Rev A Brandram - Private

Montreal 25th March 1840

My Very Dear Friend,

Your letter of the 27th ultimo is just come to hand immediately on my finishing the enclosed. I am, I assure you, grieved that I have grieved you. Forgive me, and put the best construction on all that you have seen wrong in me towards yourself, others, and the society. I take entirely in good part all you have said, shall ponder it all, and try to turn it to the best account before God, & before you. Yet allow me to say, that I fear you have taken too seriously some of my rallying on business, and again I say, and beg of you to put the best construction on my sayings, and forgive, and overlook all my rudeness, unkindness I will not say, because I am not conscious of any, nor did I feel, nor do I entertain any. There are some of my expressions however which I doubt are objectionable. I shall look over all, and weigh all, and then make such explanations as they will admit of, and with which perhaps, when you have seen them, you may be less dissatisfied.

In regards to the parts of the letter which you have withheld, I agree fully to all you have done, and give you leave at all times to withhold whatever you may think should be withheld. I say again, Forgive me, and ever believe me,

            Very Affectionately Yours,

                                                James Thomson.

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AuthorBill Mitchell

Rev A Brandram - No 92

Montreal 28th March 1840

My Dear Friend,

I here send you enclosed a list of our Bible Societies in the Two Canadas, made out as accurately as I well can. I am not sure that it will reach you in time for your Report of this year. If your Appendix is printed in succession after your Report, and that after reading it at the Annual Meeting, then list may well be in time. But if your Appendix is printed before your Annual Meeting, as I have some impression that it is at times, then list will be too late. – Have the goodness to inform me what is the latest date at which you should have such notices as this, and I will endeavour to arrange accordingly. – I believe I have not sufficiently kept in view the mentioning from time to time the new societies that are formed for their publication in your Monthly Extracts. There is some difficulty in making out correct statements of this kind as several societies actually new are in places where societies formerly existed, and whose names have been already registered. But I shall try to do the best I can in the case, and shall give you fuller notices.

            I remain, My Dear Friend,

                        Very Truly Yours,

                                    James Thomson

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AuthorBill Mitchell

Montreal 7th May 1840

My Dear Sir,

I transmit to you the following sums [below], which I beg you to enter in the names of the respective parties.

This money is in the hands of the Treasurer of the Montreal Bible Society, who will transmit you a Bill for the entire amount. He confidently expects that the exchange will turn out considerably in our favour in a very short time. I therefore put this letter for you into his hands, as I leave Montreal this day. He will extend each item above in sterling, and send the Bill as the amount may be. Be so good however to enter and notice the items severally, stating the sources of the same.

You will please to observe, that of the first item, £13:18: 1 is paid for Books from the General Depot, and the rest is for Books received from Mr Smart. Of the third item £11:19:5 is to account with General Depot, and the rest to account with Mr Smart. The fifth item is entered in Mr Milne's account of the General Depot £13:13:0, he having deducted the exchange between Upper & Lower Canada, and postage.

            I remain,

                        My Dear Sir,

                                    Very Sincerely Yours,

                                                            James Thomson.

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AuthorBill Mitchell

Rev A Brandram No. 93

St John's,  New Brunswick, 1st June 1840

My Dear Friend,

I have the pleasure of announcing to you that I arrived to stay in the city and province from which I now write. The object of this letter will be to state some things that have occurred from the date of my last down to the present time.

During the month of April, with part of March, my time was occupied in the general business of the Society in Montreal, and in correspondence with the societies in the Upper Province, together with my arrangements preparatory to removing from that quarter to the place where I now am.

On the 27th April we had a special public meeting of the Montreal Society in one of the Scotch churches of that city. The objects of that meeting, the way in which it was conducted, and the Resolutions passed, I need not here enter upon, as I understand that the Secretary communicated officially with you in regard to these soon after the meeting took place.

In planning my route from Canada to this quarter, my first intention was to pass from Montreal through Albany in the United States and Boston, from whence to St. John's there is a steam boat passing weekly. But about the time I was ready to move there was a general understanding from notices published in all the newspapers, the first steamer of the New Line from Liverpool to Halifax was to sail on the 25th April, and which the vessel was forthwith to proceed from Halifax to Pictou, and to ply between that place and Quebec. I was advised therefore by some of our Bible friends to go through Quebec to Pictou by that conveyance, in preference to passing through the States. I took the advice given, and on the 8th of May I left Montreal. On my way down I visited some parts of the French population accompanied by Mr. Hibbard, and of which I shall give you some account presently. When I reached Quebec, I learned that different accounts had come and respecting the sailing of the steamer from England, and that she was not expected in Quebec till towards the end of June. To wait for the arrival of this vessel would have been to lose much time, and accordingly I resolved to return to Montreal, and proceed through the States as at first projected. On the 19th therefore I left Quebec, reached Montreal on the evening of the 20th, and early on the 21st pursued my way into the States. One of my fellow passengers on the last mentioned day, in the steam boats and on the railroad, was the Bishop of Montreal, whose general residence is in Quebec. We had much conversation together, and of a very friendly nature. I of course tried him on the subject of our Bible Societies, and invited him to cooperate with us through his patronage. I did not succeed in the way I wished, but our conversation led me to see how friendly he is to the object in which we are engaged, notwithstanding of certain things that operate against his joining our ranks. – In Burlington, where we passed the night, I had the pleasure of seeing Dr. Hopkins, the Bishop of Vermont, who was present, I think, and spoke, at your anniversary last year. – From Burlington I passed on through Troy and Northampton. In the last mentioned place we visited the tomb of Brainerd, who died, I may say an old man, at the age of 30 as marked on the stone. We then went to Boston where we arrived on the evening of the 28th ultimo. On the 30th we sailed from that port, and this morning, as above noticed, we came to this city, giving thanks to the Father of mercies for his gracious protections and blessings to us on this and on our many voyages, journeys, and movements.

I have mentioned above that in company with Mr. Hibbard I visited some parts inhabited by French Canadians, who are all, as you are aware, Roman Catholics. In my various letters from Canada I have scarcely mentioned Mr. Hibbard's labours, and I omitted them, not because they were of little moment, which they are not, but because I understood that Mr. Wilkes corresponded particularly with you on the subject, and because his monthly journals were in several instances sent you. I am sure you would all be much gratified in perusing these journals, in which you would see how God was making openings among the people hitherto impervious to the reception of the Holy Scriptures. These openings have been increasing in number, and in interest and extent, of late, through the gracious blessing of our Heavenly Father in moving them by his Spirit through the instrumentality of Mr. Hibbard's labours and otherwise. We all greatly esteem Mr. Hibbard as a faithful, zealous, wise, and pious labourer in the Bible cause, and know not where another could be found exactly like him. I mention these things the more particularly, as he is acting under your own immediate auspices, and through means of your bounty. You will, I hope, concede to our friends in Montreal the continued services of Mr. Hibbard, for which they will be very thankful, and through which the French Canadians will be greatly benefited as they have hitherto been.

I have long indulged a wish to make a little tour with Mr. Hibbard among the French Canadians, but my various occupations elsewhere and otherwise had still stood in the way to hinder me. My going down however from Montreal to Quebec on the occasion before noticed gave me the opportunity I had long wished for. I made arrangements with Mr. Hibbard that he should meet me at Sorel, and that we should travel together inland on towards Three Rivers. Late in the evening of the 8th May I reached Sorel, where I met with Mr. Hibbard according to appointment. Next day we traveled on to the town of St. Francis where we called on the Priest, and had some very friendly conversation with him. You will be pleased to learn that he expressed himself well disposed to the circulation of the New Testament among his people. The Schoolmaster, himself Roman Catholic and all his pupils, has also given his opinion in favour of the use of the New Testaments, and has received them into his school most gladly where they are daily used. Afterwards we visited the parish of La Baie, and called on the Priest there, who in like manner expressed himself entirely favourable to the reception of the New Testament by his people. From thence we went to the town of Nicolet where we visited the Curé and the Rector of the college, for there is an extensive seminary their chiefly, I may say, for the training of Priests. Both the Curé and the Rector spoke distinctly in favour of the circulation and use of the New Testaments among the people and among the students. The next Priest we visited was the Grand Vicar of Three Rivers Mr. Cook whom I mentioned to you in a former letter. I had heard that some change had taken place in his mind, and that he had publicly prohibited the use of New Testaments. I mentioned this to him, but he said he had not done so, but wished and encouraged the circulation of the New Testament as before. I visited the school also, and found the New Testaments were used in it as when I was formerly there.

I have thus enumerated five Roman Catholic French-Canadian Priests who have openly approved of the use of the New Testament among their people, and two Schoolmasters who use the Scriptures as a school book. This is a matter of great consideration, and should called forth from us devout thanksgivings to God who has made this movement towards his kingdom among these people. We here up on the spot necessarily see and feel all this matter more than you who are at such a distance, and have the world under your charge. The friends of the Bible Society in Montreal, I am happy to say, do see, feel, and acknowledge the hand of God in these providential openings, and feel animated by them to persevere in their endeavours in favour of the French Canadians.

I should mention before I close this subject, the Priest at La Baie stated that your edition of De Sacy was not entirely conform to an authorised Paris edition of the same which he had in his possession.

I mentioned the village of St. Francis as one of the places which we visited. That village is  inhabited by Indians of the Abenaki tribe. The greater part of them are Roman Catholics, and under the Priest whom we saw there. Some of them however are Protestants, and under very interesting circumstances, and not Protestants only, but also true disciples of our Lord Jesus Christ. Several of these Indians have received a good education at Dartmouth College in New Hampshire in the States, through a donation from Scotland made many years ago on condition of the Indians being taught to the extent of its annual value. One of these whilst studying human learning there, received instruction which flesh and blood could not give, and was brought fully to the knowledge of the Gospel and under its influence. He was in due time regularly ordained as a minister, and for several years past, amidst many difficulties and oppositions, he has been diligently engaged in preaching to his countrymen. He has been the means of bringing several of them to the knowledge of the truth, and of combining them in a little church, where they are walking in the fear of the Lord, and in the comfort of the Holy Ghost. I addressed these Indians, and a little Bible Society was formed among them, which you can register as a branch of your Montreal Auxiliary. The name of it is the St. Francis Bible Society: its president is the Rev. P.P. Osunkhirhine, the Indian minister mentioned: the Treasurer is James Poor, a white man, for the red and white man are here again combined in your service: and the Secretary is James Joseph Annance another Indian.

This James Joseph Annance is, as I have just said, an Indian, and of this tribe. He is one of those who have been at Dartmouth College, where he studied for five years, and acquired a pretty extensive knowledge of Latin and Greek. He is a member of the little church mentioned, and is considered by Mr. Osunkhirhine and the others as truly pious. Having these qualifications it was thought desirable that he should engage in the translation of a portion of the New Testament into the Abenaki tongue. He is to begin forthwith. His chief difficulty for commencing was in the want of a Greek Lexicon. I furnished him with one, namely, Ewing's, which will suit his purpose well. This is the very volume that your Mr. Mills sent me out to Mexico, along with Gibb's Hebrew Lexicon. The latter was left in Mexico to be of use in the translating of the Scriptures there. The former I did not then see a need of, and it has been in my possession ever since. By a combination of unexpected circumstances it was on hand at the present occasion, and came in exactly to meet a case of need. Please let Mr Mills know of the appropriation of his book.

In Quebec during the short time I was there, I met a sub-committee of the Society which was appointed to consider the subject of a fuller distribution of the Scriptures in that quarter. On that subcommittee were the chief persons with whom I had had a little official misunderstanding . That however did not at all affect us in our personal and official duties and friendship. Our meeting and our mutual communications in our great concern were all most frank and brotherly as fellow servants. This, I may say, was my last act in Canada, and I felt truly glad in the sweet intercourse that reigned, and doubly so from the little misunderstanding before noticed. God is the Author of Peace, and may peace ever rule among all his servants.

I have only further to notice, that I left at Montreal a case to be shipped for you in the Great Britain, containing 11 copies of De Sacy's French Bible with the Apocrypha. I found these there, and I thought it best to return them to you. There were 12, but I kept one for private use. – The case also contains some books in the Indian languages for your library. I enclose a list of them.

Please address all your letters for me to Halifax till further notice.

                                    I remain, My Dear Friend,

                                                Very Truly Yours,

                                                            James Thomson.

 

Books in the North American Indian languages,

sent to the British and Foreign Bible Society, 5th May 1840

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1.The Book of Common Prayer, and Administration of the Sacraments, and other Rites and Ceremonies of the Church, according to the use of the Church of England: together with a Collection of Occasional Prayers, and divers sentences of Holy Scripture, necessary for Knowledge and Practice: in the Mohawk language: prepared and published by the Society for the Propagation of the Gospel in Foreign Parts. – To which is added the Gospel of St. Mark in the Mohawk language, translated by Captain Brant, an Indian chief of that nation. – London 1787.

2. The Gospel of St. Matthew, in the Mohawk language, translated by A.Hill and J.A.Wilkes. – New York 1831.

3. The Gospel of St. Mark, with other portions of Scripture, in the Mohawk language: translated by Captain Brant. – New York 1829.

4. The Gospel of St. Luke, in the Mohawk language: translated by H.A.Hill.– New York 1827.

5. The Gospel of St. John, in the Mohawk language. – New York 1818.

6. The First Epistle to the Corinthians, in the Mohawk language: translated by H.A.Hill, and J.A.Wilkes. – New York 1834.

7. A Collection of Hymns in the Mohawk language. – New York 1832.

8. The New Testament, in the Chippeway language, translated by Captain James. – Albany, N.Y. 1833.

9. The Book of Genesis in the Chippeway language, translated by the Rev. Peter Jones, and John Jones. – Toronto 1835.

10. The Catechism of the Church of England, in the Chippeway language, translated by Mrs. McMurray. – Toronto 1835.

11. Part of the Discipline of the Wesleyan Methodist Church in Canada, in the Chippeway language: translated by the Rev. Peter Jones. – Toronto 1835.

12. The Speller and Interpreter in the Chippeway (alias Ojibway), and English languages: by the Rev. James Evans, Wesleyan missionary. – New York 1837.

13. A Collection of Hymns, in the Chippeway  language: translated by the Rev. James Evans, and George Henry. – New York 1837.

