LORD BISHOP OF WINCHESTER
HODDER AND STOUGHTON
LONDON NEW YORK TORONTO
MCMXVI
TO
MY WIFE
AND
HELP-MATE OF MANY YEARS.
PREFACE
This little record bears the impress of the character of its writer—simple, manly, open-hearted towards man, and devout towards God.
I have read a great part of it with keen interest. Written without strain, from fresh personal experience, and with great sympathy for the officers and men of our Army, it gives a very lively picture of a chaplain's work at the Front, and the scenes and conditions under which it is done.
Mr. Kennedy's commanding stature, and fine physical manhood, gave him advantages which his fine character and genial nature used, by God's grace, to the best effect.
Having known him, and admired him from the time when I admitted him to Priest's Orders in South London, down to the day when at my request he addressed our Diocesan Conference upon the challenge given to the Church by the war, and the claims and needs of the men of our Army returning from the Front,—a subject on which he glowed with eagerness,—it is a happiness to me to bespeak for his words an attention which will certainly be its own reward.
I trust the book may do a little to lessen the loss which (to human vision) the best interests of our country and her people have suffered by his early and unexpected death.
EDW. WINTON.
Farnham Castle,
November, 1915.