<h1><SPAN name="ch_09"></SPAN>IX</h1>
<h2>Love</h2>
<p>The truest love must ever seek the highest good of
its object; sometimes even with forgetfulness of important
smaller advantages.’—<i>Mrs. Booth</i>.</p>
<p>The second great quality in Mrs. Booth’s character,
as given by the first General, was her love.</p>
<p>‘She was <i>love</i>,’ he says. ’Her
whole soul was full of tender, deep compassion. Oh,
how she loved, how she pitied the suffering poor! How
she longed to put her arms round the sorrowful, and
help them!’</p>
<p>‘How,’ asked Mrs. Booth once, ’are
we to put heart into people? Even grace seems to fail
to do so in many instances. I think it needs mothers
to do this from infancy upwards.’</p>
<p>You will recollect that Mrs. Mumford fostered this
‘heart’ and love in her little girl; and
you will remember how keenly Katie felt, blazing up
into wrath at any story of wrong or injury, and ready
to sacrifice her life for those she loved. This spirit
grew with her. She could not help caring and struggling
to help all who needed her. The General often told
her in later years that she was killing herself by
carrying every one’s burdens. Then she would
try to leave off for a little, but her heart was too
strong, and she could not hold it back.</p>
<p>When but a child, running down the road with her hoop
and stick, she saw a drunkard being dragged off to
prison by a policeman. All the people were jeering
and mocking at the poor friendless wretch. Instantly
Katie’s pity and love fired up. She dashed across
the street, and marched along close by the man’s
side, so that he might feel that at least one little
heart cared for him, and wanted to help him.</p>
<p>To the end of her life she carried this deep, tender
pity wherever she went. She loved the poor. ‘With
all their faults,’ she said, ’they have
larger hearts than the rich’; and she loved them
for it.</p>
<p>Where any one had a warm heart, she could forgive
and overlook many mistakes; but with cold, narrow,
‘fishy’ souls, she had neither sympathy
nor patience.</p>
<p>Our Army Mother’s help was practical. She did
not only give money or pity, but she–so to speak–rolled
up her sleeves and helped the suffering herself.</p>
<p>Every sort of suffering and need appealed to her.
If an animal was wounded or in pain, she stopped,
and herself relieved it as best she could; and to
the last, if she saw a horse or any creature being
ill-treated, she would not hesitate to rush out and
stop the driver, or in some way force him to leave
off his cruelty.</p>
<p>She was not only kind and helpful to those she liked,
but every living thing that suffered had a claim upon
her, and the greater the need the more tender and
ready was her help.</p>
<p>Mrs. Booth was a people’s woman, and she was
never weary of scheming and planning how to help the
poor in the most practical way.</p>
<p>‘When I see people going wrong,’ she said,
when but a girl of twelve, ’I must tell the
poor things how to manage.’</p>
<p>Dirt and sin, and drink and misery, could not quench
this love; it was a part of her very nature. Long,
long before Slum Sisters were ever thought of, Mrs.
Booth did their work herself, just because she so loved
the poor, and longed to help them. You shall read
the story in her own words:–</p>
<p>’I remember in one case finding a poor woman
lying on a heap of rags. She had just given birth
to twins, and there was nobody of any sort to wait
upon her. I can never forget the desolation of that
room. By her side was a crust of bread and a small
lump of lard. “I fancied a bit o’ bootter
(butter),” the woman remarked apologetically,
noticing my eye fall upon the scanty meal, “and
my mon, he’d do owt for me he could, bless’m–he
couldna git me iny bootter, so he fitcht me this bit
o’ lard. Have <i>you</i> iver tried lard
isted o’ bootter? It’s <i>rare good</i>!”
said the poor creature, making me wish I had taken
lard for “bootter” all my life, that I
might have been the better able to minister to her
needs. However, I was soon busy trying to make her
a little more comfortable. The babies I washed in
a broken pie-dish, the nearest approach to a tub that
I could find. And the gratitude of those large eyes,
that gazed upon me from out of that wan and shrunken
face, can never fade from my memory.’</p>
<p>Before public Meetings took up so much of her time,
she delighted in this house-to-house visiting, and
went especially for the drunkards, over whom God gave
her a wonderful power.</p>
<p>‘I used to visit in the evenings,’ she
says, ’because it was the only part of the day
in which I could get away; and, besides, I should not
have found the men at home at any other time. I used
to ask one drunkard’s wife where another lived.
