Captain January by Laura Elizabeth Howe Richards
page 58 of 67 (86%)
page 58 of 67 (86%)
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his old armchair. The window was still open, for the air was soft
and mild. The old man's hands were clasped upon his knee; his heart was lifted as high as heaven, in silent prayer and praise. Suddenly, at the window, there was a gleam of yellow, a flitting shape, a look, a pause; then a great glad cry, and Star flitted like a ray of moonlight through the window, and fell on Captain January's breast. "Daddy," she said, breaking the long, happy silence, "dear Daddy, I am sorry I burned your horrid old cap!" CHAPTER VI. THE SIGNAL Quietly passed the days, the weeks, the months, in the lonely tower on the rock fronting the Atlantic surge. Winter came, and folded it in a white mantle, and decked it with frost-jewels. Like a pillar of ice, the tower shone in the keen brilliance of the northern sun; but within was always summer, the summer of perfect peace and contentment. To the child Star, winter was always a season of great delight; for Captain January had little to occupy him out-of-doors, and could devote much of his time to her. So there were long, delightful "jack-knife times," as Star called them, when the Captain sat fashioning all sorts of wonderful trifles with his magic knife, |
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