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    Chapter 33

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    That very night, I looked in at the little shop beneath us and met
    Riggs. It was no small blessing, just as I was entering upon dark
    and unknown ways of life, to meet this hoary headed man with all
    his lanterns. He would sell you anchors and fathoms of chain and
    rope enough to hang you to the moon but his 'lights'were the great
    attraction of Riggs s. He had every kind of lantern that had ever
    swung on land or sea. After dark, when light was streaming out of
    its open door and broad window Riggs's looked like the side of an
    old lantern itself. It was a door, low and wide, for a time when
    men had big round bellies and nothing to do but fill them and
    heads not too far above their business. It was a window gone blind
    with dust and cobwebs so it resembled the dim eye of age. If the
    door were closed its big brass knocker and massive iron latch
    invited the passer. An old ship's anchor and a coil of chain lay
    beside it. Blocks and heavy bolts, steering wheels, old brass
    compasses, coils of rope and rusty chain lay on the floor and
    benches, inside the shop. There were rows of lanterns, hanging on
    the bare beams. And there was Riggs. He sat by a dusty desk and
    gave orders in a sleepy, drawling tone to the lad who served him.
    An old Dutch lantern, its light softened with green glass, sent a
    silver bean across the gloomy upper air of the shop that evening.
    Riggs held an old un lantern with little streams of light bursting
    through its perforated walls. He was blind, one would know it at a
    glance. Blindness is so easy to be seen. Riggs was showing it to a
    stranger.

    'Turn down the lights,' he said and the boy got his step-ladder and
    obeyed him.

    Then he held it aloft in the dusk and the little lantern was like a
    castle tower with many windows lighted, and, when he set it down,
    there was a golden sprinkle on the floor as if something had
    plashed into a magic pool of light there in the darkness.

    Riggs lifted the lantern, presently, and stood swinging it in his
    hand. Then its rays were sown upon the darkness falling silently
    into every nook and corner of the gloomy shop and breaking into
    flowing dapples on the wall.

    'See how quick it is!' said he as the rays flashed with the speed of
    lightning. 'That is the only traveller from Heaven that travels fast
    enough to ever get to earth.

    Then came the words that had a mighty fitness for his tongue.

    'Hail, holy light! Offspring of Heaven first born.

    His voice rose and fell, riding the mighty rhythm of inspired song.
    As he stood swinging the lantern, then, he reminded me of a
    chanting priest behind the censer. In a moment he sat down, and,
    holding the lantern between his knees, opened its door and felt the
    candle. Then as the light
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