They always knew. After getting hold of eight or ten
in this way, and getting them to sign the pledge, I
used to arrange Cottage Meetings for them, and try
to get them saved. They used to let me talk to them
in homes where there was not a stick of furniture,
and nothing to sit down upon.’</p>
<p>In this way our Army Mother sought and cared for the
drunkards long before Drunkards’ Brigades were
dreamt of.</p>
<p>When, at a later time in her life, she first heard
of the wicked and cruel way in which young girls are
trapped and drawn into sin, Mrs. Booth’s soul
was filled with a whirlwind of holy indignation.</p>
<p>’I feel as though I could not rest, but as though
I must go and ferret out these monsters myself,’
she wrote. ’Almost everybody, notwithstanding
the indignation, seems so content with talking. Nobody
appears willing to take the responsibility of doing
or risking anything. Oh, what a state the world has
got into!’</p>
<p>But, deep and practical as was her love in earthly
things, her passion for lifting and leading souls
into Salvation and Holiness was a thousand times more
intense. ’If we only realized, as we ought, the
value of souls, we should not live long under it,’
she said; and she herself realized it fully enough
to make her fight on ceaselessly in spite of intense
weakness. ‘If it were not for eternity,’
she often sighed, ’I should soon give up this
life.’</p>
<p>It was love for souls which made her go from town
to town, care-worn, weary, often quite unfit to meet
the immense congregations which came to hear her.</p>
<p>It was love for souls which kept her sitting for hours
at her writing-table, when she should have been resting,
trying to help those who turned to her for counsel
and direction from every part of the globe.</p>
<p>It was love for souls which gave her many a sleepless
night, and chained her to her knees, weeping and pleading,
agonizing with God on behalf of the people she was
to face the next day.</p>
<p>And this love for souls grew even stronger as death
came near. ‘Eva,’ she exclaimed to one
of her daughters, as she lay racked with agonizing
pain, ’don’t you forget that man with
the handcuffs on. Find him. Go to Lancaster Jail;
let somebody go with you, and find that man. Tell him
that your mother, when she was dying, prayed for him,
and that she had a feeling in her heart that God would
save him; and tell him, hard as the ten years of imprisonment
may be, it will be easier with Christ than it would
be without Him.’</p>
<p>She was lying between earth and Heaven, thinking of
the joy and peace awaiting her, when it seemed as
if she saw the dark face of a heathen woman, and heard
the cry, ‘Won’t you help us?’ The
old love for perishing souls woke again directly,
and she cried, ’Oh, yes, Lord, I will go anywhere
to help poor struggling people. I would go on an errand
to Hell, if the Lord would promise me that the Devil
should not keep me there.’</p>
<p>In one of these last days she sent a dying message
to the Officers. ’Tell them,’ she said,
’that the only consolation for a Salvationist
on his death-bed is to have been a soul-winner. After
all my labours I feel I have come far short of the
prize of my high calling. Beseech them to redeem their
time, for we can do but little at the best.’</p>
<p>A little maid who was a Candidate came into Mrs. Booth’s
sick-room once as she was speaking, and she called
her to her bedside, giving her warning and counsel
which every Corps Cadet can take as though spoken to
herself:–</p>
<p>‘You will be finished with the dishes soon,’
she said, ’and you are going to be a Cadet.
I have been very pleased with you while you have been
here, because you have worked out of sight with a good
will, and I think you will make a brave Officer. You
will promise me, will you?’ she said, as she
laid her trembling hand on the girl’s head. ‘Yes,’
was the reply, ‘I will,’ amid stifled
sobs.</p>
<p>‘Give me a kiss, then,’ said Mrs. Booth.
’Promise me that you will never get spoiled
by any unfaithful Officer. If you ever get mixed up
with such, do not hide it from Headquarters, but let
them know about it, and they will soon move the false
away from you. I shan’t be here; but, Oh! may
God help them to get rid of the wrong. Discernment
of spirits! Oh, why should we not have that gift back?
It is very necessary.’</p>
<p>Mrs. Booth’s whole heart was wrapped up in the
spread of The Army, and she was never more of a warrior
than when fighting its battles. And The Army needed
some one to stand up for it in those days. We who live
to-day can hardly fancy the fierce, bitter persecution
the early-day Salvationists had to fight through.</p>
<p>Now, even those who dislike and despise us are forced
to admit that ’The Army does a great deal of
good’; but then it was different, and again and
again, both by speech and writing, Mrs. Booth had to
defend and stand up for our methods.</p>
<p>‘I would not,’ she says, after she had
spoken too plainly for some rich people who were offended
at her words, ’sit down and listen to their
abuse of The Salvation Army for all their money. But
I did not say a word that I would object to have published
upon the housetops. Such, however, is often the spirit
of the rich. They think that one must sit and hear
whatever they may choose to say, and hold one’s
breath, because of their money! But, no, I will never
be dumb before a golden idol!’</p>
<p>She loved the Uniform: she herself planned that worn
by Army women, and always wore her own, rejoicing
to be able to give to our people a way of escape from
the fashions and extravagances of the world.</p>
<p>She loved the Flag, and was true to its beautiful
meaning. She loved to present Colours to the newly-opened
Corps, or to parties of Officers going abroad; and
when, shortly before she passed away, she changed her
room, she begged that the dear Army Flag might be brought
in and hung above her bed.</p>
<p>‘There,’ said The General, ‘the
Colours are over you now, my darling.’</p>
<p>And she clasped them fondly with her left hand, and
traced the motto–‘Blood and Fire.’</p>
<p>‘Yes,’ she said, ’Blood and Fire;
that is just what my life has been–a constant and
severe fight.’</p>
<p>‘It ought to be “Blood and Fire and Victory,"’
said The General.</p>
<p>‘I’ll fight on till I get it,’ she
answered. ’I won’t give in. Next time
I see them I shall be above the pain and sorrow for
ever.’</p>
<p>But, though at the last she longed to be at rest,
it was not easy for her great mother’s heart
to unloose itself from those she loved, and from the
thousands in all lands who looked to her as to a mother.</p>
<p>If you have learnt to love very deeply you will also
have to suffer, and her very love made the parting
so difficult.</p>
<p>‘Oh,’ she exclaimed, when speaking of
leaving The General and her children, ’mine
is such a heart! it seems as if it had got roots all
round the world clutching on to one and another, and
that it will not let them go! And yet You can take
care of them, Lord, better than I could. I do, I do
believe! O Eternal Father, Shepherd of the sheep, do
Thou look after my little flock!’</p>
<p>‘Amen,’ we who read these lines may say;
adding to her prayer, ’And give us that same
heart and love which made her life of such mighty power.’</p>
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