14. Sketch of the Grammar of the Chippeway language, to which is added a Vocabulary in Chippeway and English: by John Summerfield, alias Sahgahjewagahbahweh. – Cazenovia 1834.

15. The History of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ, comprehending all that the Four Evangelists have recorded concerning Him: by the Rev. Samuel Liebarkhun, in the Delaware language: translated by the Rev. David Zeisberger, missionary of the United Brethren. – New York 1821.

16. A Spelling and Reading Book, in the Delaware language: with the Vocabulary in Delaware and English: containing also some short historical accounts from the Old Testament, with other useful instruction for children: by the Rev. David Zeisberger. Philadelphia 1806.

17. The Three Epistles of the apostle St. John, in the Delaware language: translated by the Rev. C.S.Denke. – New York 1818.

18. The Spelling and Reading Book in the Abenaki language: by the Rev. P.P. Osunkhirhine, alias Wzekhilain, an Indian of that nation. – Boston 1830.

19. A Small Collection of Hymns, in the Abenaki language: translated by the Rev. P.P. Osunkhirhine. – Boston 1830.

20. The Ten Commandments, and other Portions of Scripture, with Scott's exposition, in the Abenaki language: by the Rev. P.P. Osunkhirhine. – Boston 1830.

 

Mr William Hitchin

Saint John,  New Brunswick, 16th June 1840

My Dear Sir,

I write you at present to advise a Bill drawn on the 6th instant for Fifty Pounds at 30 days sight, and payable to L.H. Deveber Esq. of this place. This sum you will please to carry to my Private Account.

I should, as you perceive by dates, have advised this Bill earlier. But I delayed in expectation of doing it in the postscript to a letter from Mr. Paterson who was daily expecting a letter from Earl Street which he intended to acknowledge immediately. He had not received this letter when I went to Fredericton, and finding today on my return that he had not received it, I write without further delay, and hope my letter will be with you in full time.

On the 5th instant I received a letter from Mr. Jackson containing four duplicate invoices, one of which was of the Books, sent to this city by the Neptune. The original invoice of these for Mr. Paterson did not then come to hand, nor did it by the May packet which arrived soon after, nor has it yet come.

On the 11th instant in Fredericton, I received Mr. Brandram's letter of the 5th May with a copy of Mr. Hale's, and this day I have received the Record Newspaper of the 7th May.

Be so good as state to Mr. Brandram and Mr. Jackson what I have here said bearing on their departments.

Please address all letters for me from this time, until further notice, to Halifax.

            I remain, My Dear Sir, Truly Yours,

                                                            James Thomson.

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AuthorBill Mitchell

Rev A Brandram No 94

Halifax, Nova Scotia, 3rd July 1840

My Dear Friend,

My last letter to you was written on the first of June, the day on which I arrived in New Brunswick from Canada, and was confined to objects previous and up to that day. The present letter will therefore be occupied with occurrences since that date.

Your agent has an occasion for many a place to write you of friendly reception and treatment he has met with, for your sake and in honour to your cause, but nowhere has he received as friendly a reception than that experienced on his entering the Province of New Brunswick. I had written from Quebec to the Secretary of the Bible Society in St. John, stating my intention of being with them on the 1st June by the Steam Boat from Boston. In a few minutes after we came to the wharf  I was introduced to Mr. Paterson the Secretary and to Members of the Committee, who informed me that at a late meeting they had been deputised to wait on me, to congratulate me on my arrival, and to direct me to a suitable lodging which been looked out for me. The Hon. Judge Parker the President of the Society came also on board a little after, and with the same kind intentions. One of the party forthwith conducted us to the lodging house, where as soon as we were at leisure we gave thanks to our God for our safe arrival and for these encouragements. If Paul thanked God and took courage when he met the Brethren at Appii Forum sent from Rome to receive him, you will not wonder that your poor agent should do the same, standing in need as he continually does of every help and strength. But I mention these things as indicating a high respect for your Society, and a great readiness to cooperate with you in your extensive work here and elsewhere.

Soon after we were got into our lodging were visited by the Rev. Mr. Paterson one of our West India friends whom we met with in Demerara, and afterwards my several others connected with the Society including the ministers of the different denominations in the place, all of whom seem lively in the Bible cause.

Arrangements had been made for a meeting of the Committee of the New Brunswick Bible Society on the 3rd and for a public meeting on the 4th. The committee meeting was held in Judge Parker's house, where 17 members assembled, and from 8 o'clock to 10:30 engaged in treating the various objects brought before. Several measures were arranged for in the way of increased exertion, and there seemed to be a lively desire in all towards advancement and extension in the Bible work. A resolution was passed a supply all the steam boats connected with the port, and all the wood boats on the River St. John, with the Scriptures, 3 for each of the former, (1 for each cabin and 1 for the steerage) and for the wood boats 1 Bible each. I urged the committee to use every effort with all speed to get the Scriptures into every house on the one hand, and on the other to get something out of every house for the Bible cause.

On the evening of the 4th our public meeting took place which was well attended, and we had the pleasure of seeing all the ministers of the place of the several denominations, all of whom are warm friends of the society. Judge Parker opened the meeting, and particularly expressed the gratitude and deep interest himself and the whole society felt towards you and your attentions in visiting them in the person of one of your agents. The rest of the speaking was led me, and I endeavoured to improve the occasion for the advancement of our sacred object.

After the public meeting I attended some subcommittees which met for special purposes, and had also many opportunities of conversing with several members of the society individually. I am glad to say that from these various opportunities of seeing our friends here publicly and privately, I judge very favourably of our cause in this place. The Lord enable them to carry into effect their benevolent intentions, and keep them from growing weary in well doing.

On the 5th the Books in the Neptune arrived, and I received a letter from Mr. Jackson of the 3rd April, with a duplicate of four invoices. – I send you a newspaper with some account of our public meeting.

I should not close these notices without stating that the Rev. Mr. Robinson one of the Baptist ministers here is very warm in your cause, and though not quite satisfied with your decision in the Baptist case, is resolved to adhere to you and to induce his brethren to do the same if he can. I explained matters to him, which made him see things more favourable than he had seen them before. He is about to attend the Conference of the Baptist ministers at Liverpool in Nova Scotia, and intends then to plead for you should anything be said about separation or another society. His colleague Mr. Harris in St. John is alike friendly. These views and feelings in these times are gratifying. And I may here state also on this head, and more particularly when I have before done perhaps, the Baptist ministers in the Canadas are with hardly an exception most friendly to us, and from several of them has your servant received much kindness.

On the 9th of June I went up the River St. John to Fredericton, distance about 80 miles. As soon as the steamboat arrived, Mr. Taylor the President of the Society there came on board, and kindly conducted Mrs. Thomson and myself to his own house where we were courteously entertained during the week we stopped there. On the day following a meeting of the Committee was held, which was attended and 15 members. At this meeting the field of the Society was surveyed, and arrangements were entered into for cultivating it better than it has yet been done. They say the soil, in many places at least, is good, and that a profitable return might be expected from Bible culture and seed. One part surveyed was the North East Coasts of the Province, where I learned the greater portion of the inhabitants are  French and of course Roman Catholics. It was agreed to write you for some 200 De Sacy French Testaments and a few Bibles. Respecting this you will be informed by the Secretary in his order for books which is soon to be sent. – I may mention however that as I intend to visit Miramichi in September, it would be well for you to send on some French De Sacy Testaments and Bibles there, unless the Society in that place has a supply already. You will know probably by your books whether it is likely they have a supply or not.  

On Thursday the 11th of June we held a public meeting in the Scotch Church, which was pretty well attended. I trust our assembling on this occasion will prove serviceable to the great cause. A resolution was passed pledging to new and greater exertions, which I hope will be duly realised. There is a good spirit in this Society, and it is probable that before long it will be considerably extended. The Governor is the Patron of the Society, and is very friendly towards it. I saw His Excellency at different times, and obtained from him some useful information respecting the Indians and the French settlers.

On the 15th June a meeting was held in the Scotch Church of ladies only, with one exception, for the purpose of forming a Bible Society among them, and it was accordingly formed. I give you the names of the office bearers that you may record them: Mrs. Parker, President; Mrs. Scott, Treasurer; Mrs. Smithers, Secretary. This Association is of course connected with the Fredericton Bible Society. I give you here also the names of the office bearers of the Fredericton Bible Society, as, for want of later information, they are stated incorrectly in your last report. They are His Excellency Sir John Harvey K.C.H. Patron; James Taylor Esq. M.P.P. President; C.Fisher M.P.P. Treasurer; H.Fisher and A.Smithers, Secretaries. Please also to make the following correction, in the column of patrons and presidents, for the N.B. Bible Society at St. John. Instead of John M.Wilmot Esq. put "His Excellency Sir John Harvey K.C.H." and the "Hon. Judge Parker."

In Fredericton, on the 11th June, I received your letter of the 5th of may, I bless God with all my heart that my ways have not been found contrary to your ways in the matter adjudicated. I observe your excellent observations about a thing that is here being blamed when an exactly similar thing that is old escapes censure. I would not, I assure you, have given my name to the F.C.M.S. had I for a moment thought it would be seen in Quebec as it turned out to be. And how could I imagine it would so appear there when several members of the Church of England were

its warmest supporters in Montreal, and with whom hand-in-hand I went, and who had said everything that was done in the matter. And further, as soon as ever I found there was a serious objection entertained about me and it in Quebec I offered frankly and fully to withdrawal. But they were not satisfied with this, but would record a resolution on it, and so onwards it passed until it came to you, at which I was very sorry, as you have plenty to trouble you besides. But I have gained instruction from this occurrence I hope in more ways than one.

[I might perhaps, in closing this subject, say a word about Mr. Wilkes's paragon agent, as I might perhaps lay claim to be just such a nonsuch: for in truth, I am not, I may say, and have not been for years, in connection with any particular section of the at the present divided church, but am and act as a Catholic in the ancient sense of the word. I go to, and occasionally commune with all gospel churches, and have preached in all pulpits except in that of the Church of England: but even there too at times I have held forth biblically at least from the altar and from the desk; and I may perhaps get one step higher some day, and of this you shall hear when it may take place.]

In regard to Mr. Lappelletrie's case I would state that we were unwilling to say to you anything about the matter till we should see more, for we were always in hope of things being better; and when I say we, I mean the Committee of the Montreal Bible Society and myself. His resignation took place in my absence. I did not forward to you a copy of my letter to Major Christie which I had prepared, as I was unwilling to give you additional trouble, and thought my letter was not perhaps necessary. I intended to blot out what I had said of sending it to you, but forgot at closing out the letter. I now send this copy which happens to be to hand.

Your letter to Mr. Wilkes, which you say I would see, I have of course not seen, as I had left Montreal before it reached that place. If it contains anything particular regarding me, please let me have a copy of. – I suppose I must have written you loosely about the Eastern Clerical Bible Society, but have not the copy at hand for examination. There is no other object combined with this Bible Society. The same persons are associated in our objects, yet the objects themselves are not conmingled but entirely distinct.

On the 17th June there was held in St. John a committee meeting of the Ladies Bible Association of that place. New arrangements were entered into which we thought improvements, and calculated to make this Bible Auxiliary more productive. We met in the house of the Treasurer who is a very worthy lady. Mrs. Ferguson is 81 years of age, but her activity and Bible animation would be indicated by transposing the digits into 18. Her husband is 86, and is full of the hope of what in all probability he will soon enjoy, namely, the blessings promised in the Bible to those who die in the Lord.

At the close of the 18th June, at midnight, I left St. John, and on the morning of the 20th arrived in Halifax. A few hours after arrival I attended a meeting of the Committee of the Society here, when we arranged for a public meeting on the 29th. On the evening of that day we had a very full meeting, and many could not get admittance from want of room. His Excellency, Sir Colin Campbell the Governor was in the chair. It was the Annual Meeting of the Society which had been deferred in expectation of my coming. Our meeting was kept up till a latish hour, but nobody seemed tired. We had the great pleasure of having with us at this meeting no less than six clergyman of the Church of England, four of them residents, and two of them attached to other places. This was as it ought to be. The Church of England which honours the Scriptures so much in the public reading of them should always be the most prominent in the Bible cause. All the other ministers of the place were also with us. Everybody agreed that this was the best Bible meeting that had ever been held in Halifax. From what I have seen at this public meeting, and in different com. meetings, together with what has come before me in private intercourse, I feel disposed to augur well of our future operations here. I send you a newspaper in which you will see some account of our anniversary, and a schedule operations pointed out for me for one month.

I must not forget to say, that the first reception and the general treatment your agent has met with in Halifax had equalled and perhaps exceeded any former attentions paid you in him. Your letter No.2 arrived here from Montreal on the 23rd instant. On the 16th I received the Record newspaper of the 7th May.

Glory be to God for your prosperity.

                                                            James Thomson.

Rev A Brandram No 95

Halifax, Nova Scotia, 3rd August 1840

My Dear Friend,

Towards  the close of my last letter to you, dated the third ultimo, I referred to a newspaper I sent for a sketch of prospective operations for one month. These then prospective labours, are now past labours. I have just returned from my tour, and now proceed to give you some account of occurrences in it. You will see in the list that there are 14 places marked. Meetings have been held at all of them, and all of them what encouraging meetings and well attended, except in two or three cases where the notices have not been properly given out. At Horton, Cornwallis, Yarmouth, Liverpool, and Chester societies existed, though most of them had well nigh fallen off, or ceased to act altogether for some time. Cornwallis and Yarmouth were in action, and had not ceased their labours. Perhaps the existence of the Ladies Bible Association in Yarmouth, and its active labours headed by Mrs. Fletcher who is warm and zealous in our cause, has contributed not a little to keep things alive in that place. Mrs. Fletcher has now retired from the Society, as she is going to Boston to reside. Her place is supplied by Mrs. Kelly, in whose hands I trust the Association will flourish, and this judgment I form from conversations I have had with her, and with her coadjutors. When this office fell into Mrs. Kelly's hands several ladies sent messages to her, each saying, "Be sure you keep a district for me in your arrangements." This feeling, message, and expression indicate a good state of things in our Bible cause among the ladies of Yarmouth, and I mention it to their honour. Their further praises they must proclaim themselves by their further deeds. – At Windsor, Aylesford, Bridgetown, Annapolis, Digby, Weymouth, Barrington, Shelburne, and Lunenburg new societies were formed, and all of them in connexion with the Nova Scotia Bible Society at Halifax. The other societies that were dormant, have been reorganised, if not new formed.

