B 10 To Joseph Benson
| Author | John Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | letter |
| Year | None |
| Passage ID | jw-letter-1782b-10-to-joseph-benson-000 |
| Words | 170 |
To Joseph Benson Date: NEAR LONDON, August 3, 1782. Two or three years ago, when the kingdom was in imminent danger, I made an offer to the Government of raising some men. The Secretary of War (by the King's order) wrote me word that 'it was not necessary; but if it ever should be necessary, His Majesty would let me know.' I never renewed the offer, and never intended it. But Captain Webb, without my knowing anything of the matter, went to Colonel Barr, the new Secretary of War, and renewed that offer. Colonel Barr became Paymaster of the Forces in July. See letter of July 24. The Colonel (I verily believe, to avoid his importunity) asked him how many men we could raise. But the Colonel is out of place. So the thing is at an end. I read over both the sermons; but I did not see anything materially wrong in either. I am, with love to Sister Benson, Your affectionate brother. We will consider what you propose.