The Authoritative Life of General William Booth - LightNovelsOnl.com
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German Watchman
"With that constant will power which sprang from deep and upright conviction, and with a faculty for organisation which won hearty recognition from all who knew him, he was able to do such great things."
National Gazette, Berlin
"His unselfishness and his zealous devotion to his creation (The Army) was beyond all question."
Berlin Exchange Courier
"Whoever saw and heard him knows that he remained, after all, the simple, una.s.suming, humble man. The secret of this personality was the embodiment of an unshakable religious devotion. It rang out in his burning, earnest words, it breathed in the deep heartfelt prayers in his Meetings, it expressed itself in wondrous deeds of love, which ignored difficulties and shrank from no sacrifice. This made of him the organising genius who led the world-wide Salvation Army, with all its higher and lower departments, with strength and security. William Booth was as its Founder and General perhaps the most popular man of our day."
Neckar-Journal of Heilsbron
"And so General Booth, who has now died at eighty-three, risen to be one of the greatest benefactors of the murdering industry period. His name is graven in bra.s.s in the social history of the nineteenth century.
"He was a man through whose soul the great breath of brotherly love and devotion moved, and, therefore, his example will never be forgotten."
The Baden Press of Carlsruhe
"The Salvation Army is to-day the mightiest free Organisation of Social help in the world, and the man who made it was once a street missionary, despised, and without influence, whom part of the despairing ma.s.s of the East of London threw stones at, whilst another part, with alcohol-fevered eyes, hung on his lips. 'If ye have faith like a grain of mustard seed!'"
The General Gazette of Erfurt
"In General Booth, one has closed his eyes who was able to make a visible reality of the faith that can remove mountains. The Bonaparte of free Social help has died."
The Cologne Times
"One of the greatest benefactors of mankind has pa.s.sed away, and as success is the greatest joy, also one of the happiest of men. The Salvation Army is a good, Christian undertaking, and William Booth was one of the n.o.blest Christians whose name history can record."
Hanover Courier
"Booth was the born orator of the people. He possessed above all the rare gift of keeping always to the level of his hearers, and so to speak about the highest themes that the wayfaring man understood him."
Hamburg Strangers Paper
"To the last he was the living, energising centre of The Army, and to the last breath in the truest sense its General."
Munchen Latest News
"With the decease of General Booth, mankind has to mourn the loss of a willing, self-sacrificing benefactor, a n.o.ble philanthropist of the most distinguished purpose."
The Kingdom's Messenger of Berlin
"What he accomplished in the fighting of drunkenness or other evils is too well known to need description. Taken all in all, whatever any one may have to say about any details of The Army's methods, one must agree with _The Daily Chronicle_ that the loss of General Booth is a heavy blow, and the whole world will unite with us in applauding such a life of devotion to a great end."
The Cross Gazette of Berlin
"It was seen that he was not merely a preacher of repentance, but a real shepherd of his sheep, who had an open heart, and a good understanding for all in need."
German News of Berlin
"He was no quack, no charlatan, and Carlyle, had he known him, would have certainly put him into his list of heroes as priest and prophet. It is great, what The Army has done in fighting manifold human miseries, such as drunkenness. We have often known learned men and politicians who went over the sea scoffers at it come back its admirers."
Markish People's Paper of Barmen
"Our opposition on principle does not prevent our acknowledging that The Army has done much good to the poorest of the poor."