Rev A Brandram No.59

Kingston, Jamaica, 27th February 1837

My Dear Friend,

Your letter of the 16th January came to hand the day before yesterday. I am glad you have sent me a copy of  Mr Ketley's letter, and that you have suppressed nothing. The compact that Mr Ketley alludes to, I have no recollection nor consciousness of whatever; neither do i think it was possible, (so to speak), that the two parties in question could have entered into any such compact of unrighteousness, as to say one thing, and mean another. Now the rules of the Demarara Bible Society declare a union and co-operation with the British and Foreign Bible Society. And such a connexion, a bona fide one, had all the Societies formed by your Agent, except the Danish Society in the Island of Santa Cruz, and that exception was, as you know, distinctly mentioned to you. That Mr Strong had feelings against your Society, and in favour of another, is well known. These I knew to be existing in his mind, not only before I saw him, but before I left London for the West Indies, as they were mentioned to me by Mr Coates of the Church Missionary Society. When I arrived in Demarara I was warmly pressed by Mr Strong to take up my lodgings at his house, and which I accordingly did. here at leisure we had ample opportunities of conversing upon this subject, and we did converse upon it amply and freely; and the result of these conversations I considered to be the removal of his difficulties in the case, and hence that he fully joined in our purpose of forming a Society in Demarara, as a bona fide auxiliary to the British and Foreign Bible Society.  Mrs Thomson was with me when your letter came into my hands, and previous to her reading it, I asked her what was her impression as to Mr Strong in regard to his union with the Demarara Bible Society. Her reply was, "Why that he joined it frankly and freely." But do you recollect, I said, the objections he stated, and our conversations on the subject. She said she recollected that there was much said on the matter, and one conversation in particular she well remembered, and the very place where we were at the time, namely, walking on the road towards Georgetown from St Matthews Rectory where we resided. She recollects Mr Strong saying at the close of what I related to him, "Is it so?" and upon that agreeing cordially to join with us in the establishment of our society. What that conversation was, and what I particularly said to Mr Strong, I do not recollect. But I think it highly probable that I then mentioned to him the actual state of the Committee in Earl Street, in regard to socinianism. Mr Strong had the impression that a majority, or at least many of the said Committee were Socinians; and this impression everybody must have had who read the things at that time recorded by those of the opposite side. False witnesses, truly, rose up against you, and that their  mode of witnessing was false, is manifest from the false and erroneous understanding of the subject given to all who listened to them. I stated to Mr Strong, that this view of the Committee was totally at variance with fact, for that there was not one member of that Committee who was a Socinian, nor had there ever been a Socinian in the Committee, as far as was known, from the beginning of the Society. This statement, I believe, led Mr Strong, to say, as above noticed, "Is it so?", and as a consequence to join in a Bible Society frankly and fully. ―I shall write to Mr Ketley and to Mr Strong upon the subject. In the mean time allow me to thank you for your frank communication to me of the whole of this matter, and let me beg you always to act on this plan of full openness, as you have heretofore done. I am glad that Mr Wheeler arrived in Demarara in time to prevent a chasm of any extension in the Demarara Bible Society. Its past operations have been good, and I trust its further ones will be still better.

At the public meeting held in December last to form the St Mary's Bible Society one of the speakers made especial reference to the suitableness of the Book of Proverbs for the negroes here. It was the Rev Mr Simpson who mentioned this, but the suggestion was from the Rev Mr Cowan. I was asked then and there to request this additional boon from you, and which I now do according to desire. I afterwards conversed with these gentlemen upon this subject, and learned that this book printed by itself on a good type would probably prove very acceptable and very useful to the people of this place. The best size perhaps would  be 18mo  and the type pica or english.

By your last report you had £967:7:6 standing unapplied of the Negro Fund. Would not the printing of the Proverbs be a proper use of part of this fund? I mention this, as I suppose you are somewhat at a loss how to dispose of your accumulated stock on this head. I give you some further help in the same way. The one fourth reduction given us here for two years may well be charged to that account.

