The Path of a Star eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 334 pages of information about The Path of a Star.

The Path of a Star eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 334 pages of information about The Path of a Star.
the Duke’s Own packed in a row like a formation, solid on their haunches; and three or four unshaven and loose-garmented, from crews in the Hooghly, who leaned well forwards their elbows on their knees, twirling battered straw hats, with a pathetic look of being for the instant off the defensive.  One was a Scandinavian, another a Greek, with earrings.  There was a ship’s cook, too, a full-blooded negro, very respectable with a plaid tie and a silk hat; and beside, two East Indian girls of different shades, tittering at the Duke’s Own in an agony of propriety; a Bengali boy, who spelled out the English on the cover of a hymn-book; and a very clean Chinaman, who appreciated his privilege, since it included a seat, a lamp, and a noise, though his perception of it possibly went no further.  The other odds and ends were of the mixed country blood, like the girls, dingy, undecipherable.  They made a shadow for the rest, lying along the benches, shifting unnoticeably.

Three people, two of them women, sat in the open space at the end of the room where the smoky fog from outside thickened and hung visibly in mid-air, and there was the empty seat of the man who was talking.  Laura Filbert was one of the women.  She might have been flung upon her chair; her head drooped over the back, buried in the curve of one arm.  A tambourine hung loosely from the hand nearest her face; the other lay, palm outward in its abandonment, among the folds that covered her limbs.  The folds hung from her waist, and she wore above them a short close bodice like a Bengali woman.  Her head covering had slipped, and clung only to the knot of hair at the nape of her neck; she lacked, pathetically, the conscious hand to draw it forward.  She was unaware even of the gaze of the Duke’s Own, though it had fixity and absorption.

The man with folded hands went on talking.  He seemed to have caught as a text the refrain of the hymn that had been sung.  “Yes, indeed,” he said.  “I can tell heveryone ’ere this night, heveryone, that the Saviour is mighty to keep.  I ’ave got it out of my own personal experience, I ’ave.  Jesus don’t only look after you on a Sunday, but six days a week, my friends, six days a week.  Fix your eye on Him and He’ll keep His eye on you—­that’s all your part of it.  I don’t mean to say I don’t stumble an’ fall into sin.  There’s times when the Devil will get the upper ’and, but oh, my friends, I ask you, each an’ hevery one of you, is that the fault of Jesus?  No, it is not ’Is fault, it is the fault of the person.  The person ’as been forgetting Jesus, forgetting ‘is Bible an’ ’is prayers; what can you expect?  And now I ask you, my friends, is Jesus a-keeping you?  And if He is not, oh, my friends, ain’t it foolish to put off any longer?  ’Ere we are met together to-night; we may never all meet together again.  You and I may never ’ear each other speaking again or see each other sitting there.  Thank God,” the speaker continued, as his eye rested on Arnold and Lindsay, “the vilest sinner may be saved, the respectable sinner may be saved.  We’ve got God’s word for that.  Now just a little word of prayer from Ensign Sand ’ere—­she’s got God’s ear, the Ensign ’as, and she’ll plead with ’im for all unconverted souls inside these four walls to-night.”

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Project Gutenberg
The Path of a Star from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.