The Ship of Stars 
by Arthur Thomas Quiller-Couch 
 
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Quiller-Couch 
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Title: The Ship of Stars 
Author: Arthur Thomas Quiller-Couch 
Release Date: June 7, 2005 [eBook #16000] 
Language: English 
Character set encoding: ISO-646-US (US-ASCII) 
***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE SHIP 
OF STARS*** 
E-text prepared by Lionel Sear 
 
THE SHIP OF STARS.
by 
Arthur Thomas Quiller-Couch (Q) 
1899 
 
To THE RIGHT HON. LEONARD HENRY COURTNEY, M.P. 
My Dear Mr. Courtney, 
It is with a peculiar pleasure and, I dare to hope, with some 
appropriateness that I dedicate to you this story of the West Country, 
which claims you with pride. To be sure, the places here written of will 
be found in no map of your own or any neighbouring constituency. A 
visitor may discover Nannizabuloe, but only to wonder what has 
become of the lighthouse, or seek along the sand-hills without hitting 
on Tredinnis. Yet much of the tale is true in a fashion, even to fact. One 
or two things which happen to Sir Harry Vyell did actually happen to a 
better man, who lived and hunted foxes not a hundred miles from the 
"model borough" of Liskeard, and are told of him in my friend Mr. W. 
F. Collier's memoir of Harry Terrell, a bygone Dartmoor hero: and a 
true account of what followed the wreck of the Samaritan will be found 
in a chapter of Remembrances by that true poet and large-hearted man, 
Robert Stephen Hawker. 
But a novel ought to be true to more than fact: and if this one come 
near its aim, no one will need to be told why I dedicate it to you. If it do 
not (and I wish the chance could be despised!), its author will yet hold 
that among the names of living Englishmen he could have chosen none 
fitter to be inscribed above a story which in the telling has insensibly 
come to rest upon the two texts, "Lord, make men as towers!" and "All 
towers carry a light." Although for you Heaven has seen fit to darken 
the light, believe me it shines outwards over the waters and is a help to 
men: a guiding light tended by brave hands. We pray, sir--we who sail 
in little boats--for long life to the tower and the unfaltering lamp. 
A. T. Q. C. St. John's Eve, 1899.
CONTENTS 
I. THE BOY IN THE GATE-HOUSE. 
II. MUSIC IN THE TOWN SQUARE. 
III. PASSENGER'S BY JOBY'S VAN. 
IV. THE RUNNING SANDS. 
V. TAFFY RINGS THE CHURCH BELL. 
VI. A COCK-FIGHT. 
VII. GEORGE. 
VIII. THE SQUIRE'S SOUL. 
IX. ENTER THE KING'S POSTMAN. 
X. A HAPPY DAY. 
XI. LIZZIE REDEEMS HER DOLL AND HONORIA THROWS A 
STONE. 
XII. TAFFY'S CHILDHOOD COMES TO AN END. 
XIII. THE BUILDERS. 
XIV. VOICES FROM THE SEA. 
XV. TAFFY'S APPRENTICESHIP. 
XVI. LIZZIE AND HONORIA. 
XVII. THE SQUIRE'S WEIRD. 
XVIII. THE BARRIERS FALL. 
XIX. OXFORD.
XX. TAFFY GIVES A PROMISE. 
XXI. HONORIA'S LETTERS. 
XXII. MEN AS TOWERS. 
XXIII. THE SERVICE OF THE LAMP. 
XXIV. FACE TO FACE. 
XXV. THE WRECK OF THE "SAMARITAN". 
XXVI. SALVAGE. 
XXVII. HONORIA. 
XXVIII. A L'OUTRANCE. 
XXIX. THE SHIP OF STARS. 
 
THE SHIP OF STARS. 
CHAPTER I. 
THE BOY IN THE GATE-HOUSE. 
Until his ninth year the boy about whom this story is written lived in a 
house which looked upon the square of a county town. The house had 
once formed part of a large religious building, and the boy's bedroom 
had a high groined roof, and on the capstone an angel carved, with 
outspread wings. Every night the boy wound up his prayers with this 
verse which his grandmother had taught him: 
"Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John, Bless the bed that I lie on. Four 
corners to my bed, Four angels round my head; One to watch, one to 
pray, Two to bear my soul away."
Then he would look up to the angel and say: "Only Luke is with me." 
His head was full of queer texts and beliefs. He supposed the three 
other angels to be always waiting in the next room, ready to bear away 
the soul of his grandmother (who was bed-ridden), and that he had 
Luke for an angel because he was called Theophilus, after the friend for 
whom St. Luke had written his Gospel and the Acts of the Holy 
Apostles. His name in full was Theophilus John Raymond, but people 
called him Taffy. 
Of his parents' circumstances he knew very little, except that they were 
poor, and that his father    
    
		
	
	
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