. Through the windows shone the level stars. From a beam above hung a dim lamp. He could see no one. He went to the hammock. There was no boy in it. Then he spied him, kneeling under the stern-windows, with his head down.
       "Anything the matter, Clare?" he asked.
       "No, father."
       "What are you doing?"
       "Trying to say _Thank you for my father!_"
       "Oh, thank him, thank him, my boy!" returned sir Harry. "Thank him with all your heart. He will give us _her_ some day!"
       "Yes, father, he will!" responded Clare.
       His father knelt beside him, but neither said word that the other heard.
       The next night, Clare was on the quarter-deck with his father, and heard him give certain orders to the officers of the watch. He had never heard orders given in such a way: he spoke so quietly, so directly, so simply! The night was gusty and dark, threatening foul weather. The captain measured the quarter-deck as when first Clare saw him, but with a mien how different! He walked as slow and stately as before, but with a look almost of triumph in his eyes, glancing often at the clouds. The thought of having such a father made Clare tremble with delight from head to foot. His father was the power of the sea-planet that bore them! Him the great vessel, and all aboard of her, obeyed! He was the life of her motions, the soul of her! At his pleasure she bowed her obedient head, and swept over the seas! Clare's heart swelled within him.
       But this father had, the night before, knelt with him in the presence of one unseen, worshipping and thanking a higher than himself! As the captain of the Panther sailed his frigate through the seas, so the great father, the father of his father, the father of all fathers, to whom the captain kneeled as a little child, sailed through the heaven of heavens the huge ship of the world, guided fleet upon fleet innumerable through trackless space! And over an infinitely grander sea than the measureless ocean of worlds, the Father was carrying navies of human souls, every soul a world whose affairs none but the Father could understand, through many a storm, and waterspout, and battle with the powers of evil, safe to the haven of the children, the Father's house! And Clare began to understand that so it was.
       One day his father said to him--
       "Clare, whatever you forget, whatever you remember, mind this--that you and I and your mother are the children of one father, and that we have all three to be good children to that father. If we do as he tells us, he will bring us all at length to the same port. Our admiral is Jesus Christ. We take our orders from him. But each has to sail his own ship."
       The boatswain shook in his wide shoes, but Clare never showed him the least disfavour. He recognized at once the two officers he had seen at the menagerie, but beyond giving each a look he could hardly mistake, he showed no sign of having any knowledge of them.
       He set himself to be a sailor, and learned fast. I need scarcely say he was as precise in obeying any superior officer as the best sailor on board. In a few weeks he felt and looked to the manner born--as indeed he was, for not only his father, but his grandfather, and his great-grandfather, and more yet of his ancestors,--how many I do not know, were sailors.
       He had had a rough shaking. The earthquake had come and gone, and come again and gone a many times. But the shaking earth was his nurse, and she taught him to dwell in a world that cannot be shaken.
       [THE END]
       [George MacDonald's Novel: Rough Shaking] _
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本书目录

Chapter 1. How I Came To Know Clare Skymer
Chapter 2. With His Parents
Chapter 3. Without His Parents
Chapter 4. The New Family
Chapter 5. His New Home
Chapter 6. What Did Draw Out His First Smile
Chapter 7. Clare And His Brothers
Chapter 8. Clare And His Human Brothers
Chapter 9. Clare The Defender
Chapter 10. The Black Aunt
Chapter 11. Clare On The Farm
Chapter 12. Clare Becomes A Guardian Of The Poor
Chapter 13. Clare The Vagabond
Chapter 14. Their First Helper
Chapter 15. Their First Host
Chapter 16. On The Tramp
Chapter 17. The Baker's Cart
Chapter 18. Beating The Town
Chapter 19. The Blacksmith And His Forge
Chapter 20. Tommy Reconnoitres
Chapter 21. Tommy Is Found And Found Out
Chapter 22. The Smith In A Rage
Chapter 23. Treasure Trove
Chapter 24. Justifiable Burglary
Chapter 25. A New Quest
Chapter 26. A New Entrance
Chapter 27. The Baby Has Her Breakfast
Chapter 28. Treachery
Chapter 29. The Baker
Chapter 30. The Draper
Chapter 31. An Addition To The Family
Chapter 32. Shop And Baby
Chapter 33. A Bad Penny
Chapter 34. How Things Went For A Time
Chapter 35. Clare Disregards The Interests Of His Employers
Chapter 36. The Policeman
Chapter 37. The Magistrate
Chapter 38. The Workhouse
Chapter 39. Away
Chapter 40. Maly
Chapter 41. The Caravans
Chapter 42. Nimrod
Chapter 43. Across Country
Chapter 44. A Third Mother
Chapter 45. The Menagerie
Chapter 46. The Angel Of The Wild Beasts
Chapter 47. Glum Gunn
Chapter 48. The Puma
Chapter 49. Glum Gunn's Revenge
Chapter 50. Clare Seeks Help
Chapter 51. Clare A True Master
Chapter 52. Miss Tempest
Chapter 53. The Gardener
Chapter 54. The Kitchen
Chapter 55. The Wheel Rests For A Time
Chapter 56. Strategy
Chapter 57. Ann Shotover
Chapter 58. Child-Talk
Chapter 59. Lovers' Walks
Chapter 60. The Shoe-Black
Chapter 61. A Walk With Consequences
Chapter 62. The Cage Of The Puma
Chapter 63. The Dome Of The Angels
Chapter 64. The Panther
Chapter 65. At Home
Chapter 66. The End Of Clare Skymer's Boyhood