In all the places visited there was a very strong expression and feelings towards you for sending a visitor among them, and they responded readily to the call made to them to cooperate earnestly with you in your great work. The ministers of the Scotch Church whom I met with, and also the Baptist and Wesleyan ministers gave us in every instance their warmest support. The ministers of the Church of England were also all of them friendly to us, but only a few of them gave us their active assistance, the major portion of them adhere closely to the Christian Knowledge Society, and see it to be their duty to give all the means they can afford, and all their active labours to that institution. In all cases however they attended our meetings, and were courteous to your agent, and wished us success in our great general purpose of diffusing the Scriptures over the entire world in all tongues. Opposition to us, or obstacles thrown in our way were not met with, but friendliness instead. This is a subject for our gratitude, and we may be encouraged by it to hope that the only remaining step in our favor will in due time be taken, and we shall yet see, I trust, all united in this divine operation of giving the Holy Scriptures to all everywhere.

The Society in Liverpool has ceased to act as an auxiliary, and has become a branch of the Nova Scotia Bible Society. The Society at Yarmouth still retains its position as an auxiliary.

Between Weymouth and Yarmouth there is a pretty large settlement of French. These people were found there at the conquest of this country by the English. They still speak the French language, are all Roman Catholics, and in most respects resemble the French Canadians. You may be sure that I would feel some interest in such a people, and that I would try to induce them to get and to use the Holy Scriptures. With these views I called on the Priest, the Abbé Sigogne, who is an old man of 76, a native of France, and who came here at the French Revolution. He received me with French courteousness, and was very frank in his communications. He told me that several copies of the Scriptures were in the hands of his people, and that one person at least in each house in the settlement was able to read. The number of families is about 600. Some time ago Mr. Dawson of Pictou sent him some French Bibles and Testaments, but he was not willing to distribute them among his people, because they were of a Protestant version. I mentioned to him that we had De Sacy's version which he could have. He was much pleased when I stated this, and at once signified his readiness to put copies of these into the hands of the people, and expressed a wish for some. I asked him how many he could wish me to send him, and he said 100 Testaments and 12 Bibles. All these, he thinks, he will be able to sell to his people at a fair price about equal to the cost. He expressed the same objections to the general use of the Old Testament that the French Canadian priests did; but is not unwilling to put copies of the whole Bible into the hands of such persons as are somewhat advanced in Scripture knowledge.

I am not sure whether there is in the depot here supply of the De Sacy version equal to meet this order, as I am only just returned from my tour, and have not time to make the proper inquiries as the packet sails today. But I rather think there is not a supply. I would therefore beg of you to make up this little order at Earl Street where you can do it more exactly as to the kinds I shall mention. Say then 100 De Sacy's French Testament 12mo ― 10 De Sacy's Bibles in 8vo and 10 ditto 12mo, and if you have them at hand 5 ditto 18mo. I think I have seen all these kinds of Bibles among our Montreal stock, though they are not mentioned in your Report. I would send this additional supply of Bibles and of the different kinds as an inducement to the Priest and the people in regard to their circulation. You might put in also been Testaments of a smaller size as a kind of attractive, and I think it would also tend to advantage if you would put in 10 Testaments in French and English. I am not aware of what version of the French your French and English Testament is. But it if it is not De Sacy's then a couple will be enough.

 These books you will please pack up in a small case, and address them to Abbé Sigogne, Clare, to the care of a Amos Baker Esq. Yarmouth. Mr. Baker is Treasurer to the Yarmouth Bible Society. If you can send them out to direct to Yarmouth it will be better, otherwise they can be sent through Halifax.

I should not omit saying that the Abbé Sigogne, who lived six years in London, was not at all satisfied with you London people for always saying that the Catholics are opposed to the reading of the Scriptures. In his father's house, he said, in France there had always been a Bible open to all in the house. As to himself, he noticed that he reads one whole Bible through every year, and the New Testament twice; and this he has done ever since he was a priest, a period of 55 years.

On the whole of this tour I have been accompanied by Mr. Richardson, Agent of the Colonial Church Society, who was ever ready to plead our Bible cause either in public or private. Our travelling together in most cases lessened the expense of conveyances by one half. But we had some difficulty at times in procuring conveyances; and through the misfortune of a restive horse we had one hot day to walk 10 miles, and from a similar cause on another occasion we had to make our way for some miles in a cart drawn by a couple of oxen.

                        I remain, My Dear Friend,

                                    Very Truly Yours,

                                                James Thomson.

P.S. On my return to Halifax I found your letter of the 20th of May, and am cheered by its cheering strain: and pleasing strains, I trust, will be our future eternal enjoyment in our Lord Jesus Christ. Therefore let us now run with patience and joy the race appointed for us in this world of sin and trouble.

 

 

Rev A Brandram - No 96

Halifax, Nova Scotia, 12th August 1840.

My Dear Friend,

On the eve of setting out on another tour, I write you a few lines, and leave my letter to go with the first steamer on the 3rd September.

You know that the period of two years assigned for the completion of these British American Provinces is now near an end. The burthen of this letter therefore is, – What am I to do? Am I to continue in them for another season? Or am I to return to England towards the close of this year? Or, what ought I to do?

Having made these inquiries, allow me humbly to state what has been passing through my own mind up on the matter. I have thought that if the Society would allow me to lie by in the ensuing winter for four months to attend to some little business of my own, and then in the months succeeding to commence my visitations, I should be able to get pretty well through the whole by the fall season of the year. This plan I submit to you with all respect and deference, and beg you to give me your verdict and decision upon it. The four months leave will be at my own cost, by a deduction of salary of the time. – Probably this letter will reach you about the middle of September; and if it were not to hurry you too much, I should feel glad you would write me as to what I should do by the mail of the 3rd October.

I lately received a letter from Mr. Poinsett, Secretary of War, Washington, stating that my petition for leave to pass Bibles and Testaments through the States duty-free to Canada might likely not be attended to during the present session of Congress. At the same time I had communications from Montreal to say that the Governor General had refused to remit duties on Bibles as former Governors had done. These circumstances combined have induced me to write to Messrs. Goodline & Co. to ship for London the French Testaments in their hands. They will write Mr. Jackson when they send them.

At our meeting of the Bible Society and Liverpool on ... ultimo the sum of £28:10:0 was put into my hands to remit to you, being the windings .... in Auxiliary on their commencing as a Branch of the Nova Scotia Bible Society. It is somewhat difficult to send a bill for this sum, and the easiest way therefore will be to charge it to my Private Account. Please to communicate this to Mr. Hitchin. At 13½ premium on our par (it is 109 for 100,) which is the market rate, this sum will be £22:11:11 sterling. I should like, for particular reasons, that this amount with inserted in your books into two items, thus: –

-- the Liverpool Bible Society, Nova Scotia,              £12:13:9

--                ditto                     by Mr. Barry                    9:18:2.

Our friends in Liverpool were ashamed of having done less for you, and the more so because you have liberally supplied them usually with reports etc. As a sort of acknowledgement for the Reports Mr. Barry collected this sum of £9:18:2 from those who received them.

            I remain, Truly Yours,

                                    James Thomson.

Posted
AuthorBill Mitchell

Rev A Brandram No 97

Bathurst, Bay of Chaleur, New Brunswick, 29th September 1840

My Dear Friend,

I sit down now to write you on a spot farther to the North than any on which I have heretofore been on this continent. You will see by the map that this place lies more to the North than Quebec, which was my farthest northerly point before. Across this Bay, and out of the window from where I am now writing you, I can see a part of Canada, and I feel a disposition to visit the place I thus see; but I am obliged to refrain myself at present on account of the advanced season, and the work I have already marked out towards the South. I have obtained much information here respecting the parts that lie on the North side of the Bay, and about its Western extremity, and perceive that there is a field for Bible Society work in these several parts, that would require some weeks to attend to it in a proper manner. I may also at the same time mention, that there will remain several places in this Province which I shall not be able to reach this season, and there are places likewise in Nova Scotia that should be visited, but cannot at present. There is in truth very ample work for another season in these two Provinces.

I had made arrangements for starting from Halifax on the present tour on the 15th August, and was actually on my way on that day when on a sudden the Acadia[1] burst upon us, and thus detained the mail with which I was passing along through the streets. I could not get off till Monday, through the vehicles being occupied with the Acadia's passengers, and had difficulty therefore to reach in time my first appointment. It was at a place called Gay's River. When I did reach the spot, I found that we had but a very small assembly. The reason was obvious, the people were busy in a more than common degree in their fields with the hay crop. This same full occupation of the Farmers at the period I found to interfere with our Bible operations a good deal in other places as I moved along. Nevertheless in some and several parts we had good meetings, and what I might call very good, taking into consideration this busy time of year. The people regretted in most places then visited that the meetings should have been at that inconvenient time for them, as it hindered a manifestation of the true state of feeling in the Bible cause which they knew to exist. My only excuse and defence were that I must needs travel and make my visitations both in season and out of season.

My course in this tour, within Nova Scotia, lay first in a northerly direction towards Pictou, and then Easterly as far as Guysborough. The names of the Societies formed in these quarters, with their office bearers are as follows [see below].

Arrangements were also made for forming Societies in the following places:― Gay's River, Lower Musquodoboit, Maher's Grant,  Lower Souiac. When these are actually formed, I shall notice them, with their office bearers.

During the whole of my tour through the parts above named I am happy to say that there was a very general manifestation of a lively interest in the Bible cause, and a readiness to cooperate with you in it. There were other places in the same quarter which might also have been visited had time permitted, and where promising societies might have been formed, I believe. But I was unwillingly obliged to leave them at the time, and until some future occasion should it ever occur.

The kindnesses of our Bible friends in these quarters were exhibited towards your agent in various ways, and not least in helping him forward on his journey by vehicles free of expense. One gentleman in addition to such help, took me aside, and putting a gold dobloon into my hand, said, "That is to help you on your journeyings." This was Mr Matheson of the neighbourhood of Pictou, and from who you have received within these few years, through Mr Dawson, the sum of £50 sterling once and again. Him

The Bible Society at Upper Souiac of which the Rev. James Smith is President and Secretary has been in existence several years. A few years ago it fell off or away, but lately it has been again set on its feet, and there seems to be a determination formed by supporters and shall never again fall down, but be kept on its feet, and also made to move onwards.

The Auxiliary and Pictou has, I think, received a profitable impulse from this visitation, and from the branches appended to it, as you will see in the above list. The Secretary Mr. Dawson, is a very efficient office bearer.

In New Glasgow there was formerly a very warm and active friend of our Society, but he has gone to his reward. This was the late Rev. Dr. MacGregor. His four sons are in that quarter, and his Bible mantle seems to have fallen upon each of them, for they, each and all very active supporters of our cause. One of them drove me a good distance in his vehicle, once and again, and a third time.

At Guysborough the ladies presented an address to you in your representative which was flattering to us all. The newspapers also have said many favourable things of our work and of ourselves. I have not sent you the address, nor any of the newspapers, but content myself with this notice.

In Truro I found that had been a Society formed at an early period, I believe in 1810. It has however been extinct for at least the last six years, and the present Society therefore is a new one. The Rev. Mr. Waddell was the President and active promoter of the Society. He is now however, and has been for some time past, superannuated, and partly through a paralytic affection. Unable to move himself he was wheeled to and into the meeting in his chair, and there seated he opened the meeting with prayer. He still feels a lively interest in your work, and was thankful and joyful that he could be with us on this occasion, and that he saw the Bible Society there again brought into life.

In Antigonish I met with the Roman Catholic Bishop of  Nova Scotia. He was very frank, and in some measure friendly to our work. In the Bible Society formed in that place that are two persons appointed as depositaries for the sale of the Scriptures, and one of them is a Roman Catholic. Previous to his appointment I asked the Bishop whether he would have any objections to his selling our Bibles for us. He applied with great frankness, "No, none at all." Finding him thus well disposed towards us, I said to him, "Suppose I should meet some of the Priests under you, through the province, who might say they would have no objections to the circulation and use of our Books among the people if they had your sanction: suppose this, I said, What shall I say to them?" With the same frankness as before, he said, "You can say that they have my sanction."

From Nova Scotia I passed over to Prince Edward Island. I had made arrangements to spend a week in it, judging that I had no more time to spare. I was well received there, as I had previously been in other parts. A public meeting of the Auxiliary of the Island was held in the Scotch church in Charlotte Town: his Excellency the Governor presided, and the English clergyman opened the meeting by prayer. Some little impulse may probably have been given to the Society through this meeting. Arrangements had been made that I should visit for places in the interior of the Island during my week's stay, but owing to the weather being very bad for some days in succession only two of these places could be visited. Our meetings at these two were encouraging, and will result, I believe, in two Branches to the Island Auxiliary; but it was considered necessary to wait a little previous to their formation. When I learn that they are formed, I shall mention them to you.

There is a Ladies' Bible Society Prince Edward's Island, of which the Governor's Lady is Patroness, and is also the chief actor in all branches of its operations. I paid a formal visit to her Ladyship, as distinct from paying my respects to Sir Charles, in order formally to thank her on the part of our Society for her warm and efficient patronage and services. Lady Mary is a daughter of the late Duke of Richmond, and sister to the present Duke.

I left Prince Edward's Island with regret at the end of my measured time of the week. I should have been glad to have spent two or three weeks in it, and I believe this would have been profitable to our cause. But I am hurried along from the necessity of comprehending as much as I can within the season. Should I ever again return to the Island, I shall contrive to make a longer and hence a pleasanter stay, for there is but small pleasure, I may say, in thus travelling post.

In Prince Edwards Island lives the Roman Catholic Bishop of that Island and New Brunswick. I called on him, and from the communications we had I judged he was in a certain degree friendly to the use of the Scriptures among his people. In the Steam Boat from the Island to Miramichi we happened to meet again as fellow passengers. This gave us ample opportunity for further conversation, during which I could not judge of his opinion otherwise than as above stated. One expression he used was of a peculiar kind, and I should like well enough to see all his Brethren take up the idea he stated, erroneous though it be. He said, "The sooner the Scriptures are generally diffused, the sooner will you all become [Roman] Catholics." Be it so if you will, said I, only let us all in the meantime actively join in the general diffusion of the Scriptures among all, and let the result declare result. We have no fear on this score, and neither it seems have you. In this therefore we are happily united.

