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The Garden of God

Chapter 2: CHAPTER I
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A drifting schooner discovers a young family of castaways and a lone child, prompting the patriarch's long search to resume; subsequent chapters follow the rescued children's reintegration and the broader island community as youthful survivors confront local tribes, mysterious rituals, and a malevolent presence. The narrative alternates quiet scenes of lagoon life and parenthood with escalating dangers: rivalries, supernatural intimations, fierce storms, and pitched fights that reshape leadership and fate. Recurrent motifs include survival, the pull of kinship, cultural collision, and nature's power, with episodic structure moving from discovery and domestic calm to confrontation, loss, and eventual renewal.

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Title: The Garden of God

Author: H. De Vere Stacpoole

Release date: January 1, 2019 [eBook #58593]

Language: English

Credits: Produced by Roger Frank and Sue Clark

*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE GARDEN OF GOD ***

The Garden of God

BY
H. De Vere Stacpoole
AUTHOR OF “THE BLUE LAGOON,” ETC.
NEW YORK
DODD, MEAD AND COMPANY
1923

Copyright, 1923,
By DODD, MEAD AND COMPANY, Inc.
PRINTED IN THE U. S. A. BY
THE QUINN & BODEN COMPANY
BOOK MANUFACTURERS
RAHWAY, NEW JERSEY

CONTENTS
BOOK I—ON THE ISLAND
I THE CORMORANT
II DAWN
III THE VISION
IV DICK EM
V THE GARDEN OF GOD
VI HERE ONCE THEY DWELT
VII THE KEEPER OF THE LAGOON
VIII SUNSET
IX THE ROLLERS
BOOK II—THE CHILDREN RETURN
I TIME PASSES
II THE RETURN OF THE CHILDREN
III IN THE GARDEN OF GOD THERE IS TRUTH
IV THE FIRST GLIMPSE OF THE DEMON
V OUT OF THE GLOOM
VI KATAFA
VII BLOWN TO SEA
VIII AT DAWN
IX OUT OF THE SEA
X A FIRE ON THE REEF
XI A FIRE ON THE REEF (Continued)
XII NANAWA SPEAKS
XIII THE WISH
XIV OUT OF THE GLOOM
XV NAN
XVI THE MONTHS PASS
XVII THE FIGHT ON THE BEACH
XVIII WAR
XIX DAYBREAK
XX THE TREE
XXI THE GREAT KILL
XXII THE CRISIS
XXIII THE PRISON OF THE TREES
XXIV KARA! KARA! KARA!
XXV SOUTH
XXVI THE PRIESTESS OF NANAWA
XXVII THE SHADOWS AND THE ECHOES
XXVIII IN THE NIGHT
XXIX THE BREAKING OF THE SPELL
XXX THE GREAT WIND
XXXI DEBACLE
XXXII AFTER THE BATTLE
XXXIII THE CALL OF KAROLIN
XXXIV THE MORNING LIGHT
XXXV THE DEATH OF A SEA KING
XXXVI THE CLUB OF MA
XXXVII THE CLUB OF MA (Continued)
XXXVIII THE FÊTE OF DEATH
XXXIX FROM GARDEN TO GARDEN LIKE SEEDS ON THE WIND
XL THE BIRTH OF A SEA KING
XLI HIS KINGDOM
  CHAPTER THE LAST

BOOK I
ON THE ISLAND

CHAPTER I

THE CORMORANT

“No,” said Lestrange, “they are dead.”

The whale boat and the dinghy lay together, gunnels grinding as they lifted to the swell. Two cable lengths away lay the schooner from which the whale boat had come; beyond and around from sky-line to sky-line the blue Pacific lay desolate beneath the day.

“They are dead.”

He was gazing at the forms on the dinghy, the form of a girl with a child embraced in one arm, and a youth. Clasping one another, they seemed asleep.

From where had they drifted? To where were they drifting? God and the sea alone could tell.

A Farallone cormorant, far above, wheeling and slanting on the breeze, had followed the dinghy for hours, held away by the awful and profound knowledge, born of instinct, that one of the castaways was still alive. But it still hung, waiting.

“The child is not dead,” said Stanistreet. He had reached forward and, gently separating the forms, had taken the child from the mother’s arms. It was warm, it moved, and as he handed it to the steersman, Lestrange, almost upsetting the boat, stood up. He had glimpsed the faces of the dead people. Clasping his head with both hands and staring at the forms before him, mad, distracted by the blow that Fate had suddenly dealt him, his voice rang out across the sea: “My children!”

Stanistreet, the captain of the schooner, Stanistreet, who knew the story of the lost children so well, knelt aghast just in the position in which he had handed the child to the sailor in the stern sheets.

The truth took him by the throat. It must be so. These were no Kanakas drifted to sea; the dinghy alone might have told him that. These were the children they had come in search of, grown, mated and—dead.

His quick sailor’s mind reckoned rapidly. The island they were making for in hopes of finding the long-lost ones was close to them; the northward running current would have brought the dinghy; some inexplicable sea chance had drifted them from shore; they were here, come to meet the man who had sought them for years—what a fatality!

Lestrange had sunk as if crushed down by some hand. Taking the girl’s arm, he drew it towards him. “Look!” he cried, as if speaking to high heaven. “And my boy—oh, look! Dick—Emmeline—oh, God! My God! Why? Why? Why?”

He dashed his head on the gunnel. Far away above the cormorant watched.

It saw the whale boat making back from the schooner with the dinghy in tow; it saw the forms it hungered for taken on board; it saw the preparations on deck and the bodies of the lost ones committed to the deep. Then, turning with a cry, it drifted on the wind and vanished, like an evil spirit, from the blue.