I thank you for the Resolution in favour of the general depot in Kingston. Every hour I am looking for the Books. They are greatly wanted. I have a request for Manchester Parish for 300 Bibles, and cannot meet iteven in the least degree. I may here mention, and more particularly in reference to one of Mr Jackson's late letters, that the depot of Kingston does not suppose the giving up the plans of shipping to outports also; and this will be abundantly manifest by a subsequent request for 4000 Bibles to be sent to the outports.  Indeed, the preference in every case where practicable is to be given to sending the Books direct to the place where they are wanted; and the general depot is for supplying immediate needs in any and every place as they may occur, in order to prevent retardations of our work through long wants, as have happened heretofore  in several instances. The expense of sending Books from Kingston to the outports must be saved as possible; and when it does occur, as occur it will, the items might I think very properly be charged to the Negro Fund.

Mr Tinson was I understood to have sent you £50 by the last packet, but I find he did not. He has now about £100, and I have advised him to hurry it off, that it may have a chance of being placed to account for the 31st March. I am glad to be able to say, that our good friend will continue to act in the Bible Society as heretofore.

The name of  T J Bernard, President of St Catherine's Bible Society, I gave you in my last without the prefix "Hon.". I dropped it because he is no longer Custos, but I have since learned that he has a claim to "the Honourable" on another score, as an Assistant Judge. Please then print the name as in your last report.

I have long had my eye on Cuba, and have made many enquiries about it. Probably I may be in that Island on the day of your annual meeting. Peru, and the vast continent of South America, is in course of being opened up to your operations with more facility than it has hitherto been. I have lately heard of a proposal to establish a regular monthly communication by steam vessels from Chile to Panamá, including intermediate parts. I shall anxiously look for the realization of this scheme. I have some requests to prefer to you respecting the Spanish Scriptures, their versions and editions, by way of facilitating the circulations of the Sacred Book in the parts referred to. But my notices I must defer till another opportunity, and so that my letter may come into your hands after your anniversary when you will have more leisure to consider them than you can now be expected to have. In the meantime I should like to know whether you have received a copy of Torres Amat's second edition of his Spanish version of the whole Bible. Also whether you possess an entire copy of the First edition, for you did not when I left London.

I lament with you the loss of our late valuable and dear Friend Mr Tarn. God, in his infinite wisdom, has taken two names out of the tablet of my daily prayers by this packet. Mr. Tarn is one, the other is my only brother.

My Dear Friend, may the grace of our Lord Jesus Christ be with you evermore.

                                                                                                                James Thomson.

Rev A Brandram No.60

Kingston, Jamaica, 3rd May 1837

My Dear Friend,

All hail the auspicious day, the day on which all the disciples of Christ meet together around the Word of God, with one heart and one soul, the day on which they all speak the same thing, and when there is no divisions among them! All hail to this day, the best and noblest of the year, as marked in the calendar of heaven. And, Oh, when shall the antitype of this blessed day come, when shall the time arrive shadowed forth in this day, the time when the whole church of God shall be perfectly united in one mind and one judgment, and when we shall all glorify God with one mind and one mouth! The Lord be with you all on this day. May the Holy Ghost fall upon you all: may you never afterwards quench nor grieve the Spirit of God in your intercourse one with another; and may God never take away his Spirit from you!

In my last I told you, that I expected to be in Cuba on this day. From a disappointment in regard to a vessel, that has not been verified. But, tomorrow, if the Lord will, I sail from this port to the Havanna. I do count, as you know, on the prayers of yourself, of the Committee, and of all the friends of the Bible Society, in this enterprise, for enterprise it may be called, and one too of a doubtful character, not as to its merits, but as to the results that may attend it. The Lord hear all your prayers, and make this effort glorious in its effects, for the advancement of his kingdom!

The Bibles, alas for it, our expected Bibles, are not yet come. Three months ago we thought we had them, for there was time. I suppose there is nobody to blame in the case, except for the ship; but, you know, one will quarrel even with a ship under disappointments. We feel our loss greatly, and our character is suffering in the minds of many Negroes who have been looking their eyes out for them in long suspense. I hoped much they would have arrived before I set out for Cuba, but in this I am disappointed. I must now do the best I can to arrange for their distribution whenever they may come, in my absence.

Since my last I have received letters from you of the 28th January, the 14th February,  and the 14th March; and from Mr Jackson of the 15th March. Last mail brought ne a very cheering brotherly letter from our fellow labourer Mr Wheeler.

During the  last two months I have been endeavouring to do something in different places near to this in the way of stirring up congregations to get the Scriptures among themselves to the fullest extent of their need; and the results in some of these places show how rich and large a field there is in this respect for Bible Society cultivation.