On the 20th instant we arrived in Miramichi, where I saluted, my cousin, as I may say Mrs. Thomson, who has been long your correspondent as Secretary to the Miramichi Ladies' Bible Society. On the 21st we held a public meeting of the Society, and made arrangements for a future meeting on my return southerly, at which we expect to form a general Bible Society for that place and neighbourhood. I shall therefore leave any further notice of operations in that place till my return, and till a future letter.

Last night, according to appointment, we held a public meeting in this town, in the English church, at which the Rector presided, and became also President of the Society that was formed on the occasion. We had a good meeting, though the weather was very unfavourable, and I trust a good Bible feeling was excited, and will be kept up. The Society formed embraces the County, and is called the Gloucester County Bible Society, and is connected with you direct as an Auxiliary. The office bearers are: – the Rev. A.B. Somerville, President: Thomas Deblois, Treasurer: the Rev. George MacDonald, Secretary.

            I remain,

                        Very Truly Yours,

                                    James Thomson.

[1] Note (BM): The Cunard Liverpool-Halifax transatlantic steamer which had recently begun this service.

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Rev A Brandram No 98

Halifax, Nova Scotia, 3rd November 1840

My Dear Friend,

My letter of the 19th ultimo will have informed you of my operations on this tour up to that date. On the first of this month I left the Bay of Chaleur and came to Chatham on the Miramichi. There are three towns on that River, not very far from each other, namely, Chatham, Douglas and Newcastle. these are all classed not unfrequently under the common word Miramichi. The chief of these places is Chatham, and the next in importance is Newcastle. We have friends of our Bible cause in each of these towns or villages. It was my duty to visit them, and I did so accordingly. Among these was your old acquaintance Mr. McDonald.

I mentioned in my last that though we had had a public meeting in Miramichi, of the Ladies Bible Society, and which was well attended by both sexes, yet that we intended to have another meeting at that place afterwards, in order to form a general Bible Society to embrace a larger field that had been occupied by the Ladies, however well they had done. The meeting took place in Chatham on the 6th. It was well attended. We had five ministers with us, and of different denominations as you may suppose; but there was nothing different seen or felt on that occasion, but all was full cordiality, all rejoiced at the opportunity thus afforded of a general Christian union for the purpose of making Christianity general through the diffusion of the word of God over the world. We had to ministers of the Scotch Church, or Kirk, and both spoke at length with great delight on the subject of our Bible union and cooperation. I mentioned this the more, because there are in some places and persons in these Provinces some remembrances still of certain old scores which I need not mention. Several speeches longer or shorter were made at this meeting, by both ministers and laymen of several denominations of the place, and a very general satisfaction seemed to be the result. You may be sure that your agent enjoy the occasion as much as most, and one circumstance seemed to favour in him and genial feeling. The day of our meeting was, what I may call a commemoration day with me, for on that day, the 6th of October, 22 years before, I first set foot on the continent of South America.

From Miramichi I proceeded to Richibucto, having previously arranged, as usual for a Bible Meeting there. We met on the 9th and had a good assemblage, of people in the village, and from the country around to a good distance. The Rev. Mr. Hannay the Scotch clergyman of this place was with us, and fully, and his aid is of some consequence, as his people formed the chief body of Protestant Settlers on that River. The French Roman Catholics there, and in all that quarter, are numerous. I hope the Richibucto Bible Society will soon begin to act and to tell upon them. The Ladies' Bible Society in this place commenced about 18 months ago, and it has sent to the auxiliary at St. John upwards of £80 in that comparatively short time. It is, we may well say, in a flourishing condition. We all hoped that the meeting held on this occasion would prove the means of making it still more prosperous.

On leaving Richibucto I went southwards, and was kindly driven as far as Chediac by Mr. Wark one of our Bible friends, and who is most friendly. We had a little meeting there, and made preparations for a larger one afterwards. Our next meeting in order was at Sackville, widow Bible Society was formed. From thence I went into Nova Scotia to Amherst, at which was held the meeting of the Cumberland County Bible Society. I came back into New Brunswick; and we held at Dorchester a meeting of the Westmoreland County Bible Society. My next stopping place was a gorgeous called The Bend, and it is so named because of a very remarkable Bend in the River Peticodiac. Here we had a meeting, and formed the Monkton Bible Society, as Monkton is the name of the parish. In the next place I meeting was held of the Salisbury Bible Society. At Sussex Vale onwards we were hindered of our meeting by the weather, as it rained all day, a sufficient hinderance perhaps where there is no village, but all would have to come some distance from the country.

On Saturday the 24th I arrived in St. John, and on Monday following, the 26th there was held the Anniversary of the New Brunswick Bible Society. It was held a little earlier than the usual time in order to meet my convenience and movements. It was a very full assembly, and at which were present the various Ministers of the place. No denomination lacked its representative, and there were three from the Church of England, and two from the Church of Scotland. Not the least cordial of our friends there was Mr. Robinson the Baptist Minister. Our speakings and hearings lasted full four hours. But I may say there was not a murmur, nor a move, nor a removal all the time till everything closed. When we were about three quarters through, and to prevent the same I mentioned the great and long patience of the Indians at our Bible meetings, which were lengthened and doubled by the necessity of speaking through an interpreter. If this notice had no good effect on the audience, it had certainly no bad one: – and I state it to you now, that you may know when you see need from moving send removings at any of your English meetings, remind your people of the great and long patience of the Canada Indians of the Bible Society Meeting. I leave further notices of our anniversary, and of this Society, to be transmitted to you by the Secretary, was active and worthy in our cause, Mr. Paterson.

My arrangements were to cross over from St. John's to Windsor in Nova Scotia with the steam boat on the day after the anniversary meeting above noticed. But owing to a heavy storm of wind on the day of our meeting in St. John, the steam boats were thrown out of their arrangements, and this with other stormy days following, prevented me from crossing all the week. I was grieved at this, because I had made arrangements for three meetings on the Nova Scotia side before I should reach Halifax, which Mr. Uniacke one of the clergymen of Halifax had my request kindly arranged for me, writing to all his friends, and causing notices to be given. By these circumstances in regard to the weather, etc. I missed all these three meetings, and arrived in this city on the last night.

In St. John I had a good deal of conversation with Mr. Robinson the Baptist Minister above noticed, and our conversation turned on the subject between the Bible Society and the Baptists. At the Baptist Nova Scotia conference in July last Mr. Robinson and another Minister were appointed to treat with the conference in New Brunswick and to draw up a conjoint memorial to be addressed to your Committee through me on the misunderstanding in question. Since July I have wondered a good deal about this memorial that it had not come into my hands, and could not conjecture the cause of the delay. Mr. Robinson however explained this to me in our conversations. He told me that when the subject was brought before the conference in New Brunswick, there were so many of the ministers pleaded for you, offered excuses and defences, and so magnified great work in which you are engaged, that they agreed to drop the subject altogether for the time. Mr. Robinson said it was very providential that I had met with him in June last, as I had rectified his views a good deal in this matter, and in consequence of his restating my explanations to his brethren they had seen things in a more friendly light.

Your letter of the 29th September reached me in St. John on the 24th October. I do thank you yourself, my Dear Friend, and think all my kind friends in the committee for the favourable Resolution passed in regard to me on the 28th September, not only conceding me my request for four months leave, but also for continuing my salary during that time, which I had not requested, nor looked for. And I think you all besides, for the unanimity and cordiality with which you say the Resolution was passed, and with such kind references to my poor services. I trust these four months will not be altogether lost to the Bible Society, and to the great general cause of the kingdom of God on earth. – I further think you for meeting my wishes for an early decision and communication on the subject. I am sorry I put you to the trouble of having a special meeting of the Committee called. I was too late in writing you, but delayed as long as I could, in expectation of some notice from you as to the continuance or not of my mission here beyond the prescribed two years. It will still be necessary for you to treat upon us, and to let me know your mind. There is still more than sufficient work for me during a long summer in these Provinces of Nova Scotia and New Brunswick, without mentioning Newfoundland, from which I have invitations with favourable prospects. – My four months leave I intend to pass in Montreal for reasons I need not now mention. My residence there will I hope be useful to the Society, more than it could be here, in attending the frequent committee meetings of your lively Auxiliary there. I also intend out of some five months stay there, to have about a month's travelling for you during the best travelling part of the winter season, and through places which I was anxious before to visit, and could not.

Your letter of the 22nd of July came into my hands on the 16th of August: and that of the 1st September on the 20th of the same. Mr. Jackson's on the 18th September, on the 6th of  October.

            I remain, My Dear Friend,

                        Very Truly Yours,

                                    James Thomson.

Postscript.

New Societies

 Name               Connected with          President                     Treasurer         Secretary

Miramichi        B. P F. B. Society        Wm Abrams               George Kerr    Rev I M Curdy

Sackville          New Brunswick          Edward Dixon            I F Allison        C F Allison

Monkton         New Brunswick          Wm Chipman              M Harriss         Bliss Botsford

Alterations to be made in the names of office bearers in different Societies previously formed: – in the Westmoreland BS instead of James Ross for Secretary, say, C Milne: –in the Salisbury BS instead of Y Sherman for Treasurer, say R. –and instead of I Peck for Secretary, say William Stone. In the Cumberland BS of Nova Scotia, instead of the names that you have in the 36th Report, put E.B.Cutter for President, and also for Treasurer, and For Secretary W.P.Moffatt.

The Richibucto BS is now a Branch and requires a place in the Report. The office bearers are: – President: Mrs Jardine ; Treasurer: Mrs Weldon; Secretary: Mrs. Wood.

In the Gloucester BS mentioned in No 97, write McDonnell instead of McDonald for Secretary.

The parcel containing this year's Report for Prince Edward's Island was sent to Mr. Paterson in St. John. I have manage to get it forward to the special kindness of the Postmaster. But I would beg to notice the port of St. John has, I may say, no communications with P.E.Island, whilst on the other hand there are ready communications weekly between that Island and Pictou and Miramichi by steam boat, so that at any time when you at a loss for a direct communication to "the Island" you could send to either of these two places, requesting your friends there to forward what you send.

Please address my letters to Montreal till further notice. JT.

Mr William Hitchin

Halifax, Nova Scotia, 14th November 1840

My Dear Sir,

Just on the start of setting out for Canada, I write you a few lines, to advise Bills drawn, & an order given.

The first Bill is for Fifty Pounds, drawn on my Travelling Account, in favour of Martin G Black Esq. at 30 days sight, and dated the 12th of November 1840.

The second Bill is for One Hundred Pounds, drawn on my Private Account, in favour of David Hare Esq. at 30 days sight, and dated the 14th of November 1840.

Also I have given an order on you, for Thirty Pounds, in favour of Mr William Jones, of the Religious Tract Society, dated the 14th November 1840: to be placed to my Private Account.

            I remain,

                        My dear Sir,

                                    Very Sincerely Yours,

                                                            James Thomson.

Posted
AuthorBill Mitchell

Mr William Hitchin

Montreal 24th December 1840

My Dear Sir,

I write you a few lines, to advise Two Bills drawn on your house, the value of both to be placed to my Private Account.

            First: For One Hundred Pounds, in favour of John Matheson Esq. at 60 days, dated the 23rd instant.

            The Second: For Fifty Pounds, in favour of John Dougall Esq. at 60 days, dated the 24th instant.

I understand you have received for me Twenty Pounds from Mr Morrish of Bristol.

In my letter of the 14th of November, did I say, that the £100 Bill then advised was to be placed to my Travelling Account? If I did so, it was a mistake, which please to rectify if committed. I say this, because I find, to my surprise, the oversight in question in my copy of said letter.

            I remain,

                        My dear Sir,

                                    Truly Yours,

                                                James Thomson.

Posted
AuthorBill Mitchell

Mr John Jackson

Montreal 19th February 1841

My Dear Sir,

Your lot of Invoices reached me here on the 20th December, accompanied by your own note, short and kind as usual. In looking over the Invoices I observe that that of the Books for the Abbé Sigogne says 20 Bibles and two French and English Testaments, whilst the main thing is wanting, namely, 100 De Sacy's Testaments. I am inclined to think that this is an oversight merely in writing out the Invoice and not in making up the case and sending it. I should be very sorry if the main part, the 100 New Testaments, have been forgotten. Write me about this.

I have another request to make. In August last when in the district of Pictou, I met with the Scotch Minister of the name of Stewart who had formerly been master of the school attached to Dr. Andrew Thomson's church. He has a story about a case of French Bibles, with the Apocrypha in them, being found among the cargo of a vessel which was wrecked, I think in 1832 or 4, and which Bibles, it was alleged, had been sent out of your depot about that time, and of course after the anti-Apocrypha resolution of 1826,7, and hence you here in broke your rules openly. This W.S. had from hearing Dr. Thomson state it publicly in Edinburgh. Be so good as inform me particularly what this matter was, for I do not recollect hearing anything of it before. I had a summary answer to it, but I want a more specific one, especially in view of returning to that place in April ensuing.

There is another matter also I wish to inquire about, and as bearing on a person in place adjacent to the one above named. In St. Ann's Cape Breton there is a Mr. McLeod, the Minister of the Scotch Church, who also has some old scores against the Earl Street body. One of these is their having "imposed on the public by false Reports under the mask of judicious faithful services." Some years ago I read Mr. Wilkes's statements, but forget whether he meets this case, or not, or how. If he does not, please to let me have the cream of this matter, as I intend to see Mr. McLeod early in the ensuing summer.

On arriving here in the end of November last, I found a parcel containing Annual Reports of our and some of your London Societies, and with them some Bible Society Pamphlets. The latter I have read over carefully, and find them of considerable consequence. The two on the Baptist case are much required in Nova Scotia and New Brunswick, and may be of much use to me in moving through these parts next summer. Please then to send me if you have them 100 copies of "The Bible Translation Society of the Baptists shown to be uncalled for and injurious, by a Baptist." Also 100 of Dr. Henderson's letter to Mr. Brandram.[1] I should like also to have say 10 or 20 copies of "Statements presented to Judge Erskine," and as many of Mr. Wilkes's "Letters to Bishop Burgess" published, I think, in 1832. 10 or 20 of "Remarks on a Pamphlet, by T.H." will likewise be acceptable. Pray who is T.H.?

