
A thick English mist rolls in over the bustling quay, muffling the shouts and clatter of dockworkers while two great liners sway at their moorings. Amid the hurried crowd lies a ragged, sun‑kissed boy named Sandy Kilday, his oversized sailor’s blouse and missing shoe a testament to a life lived on the edge of the tide. He watches a weather‑vane wobble indecisively, his mind a storm of dreams, memories of an Irish hearth, and the restless urge to choose his own direction.
Sandy’s thoughts drift back to a tiny white house on a heath, where a laughing mother sang songs of fairies and a silent father kept a steady gaze. Those distant images fuel his longing for freedom, a taste he’s chased ever since he fled home two years ago. Now, with the record‑breaking liner Great Britain docked and a rival steamship poised to depart, Sandy faces a pivotal choice: stay ashore or slip aboard as a stowaway and let the sea carry him toward the unknown.
Language
en
Duration
~4 hours (253K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2004-11-18
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
Subjects

1870–1942
Best known for creating the beloved Mrs. Wiggs, this Kentucky novelist wrote warm, lively stories that mixed humor with sympathy for people living on the margins. Her most famous book became a major bestseller and helped bring wider attention to life in Louisville’s poor neighborhoods.
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