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At last he ceased to think; there he sat with hishand on the tiller in the sun, staring at the Light-house, powerless to move, powerless to flick off thesegrains of misery which settled on his mind one afteranother. A rope seemed to bind him there, and hisfather had knotted it and he could only escape bytaking a knife and plunging it. . . . But at thatmoment the sail swung slowly round, filled slowlyout, the boat seemed to shake herself, and then tomove off half conscious in her sleep, and then shewoke and shot through the waves. The relief wasextraordinary. They all seemed to fall away fromeach other again and to be at their ease, and thefishing-lines slanted taut across the side of the boat.But his father did not rouse himself. He only raisedhis right hand mysteriously high in the air, and let itfall upon his knee again as if he were conductingsome secret symphony.