I am glad to see the tribute you have paid to the memory of our late dear Friend Mr Tarn, as contained in your letter of 28th January. He was a faithful and laborious servant of the Society for a very long period. He died at his post, and has, I doubt not, received the conqueror's reward from the Captain of our salvation.

You notice our Hampden Bible Association. The seeming, not real, irregularity, arises, I believe, from the circumstance of a collection being made, and part of it paid in to their Bible Association, and part of it to their Missionary Society.

            Believe me, My Dear Friend,

                        Very Truly Yours,

                                    James Thomson.

Rev A Brandram  No.61

 Havannah  8th June 1837

My Dear Friend,

I now write you from the island of Cuba, a place I have looked to for a long time, with wishes, hopes & fears; the first and the last of these feelings, prevailing, I confess, over the one expressed between them. But your business and mine is to offer and obtrude the Holy Scriptures every where and to all men, of all continents and all nations, and to the distant isles of the sea.

This is the last island in the West Indies, in regard to its position, and in regard to the visitation of your society; and it is last in several other respects, which I shall not here mention. But though last, it is not least; for it is in size the greatest of all the West India Islands, and it is greatest too in regard to its need of your help. This is the 20th Island in the West Indies visited by your Agent during his tour through this Archipelago, exclusive of Demerara, which is not an island, and exclusive of Venezuela, both of which parts are on the main and great continent of South America. The places therefore, if not the islands, are in number 22, and belonging to different nations. In all the 21 the Scriptures have had an entrance; and into all that entrance was frank and full to a considerable extent, except Porto Rico. But there too the Word of God entered, though it was, if I might so speak, taken up the wall in a basket, yet without infringement of law.

Notwithstanding however all these encouragements, I felt discouraged when I looked to Cuba, and longed to be in it. The enquiries that I had made about this island when I was in Jamaica, did not lessen but rather increased my doubts and fears upon this subject. At length the proper time of visiting it seemed to draw near. The Havannah I had thought was the best place to begin this experiment in; but there was a difficulty in this, as it is a very awkward place to find a conveyance from back to Jamaica, and thus both the time and the expense would be much greater to pay a visit to Cuba there, than it would be to visit some other parts, such as Santiago de Cuba or Trinidad, with both of these ports there is constant communication with Jamaica, to and from. Having this difficulty before me, I had next to resolved to visit Santiago. But the fear that greater obstacles would be met with there than at the Havannah getting the books through the Custom House under ecclesiastical and other trammels, I at length resolved to encounter the difficulties of loss of time, of inconvenience and expense, as to the Havannah in order of possible to secure the great object before us, or at least to use all likely means within our reach to secure it.

Thus it was that I came to straight from Kingston to the Havannah, sailing from the former on the 5th of May, and reaching this on the 15th of the same month. I arrived here on the Sunday, but was not permitted to land under a penalty of 500 dollars, until I should get a written  permission  under the hand and seal of the governor himself, and this was not to be obtained until security should be given by a person of property in the place, that I should not carry the island away, I suppose, nor the Havannah, nor turn things upside down in any manner whatever. All this, or rather nothing of this could of course be done on the Sunday, so that I had to content myself on board in the harbour till the next day.

I did not tell you before, that whilst viewing Cuba from a distance with wishes, hopes and fears, I made supplications and prayers often to the Almighty God, who made this Island and all its inhabitants, that he would graciously direct and mercifully prosper my way to the glory of his name in this place. The Sunday I spent on board gave me an opportunity of renewing these supplications within the country itself: and I may say I was greatly encouraged in this, it being on God’s holy day when so many are praying that the Kingdom of God may come, and that his will be done on earth as it is in heaven. O ye Christians all, and everywhere! Remember when ye are using these words, or are in other words praying for the advance of the Kingdom of God, and particularly on the Lord’s day, –think, O think, how many missionaries are, I may say, hanging on your prayers, whilst they are going round & round the strong holds of Satan, and blowing the Gospel trumpet the best way they can, amidst many hopes and fears and difficulties, but in full faith that sooner or later your supplications will be answered, and that the walls that defend the kingdom of iniquity shall assuredly fall before your effectual fervent prayers, and that we shall possess the gate of our enemies, according to the prediction of the word of God, which cannot fail to be accomplished.

