Excellent Women eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 401 pages of information about Excellent Women.

Excellent Women eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 401 pages of information about Excellent Women.

Of her temperance work she writes a little later:  “May, 1879.  I haven’t taken up teetotal work, but teetotal work has taken up me!  Morgan and Scott made me accept a big handsome pledge-book in February, and somehow the thing has fairly caught fire here.  One led to another, and yesterday boys were coming all day to sign.  I had twenty-five recruits yesterday alone, and a whole squad more are coming this evening! and we are going in for getting EVERY boy in the whole village! and now ‘Please, miss, mayn’t girls sign?’ So I’ve got to open a girls’ branch as well!  So work grows!” Again, “Really a wonderful little temperance work here; all the rising generation have joined the pledge except about twelve, and now the men want to speak to me and I am to meet them to-night at the corner of the village (open air, having no place else) with my pledge-book.  I have got 118 pledged, and each with prayer over it and personal talk about better things.”  On May 21 she met these men, carrying with her her Bible and temperance book.  While standing, heavy clouds came up, and she was obliged to return home, wet and chilly, though some men were still waiting to speak to her.  The next day (Thursday) she managed to get to church and received the Lord’s Supper.  She was very tired with the service, and rode home on a donkey.  As she passed through the village, quite a procession of her boys followed her.  She urged her donkey boy to “leave the devil’s side and get on the safe side; that Jesus Christ was the winning side; that He loved him, and was calling him, and wouldn’t he choose Him for his Captain?” Arrived at home, she ran in for her temperance book, and the boy signed it on the saddle.  That evening she spoke to several persons with intense earnestness and pleading.

The next day she was to have attended a temperance meeting and have presented 150 cards to those who had signed her book; but the chilliness increased, and the doctor forbade her to go out.  Unable to be present herself, she sent two messages by her sister:  one to those who had signed—­“Behold, God Himself is ... our Captain;” [1] to those who had not signed—­“Come thou with us and we will do thee good.” [2]—­While the meeting was going on she was busy at home stitching strong paper tract-bags for sailors at sea, till she felt ill and had to be assisted to her room.

[Footnote 1:  2 Chron. xiii. 12.] [Footnote 2:  Num. x. 29.]

On May 26 she was able to correct the proof of Morning Stars, on the text, “I am the bright and morning Star;” and then, as her sister says, the pen so long used in the service of her King was laid down.  The last passage she looked at in her Bible was the Christian Progress chapter for May 28.[1] She asked that it might be read to her, and dwelt on “Be thou faithful unto death, and I will give thee a crown of life.”  On the 29th fever and internal inflammation rapidly came on, and she exhibited all the symptoms of peritonitis. 

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Excellent Women from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.