Page:The Works of the Reverend George Whitefield, M.A., late of Pembroke-College, Oxford, and Chaplain to the Rt. Hon. the Countess of Huntingdon (1771 Volume 2).djvu/189

 affectionate respects, and entreat him to remember me in his prayers. I wrote to Mr. H lately. I herewith send you an extract of a letter I wrote on ship-board to my dear invaluable friend Mr. S, of South-Carolina. If it was judged proper, I would put it in the preface of a new edition of my Journals. I would not have any of my mistakes remain uncensured, uncorrected. I thank you for your hint about my way of preaching. I shall take care to observe it. And now, dear Sir, for the present, adieu. I am afraid I have tired you. I shall be fond of seeing you at London. Rejoicing in the prospect of seeing you in the kingdom of heaven, I subscribe myself, very dear Sir, Yours most affectionately in, G. W.     LETTER. [DCLXXXVI.] To Mr. K.

Dear Sir,                            Glasgow, Sept. 28, 1748.

WHEN I was the other day at Edinburgh, your aged father communicated a letter to me, which gave an account of your being translated from the kingdom of darkness into the kingdom of 's dear Son. As the news rejoiced the hearts of angels in heaven, no wonder that it gives satisfaction to those who desire to follow the blessed here on earth. Hoping that I am one of those, and being willing to promote his glorious gospel in every part of the world, I write you this letter at a venture, to wish you joy of your happy change, and to exhort you with full purpose of heart to cleave unto the. The more you know of Wisdom's ways, the more you will find them to be ways of pleasantness. The more you know of the blessed, the more you will find that his yoke is easy, and his burden exceeding light. Go on then, dear Sir: be strong in the grace that is in, and learn to endure hardness like a good soldier. Who knows what the may do by you in the dark parts where you are? Much good has been done among the soldiers in Flanders. What has done for your soul, I trust is only an earnest of what he intends to do for others in St. Helena. I salute your companion very heartily.