4.5 Stars
”I am not afraid of storms, for I am learning how to sail my ship.”
-- Louisa May Alcott
When I was a child, there was an older man, a former sea Captain who lived in a tiny cabin overlooking one of the lakes in our town. He got by on doing odd jobs in the neighborhood and on whatever else he might have received. I know my father had somewhat of a soft spot for him, where my mother disliked his rough, unmannered ways. Through him, I heard stories of life on the wild seas, and about lighthouses being a beacon to those at sea, and for him perhaps more like a parent welcoming a child home. Because of him and his love for lighthouses, I have always loved them, for many years more from afar, but later on I began to try and explore as many as I could.
So, for me this was another exploration into a new lighthouse, through the pages of a story that is based on a true story. The story of Grace Darling, a twenty-two year old young woman living in a lighthouse on the Farne Islands in 1838, her father the lighthouse keeper, and she, the lighthouse keeper’s daughter. A title that would imply she was only that, a daughter, but she assisted in the running of the lighthouse. In fact, she wants no other life than this.
”As Father is on first watch, I leave the comforting light of the lamps, and enter the dark interior of the staircase. My sister Thomasin used to say she imagined the stairwell was a long vein running from the heart of the lighthouse. In one way or another, we have all attached human qualities to these old stone walls so that it has almost become another member of the family, not just a building to house us…A storm always stirs a desire for everyone to be safe inside the lighthouse walls, but my sisters and brothers are dispersed along the coast now, like flotsam caught on the tide and carried to some other place.”
When a horrendous storm causes a the shipwreck of the Forfarshire, she convinces her father that they must come to the aid of those she can see shipwrecked on the rocks, and they rescue the nine survivors, risking their own lives in the process. When this news becomes public, it spreads further and soon people are flocking to see this brave young woman.
Among the survivors is a woman named Sarah Dawson, sister to artist George Emmerson, whom Grace has met. He becomes one of many artists desiring to capture her portrait; he is already captured by her.
There is an alternating story, in an another time, a hundred years hence, that centers around Mathilda, whose story begins with her leaving her home of Cobh, Ireland, and carrying a secret with her to Newport, Rhode Island. Her secret will become more obvious as the months pass, but her parents in Ireland will avoid the public shame she would cause them had she stayed. Not that it was by her choice, her mother has sent her to live with a family friend, Harriet, in yet another lighthouse.
Very poignant, life-affirming, occasionally heart wrenching, but also heartwarming historical-fiction, a novel reminding us of the best that is within us, and inspiring us with the stories of these young women who didn’t allow their fears to conquer them, but who rose to the occasion with the courage to face their future.
Many thanks, once again, to the Public Library system, and the many Librarians that manage, organize and keep it running, for the loan of this book!