Well, not to keep you longer in suspense, after thus preparing you with a view of the case now before us, let me call upon you to rejoice and give thanks to God, for the walls of the Havannah are fallen down before the word of God, and the blessed book is now in full possession of this city, or this city of it.

On the Monday morning after the Sunday of our arrival, I wrote from on board to a gentleman living in the city, to whom I had brought a letter of introduction, enclosing the same letter, and begging him to get me out of prison as early as he conveniently could. By noon I was free, and was the first freed of five passengers, one of them, a native of the city too, not getting his leave till some hours after, and the rest not before next day. Mr. Picard of the house of Fesser Picard & Co. was the gentleman who performed, and so promptly, this good office for me, and in which he had to bind himself for my good behaviour, as before hinted, and that I would not turn all things topsy-turvy, a rather bold venture for my obliging friend, seeing I came here purposed to turn things upside down, or downside up rather, and to use means for making all things new—I feel greatly obliged to Mr. Picard for his kindness in this instance, and for many other good offices in facilitating my business here. The books were consigned to his house, and through it all my Custom House and other such business was done, and for which nothing was charged nor accepted. In managing this matter I availed myself of the suggestions of Mr. Picard & of some other friends, and endeavoured to conduct all in the wisest manner I could devise. God has given us a noble triumph, considering all the circumstances of this place, and considering particularly the prohibition I met with at Porto Rico. Everything has been done straightforwardly, and according to law and custom, and no hinderance occurred, nor was any obstacle made through this whole concern.

When I had got the books fairly entered into this city, and within my own power, I made inquiry among the Booksellers about their sale. The whole quantity I brought was two cases, a larger and a smaller, which was very nearly all I had in Jamaica. Of Testaments there were 268, and of the two small books 50, making in all 398 volumes. To one of the Booksellers I sold 42 Bibles, for 85½ dollars, and three others I sold elsewhere for 5 dollars, making 90½ dollars for a commencement, and with which I felt greatly encouraged. The Bookseller would not buy the New Testaments, and the small books, but he agreed to sell them for me on commission, or rather without commission, as he generously realised it when proposed, and offered to do it gratis.

The next thing was to get public notice given of the existence of this treasure in the city, and that there was living water for all, but not exactly without money, & price; for, for the best reasons I always wish to sell our books rather than give them away, and in truth I give very few in a gratis form at any time or in any place. The Bookseller at my suggestion drew up an advertisement, and it was inserted in two daily newspapers, as you will see by a copy of each: which I now send you. Thus you see our flag is unfurled in Cuba, and all is in a prosperous train. A portion of the remainder of the Scriptures brought, which are on sale at the Bookseller’s above referred to, are on sale elsewhere in two places.

Among the friends I have met with here, and from I have received aid and encouragement in my work, not least but the greatest is a Mr. Norman, and English merchant who has resided in this city for several years, and who has been brought by the grace of God to see the value of the Bible, and to perceive in it the glorious gospel of salvation for poor lost sinners in the sacrifice of the Son of God for our redemption. In this salvation he is resting and rejoicing, and has given himself up, as every disciple must and does, to follow the Lamb whithersoever he goeth. The Lord bless him unto eternal life, and make him a light in this very dark place. Mr. Norman, as you will suppose, has given me all help in my present visit to Cuba, and he will continue his services in your cause when your servant leaves this island for other parts of his extended diocess. This will prove of great value to you and I am sure you will be thankful to God for raising such a friend and agent in this place.

In Mr. Norman’s hands I have put some of the Bibles and Testaments for sale, and I know that he will thus put them into circulation, through the intercourse he has with many, and through his forcible recommendation of the inestimable value of the word of God from what he himself has experienced, and by setting before his fellow sinners the necessity of receiving and obeying the doctrines and the precepts of the Scriptures, as otherwise we cannot be saved, and must therefore perish for ever. The Lord prosper him in thus preaching salvation through the Bible, and our Lord Jesus Christ.

A third sale place of the Scriptures is established in a steamboat which runs from this port along a considerable portion of the northern coast of this island. Through the Scriptures being exposed here, the many passengers sailing in this vessel will have the word of God brought under their attention, and offered to them at a low rate. May the Lord lead them to profit from the same, for their everlasting salvation.

