Robert Moffat - The Missionary Hero of Kuruman by David J. Deane
page 39 of 139 (28%)
page 39 of 139 (28%)
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[Illustration] [Illustration] CHAPTER IV. MARRIAGE, AND ARRIVAL AT LATTAKOO. Up to this time, Robert Moffat had pursued his course alone. No loving helpmeet had cheered him in his efforts, or with womanly tenderness ministered to his wants. But though far away, he was fondly remembered and earnestly prayed for, especially by one noble Christian lady, over whose fair head scarce twenty-three summers had passed, and whose heart had been torn with the severe struggle, between filial love and regard for her parents on the one hand, and her sense of duty and affection for her missionary friend on the other, which for two and a-half years had been carried on therein. At last, when hope seemed to have vanished, the parents of Mary Smith, to whom the idea of parting with their only daughter was painful in the extreme, saw so clearly that it was the Lord who was calling their child to the work which He had marked out for her, that they felt they dare not any longer withhold her from it, and therefore calmly resigned their daughter into His hands. Thus it came to pass that,--after a short stay in London, and at Cowes, in the Isle of Wight, at which places she won |
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