[Carette of Sark by John Oxenham]@TWC D-Link bookCarette of Sark CHAPTER V 2/8
My grandfather, Philip Carre, was one, however, and he would have starved sooner than live by any means which did not commend themselves to his own very clear views of right and wrong.
The Le Marchants had made themselves a name for reckless daring, and carelessness of other people's well-being when it ran counter to their own, which gave them right of way among their fellows, but won comment harsh enough behind their backs.
Many a strange story was told of them, and as a rule the stories lost nothing in the telling. But my boyish recollections of Carette,--Carterette in full, but shortened by everyone to Carette, unless it was Aunt Jeanne Falla under very great provocation, which did not, indeed, happen often but was not absolutely unknown,--my recollections of Carette, and of my mother, and my grandfather, and Krok, and George Hamon, and Jeanne Falla, are as bright and rosy as the dawns and sunsets of those earlier days. All these seem to have been with me from the very beginning.
They made up my little world, and Carette was the sunlight,--and occasionally the lightning,--and the moonlight was my mother, and the bright stars were Jeanne Falla and George Hamon, while my grandfather was a benevolent power, always kind but rather far above me, and Krok was a mystery man, dearly loved, but held in something of awe by reason of his strange affliction. For Krok could hear and understand all that was said to him, even in our Island tongue which was not native to him, but he had no speech.
The story ran that he had been picked off a piece of wreckage, somewhere off the North African coast, by the ship in which my grandfather made his last voyage, very many years ago.
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