Journal Vol1 3
| Author | John Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | journal |
| Year | None |
| Passage ID | jw-journal-vol1-3-101 |
| Words | 305 |
About five, Mr. Kinchin riding by a man and woman double-horsed,
the man said, “ Sir, you ought to thank God it is a fair day ; for if it
rained, you would be sadly dirty with your little horse.” Mr. Kinchin
answered, “True: and we ought to thank God for our life, and health,
and food, and raiment, and all things.” He then rode on, Mr. Fox
following; the man said, “Sir, my mistress would be glad to have some
more talk with that gentleman.” We stayed, and when they came up,
began to search one another’s hearts. They came to us again in the
evening, at our inn at Stone, where I explained both to them and many
of their acquaintance who were come together, that great truth,--Godliness hath the promise both of this life, and of that which is to come.
Tues. 21.--Between nine and ten we came to Hedgeford. Just
then, one was giving an account of a young woman, who had dropped
down dead there the day before. This gave us a fair occasion to exhort
all that were present, ‘so to number” their own “ days,” that they
aight apply their “hearts unto wisdom.”
In the afternoon one overtook us, whom we soon found more inclined
to speak than to hear. However, we spoke, and spared not. In the
evening we overtook a young man, a Quaker, who afterward came to
us, to our inn at Henley, whither he sent for the rest of his family, to
join with us in prayer: to which I added, as usual, the exposition of
the Second lesson. Our other companion went with us a mile or two
in the morning; and then not only spoke less than the day before, but
took in good part a serious caution against talkativeness and vanity.