for this scarcely lucrative position as a means of
securing the seclusion he valued more than gold.
Some believed that he was the victim of an early disappointment
in love—a view charitably taken by those
who also believed that the government would not have
appointed “a crank” to a position of responsibility.
Howbeit, he fulfilled his duties, and, with the assistance
of an Indian, even cultivated a small patch of ground
beside the lighthouse. His isolation was complete!
There was little to attract wanderers here: the
nearest mines were fifty miles away; the virgin forest
on the mountains inland were penetrated only by sawmills
and woodmen from the Bay settlements, equally remote.
Although by the shore-line the lights of the great
port were sometimes plainly visible, yet the solitude
around him was peopled only by Indians,—a
branch of the great northern tribe of “root-diggers,”—peaceful
and simple in their habits, as yet undisturbed by
the white man, nor stirred into antagonism by aggression.
Civilization only touched him at stated intervals,
and then by the more expeditious sea from the government
boat that brought him supplies. But for his contiguity
to the perpetual turmoil of wind and sea, he might
have passed a restful Arcadian life in his surroundings;
for even his solitude was sometimes haunted by this
faint reminder of the great port hard by that pulsated
with an equal unrest. Nevertheless, the sands
before his door and the rocks behind him seemed to
have been untrodden by any other white man’s
foot since their upheaval from the ocean. It
was true that the little bay beside him was marked
on the map as “Sir Francis Drake’s Bay,”
tradition having located it as the spot where that
ingenious pirate and empire-maker had once landed his
vessels and scraped the barnacles from his adventurous
keels. But of this Edgar Pomfrey—or
“Captain Pomfrey,” as he was called by
virtue of his half-nautical office—had
thought little.
For the first six months he had thoroughly enjoyed
his seclusion. In the company of his books, of
which he had brought such a fair store that their
shelves lined his snug corners to the exclusion of
more comfortable furniture, he found his principal
recreation. Even his unwonted manual labor, the
trimming of his lamp and cleaning of his reflectors,
and his personal housekeeping, in which his Indian
help at times assisted, he found a novel and interesting
occupation. For outdoor exercise, a ramble on
the sands, a climb to the rocky upland, or a pull
in the lighthouse boat, amply sufficed him. “Crank”
as he was supposed to be, he was sane enough to guard
against any of those early lapses into barbarism which
marked the lives of some solitary gold-miners.
His own taste, as well as the duty of his office, kept
his person and habitation sweet and clean, and his
habits regular. Even the little cultivated patch
of ground on the lee side of the tower was symmetrical
and well ordered. Thus the outward light of Captain
Pomfrey shone forth over the wilderness of shore and
wave, even like his beacon, whatever his inward illumination
may have been.