The Romance of Charity

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A. Strahan, 1867 - Charities - 480 pages
 

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Page 90 - was not very inviting : two sleeping-rooms with the bed-straw piled up in a corner, and a doorway between them, where I stood, that I might be heard by the women on one side and the men on the other." A society for prison reform was now established after the English pattern ; and those horrible jails, which hitherto had been filthy dens and scenes of the lowest immorality, were gradually turned into places fit for the habitation of human beings, besides being provided with sufficient means for making...
Page 118 - ... saved, and to come unto the knowledge of the truth. Mark xvi. 15, and Matt. xxviii. 20. Go ye into all the world, and preach the Gospel to every creature ; and lo, I am with you alway, even unto the end of the world. Luke xviii. 16. Suffer little children to come unto Me, and forbid them not ; for of such is the kingdom of God. Matthew xviii. 5. Whoso shall receive one such little child in My name receiveth Me.
Page 144 - ... simple enough to be the vehicles of children's thoughts, and sublime enough to carry up the minds of all the audience. The sermon, from Rom. xiii. 11-14, was as telling upon the heart as it was quaintly divided. Each of its three parts was headed by a preposition thus : Up! (ver. n, Awake out of sleep); Off! (ver. 12, Cast off the works of darkness); On! (verses 12 and 14, Put on the armour of light; put on the Lord Jesus Christ). After the close of the service, the whole congregation rose and...
Page 13 - Though the children never called him by the title of " father " — a hackneyed orphan-house term which he could not bear — yet nevertheless he loved them, and felt concerned about them as a father. But he perceived, too, that ha would come to lose the feeling of a father, if he allowed his family to swell beyond the range which nature has drawn for the duties of a parent. There was room enough for building a house for a second family, and he had no objection to enlarge the place for more houses...
Page 285 - I will explain. Some time ago one of the doors in my house creaked. Nobody, therefore, liked to go in or out by it. One day I oiled its hinges, and it has been constantly used by every body ever since." "Then you think I am like the creaking door,'" cried the old gentleman. " How do you want me to oil myself?" "That's an easy matter,
Page 123 - ... sometimes for an indefinite time, as he had fallen into the mistake of accepting young men too quickly. His motto was, "Better no schoolmaster at all than a bad one." For providing the poor people with bad teachers no establishment was required. But if he could only bless a few hamlets with well-trained, able, and truly Christian schoolmasters, he thought it would be worth all the trouble and sacrifice he was willing to undergo. The working of the establishment, as organised by Mr. Zeller, was...
Page 11 - It was not exactly the most agreeable company one could wish for one's pleasure. Eight of them were illegitimate; four were brought up by drunken and criminal parents; one lad was known to the police for ninety-two thefts; one had escaped from prison. They were a lot of young savages, accustomed to live upon robbery, to amuse themselves with hazardous enterprises behind the policeman's back, to sleep under a bridge or on a staircase, to curse their fathers in return for parental curses, and to beat...
Page 8 - Hamburg, of course ; for that would be keeping the children in the very atmosphere they ought to be removed from, but near Hamburg, somewhere down in the country, where fresh air and wholesome labour would invigorate the body, and a Christian family life, carried on with patriarchal simplicity, would revive the spirit These were the thoughts which on one October evening in 1832 he discussed with his friends, the members of the Visiting Society — men like himself, richer in faith and love than in...
Page 244 - let us not speak just now of that awful fire. We know that the Lord will not be mocked, and that it is a fearful thing to fall into the hands of the living God.
Page 11 - And true genuine love certainly imparts a wonderful talent for the work of training. The problem which was to be grappled with was, how to win the confidence of young liars and thieves who distrusted everybody; how to make obedience a pleasure to young rascals who...

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