Another request. Would you have the goodness to lay by for me one copy of every Bible Society Pamphlet already published, so far as you can obtain them, and keep one for me of each that may be published? These I do not wish you to send, but to keep for me till some convenient time when I made bind them together in volumes.

These Pamphlets, with a few copies of your last year's Annual Report, say 20, with any parcels that may be lying in Earl Street for me, and one that Mr. Nisbet, Berner's Street, will send you, have the goodness to put into a case together, and send them by the first vessel for Pictou, addressed to the care of our friend Mr. Dawson there. Should Mr. Nisbet not send the parcel, please inquire after it. – Put in also a few copies of the last years Abstract, the Brief View, and the Anniversary Speeches.

Excuse another request, and the last, at least in this letter. I saw an advertisement some time ago of "Palmer & Co. of Sutton Street, Clerkenwell," mentioning a "Patent Candle Lamp, with 2, 3, or 4 burners, at10½ d. or 11d. the lb." Be so good as purchase for me, of these candles, 4lb with two burners, 3lb with 3, and 2lb with 4 burners. These you will be so good as put into the same case, and very carefully packed up so as not to receive any injury by the way, Mr. Hitchin will give you for me the sum required.

Your kind attention to the various items of this note, will, My Dear Sir, very much oblige.

            Yours Very Truly,

                        James Thomson.

P.S. Address to me by mail to Halifax, and so till further notice.

[1] Note (BM)--the letter dealt with the meaning of the Greek word for baptism.

 

Rev A Brandram - No 99

Montreal 20th February 1841

My Dear Friend,

I begin this letter mournfully. We have recently heard from Jamaica, and have learned that our fellow labourer Mr. Wheeler is no more, that he died at Buff Bay on the North side of the island on the 30th November. This notice came upon me like a shock, and I have grieved much on his account. Alas! for my brother! taken away in the midst of his services, and towards the approval of  which he look forward to with hope and anxiety! He told me, in reference to his family that he left behind, but after he had laboured, say seven years, in the West Indies, you would allow him to go home perhaps employ him in England, where he would be with or near his family. But, at the close of Five years he is taken away, and his earthly hope is perished. He has however, I believe, realized a better hope, even the blessed hope of the Gospel of Christ, and he has now, I trust, entered into the heavenly rest where there is no travelling, no anxiety, no care, no trouble; but joy only, the joy of the Lord. – He was a diligent and faithful servant of the Bible Society.

The death of our Brother Wheeler has forcibly turned my thoughts back to the West Indies, in which the Lord mercifully preserved me, and my dear wife, for a period of seven years. We feel a fresh sense of gratitude for our gracious protection in these climes of more than common danger, and desire to be awakened to a new and more powerful sense of our duties, that God our heavenly father may be glorified in us. Again the same subject draws me still farther, and to more distant countries, where I spent ten years, and wherein pursuing the same tract, our Brother Matthews fell, and not by the climate, but by the hand of the assassin, as we have too much reason to fear. – My Dear Brother, and all my dear Brethren, give thanks to God with me, and pray yet more earnestly for me, that I may serve the Lord humbly and faithfully, and wherever he may be pleased to send me.

Agreeably to the intimation in my last letter to you of the 3rd November I came on to this city through the United States, and arrived at the close of the month just named. I found on arriving that the quarter where I intended to visit had been gone over officially by one of the officers of the Montreal Society. My Bible business has in consequence been confined to miscellaneous matters as they have arisen from time to time instead of formal journey through a part of the country as I originally intended.

On the 27th ultimo the Montreal Bible society held its Anniversary Meeting. It was well attended, the speeches were all of the superior kind (my own excepted), and a very general gratification was experienced by all present: and interesting and gratifying as were former anniversaries, yet this the latest, not the last, was classed by all as superior to its predecessors. And this, I may say, is as it ought to be, for every additional year should witness in our Bible movements something new and in advance. So I trust it will in general be, and future years will unquestionably witness the greater things than any of us can now anticipate, however sanguine may be our hopes.

The meeting was held in one of the Scotch Church, and all the three Scotch ministers were present, and all officiated. One of them commenced the meeting by reading a portion of Scripture and prayer, and the other two delivered truly Biblical addresses which gave general satisfaction. This was a step in advance, for we never had had the three with us on any former occasion. Another visible step in advance at this Anniversary was the presence on our platform of two ministers of the Church of England. Other denominations among us were also represented, and the Catholicity of the Bible society was fully held forth. For further notices I send you a newspaper in which you will find an account of the meeting. The Annual Report will be soon ready, and will be duly forwarded to you. – Since the public meeting we have had a meeting of the Ladies' Committee, and I am happy to say, that there were more ladies present than on any former occasion; and arrangements were made to fill up all the districts with collectors, which had not been done before, from lack of a sufficient number of willing and able agents. All these things are encouraging, and blessed be God for the same; for of Him, and through Him, and to Him are all things, to Whom be glory for ever, Amen.

Your letter of the 11th December was received on the 2nd instant. I observe what you say about the present difficulty, for it should seem that there must needs always be some difficulty present. Such things however, like all other afflictions, though not for the time joyous but grievous, will produce the fruits of righteousness in more ways than one, though of course we cannot well see the clearness beyond through the cloud that is present. Perhaps I may by next packet give you my own little views upon the Printing question now before you. In the meantime I pray, and more earnestly than common, that the Lord may direct you to what may be most agreeable to his will, and most for his glory.

I am glad to see by your letter how much cause you have to rejoice in many things in your great work. To God be the praise. May God prosper you a thousand fold, and that early. Oh the greatness of this work! Oh how slowly we move!

The particular reasons for my preferring Montreal to Halifax during the winter I did not mention to you in my last, neither did I then mention, or previously, the special object for which I had begged a furlough from you. When I wrote out my petition for the furlough I coupled it with the reasons that induced me to seek it. But on second thoughts I suppressed these, thinking it better not to involve the case, but simply to beg a few months leave from you for something of my own. I now state these reasons, and add something to them by way of bringing all connected with this before you at once.

During my wanderings, particularly in foreign countries, I have often seen cause for regretting that I had not a full knowledge of the subject of medicine, and I have therefore often had a desire, if ever an opportunity should offer, to make efforts to gain this object. In this city there is a good Medical College, and it is the only one in these Provinces. After much meditation and prayer, it appeared to me the opportunity I had often looked for was present. I therefore resolved to petition you for a furlough, which you kindly granted, and as a consequence I am now in this city, and my occupation is in medical studies.

In your letter of the 11th December now before me, you intimate your wish that I should prosecute my Bible tours in Nova Scotia and places adjacent until the whole has been visited. I shall therefore return to these parts as soon as the navigation opens, and shall arrange to finish the whole during the ensuing summer. – Summer being ended, and the Lord preserving me still in life and health, I could wish to return once more to this city, and to pass a succeeding winter also in medical studies. This would finish all I had to do in this way, for I formerly started some branches of this science many years ago, and have long kept in my library a few of the best medical works.

You say further in your letter above noticed, "And when that [the North American business] is done, the inquiry will arise, is the South open, and is our agent willing to turn his steps thitherward." You also add "We shall be glad of your own views upon the point." Whether the South will be open at the time referred to, or say at the close of the succeeding winter, will of course be a proper object for you to consider as the Bible Almoners of that and every portion of the world. As to the next question, Is your agent willing to go further, I would answer, and readily, in the affirmative.

Naturally enough, I should like to see you all in Earl Street for a short time before I should set out for Spanish America. But I make no conditions on this score, nor shall I consider it wrong in you to deny me. My request indicated above for leave to spend next winter here to complete my medical studies you will please to consider. And should I yet wander for you through Foreign lands the knowledge I should thus possess would probably be in your favour, and to the full amount of any previous disadvantage. But this I leave also in your hands unconditionally. May the Lord direct you to what is best in this case, and may he afford me direction through you. I would not hurry you for a reply bearing on these points, but the sooner I learn your views the better shall I be able to make my general and prospective arrangements.

            I remain, My Dear Friend,

                        Truly and Affectionately Yours,

                                                James Thomson.

 

P.S. Address to me at Halifax.

Rev A Brandram No 100

Montreal,  22nd March 1841

My Dear Friend,

This is now the third Canadian winter which I am seeing and feeling; for winters here are visibly seen, and sensibly felt: they are seen wherever the eyes are turned, in the deep general covering of the ground with snow and the stern cold rules and reigns over all whilst both these are heightened from time to time by the wind raging storm. It is but a short time, I may say, since I left the sunny and evergreen regions of the middle world where I spent years of my poor life, and yet now they seem half forgotten, and I am become as familiar with cold, and snow, and deadness, as I formerly was with the never ceasing heat, and the everlasting vegetation and life of the brilliant torrid zone. These circumstances suggest to me the idea of reviewing the two or three years past in a sketch, both as respects my personal movements, and my general employment.

The sudden leap I took from the West Indies to this country, and the great change in employment I made within a few weeks, you already know. I dreaded the change, but ventured to make it, as it was duty to do so. Now that all is over I can look back with some composure upon the scenes and the thoughts of that time. When we arrived in Charleston being driven into that port in distress, the weather was wet and bad, and I felt the cold much. If I thus feel here said I to myself, when only about half way to Canada, and before the winter is set in, how shall I get on when there and during the depth of the season. I had in truth serious thoughts of writing home to you, to beg that you would let me stay by the fireside all the winter, for that it would be impossible for me to travel and to preach for you during the cold season: but adding, that when the sun got strong I should be able to leave the house, and journey and serve you from place to place as long as the warm season lasted. Things were not better on arriving at New York on the 24th November. I met with a cold reception indeed, for that night was a very coldness night ever known there at that date in the season. Again when I came near the northern border of the States, from the severity of the weather, I had to lay aside my hat and by a fur cap, fur is the only article capable of keeping the head in due warmth in northern regions. A day after, I passed the lines of the United States and entered Canada, where once I met the dread winter in full costume and character; for the ground was all covered with snow as I entered, and the snow and the storm were driving along when at a late hour I took up my first night's lodging in Canada; and as if the cold were determined at every step to make a bold and early onset, the thermometer fell that night to 5° below zero. We had now the mighty St. Lawrence to cross. But at the usual place it was impossible, being partly frozen and partly not, and hence it could not be crossed by ice nor by boat. We have to travel 11 miles up the bank, but it was about dark when we reached the place, and the ferrymen would not venture to take us over that night. We slept in the house of an Indian, for it was an Indian village where we stopped. Next morning early the Indians ferried us over, and the scene I shall never forget. We crossed just above one of the rapids, where the stream ran quick and by its rapidity prevented the frost from seizing upon it and turning it into a solid. As we sailed along a distance of 2 miles from side to side of the river, it was deeply interesting to observe the contest, as I imagined to myself, for the whole scene was like one of pure imagination, the contest between the elements or states of solidity and fluidity, each striving to have for its vassal this majestic river. The ice swam about in broad tables, and these again would join together in bands, as other combatants do, and thus by the individual and united strength they would essay to block up the whole river and take it prisoner. But on the other hand the powers of fluidity and the force of the rapid and whirling current, would break up these armed bands, disperse and put them to flight, hurling them over the rapids. The attacks were repeated, and the insurgents again dispersed, and thus on hour after hour and day after day the attack and the resistance were continued. But the besieged kept their ground, and held their fortress and possessions, for this is one of the spots of the river where the Fluidity holds sway all the season through and that in spite of the Giant cold who would take it captive, and in spite of the discouragement of seeing this fellow tyrant gradually and firmly seize and bind in icy chains, part by part almost the entire river in all its length, whilst this and a few other indomitable spots like itself stand out and enjoy that liberty and fluidity. The scene was grand, and he who has once seen it, will always see it.

The thus far I have treated you with cold, but I shall now treat you with heat. And to act in this manner is quite in keeping with our winter journeyings here; for when we have travelled some distance in an open sleigh till we are about half frozen we all get out of our vehicle, enter a house, and stand around the stove till we are thoroughly warmed, and thus furnished with heat we again set out on our journey. I shall now therefore in my Sketch bring you into a house, and take you to the stove, where if I mistake not, you will find yourself warmed and also cheered.

On the evening of the very day I crossed the river, as above described, and entered Montreal, there was held a meeting of the Committee of your Auxiliary in this place. Here I was introduced to our Bible friends at once, and was immediately informed of all they had done in the Bible cause, of all they were doing, and of all the purposed, through strength divine, to perform, and with all possible haste. This proved a heating stove to me, and I soon forgot all the cold that preceded.

The Society I found had been doing well several years, proving a valuable help to you in the general distribution of the Scriptures over this country, and of raising means to meet expenditures as far as they well could. But latterly they had taken a new and more powerful view of things in respect to the value of the Bible for all, and in respect to the well-known lack of it in the country, and the desirableness of bringing it, and speedily within the reach of all the surrounding population. They forthwith entered into a specific resolution in reference to these views, and nobly purposed with all convenient rapidity to get a copy of the Scriptures into every family within the province. Having done this, some of the more active members of the Committee went round among the citizens here and procured a considerable sum for carrying into effect this specific purpose. After this, one individual in the Committee undertook to visit personally some country districts, going from house to house, to inquire of every family whether they possessed a copy of the Scriptures, and where the holy book was wanting, to stir up the people to purchase it if they had means sufficient, and if they have not, the price was reduced, or taken off altogether according to circumstances. But the object was to get the Bible fairly into the house, and in this manner into all the houses of each district. Of course the Committee could not personally carry this object into effect to any great extent. The work however was not neglected or delayed on this account, for they aroused their friends in several quarters of the country to undertake these from house-to-house visitations; and further, where gratuitous labours could not be obtained they employed others and remunerated them for their services.

When you heard of our friends here having entered on this benevolent career you liberally gave them 2000 copies of the Scriptures to aid them in their work, and the American Bible Society generously contributed 1000 copies. These two grants were of much service, and enable the Society to pursue its object to a greater extent than their own supplies could enable them, liberal as these had been.

