The Christian, by Hall Caine
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Title: The Christian A Story
Author: Hall Caine
Release Date: July, 2005 [EBook #8407] [Yes, we are more than one
year ahead of schedule] [This file was first posted on July 8, 2003]
Edition: 10
Language: English
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*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE
CHRISTIAN ***
Produced by Charles Aldarondo, Tiffany Vergon, Thomas Berger, and
the Online Distributed Proofreading Team.
THE CHRISTIAN
A STORY
BY HALL CAINE
Author of The Manxman
* * * * *
The period of the story is the last quarter of the nineteenth century. No
particular years are intended. The time occupied by the incidents of the
first Book is about six months, of the Second Book about six months, of
the Third Book about six months; then there is an interval of half a year,
and the time occupied by the incidents of the Fourth Book is about six
weeks. An Author's Note will be found at the end.
* * * * *
THE CHRISTIAN.
FIRST BOOK.
THE OUTER WORLD.
I.
On the morning of the 9th of May, 18--, three persons important to this
story stood among the passengers on the deck of the Isle of Man
steamship Tynwald as she lay by the pier at Douglas getting up steam
for the passage to Liverpool. One of these was an old clergyman of
seventy, with a sweet, mellow, childlike face; another was a young man
of thirty, also a clergyman; the third was a girl of twenty. The older
clergyman wore a white neckcloth about his throat, and was dressed in
rather threadbare black of a cut that had been more common twenty
years before; the younger clergyman wore a Roman collar, a long
clerical coat, and a stiff, broad-brimmed hat with a cord and tassel.
They stood amidships, and the captain, coming out of his room to
mount the bridge, saluted them as he passed.
"Good morning, Mr. Storm."
The young clergyman returned the salutation with a slight bow and the
lifting of his hat.
"Morning to you, Parson Quayle."
The old clergyman answered cheerily, "Oh, good morning, captain;
good morning."
There was the usual inquiry about the weather outside, and drawing up
to answer it, the captain came eye to eye with the girl.
"So this is the granddaughter, is it?"
"Yes, this is Glory," said Parson Quayle. "She's leaving the old
grandfather at last, captain, and I'm over from Peel to set her off, you
see."
"Well, the young lady has got the world before her--at her feet, I ought
to say.--You're looking as bright and fresh as the morning, Miss
Quayle."
The captain carried off his compliment with a breezy laugh, and went
along to the bridge. The girl had heard him only in a momentary flash
of consciousness, and she replied merely with a side glance and a smile.
Both eyes and ears, and every sense and every faculty, seemed
occupied with the scene before her.
It was a beautiful spring morning, not yet nine o'clock, but the sun
stood high over Douglas Head, and the sunlight was glancing in the
harbour from the little waves of the flowing tide. Oars were rattling up
the pier, passengers were trooping down the gangways, and the decks
fore and aft were becoming thronged.
"It's beautiful!" she was saying, not so much to her companions as to
herself, and the old parson was laughing at her bursts of rapture over
the commonplace scene, and dropping out in reply little driblets of
simple talk--sweet, pure nothings--the innocent babble as of a mountain
stream.
She was taller than the common, and had golden-red hair, and
magnificent dark-gray eyes of great size. One of her eyes had a brown
spot, which gave at the first glance the effect of a squint,
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