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![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() | [Biography] - Julia and the Clock This story is a tale of Virtue from Ultima 9 [Shard] - Sosaria [Type] - Fiction/History [Book] - Purple - 40 pages [Title] - Julia and the Clock [Author] - McCubbin the Wise [Page 1] Minoc is well known as the center of all the finest artisans and craftsmen of the land. Two of the most famous, Jervaise, the carver, was everywhere acclaimed one of the greatest artists [Page 2] Britannia had ever produced. The other was Julia, the Tinker. While Jervaise was, above all, an artist, Julia was an artisan. It was said her timepieces would remain accurate to the [Page 3] very second for a hundred years, if kept wound and properly tended. She also invented many cunning devices of the sort to make tasks both simpler and more precise. When one of [Page 4] the great nobles of the land wished something that was both beautiful and intricate, he would often commission both Julia and Jervaise to work together on it. [Page 5] As for Jervaise and Julia themselves, they were content in their work, and they charged their patrons a rate worthy of their skills, so they became two of the most prosperous citizens [Page 6] of Minoc, in addition to being two of the most celebrated. So it came to pass that one day a messenger came from a rich noble of the city of Moonglow. This noble desired a great clock to [Page 7] be made, of unsurpassed beauty and complexity. It was to be constructed out of the finest wood and marbles, and to be capable of showing not only the time, but also the phases of the moons, [Page 8] the season and the year, and to predict the weather for the day. All this was to be told through the actions of various cunning and amusing automata, and accompanied by music. [Page 9] The terms for this commission were to be a rich sum immediately, for material and expenses, generous annual payments for the duration of the task, and a small fortune upon completion. [Page 10] Julia and Jervaise took council together, and returned a reply that the clock could be completed in six years of work. The messenger received this news and delivered the first payment. [Page 11] The two immediately threw themselves into the work, drawing up the intricate plans and sketches, and sending them to their patron in Moonglow, where they were rapturously received. [Page 12] At that, Jervaise ordered the rich materials for the case and fittings of the clock, while Julia began work on the core of the mechanism. Two years later the clock was taking shape [Page 13] nicely. Then one day the messenger returned, bearing a single curt letter. It said that their patron had died of a fever, and his estate had gone to his sister. Which lady, not sharing [Page 14] her brother's taste for finery, had no desire to continue to pay to see the clock finished. There would be no further payment, but the artisans could keep the rich materials as [Page 15] compensation for the breaking of the contract. At this news Julia swore in a most unladylike fashion, and for a very long time, but in the end she had to admit that they'd had a good two [Page 16] years' income off the thing, though what a pity it would never be finished. Then she went off to draft replies to potential commissions that she'd been planning to refer to others. As for [Page 17] Jervaise, he just sighed, and sat looking at the unfinished clock until far into the night. A few days later Jervaise asked Julia if she minded if he looked for a new buyer for the [Page 18] clock, rather than selling it for the raw materials. She agreed, by this time rather wishing never to see the thing again. For the next year she heard little from Jervaise. He politely refused joint [Page 19] commissions, saying he was otherwise occupied. When Julia inquired if he had any new buyers for the clock, he only shook his head, with a sad smile. Then, one day Julia was [Page 20] out near the mines on the outskirts of town on an errand, and there she saw Jervaise, pulling a handcart of ore in the hot summer sun. Now the mines of Minoc were a lways hiring laborers, but [Page 21] this was the lowest and least paid of all tasks in that city. Jervaise was stripped to the waist against the heat, and Julia could see that his weathered old skin was stretched painfully tight [Page 22] against his prominent ribs. As she watched in horror, scarcely believing her eyes, she saw the cart slip from her friend's frail grasp, as he crumpled to the ground in hunger and exhaustion. [Page 23] The foreman began to bellow and shake the fallen craftsman, calling him lazy and worthless, but Julia rounded on the lout with curses and wrath, and he fell back. She paid a pair of mine [Page 24] workers to pick up Jervaise and bear him back to town, where she brought him to her house. For several days he lay there raving, while Julia fed him broth. At last he regained consciousness. [Page 25] He then confessed that after the loss of the commission, he could not bring himself to stop work on the clock, which he regarded as his masterpiece. There were no new buyers, for [Page 26] nobody wished to spend so much on such an extravagant thing. Yet he had refused all other commissions, only taking occasional odd jobs when he needed gold for food. But this last time he [Page 27] could not bring himself to quit the clock until he was so weak with hunger that he could not complete the work he needed. Julia was astonished at this, and she spent long [Page 28] hours trying to reason or bully the old man into abandoning the clock and resuming his former life. He'd listen patiently, but at last he only shook his head and said, "Don't you see - gold is nothing, [Page 29] but the clock is all." So at last Julia gave up in disgust, but she saw that meals from her Jervaise every day. Thus freed from the threat of starvation, Jervaise began [Page 30] a sort of impoverished but busy retirement, he who was once nearly the richest man in Minoc. Every day he worked on his clock, but the work went slowly, for he had no money for assistants [Page 31] to hasten the task. About two years later, Jervaise did not answer when Julia's servant knocked with his supper, and when the maid entered the workshop she found Jervaise lying dead [Page 32] at the foot of the clock, his smallest hammer and chisel in his hand, and a small, strange smile on his face. They found a will, which left everything to Julia, but by that time "everything" consisted [Page 33] of his ancient workshop, his tools, and his still unfinished clock. On the day they buried him, Julia went to the workshop alone. There she ran her hands over the intricate carving of the [Page 34] case, spotting with her practiced eye the few areas still awaiting attention. As she left the workshop, she was accosted by a messanger from Britain, who told her that Lord British [Page 35] himself requested that she create for him a new kind of telescope. "Tell his majesty thank you," she replied, "but I have a previous commission that I must complete first." For the next three [Page 36] years Julia was little seen. She did not receive visitors, and she dismissed all her servants and apprentices except for an old woman who swept her house and cooked her evening meal. Her own [Page 37] workshop stood empty, for she was working in the one which had belonged to Jervaise. And then, after three years, she put a heavy lock onto door to Jervaise's workshop, and [Page 38] rehired her staff, and let it be known that she was once again receiving commissions. She was soon busier than ever, and she even built the king's telescope, which had been kept open awaiting [Page 39] her convenience. And in later years she would sometimes go all alone into Jervaise's workshop, and stay there for hours, and passersby could hear faint and sweet music coming out of the old [Page 40] building. But those few who actually saw the inside said it was totally bare, save for a tall box or cabinet in one corner, covered with a heavy cloth. |
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| Pretty Nice Disguise, isn't it? Join Date: Nov 2005 Shard: Lake Superior
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![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() | Re: [BOOK] - Julia and the Clock Wow... That was a good one! ![]() ~ "It's definitely a Bubble Bath Day.". ~ Dove Promise ~ |
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