The Society at the time I arrived had been engaged in this work of special general distribution of the Scriptures nearly two years, and the accounts they furnished of the good effects attending their labours were very cheering, and I rejoiced in their joy from the work of their hands. In the course of the many visitations made in various parts of the country during this time many facts have been brought to light respecting the want of the Scriptures among the people generally, and these fully justify the Society in the labour they had undertaken. On the other hand the extensive supplies which the Society's agents had afforded to many destitute families and individuals and the gratitude which not a few of these manifested for this visitation, of mercy and the means of procuring the word of God, were exceedingly gratifying and encouraging. But for this arrangement of the Society, and the efficiency with which it was carried forward, multitudes now in possession of the Holy Scriptures would in all probability have remained without them for years, or during their entire life. The good therefore which has been done in this case is beyond our calculation, and has its important bearings both on time and on eternity.

As it is an established rule in God's providence, that good done to others procures good for ourselves in return, so it has happened fully in this instance. By the means adopted and the happy effects produced the Society has been kept alive and animated, and the meetings of the Committee have been interesting and gratifying. These things were the reward of benevolence, and they stirred up to further benevolence. In consequence of these things I found our Bible friends here fully resolved to pursue their work steadily, and to carry it forward to a blissful close. Such were the things that came before me at my immediate entrance on my work in this country, and he produced a cheering and salutary effect, and warmed me, as I before said, after the cold I had recently endured from place to place on my journey. I found that the Bible is highly valued in both cold and hot regions, in Canada and the West Indies, proof of the latter I had recently seen, and proof of the former here lay before me.

Thus animated I set out on my first journey, but not till I had furnished myself with coat upon coat and fur upon fur, all being necessary and fully required for the degrees of cold that lay before me were greater than any before felt. I gave you formerly some account of my first tour, and described the cold predicament in which I found myself, and my feelings of regret for leaving the sunny regions of the West Indies for this inhospitable clime. I shall not therefore now repeat that description. My other journeyings also during that winter reminded me of the ever green lands I had left. The thermometer stood on different occasions at 10, 12, 17, 22, 24, and 31 under zero, and oftimes the snow storm raged. But God mercifully and graciously preserved me, and though I was thus much exposed by day and more at times by night, in this inclement quarter, yet I suffered no harm in my general health and strength, and was enabled to attend to your work in a manner that a different from the fears I entertained under the first onsets of the northern cold. Blessed be God for these and all his former mercies to me in all my wanderings and dangers.

In the cold movements above described, it was sensibly warming, and truly cheering, to get into the log house of a Bible friend, and to receive the reception of a Bible messenger. On many occasions I was thus treated, and experienced a warm hospitality. The larger and more noble mansion also opened its doors, of its own accord I may say, to receive your messenger, and to bestow on him the ample conveniences which they contained. I feel much indebted to these good friends who entertained me, and shall long remember their kindnesses, hospitalities and courtesies: and I pray the Lord to reward them.

But though I thus found a "son of peace" ready to receive me every where, the country all the while was full of the sons of war, and military exercises and operations seem to be the only business going forward. By some of these sons of war I was treated less kindly than above described. On one occasion soldiers full armed sprang in before me and my traveling companions, and have been totally ordered us to turn back, and appear before his officers. We got out of this scrape with our whole shin. But afterwards we were hotly pursued a distance of seven miles by the head officer himself accompanied by a dragoon. But we got the victory over them both, for we were furnished with passports, which we had taken the precaution to provide before setting out owing to the very warlike state of the whole country.

The Public Bible Meetings which we held were always cheering and often truly animating. Cold and bad as the weather might be, out of doors, yet within we were assembled around the Bible, and the light, tranquility, and heat which afforded made us for a while forget all else, and led us to anticipate the time when the Bible would banish all evil out of this hitherto unfortunate world, and fill it with light divine, holiness, and blessedness, for surely it is established as the sun, that the will of God is yet to be done on earth as it is in heaven, and when this is the case we may be sure that the happenings of earth will resemble that of heaven. All what I blessed book is the Bible, which is through the power of God given to it, to work such wonders. God is himself in his word, and great and blessed must be its effects. All then let us haste and to place it in every house around us, and let us diligently send it to all nations, in all tongues, that it's wonders may be wrought in the sight of all, and speedily!

But an early promise of the Bible is not unfulfilled in Canada as well as elsewhere, and notwithstanding all I have said of cold, you must not think it is always cold here. We have our summer too, because the Bible says, that somewhere shall continued in its turn, "while the earth remaineth." During the whole of the summer following the winter above described, I was employed in one continued tour in Bible visitations over upper Canada. The same kind reception and treatment, as before noticed, I experienced during all this period, and over a vast tract of country. Our Bible meetings were many and were cheering, and our numerous friends, scattered over these widely extended regions, now thinly, but soon to be densely people, took a lively interest in the great Bible cause.

You know that our Society is of no denomination, alias, of all denominations. So, in this measure, your humble servant pretends to be, personally and officially, and so is he everywhere received. In traveling over Upper Canada during the summer mentioned, I was struck more than common with the circumstances here referred to. One night, or two or three together, if privileged to rest so long in one place, I found myself lodged, and receiving every kind attention as a member of the same fraternity and family, in the house of a clergyman of the Church of England. My next lodging place, and where I would be treated precisely in the same friendly manner, would be with a clergyman of the Church of Scotland. The third caravansary that would receive me would be the house of the Wesleyan Minister. The fourth place where I would lay my head would be in the dwelling of a Baptist minister: and my tired body in the fifth instance, would be rested and nourished in the abode of the Minister of the Congregational denomination. That is no fancy or colouring in this statement. It is literally true: nor did it occur only once, but often, and so frequently were these alternations made that I was, as I may say, amused with them, as well as gratified and thankful. On one occasion, and I shall never forget it, when calling on a clergyman of the Church of England, and our subject of conversation and regret at the time being in reference to the unhappy divisions and unhappier alienations among Christian ministers and people, he said to me with evident deep interest and feeling, "Mr. Thomson you have fine opportunities of promoting peace, union, and goodwill among different parties." I instantly replied, "I have, and thus I employ these opportunities."

Not unfrequently whilst thus domiciled under various roofs, I have heard in course of our conversations something like complaints of the evil speaking or evil acting of some other denomination against the parties stating them to me. These complaints I have any frequently found to be grounded on misunderstanding and I have explained and apologized for these complaints and the parties concerned in them, endeavouring to induce to peace and good feeling. My familiarity with all parties enables me often to see through these misunderstandings better than the parties affected by them, and this accidental knowledge which my opportunities give me I endeavour to use in the name of our Lord Jesus Christ, for promoting brotherly feelings among all who love Him who loved them and gave himself a ransom for our sins, that we might be delivered from all iniquity, and be blameless and harmless, peaceful and loving, as the children of God. There is a fine petition bearing on the subject, in the Moravian liturgy, which may we all put up, and act upon. It is this, "Lord diminish misapprehensions."

My travellings during the second winter I pass over in this sketch, remarking only that whenever I went I met with the same friendliness from various parties in politics and in religion, and our Bible meetings were good and encouraging.

On the opening of the following season, in the spring of last year I set out for Nova Scotia and New Bruns­wick. In the latter place I arrived first, and in the city of St. John's, which, though not the political, is the commercial capital and ruling city of the province. Immediately on arriving there, and before I left the steam-boat, I was greeted by a deputation from the New Brunswick Bible Society, at the head of which was Judge Parker, the President, a man of high and deserved standing in the community. A public meeting of the Bible Society there was held within a few days after, which was nume­rously attended. I must not omit in my haste to mention a circumstance of some moment, as I conceive, in our Bible cause. It was this, that all the ministers of the several denominations of the place were present. This was gratifying in many ways, and I long to see the time when we shall always be able to calculate on the presence of all the ministers within reach at all our Bible meetings. This should be the case, and it) will be the case, whether within the time of our individual pilgrimage or beyond it. I attended some Committee meetings of the Society in St. John's, and had a good deal of intercourse otherwise with several of the leading members of the Society ; and through these opportunities I learned that there is a deep feeling in favour of your cause in that place. Several months subsequently I attended the anniversary of the Society, which consisted of a large assembly; and which, through what was laid before them, kept together unmoved till a late hour. The Ladies' Society deserves also to be mentioned with all due approbation, as administering essentially to the general cause in that city.

In Fredericton, the government head of the province, we held a large meeting of the Bible Society; and there, and at Committee meet­ings, I found the same interest in our blessed work as I had seen exhibited in St. John's. His Excellency, Sir John Harvey, treated your Agent very courteously. He patronizes the Bible Society there; and Lady Harvey is the patroness of the Ladies' Branch.

In reviewing my movements in New Brunswick, I shall take you next to Bathurst, on the south-side of the Bay of Chaleur,—though I did not go direct from Fredericton to that place, but visited Nova Scotia in the interval, and also Prince Edward's Island. Bathurst is in sight of Canada; and here was formed a new Auxiliary to your institution. Our meeting was held in the Episcopal church, and the incumbent became the President, whilst all the other, ministers rallied around him.

I next notice Miramichi:—this is a populous quarter, and a great shipping place,—the most so of any port in these two provinces, after St. John's. A Ladies' Bible Society has existed here about twenty years, and has done much good. We succeeded in forming a new Society, besides this, and under the title of an Auxiliary, embracing the general population on the banks of this fine river. Here again we had several ministers of different denominations, but I regret to say that one was wanting. I visited a good many other places in this province, but must not stay to enumerate them, though I cannot pass over Richibucto, where there is a very flourishing Ladies' Bible Society.

I now notice my visitations in Nova Scotia.—It was towards the latter end of June when I arrived in Halifax. A few days after my arrival, the anniversary meeting of the Nova Scotia Bible Society was held. A great multitude hastened to this meeting; the place of assembly was 'speedily filled, and many were unable to gain admittance. His Excellency Sir Colin Campbell, the Lieutenant-governor, was in the chair ; and he was well supported by numbers of the best rank of Society, and particularly by the various ministers of the city, among whom were five of the Church of England. This was a gratifying meeting, and con­tributed, it was thought, a good deal for the advancement of the Bible Society's interests in that place.

After this public meeting, and after attending some meetings of the Committee, I travelled over the south-western parts of the province, visit­ing all the places of note. The meetings held during this tour exhibited a good state of feeling in favour of the general circulation of the Scrip­tures at home and abroad; and it was pleasing to see the large numbers that came together in several thinly peopled districts.

Soon after returning to Halifax, I set out again, in another direction, and went over the north-eastern parts of the province. In moving through these parts I was gladdened with the same favourable manifestations I had elsewhere perceived in regard to that most desirable object in which we are all, in our measure, engaged and interested, namely, that of getting the word of God into every family, and into the possession of each individual in these provinces; and of seeing the whole world benefited in this way equally with ourselves. On this tour, I met with more than common favour in the way of free conveyances ; and it is both a duty and a pleasure for me to make this statement. One gentleman, in addi­tion to forwarding me some distance, put a doubloon into my hands as we parted, saying, "That is to help you in your journeying expenses."

Returning from the eastern parts just mentioned to Pictou, I went over to Prince Edward's Island. Upwards of a year ago an Auxiliary Bible Society was formed there under favourable auspices. A public meeting of this Society was held in the Scotch church, Charlotte Town, which was opened by prayer by the rector of the place. His Excellency Sir Charles Fitzroy, the Lieutenant-governor of the island, was in the chair. His lady also was present; and the assemblage was numerous, embracing all classes of Society. After this, I visited several places in the interior of the island, where meetings were held, and arrangements made for extending and quickening the sacred work of the Bible Society.

I was much gratified here in learning that the governor's lady not only patronizes the Ladies' Bible Society of the island by her name, but is herself also the chief and most active personal labourer in making collec­tions and in distributing the Scriptures around. This is truly praiseworthy, and ought to be set forth, as I now do it, in order to encourage others in the high ranks of Society, to take that stand and that active employment in God's work for which he has qualified them by their ample means and abundant leisure. May all of them hear- God's voice,  which says, "To whom much is given, of them much shall be required." It so happens that this lady is the first lady in rank, as I understand, in these British North American provinces. She enjoys by her birth the title of Right Honourable ; and in our Bible field she has, I may say, justified her title by the right honourable course she is pursuing, by actively labouring in person to promote the circulation of God's holy word. Oh that we all, male and female, could duly understand how right and honourable this work is! If we did, we would unquestionably act better in it than we do. For, alas! how inadequately, I may say, do we all labour in this cause! and our defective operations are greatly owing to the defective nature of our thoughts, our judgments, and our feelings, respecting the superlative value of the word of God.

Besides the lady mentioned above, and her associates, there are many other honourable and right honourable ladies in these British provinces, who have ennobled themselves by their labours in the Bible field. Many Ladies' Bible Societies are in full operation in different places throughout these extensive and interesting countries ; and their services are a great benefit to the general cause of spreading widely at home and abroad the word of truth and salvation. The chief of these in Nova Scotia is the one at Yarmouth, and that at Guysborough, both of which are of long standing and have done well. In the latter place, at the close of the public meeting, the ladies were pleased to deliver an address in the person of their worthy Secretary, complimentary to your Society, to yourself, and to somebody else. I enclose the address for your perusal, as your name is in it, and it is due you should see it.

The Baptist body in Nova Scotia and New Brunswick is numerous. They are very friendly to our Society; and their various ministers have cordially aided our work at the public meetings and otherwise.

In the neighbourhood of Yarmouth, in the south-west portion of Nova Scotia, there is a French settlement, consisting of about 3,000 per­sons,—a people similar in many respects to the French Canadians. I visited this settlement; at the head of which is the Abbé Sigogne, an aged priest, a native of France, who left that country at the revolution. I was happy to find that the Abbé was well inclined to the use of the Holy Scriptures among his flock. He gave me an order for 100 De Sacy's Testaments, and some Bibles. In Antigonish, in the north-east of Nova Scotia, I met with the Roman Catholic Bishop of that province, with whom I had a good deal of conversation ; and he also expressed him­self favourably In regard to the circulation of the Scriptures among his people, and cheerfully consented to an appointment being made by the Antigonish Bible Society, that one of his flock in that place should act as one of the depositaries for the general sale of the Scriptures. In Prince Edward's Island I saw and conversed with the Roman Catholic Bishop of New Brunswick, who also made favourable statements regard­ing the general use of the Scriptures.

In closing this sketch of Bible Society operations in Nova Scotia and New Brunswick, during last summer, I am happy to notice the friendly reception I everywhere met with, as an advocate of the Bible cause. I also received much hospitality and general courtesy, and nowhere more than in the city of Halifax, which will long remain prominent before me, of the many places among my own countrymen, and among foreigners, where, through the favour of God, I have been treated with kindness: and may the Lord reward all those kind friends at home and abroad!

