Capitolo 51
together, and the Mr. Fletcher was out well of the first city the
disgustedlies of the judge discovered the error.
When in the south of France, Fletcher determined to visit the
Protestants of the Mountains of Cevennes, and nothing would serve him/it but
what he should complete the long one afoot and I travels difficult, with
but a personnel in his/her hand. He disdained to appear well he/she took care of for, and on
rump, to the doors of those for which fathers were outcast them
the faith from stone to cradle. He put out in his/her his/her own way, therefore; on
the first night of his/her trips that you/they implore the use of a chair in some
humble cottage up to morning. The farmer was reluctant to admit his
strange guest, but when he had felt him speak and you/he/she had prayed, him, no
less that his/her wife and children, were stricken to torn wounds. "Me almost
refused to do an extraneous in the house" my, relative the farmer to his
neighbours, "but when he came me I found more angel that man."
Neither it was this the only person that held such opinion. Wesley says of
another visit paid by the Vicar on his/her way of doing appeal to a minister
of the district. A small crowd was assembled to the door of a house
where a mother and his/her child of recent-been born you/they were dying. The room was also
filled with neighbours. Fletcher went in, he/she softly talked to the people
present of the effects of the sin of our first parent, and pointed
them to Jesus. "Jesus!" he exclaimed, "He is able to raise the corpse,
to save him/it all from sin, to save these from death. Comes, I/you/he/she allow us to ask
Him!"
In prayer he had the marvelous liberty. The convulsions of his/her/their child stopped, the
mother became easy, and strength flowed in her as him it prayed. The
neighbourses looked fixed surprised, and silently it withdrew, while talking to low voice to one
another when without the house, "_Certainly was an angel!_"
On their trip from France to Italy the travellers reached the
Way of Appian. Fletcher stopped the carriage and descents, remarking to