From Aldershot to Pretoria eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 196 pages of information about From Aldershot to Pretoria.

From Aldershot to Pretoria eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 196 pages of information about From Aldershot to Pretoria.

‘And now,’ said the Roman Catholic soldier, who, on his return from the war, told this story to the Rev. T.J.  McClelland, ’I know that God will hear the prayer of a good man as well as the prayer of a priest, for he heard little Jemmie’s prayer that night.’

And so the Aldershot barrack room prepares the way for the South African veldt, and the example apparently unnoticed bears fruit where least expected.

=The Hymns the Soldier Likes.=

Of all hymn-books Mr. Thomas Atkins likes his ‘Sankey’ best.  He is but a big boy after all, and the hymns of boyhood are his favourites still.  You should hear him sing,—­

    ‘I’m the child of a King,’

while the dear lad has hardly a copper to call his own!  And how he never tires of singing!

But the Scotchmen are exceptions, of course, and when, following mobilisation times, the Cameronian Militia came to Aldershot, they could not put up with Mr. Sankey’s collection.  Rough, bearded crofters as many of them were,—­men who had never been South before,—­all these hymns sounded very foreign.  ‘We canna do wi’ them ava,’ they cried; ’gie us the Psalms o’ Dauvit.’  But they set an example to many of their fellows, and the remarkable spectacle was witnessed in more than one barrack room of these stalwart crofters engaged in family prayer.

But it is time we saw our soldiers depart.  And first there is the inspection in the barrack square, and it is difficult to recognise in these khaki-clad warriors the men we had known in the barrack room or ‘Home.’  And then there is the farewell in the evening, and the ‘glory-room’ or other devotional room is full of those ordered South, and there is the hearty hand-shake and the whispered ‘God bless you,’ and then all join in the soldiers’ good-night song—­his watchword all the world over, hymn 494 in Sankey’s collection,—­

    ‘God be with you till we meet again.’

His life is such a coming and going that he would be unhappy unless you closed every evening meeting with at least one verse, and on these occasions, when no one knows whether it will be in earth or heaven that he will meet his comrade next, it is, of course, impossible to close without it.  And so night by night before each regiment takes its departure some one starts 494.  By-and-by, as the train steams out of the station, it will be ‘Auld Lang Syne,’ but these are Christian men, and they are parting from Christian men, and so often with hands clasped and not without tears they sing,—­

    ’God be with you till we meet again,
    Keep love’s banner floating o’er you,
    Smite death’s threatening wave before you,
    God be with you till we meet again.’

They will not forget it, these soldier lads, and as they pass one another on their long marches across the veldt, unable to do more than shout a greeting to some old friend, it will be 494; and as with rapid tread they advance to charge some almost impregnable defence, they will shout to one another—­these Christian soldiers—­494, ’God be with you till we meet again!’

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From Aldershot to Pretoria from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.