[The Authoritative Life of General William Booth by George Scott Railton]@TWC D-Link book
The Authoritative Life of General William Booth

CHAPTER XVI
9/26

However, we had a very nice finish, and I got to bed about 11.30.
"Thursday .-- Breakfast with the Staff Officers at 8.

An hour and three-quarters' good straight talk afterwards with beautiful influence, everybody so tender.

At the close I said, 'Now let us kneel down,' and after a little prayer asked them to link hands with me, and let us give ourselves up again to Jesus for the service of God and The Army." Such tender-hearted linkings together of those who have the leadership of The Army's various departments have alone prevented the separations of heart that must inevitably be threatened wherever a number of very strong-willed men and women are engaged in labours into which they throw their whole soul, and in which they cannot, perhaps should not, avoid the feeling that their own department is, after all, the most important in the world.

But any one who thinks will understand how men and women so blended together in fellowship with God and each other have been able to override all contrary influences in every country.
"E.

(the leader of our Work in South Africa) then turned to me" (the letter goes on) "and made a few appropriate remarks about his own devotion to The Army, and on behalf of every Officer, present and absent, assured me that they loved The Army as it was, and did not want any alterations in _Orders_ or _Regulations_, and were prepared to live and die in the War.


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