The Corridors Of Time, CHAPTER THIRTEEN.
Storm:
"...shone, Lockridge thought dizzily, like that sea which was also the Goddess'." (p. 115)
We find parallels with another time travel narrative:
"...often she rose early, long before the sun, to watch over her sea. Upon her brow shone the morning star."
-Poul Anderson, "Star of the Sea" IN Anderson, Time Patrol (Riverdale, NY, December 2010), pp. 467-640 AT I, p. 467.
(Unfortunately, there are no cover images for "Star of the Sea" because it was never published as a single volume.)
"Upon her brow a star burned white as the fire's heart.'" (II, p. 557)
"'There's something about a star and the sea, but I know nothing of that, we're inlanders here...'" (10, p. 552)
"Hers are the sea and the ships that plow it." (III, p. 628)
"Pure as yourself, your evenstar shines above the sunset... Lay your gentleness on the seas...
"Ave Stella Maris!" (IV, p. 640)
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