From Aldershot to Pretoria A Story of Christian Work among Our Troops in South Africa
FROM ALDERSHOT TO PRETORIA A Story of Christian Work among our Troops in South Africa BY W.E. SELLERS WITH AN INTRODUCTION BY R.W. ALLEN WITH FIFTEEN ILLUSTRATIONS Second Impression LONDON THE RELIGIOUS TRACT SOCIETY 56 PATERNOSTER ROW AND 65 ST. PAUL'S CHURCHYARD
words. (Not long before that he had had the queer notion of sheltering
and nursing a crippled hind that had escaped from a previous run, and
his act had given great displeasure in high places.) So as soon as he
opened his mouth we made him shut it. The idea of Eudo in judgment on
princes!
And the rest lowered their heads and nodded and murmured, "Yes, he's a
grandee."
And the little phrase spread abroad, timidly and obscurely.
* * * * * *
When All Saints' Day came round, many of the distinguished visitors at
the castle were still there. Every year that festival gives us
occasion for an historical ceremony on the grand scale. At two o'clock
all the townsfolk that matter gather with bunches of flowers on the
esplanade or in front of the cemetery half-way up Chestnut Hill, for
the ceremony and an open air service.
Early in the afternoon I betook myself with Marie to the scene. I put
on a fancy waistcoat of black and white check and my new patent leather
boots, which make me look at them. It is fine weather on this Sunday
of Sundays, and the bells are ringing. Everywhere the hurrying crowd
climbs the hill--peasants in flat caps, working families in their best
clothes, young girls with faces white and glossy as the bridal satin
FROM ALDERSHOT TO PRETORIA A Story of Christian Work among our Troops in South Africa BY W.E. SELLERS WITH AN INTRODUCTION BY R.W. ALLEN WITH FIFTEEN ILLUSTRATIONS Second Impression LONDON THE RELIGIOUS TRACT SOCIETY 56 PATERNOSTER ROW AND 65 ST. PAUL'S CHURCHYARD