
Born into a family marked by both martial service and profound loss, the young James Gardiner grew up under the careful guidance of a devoted mother who instilled in him a deep Christian faith. His early schooling in Linlithgow showed promise, yet his restless spirit was drawn to the soldier’s life, a path encouraged by a persuasive friend and colored by youthful bravado—he even fought three duels before reaching manhood. Though he later regretted this false sense of honor, his conversion sparked a sincere desire to temper courage with conscience.
At just fourteen, Gardiner entered the Dutch service, later receiving an ensign’s commission from Queen Anne and seeing action at the Battle of Ramilies. In a daring assault to drive the French from a churchyard, he was struck by a musket ball that passed through his mouth and neck without taking a tooth, leaving him bewildered but miraculously alive. As night fell, he lay wounded on the field, contemplating the strange providence that had spared him and beginning a slow, reflective journey toward humility and renewed faith.
Language
en
Duration
~47 minutes (45K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2020-06-30
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
Founded in London in 1799, this influential evangelical publisher helped shape 19th-century popular reading through affordable religious books, magazines, and children’s literature.
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