Poor Man's Rock 
 
The Project Gutenberg EBook of Poor Man's Rock, by Bertrand W. 
Sinclair This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and 
with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away 
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Title: Poor Man's Rock 
Author: Bertrand W. Sinclair 
Illustrator: Frank Tenney Johnson 
Release Date: August 17, 2005 [EBook #16541] 
Language: English 
Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 
*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK POOR 
MAN'S ROCK *** 
 
Produced by Suzanne Shell, Paul Ereaut and the Online Distributed 
Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net 
 
Novels by: 
BERTRAND W. SINCLAIR 
North of Fifty-Three Big Timber Burned Bridges Poor Man's Rock
POOR MAN'S ROCK 
BY 
BERTRAND W. SINCLAIR 
BOSTON 
LITTLE, BROWN, AND COMPANY 
Published September, 1920 
THE UNIVERSITY PRESS, CAMBRIDGE, MASS., U.S.A. 
 
CONTENTS 
Prologue--Long, Long Ago 
CHAPTER 
I. 
The House in Cradle Bay 
II. His Own Country 
III. The Flutter of Sable Wings 
IV. Inheritance 
V. From the Bottom Up 
VI. The Springboard 
VII. Sea Boots and Salmon 
VIII. Vested Rights
IX. The Complexity of Simple Matters 
X. Thrust and Counterthrust 
XI. Peril of the Sea 
XII. Between Sun and Sun 
XIII. An Interlude 
XIV. The Swing of the Pendulum 
XV. Hearts are not Always Trumps 
XVI. En Famille 
XVII. Business as Usual 
XVIII. A Renewal of Hostilities 
XIX. Top Dog 
XX. The Dead and Dusty Past 
XXI. As it was in the Beginning 
 
POOR MAN'S ROCK 
PROLOGUE 
Long, Long Ago 
The Gulf of Georgia spread away endlessly, an immense, empty stretch 
of water bared to the hot eye of an August sun, its broad face only 
saved from oily smoothness by half-hearted flutterings of a westerly 
breeze. Those faint airs blowing up along the Vancouver Island shore 
made tentative efforts to fill and belly out strongly the mainsail and jib 
of a small half-decked sloop working out from the weather side of
Sangster Island and laying her snub nose straight for the mouth of the 
Fraser River, some sixty sea-miles east by south. 
In the stern sheets a young man stood, resting one hand on the tiller, his 
navigating a sinecure, for the wind was barely enough to give him 
steerageway. He was, one would say, about twenty-five or six, fairly 
tall, healthily tanned, with clear blue eyes having a touch of steely gray 
in their blue depths, and he was unmistakably of that fair type which 
runs to sandy hair and freckles. He was dressed in a light-colored shirt, 
blue serge trousers, canvas shoes; his shirt sleeves, rolled to the elbows, 
bared flat, sinewy forearms. 
He turned his head to look back to where in the distance a white speck 
showed far astern, and his eyes narrowed and clouded. But there was 
no cloud in them when he turned again to his companion, a girl sitting 
on a box just outside the radius of the tiller. She was an odd-looking 
figure to be sitting in the cockpit of a fishing boat, amid recent traces of 
business with salmon, codfish, and the like. The heat was putting a 
point on the smell of defunct fish. The dried scales of them still clung 
to the small vessel's timbers. In keeping, the girl should have been 
buxom, red-handed, coarsely healthy. And she was anything but that. 
No frail, delicate creature, mind you,--but she did not belong in a 
fishing boat. She looked the lady, carried herself like one,--patrician 
from the top of her russet-crowned head to the tips of her white kid 
slippers. Yet her eyes, when she lifted them to the man at the tiller, 
glowed with something warm. She stood up and slipped a silk-draped 
arm through his. He smiled down at her, a tender smile tempered with 
uneasiness, and then bent his head and kissed her. 
"Do you think they will overtake us, Donald?" she asked at length. 
"That depends on the wind," he answered. "If these light airs hold they 
may overhaul us, because they can spread so much more cloth. But if 
the westerly freshens--and it nearly always does in the afternoon--I can 
outsail the Gull. I can drive this old tub full sail in a blow that will 
make the Gull tie in her last reef." 
"I don't like it when it's rough," the girl said wistfully. "But I'll pray for
a blow this afternoon." 
If indeed she prayed--and her attitude was scarcely prayerful, for it 
consisted of sitting with one hand clasped tight in her lover's--her 
prayer fell dully on the ears of the wind god. The light airs fluttered 
gently off the bluish haze of Vancouver Island, wavered across the Gulf, 
kept the sloop moving, but no more. Sixty miles away the mouth of the 
Fraser opened to them    
    
		
	
	
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