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<h1>Catherine Booth</h1>
<h2>A Sketch</h2>
<p style="text-align: center"><i>Reprinted from The Warriors’ Library</i></p>
<p style="text-align: center; font-variant: small-caps">by</p>
<h3>Colonel Mildred Duff</h3>
<p style="text-align: center; font-variant: small-caps">With a Preface by<br/>
General Bramwell Booth</p>
<h1>Preface</h1>
<p>Colonel Duff has, at my request, written the following
very interesting
and touching account of my dear Mother; and she has
done so in the hope
that those who read it will be helped to follow in
the footsteps of that
wonderful servant of God.</p>
<p>But how can they do so? Was not Mrs. Booth, you ask,
an exceptional
woman? Had she not great gifts and very remarkable
powers, and was she
not trained in a very special way to do the work to
which God called her?
How, then, can ordinary people follow in her steps?
Let me tell you.</p>
<p>Mrs. Booth walked with God. When she was only a timid
girl, helping her
mother in the household, she continually sought after
Him; and when, in
later years, she became known by multitudes, and was
written of in the
newspapers, and greatly beloved by the good in many
lands, there was no
difference in her life in that matter. She was not
content with being
Mrs. General Booth of The Salvation Army, and with
being looked upon as a
great and good woman, giving her life to bless others.
No! she listened
daily for God’s voice in her own heart, sought
after His will, and leaned
continually for strength and grace upon her Saviour.
You can be like her
in that.</p>
<p>Mrs. Booth was a soul-winner. A little while before
her spirit passed
into the presence of God, and when she knew that death
was quite near to
her, she said: ’Tell the Soldiers that the great
consolation for a
Salvationist on his dying bed is to feel that he has
been a soul-winner.’<br/>
Wherever she went–in the houses of strangers as well
as of friends, in
the Meetings, great and small, when she was welcomed
and when she was
not, whether alone or with others–she laboured to
lead souls to Christ.
I have known her at one time spend as much trouble
to win one as at
another time to win fifty. You can follow her example
in that.</p>
<p>Mrs. Booth always declared herself and took sides
with right. Whatever
was happening around her, people always knew which
side she was on. She
spoke out for the right, the good, and the true, even
when doing so
involved very disagreeable experiences and the bearing
of much
unkindness. She hated the spirit which can look on
at what is wicked and
false or cruel, and say, ‘Oh, that is not my
affair!’ You can follow her<br/>
example in this also.</p>
<p>Mrs. Booth laboured all her life to improve her gifts.
She thought; she
prayed; she worked; she read–above all, she read
her Bible. It was her
companion as a child, as a young follower of Christ,
and then as a Leader
in The Army. Those miserable words which some of us
hear so often about
some bad or unfinished work–’Oh, that will
do’–were seldom heard from
her lips. She was always striving, striving, striving
to do better, and
yet better, and again better still. All this also
you can do.</p>
<p>Mrs. Booth was full of sympathy. No one who was in
need or in sorrow, or
who was suffering, could meet her without finding
out that, she was in
sympathy with them. Her heart was tender with the
love of Christ, and so
she was deeply touched by the sin and sorrow around
her just as He was.
Even the miseries of the dumb animals moved her to
efforts on their
behalf. This sympathy made Mrs. Booth quick to see
and appreciate the
toil and self-denial of others, and ever grateful
for any kindness shown
to her or to The Army or to those in need of any kind.
The very humblest
and youngest of those who read this little book can
be like her in all this.</p>
<p>Mrs. Booth endured to the end. She never turned back.
She was faithful.
Her life and work would have been spoilt if she had
given up the fight.
She was often sorely tempted. She was slandered and
misrepresented by
enemies, betrayed by false friends, and often deeply
wounded by those who
professed to love her, though they deserted the Flag.
But she held fast.
You can be like her in that. You may make many mistakes,
suffer many
defeats, but you can still keep going on, and it is
to those who go on to
the very end, whether in weakness or in strength,
that Jesus will give
the crown of life.</p>
<p>Mrs. Booth trusted with all her heart in the love
and sacrifice of her
Saviour. These were her hope and her strength. When
at the height of her
influence and popularity she delighted in that wonderful
song which we<br/>
still so often sing:–</p>
<blockquote>I love Thee because Thou hast first loved me,<br/>
And purchased my pardon when nailed to the tree;</blockquote>
<p>and when, amid much suffering, she lay dying, we often
sang together with her:–</p>
<blockquote>Victory for me!<br/>
Through the Blood of Christ my Saviour;<br/>
Victory for me!<br/>
Through the precious Blood.</blockquote>
<p>This was her victory. You can follow her in the faith
that won it. Will you?</p>
<p class="smallcaps">Bramwell Booth</p>
<p><i>International Headquarters.</i></p>
<h1>Contents</h1>
<p><SPAN href="#preface" class="smallcaps">Preface</SPAN></p>
<ol style="list-style-type: upper-roman">
<li><SPAN href="#ch_01" class="smallcaps">Childhood</SPAN></li>
<li><SPAN href="#ch_02" class="smallcaps">Conversion and Soul Struggles</SPAN></li>
<li><SPAN href="#ch_03" class="smallcaps">A Three-Years Engagement</SPAN></li>
<li><SPAN href="#ch_04" class="smallcaps">A Life of Sacrifice</SPAN></li>
<li><SPAN href="#ch_05" class="smallcaps">The Speaker</SPAN></li>
<li><SPAN href="#ch_06" class="smallcaps">The Mother</SPAN></li>
<li><SPAN href="#ch_07" class="smallcaps">The Worker</SPAN></li>
<li><SPAN href="#ch_08" class="smallcaps">Goodness</SPAN></li>
<li><SPAN href="#ch_09" class="smallcaps">Love</SPAN></li>
<li><SPAN href="#ch_10" class="smallcaps">The Warrior</SPAN></li>
<li><SPAN href="#ch_11" class="smallcaps">Last Days</SPAN></li>
</ol>
<p><SPAN href="#dates" class="smallcaps">Dates in Mrs. Booth's Life</SPAN></p>
<h1>Catherine Booth:</h1>
<h2>A Sketch</h2>
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