On returning to Montreal and communicating with our Bible friends at their Committee meetings and otherwise, I have been gratified to find the progress of things since I left this place. Their general supply of families with a Bible to each, according to their resolution previously mentioned, has advanced to a kind of termination within the limits of the Society, and they are about to pass beyond this boundary, and in conjunction with the Quebec Bible Society to extend down the river, and on to the easternmost parts of the province where it joins with New Brunswick.

But gratifying as is this state of things it is, I may say, exceeded in interest by the Bible operations among the French population of the country, all of whom as you are aware, are Roman Catholics. The agent or colporteur whom you support here, and whose labours are almost exclusively devoted to the French, has had unusual success during last year in distributing the Scriptures among the people. The openings are wonderful considering all the circumstances of this long neglected portion of our fellow subjects. Several of the priests openly befriend the distribution of the Scriptures among their flocks, and the New Testament has in a good many places be, schoolbook with the goodwill of the schoolmasters, and with the sanction and encouragement of the priests. The journals of Mr. Hibbard, which are sent you from time to time, will show you the extent to which the work is reached, and will cheer you with their many interesting particulars. Your generosity and your wisdom in supporting this agent among this people are now meeting with their reward, and better things will no doubt follow these encouraging beginnings. May the Lord prosper this work, there are half a million of people to act on, and this is the first movement among these dry bones, "and lo! They are very dry."

In my first letter from this place, written during the disordered state of things here, I said, "the present political state of the country is unfavourable and may retard our operations; but we see, though somewhat darkly, that even these civil commotions will in effect, be attended or followed with good effects, as respects the kingdom of Christ and also as respects the Empire to which these colonies belong." Both these hoped-for, and "dimly seen" results have followed, and are evident to all. The proofs of this I cannot enter into except so far as concerns our own cause. The general changes produced have no doubt materially contributed to the circulation of the Scriptures among the French as here mentioned. You recollect the priest who burned some of our Bibles, and whom we noosed for his own good and the good of the public? The plan we took with him had exactly the effectively desired and arrived at. We made him pay the Bibles, and frightened him into the bargain, and since that time he has burned no Bibles, nor taken any away from the people, nor forbid their reading of them, but is as quiet as the lamb.

On the 27th January the Montreal Bible Society held their anniversary meeting. It was well attended, the speeches were all of a superior kind, (my own excepted), and a very general gratification was expressed by all present: and interesting and gratifying as were former anniversaries, yet this the latest, not the last, was classed by all, as superior to its predecessors. And this is, I may say, as it ought to be, for every additional year should witness in our Bible movements something new and in advance. So I trust it will in general be in future years will unquestionably witness greater things than any of us can now anticipate, however sanguine may be our hopes.

The meeting was held in one of the Scotch churches, and all the trees Scotch ministers were present, and all officiated. One of them commenced the meeting by reading a portion of Scripture and prayer, and the other two delivered truly biblical addresses which gave general satisfaction. This was a step in advance, for we never had had the three with us on any former occasion. Another visible step in advance of the anniversary was the presence on our platform of two ministers of the Church of England. Other denominations among us were also represented; and the Catholicity of the Bible Society was fully held forth.

In Upper Canada I learn that our Bible cause is going on with new vigour. Last summer an agent was appointed to travel over the country, to encourage and extend old societies and to form new ones. This is an important measure for the carrying this work out to its proper extent, particularly in so wide a field as that embraced by the Society. And arrangement has also been entered into for the general supply of every family within the province with a copy of the Scriptures, in accordance with the plan adopted in this province, as before described, and which has been attended with such happy effects in different ways. The same beneficial results will no doubt follow the measure in that as has followed in this province. The issues of the Scriptures since this plan was entered on have greatly increased, and probably they will continue to increase, and with an increasing ratio for some years to come. I apprehend you will have a very large order to fulfill for that Society by the spring vessels. In the eight months ending at the close of December last they had issued 6447 copies, whilst the total number of copies issued during the 12 months preceding these eight was 2819. This you see is more than the trebling of their operations.

I have thus given you a sketch of the operations of your agent in these British American Provinces during the two past years. This is about the time you allowed him for going over them. He has not however been able to bring things quite to a close. There remains yet sufficient labour in New Brunswick and Nova Scotia for the ensuing summer and you have acceded to his remaining in this quarter until the unvisited parts are gone over. I hope it will be found not altogether in vain that you have thus paid a visit to these interesting provinces. Your kind remembrance of your Bible associates over these countries, in sending an envoy to them, has been fully responded to on their part, by an increased attachment to you as a parent, and a firmer purpose to co­operate with you locally and generally. Many new societies have been formed in all these provinces during this visitation. Old ones, on the other hand, have been revived and strengthened. Your single and noble object of giving the Bible to all mankind, in all languages, and your success hitherto in this enterprise, have become better known over these provinces by the many statements of the same, publicly and privately, of your Agent. A deeper feeling about the value of the Bible itself has also, it is hoped, been produced; and an increased attention has been awakened, perhaps, and strengthened, in respect to the individual read­ing of the Bible, and in the closet, with earnest prayer for Divine guidance in the study of this blessed volume; for your Agent does not consider himself as acting out of place or character in repeatedly bring­ing before his audiences the high value of the Bible, and the especial duty of all to read it most closely and prayerfully. And he argues that, just in proportion as men read, and thus read the Bible, will they be disposed to contribute to the giving of it to others and to all. Might I add also, that perhaps a better British feeling has been produced from this inter-communion with you. It is the Bible that has made the British what they are, though, alas! there are many who enjoy the benefit  who do not know this. The Bible is undoubtedly the basis and the ladder of our prosperity. This subject has been alluded to by various speakers at our meetings; and the gentleman presiding on one occasion made happy use of the phrase The British Family, of which we here claim to be a part.

I urge everywhere two things: first, that we ought diligently to labour to get the Bible into every house, and further, into the individual possession of all who can read; and, secondly, that we ought, if possi­ble, to get a contribution annually from every house, and from every individual in possession of the Bible. I press strongly the duty and obligation of every one who has the Bible to contribute from year to year, as a tribute of thanksgiving for the boon he has and enjoys, in order that by these contributions the boon may be bestowed upon all our fellow-creatures everywhere.

The circulation of the Scriptures in these provinces is perhaps more important, in some respects, than with you at home. Our popu­lation is rapidly increasing; and it is very desirable to have the whole country Bibled as early as possible, as a basis for the advantage of our rapidly increasing numbers. I am sure you will be most willing to give all aid towards this early Bibling of the country. You may not meet with your full pay soon, but it will be sure.

You see I have made a verb of the Bible. Grammarians tell us that the verb is the principal part of speech: and surely To Bible the world should be the principal part of our speech and our action, even of us who, by God's grace, have the Bible. Such is the sacred and honoured employment of yourself and your Society, and such also, blessed be God, is mine.

I have hardly left room for the Indians, who, you know, have joined your ranks. They will deserve a full page of attention; and if I cannot now give it in length, I will try to give it in strength. They have done nobly: they have surpassed all others among us. The proofs of this I cannot now give: I gave them to you on former occasions. I have repeatedly held forth the Bible feeling and action of the Indians as an example. "Liberal as you know I wish you all to be towards the Bible cause," (I have said that several meetings), "I shall yet be amply contented, if you give as the Indians have given, weighing your means and theirs." You know from my former communications how readily and amply the Squaws contributed to our cause at Moravian Town both for themselves, and also for their children, and that too often their husbands had subscribed. Please tell this at all your meetings until the husband, wife, and children in each house shall have subscribed. Will not your coffers be better filled when you thus all become Indians, or like them? I would not wish to change your fair ladies into red Squaws, nor your men into Indians, but would like to see you and ourselves all Indians, in the way here noticed. The sums subscribed by the Indians compared with their incomes are wonderful, and the imitation of them which change our copper into silver and our silver into gold. Again your recollect what I told you of the Indians at Rice Lake. At the close of our meeting there, when the person who wrote down the names of subscribers, (himself an Indian), was asked how many he had got, he replied, as "I have got the name of every person at the meeting, man, woman, and child." Now tell this also at all your meetings if you please, and say that in other two places the same happened, until at the close of your overflowing assemblages it can be said, that all present, then, women, and children subscribed to the Bible cause; and till this takes place, let the Indians hold the station in which by their deeds they have placed themselves. That is no respect of persons with God: and to whom much is given, of them much is required.

In summer before last when I made my extended tour over Upper Canada, I reached as far as Lake Huron. Just at the entrance of the Lake from the River there is a lighthouse. I had the curiosity to ascend to the top of this beacon: and when there, what a glorious view lay before me, the splendid Lake, the splendid River, and the splendid expanse of a rich, fertile though wooded country, each lost to view only in the horizon. There thus lay before me a kind of emblem or representation of your Society. There, to this place were gathered the entire waters of the Great Lakes, Superior, Michigan, and Huron. To this spot all their waters flow, and from this they have their main entrance upon usefulness. The outlet of the Lake, or in other words, the commencement of the great River is a narrow and rapid stream, not half a mile wide, and running at the rate of about six or seven miles an hour. The water is deep, as you may well suppose, and it is so thoroughly clear and transparent that you can distinctly see to the bottom. Your Bible House in Earl Street, London, is this narrow, deep, rapid, and chrystaline stream. Into this house flow the means of your great waters, or many peoples spread over the British Isles. There you purify the muddy money that your receive, as the muddy waters are by the Lake, and thus purified and transformed into Bibles, into the pure river of the water of life, you send the fertilizing stream, deep and rapid, over the wide world. Great are the advantages of our mighty St. Lawrence, but what are the in kind or degree compared with the Grand Bible River that flows out of your House? Your river now reaches, I may say, to the ankles, and Oh may God open the windows of heaven and send a plentiful rain to raise the river, that it may soon reach to the knees, and then to the loins, and then become a river that cannot be passed because of its greatness. And well may we thus wish, and pray for the fulfillment of our wish, for by the faithful word of promise contained in our Book, "Everything shall live whither the river cometh."

This world in which we dwell is a parched wilderness, a dry and thirsty land, that eateth up, we may say, the inhabitants thereof, and much does it need the River of God to make it glad. And it shall be made glad, and by the River of God. The desert shall rejoice, and blossom as the rose. But now alas! we see it not so. We know however for our consolation the leaven is in the mass, and that it is effectively, though slowly, working its way, and with a certain issue. The Bibling of the world goes on apace. The work done in the circulation of the Scriptures, and in the translations of them during these 36 years in which you and others have been at work is wonderful, is passing wonderful, all things considered. If the two witnesses have not yet ascended up to heaven in a cloud, they are at least no longer dead bodies lying contemned in the street, they now stand up on their feet, and soon shall they hear from on high the joyful voice, "Come up hither."

Be not discouraged then, but be thankful that you have done so much or rather that God has done so much by you. The waters issuing from your House, already reach, as I have said, the world's ankles. You see them steadily rising before your eyes with the increase of God, and you know for a certainty that they shall and must rise to the prevail upon the earth exceedingly, like Noah's flood, until all the high hills under the whole heaven be covered. Fear not then because of the vast expanse of earth which yet remains to be Bibled, fear not because of the high hills, nor say where shall waters be found to cover them? No, the windows of heaven are already opened, the fountains of the great deep are breaking up, and the world shall, and soon, be flooded with the Bible. Rejoice then in God and in his work, walk humbly, put on new strength, act in all wisdom, for the victory is sure. Darkness and clouds, troubles, impediments, and difficulties, we may expect at present and in our onward way. But let us look forward even to the glorious light that is to follow, and which advances upon us in no mean degree. Thus the Saviour did in his day, and much more may we do it in ours which is so far in advance, for the night is far spent and the day is at hand. The Saviour, though a man of sorrows, at times rejoiced in spirit, when he looked forward and saw Satan fall in like lightning to the ground, when he beheld the glorious latter days, and saw finally his Church without spot or wrinkle or any such thing. Let us all then, for our animation, look forward to the day, when the glory of God shall cover the earth, and let us look still further forward, and see this glory fill the heavens above, and all eternity.

I remain, My Dear Brother, and

            all my Dear Brethren.

                        Truly and Affectionately Yours,

                                    James Thomson.

Rev A Brandram No 100 101.

Montreal 22nd March 1841

My Dear Friend,

In my last letter of the 20th ultimo I mentioned that I might perhaps give you by this packet my little thoughts in regard to the subject particularly noticed in your last (of 11th Dec.), and which is now of pretty general notoriety with you, I mean the Printing Question. I have read in one number of the Record, which I arrived here at the same time with your letter, a general view of the subject. The Patriot I have not seen, nor any of its statements, except so far as they are quoted in the newspaper just noticed.

The intemperate and extravagant language of the popular opponents of the Queen's Printers, and of yourselves, I most entirely disapprove of: and the avowed intention of resisting and contravening the law of the land, which the same parties hold forth, is to be reprobated, I think, in the severest degree. Nevertheless, there are some things involved in this question that are of high moment, and which we ought not to avert our eyes from. If there is a system in action whose natural and unavoidable tendency will necessarily restrain the circulation of the Scriptures, and make the number diffused, say one million, or even a thousand fewer in a given time than would otherwise be the case, then this interfering system should unquestionably be removed, if it can properly become. Your Society is involved in this question in a twofold point of view. First, as a body of men feeling deeply the great cause of diffusing the Bible among your countrymen to the greatest possible extent: and secondly, as a body entrusted, on the part of thousands of contributors, to administer their bounty in the most faithful and judicious manner, so as to make it effectual for the greatest quantity of good in the way intended. On these two grounds you are so concerned and entangled with this case as to be obliged, in duty, in my very humble opinion, to take a share in the question, and not to turn away from it, as if it formed no item of your business.

I take it for granted, as a matter of needing no formal proof, that however reasonable your three printers may be, yet beyond all doubt they must have a considerable gain from their transactions with you from year to year; and this sum, whatever it may be, would, if you had it at command, cause an additional circulation of the Scriptures usually. Here then is a case, and a handle for your opponents, and by which they have, as I think, an advantage over you, so long as you stand aloof from the question.

