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Arthur Douglas Crease Letters, Diaries and Scrapbooks

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No doubt the good citizens of London are regarding the bright moon with anything but affection but Lloyd George compared their trials with those of the men in the front line in Flanders in very apt words.
 
No doubt the good citizens of London are regarding the bright moon with anything but affection but Lloyd George compared their trials with those of the men in the front line in Flanders in very apt words.
  
Will you return the enclosed letter to mother + saw that I have read it with great interest and pleasure.  The Bishop expressed his ideas in graceful language - my affection + admiration for any particular church is steadily waning while my conviction of the necessity for a real and simple religion is growing.  We find it very hard to find out here any evidence that the Church of England or any other church is an essential part of any man's existence.  Our Church has certainly not made good notwithstanding
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Will you return the enclosed letter to mother & saw that I have read it with great interest and pleasure.  The Bishop expressed his ideas in graceful language - my affection & admiration for any particular church is steadily waning while my conviction of the necessity for a real and simple religion is growing.  We find it very hard to find out here any evidence that the Church of England or any other church is an essential part of any man's existence.  Our Church has certainly not made good notwithstanding
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BC Archives, MS-0055 Box 15 File 3 / CREASE FAMILY / Letters from Arthur Douglas Crease to his brother, Lindley Crease, 1917.

Revision as of Nov 19, 2015, 1:14:29 PM

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No doubt the good citizens of London are regarding the bright moon with anything but affection but Lloyd George compared their trials with those of the men in the front line in Flanders in very apt words.

Will you return the enclosed letter to mother & saw that I have read it with great interest and pleasure. The Bishop expressed his ideas in graceful language - my affection & admiration for any particular church is steadily waning while my conviction of the necessity for a real and simple religion is growing. We find it very hard to find out here any evidence that the Church of England or any other church is an essential part of any man's existence. Our Church has certainly not made good notwithstanding

BC Archives, MS-0055 Box 15 File 3 / CREASE FAMILY / Letters from Arthur Douglas Crease to his brother, Lindley Crease, 1917.