But, what is to be done, you will say. The right is in the hands of the three printers, and they cannot lawfully be deprived of it. No certainly: but the door is not shut for all that. The right might be bought up by the Government, and this would be a fine opportunity, for the Parliament say, to give a noble contribution to the Bible Society: and as the measure, if introduced into Parliament, would most probably be popular, I have little doubt that it would be accorded. Now, it appears to me, that it would be quite justifiable and suitable that your Committee and Society as a body should make a petition the Government and Parliament on the subject, and if you did make this movement, you would show to all concerned your anxiety to have the Bible cheap for the millions of the Poor who need it, and are ready to receive it, if cheap, to a much greater extent than when its price is higher. – But should this boon be granted, I would not have the printing of the Bible thrown open to everyone, nor so loose as it now is in Scotland. Some wise arrangement should be made so as to ensure the utmost accuracy, and the lowest possible price.

I have thus endeavoured to solve the difficulty in its cost aspect first. But there is another way of solving it, and a better and easier one. The Crown that gave the right to three different parties to print the Bible, could give the same privilege to a fourth party. And who should that party be, but the British and Foreign Bible Society. This would clear the matter at once. By this means you would be able to give the Bible and more cost in the most advantageous way. Your opponents would be silenced and satisfied with this measure, and the Blessed Bible would have free course without any restraint.

Your object is to feed the Poor with the Bible, not the rich, and if you could print the Bible yourselves as a fourth Patentee, you might be satisfied with printing it only on inferior papers, and with issuing it only in plain bindings. This limitation might be laid upon you by the Crown for the 20 years of the right of the present Patentees. Under this arrangement the three Patentees would probably be satisfied. And they should be so, for your Society has put much into their hands, partly by your direct purchases, and partly by the very extensive demand which your operations have made for the Bible among the many who are not connected with, or do not purchase from your Society, but through the Booksellers. By the plan here suggested you would still leave with the Patentees this extensive sale untouched, and also the sales of Bibles by yourselves of the better papers and the better bindings.

Should the Committee look upon the question in this latter view of it, and should they agreed to apply to the Crown on the subject, I have little doubt that your President and Vice-President could easily procure the privilege that has been suggested.

Please, My Dear Friend, to forgive the freedom, and errors if you will, of these observations; and read them to the Committee, or not as you may think proper. But should you not read the letter in Committee, please show it privately to some individuals of your body.

            I remain, my dear friend,

                        Very Truly Yours,

                                    James Thomson.

Postscript, 6th April. ― This letter, precisely as you now have it, was written a few days after I received your letter of the 11th Dec. but it was detained when I found I had another and a longer one to send you. Since then I have received your Circular of the 8th of February. But nothing in it hinders or affects the arguments I have used. The question will not be settled by this arrangement and reduction. J.T.

Posted
AuthorBill Mitchell

Rev A Brandram No 102.

Montreal 7th April 1841

My Dear Friend,

I beg leave to lay before you a note of the quantity and kinds of Books which, according to the judgment of our friends here, will be required for your general depot in this city. You can send them by any of the Spring ships at your convenience, consigned as formerly.

  300 Nonpareil Bibles, at 1/6.

             100 Ruby Bibles, at 1/6.

             100 Pearl Bibles, at 1/6.                              500

             1000 Testaments, at 8d.

             1000       do.        , at 6d.                             2000

You are aware, I suppose, that Bibles printed in Edinburgh, or any part of Scotland, can be imported lawfully and freely into this or any other British colony. You can therefore accommodate matters as to the above order as you may find for the cheapest and best, in sending the Books from London or from Edinburgh, say via Greenock if from the latter place.

I would seize this opportunity of saying what I have often wished to say, and of making a little request. During last summer whilst in Nova Scotia and New Brunswick I experienced considerable favour from John Howe Esq. the Deputy Postmaster General in Halifax, in the way of franking letters,  and he not a little favoured also the Halifax Bible Society in the same way. Mr Lessel his assistant likewise was ever ready through personal labour and kindness thus to befriend us: and often too I met with the same attention from the Postmaster in the country places, to whom generally I had a note of introduction from Mr Howe when I moved about.

From the favours we have thus received from Mr Howe, as also through Mr Lessel and others under his direction, I think there is due to him, and also to them through him, some little note of acknowledgement and thanks, either from the Committee or yourself; and this notice on your part, will besides obtain for us continued and more cheerful favour, if the parties could do it more cheerfully.

                          I am, Very Sincerely Yours,

                                                            James Thomson.

Posted
AuthorBill Mitchell

Rev A Brandram - No 103

St. John, New Brunswick 22nd May 1841

My Dear Friend,

I write you a few lines that chiefly to say that I have safely arrived in this place. I came through the United States. When I left Montreal it was my intention to go by land from Burlington or Albany direct to Boston. But the weather and the roads proving very unfavourable, I was induced to go by way of New York to have the advantage of steam boat and rail road conveyances. It so happened that the very day I was in New York was the Anniversary of the American Bible Society. I was gratified in this in one way, as it afforded me an opportunity of witnessing the national efforts of the Americans to circulate the Holy Scriptures. But in another respect I had some an easiness, as being there unofficially, and yet obliged to take part in their public business. I trust you will excuse any irregularity you may see in this travelling accident. I say nothing of the meeting itself, as I suppose you will be duly and officially notified of it.

I arrived in this city on the afternoon of Monday last the 17th instant, and in ample time for the operations of the season, as the weather hitherto has been very bad, and unfit for Bible visitations. Yesterday however and today it is better, and we hope for a continuance of what we now have. You will perceive that I have been exactly six months absent from this quarter. I had four months leave, but the month before and after are non-travelling months in this country.

Two days after my arrival here we had a meeting of the Committee of the New Brunswick Bible Society. There was a very full attendance. The chief object of it was to make arrangements as to my visitations in this Province, and more especially in this neighbourhood. We have had a subcommittee meeting since for the same purpose. The routes and places have been pointed out to me, and on Monday next the 24th I commence my country visitations by going to St. Andrew's. I shall then take other places in that quarter. I write and leave this letter now for the next packet, as I would be too late for it when I return to this city.

Your letter of the 15th March reached me on the 24th April. Since which date I have not received any communication from Earl Street. I suppose there may be letters for me at Halifax, to which place I have written that they may be sent here. I wait their arrival before I answer your West India inquiry general and particular. I think you need not be in haste to appoint for the West Indies.

                       I remain, My Dear Friend,

                                                Very Truly Yours,

                                                            James Thomson.

Posted
AuthorBill Mitchell

Mr John Jackson

St. John, New Brunswick 22nd May 1841

My Dear Sir,

Many thanks for your note of the 18th March which was received on the 24th April. The letter your promised me by next packet has not yet reached me. Probably it is lying in Halifax, from which I expect letters soon.

I seize this opportunity to make one particular request, which is, that you would be kind enough to see that my letters are not addressed to the care of anyone, unless I especially mention it. In consequence of some being addressed to the care of Mr. Black in Halifax when I was in Montreal they were delayed for a fortnight; and more or less inconvenience of the same kind has a different times happened from this mode of addressing them. I always mention to what Post Office I wish my letters addressed, and with that Post Office I correspond, and receive my letters regularly, except when taken out by some person in whose care they are addressed.

Hoping soon to receive your expected communication,

                        I remain, My Dear Sir,

                                                Truly Yours,

                                                            James Thomson.

Posted
AuthorBill Mitchell

Mr William Hitchin

St John, New Brunswick, 9th June 1841

My Dear Sir,

I beg leave to advise a Bill drawn this day for Fifty Pounds, at Thirty days, in favour of  L.H. Deveben of this place; the amount to be charged to my Travelling Account.

Your letter of the 29th April, with my accounts balanced up to the 31st March was received by me in this city on the 2nd instant. All is, as usual, very correct. I would just notice that you have overlooked a little thing I mentioned in Note 4 of Letter 34, last sentence. Please to keep it in mind next time, as it will enable me more readily to identify all sums drawn when looking over your Accounts.

                        I remain,

                                    My Dear Sir,

                                                Very Sincerely Yours,

                                                                        James Thomson.

Posted
AuthorBill Mitchell

Rev A Brandram - No 104

St. John, New Brunswick, 12th June 1841

My Dear Friend,

By last packet your letter of the 18th came into my hands, and a few days earlier I received yours of the 19th April, returned from Montreal. The one dated the 15th of March was received in Montreal on the 24th April.

I find by your two last letters that you are waiting my answer to yours of the 15th March concerning the West Indies: whilst I on the other hand was waiting your notice of my items as contained in my letter of the 24th February.

The case stands thus. In your letter of the 20th December you inquired whether I was willing to go to Spanish America. I said, yes. Before my letter with this reached you, you mentioned propositions about the West Indies, without referring to the previous proposition you had made, the answer to which was on the way. The letter that contained my answer, contained also some hints of some wishes I had of a private nature, and I thought I would wait till I should see what you would say to the whole of my letter of the 20th February, as respected South America and my private wishes. Now however that I see we are waiting for each other, I proceed immediately to treat on all that is pending between us.

Before however I commence, I would notice that the Resolution of the Committee respecting Mr. Howe and Mr. Lessel. The letter which contained Resolution was forwarded to the Parties by last mail the other day, and there is not yet time for a reply. For myself I thank you much, and all the Committee, for the kind manner in which you have attended to my suggestion. Something was due in the case, and you have done it, and gracefully.

In your letter of the 19th April you say, in reference to mine of the 20th February, "From that letter I learn that your thoughts are turned more decidedly to the South." I do not see how you gathered anything of a decision in preference from that letter, for there was only one object before me, and the whole of what I said on it was as follows: – "As to the question, Is your agent willing to go to South America, I would answer readily in the affirmative".

Now however there are two objects before me, and I think the Committee wishes me to express a decision in favour one of them. Since I wrote what I have quoted above in reply to your letter of the 11th of December 1840, I have often turned the subject of a visit to those distant countries in my mind, considering that the finger of God was directing me again to those quarters. In these late contemplations, as well as in some former ones, I have tried to see a field of Bible labours which might perhaps prove right and extensive. The field I referred to is as regards the native tongues. In Mexico there are almost half a dozen languages which are very extensively spoken, say by Three Millions of people; besides which there are from ten to fifteen other languages and dialects spoken perhaps by other Two Millions, making in all Five Millions. This alone is no mean object of attention, and would justify considerable effort on your part, if the door open, and whether it is fairly open or not can only be ascertained on the spot. I am inclined to think something could now be done to give the Scriptures to these Five Millions in their own tongue, if things were well managed. In Guatemala also the native languages are extensively spoken. The two great languages which chiefly prevail over the Western parts of the Southern Continent are the Peruvian and Araucanian.

In directing your efforts to these countries, it appears to me, you must chiefly look to work in the native languages; for probably the circulation of the Scriptures in Spanish would not be very extensive; although as respects the New Testament perhaps a good deal might be done, say in schools. And further, the system of colportage should be fully tried, and it may do much. In my letter No.70, of  the 24th of May 1838, you will see that I have treated on the subjects particularly, and I beg you would look over what I have their said.

Very recently and unexpectedly this object of the native tongues has come before me anew, and I may say, with fresh encouragement. On my late, and I may say in truth, unwilling visit to New York, in going down to that city from Albany in the steam boat I met with a gentleman a native of Yucatán, and just come from that place. He informed me that Yucatán had broken off from Mexico, and was independent. With the political merits and demerits of this act and change I have nothing to do, but its bearing on our concerns may perhaps be very favourable. The new Constitution they have just promulgated grants religious liberty to all foreigners, which hitherto has nowhere else been done in Spanish America except in Buenos Ayres: and my informant intimated to me that this step was a forerunner to general religious liberty in the country. Now no part of the Mexican territory is more interesting than Yucatán as respects what I have here considered as the main object of your present agency in those countries, I mean in regard to the native tongues. The whole of that Peninsula speaks one, called Maya. I had always considered its population to be about half a million, but this gentleman says there are 700,000 inhabitants in it. Here then is an important field to try in the work in question, and probably under the new state of things I have mentioned there would be considerable facility for obtaining not only a translation of a portion of the Scriptures, but for getting it into use also, and perhaps under the sanction and encouragement of the new government, for they will be anxious that their people should become intelligent and great, and I will tell them should I go there, and with all my conscience that the knowledge of the Holy Scriptures will raise these people, and higher than any other means could. – I may here add also, that the other subdivisions that seemed to be going on in Mexico will most likely be in our favour in like manner, and that both as respects the languages, and the general circulation of the Scriptures, for there will be a rivalry among the several little nations in the way of liberality, etc.

As to whether I should go to Spanish America or West Indies, I am inclined to think the indications of duty are in favour of the former, under all the circumstances of the two cases at the present period. I shall therefore consider that I am to be led back again to those countries by the hand of Providence in due time. These countries are already associated in my mind with many strong impressions; and why should I hesitate to return to them after all the mercies I experienced there during ten years, and in the midst of many difficulties and dangers.

Having made this statement of my views I would beg leave to the refer you to my letter of the 20th February, and particularly to my special request for leave to spend the ensuing winter season in Montreal, in order to pursue the objects of study there mentioned. Please therefore to read those parts of that letter I here referred to when this is read.

This finishes all I have to say in regard to myself, and I shall now proceed, agreeably to your request, to say something about the West India Agency generally. You will probably recollect my having written you pretty fully upon the subject, I think towards the end of 1834, or beginning of 1835. Be so good as look up that letter, as it contains, I believe, the same views I now hold in regard to this matter. I then recommended two Agencies for the West Indies, and the reasons for this arrangement are not lessened by occurring and intervening circumstances, civil or biblical, but increased. One at all events certainly you ought to have, and the West Indies ought to be the post of a continued agency, not a casual one. Do you ask me whom, of those I know, should you send? I would reply, Is Mr. Bourne willing to go? He is a better West Indian than I.

I have thus treated on all the subjects in suspense, and I now look out with interest for your notices of the whole in reply, praying earnestly that God may guide you to what is right, and to the best in all that is before us.

You noticed in your No.10, that you might have to open a subscription for Mrs. Wheeler, but in No.11 and 12 you say nothing further of it. If you should make a subscription for her, as I suppose is most likely, put me down for Ten Pounds.

May the Lord prosper you, My Dear Friend, in all your affairs public and private: and please ever to believe me,

                        Affectionately Yours,

                                                James Thomson.

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