The last portion of the books, being somewhat more than one third, I take with me to other parts of the island. My intention is to leave in a few days, and to direct my way, – first to Matanzas, a large and growing city of 20,000 inhabitants, with much commerce, and lying about 70 miles to the Eastward of this. After trying to sell some part of my stock there, I purpose to go on to the city of Principe, which is in a certain view the capital of the island, and the residence of the supreme court called the Royal Audiencia, and containing a population of upwards of 50,000 inhabitants. I go towards that city in the steamboat above referred to, called the Yumurí, and in which is, I trust, a good man, who will take charge of our books for sale, as above noticed. After some stay in Principe, and after disposing, as I hope, some of our good treasure, I shall have to go on overland to Santiago de Cuba. In  that city, containing about 30,000 inhabitants, I expect to dispose of my remaining portion of Books, if I should have any left. Having so disposed of them, and having thus accomplished the object of my visit to this island, I intend to sail for Kingston, Jamaica, to which place there are vessels going frequently.

Before you can receive this letter, I trust that all our Bibles will be out of the hands of their respective salesmen, and into the hands of purchasers and readers: and O! may all who read, live for ever. Thus pray you likewise; and I know you do; for what is out object in circulating the Scriptures, but that people may live by them; and let us remember that our prayers will not a little contribute to this end, for so God hath arranged things in his infinite wisdom; and to whom in all things be the glory. If our Books are disposed of, as I hope, in the time above mentioned, we shall need a new supply, and I trust this island will require and call for many, many copies of the word of God. Please think to send us when this reaches you, Two Hundred Bibles, of the kinds and sorts following: 140 Spanish Bibles, half large, half small; 20 English Bibles, five of these pearl gilt, 5 nonpareil with references; next  5 small pica with references, and 5 English quarto: next 10 French Bibles, half large, half small; 10 German, half large, half small; 5 Portuguese; 5 Italian; 4 Danish; and 5 Dutch; making in all 200 Bibles. To which be so kind as to add, one Arabic Bible, one Ancient Armenian, one Hebrew 8vo  and one Syriac.

I have the pleasure of saying that Dr. Maddan, the superintendent here of the Captured liberated Africans has given every help and encouragement in the blessed work of getting the Scriptures into this place and I feel greatly indebted to him for his many friendly offices. Dr. Maddan has been led to see the value of the Bible, and is very desirous that it should have an extensive circulation in this city and island, and will cheerfully contribute all he can toward the same.  This is his only hope of reanimating religion in this place; though, I suppose, it is a question. Whether religion ever was animate here at all; but at all events it is dead and dead at present. May the word of the Lord be a fire and a hammer to break the rock in  pieces, and bring many souls from darkness to light, and from the power of Satan to God, that they may receive forgiveness of sins, and an inheritance amongst all them that are sanctified by faith in  Christ Jesus, our only Saviour and King, and our final Judge.

I should mention that I have received the kind attentions of a Dr. Finlay, an English medical practitioner in this city, who has introduced me to several individuals, and other wise given me all the aid he can. Amongst others, he introduced me to one of the Canons, and with whom I had a long conversation, and bearing much upon the use of the Scriptures, and to all of which he agreed. He has himself one of your Bibles, of the first edition of 1821, which he showed us, and said he very often reads in it, and mentioned the particular excellencies of different books of Scripture, as had struck him whilst reading your volume. He stated that a Friar brought some Bibles to this city from Panama, and disposed of them, of which his, I think he said, was one. I hope this Canon will be of service to us.

I may state here also, in respect to the distribution of the Scriptures in this place, that Mr. Picard got some copies some years ago, and through the favour of a very intimate friend of his, the then Vicar-General of this city, they were got through the Custom house, and were personally circulated by this Ecclesiastic. Let me record his name, as worthy of being remembered. It is Don Justo Velez. He has left this scene and has entered into eternity, I hope into the joy of our Lord Jesus Christ, and into which joy may every circulator of the Holy Scriptures come.

The Books, you will please direct, with accompanying invoices, to “James Norman Esq. Havannah”. I have made arrangements with this gentleman regarding them, and I am sure he will have a pleasure in serving you, and this people, and God, in this matter. Correspond with him therefore frankly, and you will meet frankness in return.

I notice lastly and incident, or coincidence, which though little, looks in one way great. When I went to the Bookseller’s to talk about selling to him the Bibles, before I had opened my subject, two men came in, in ordinary life from the country, eagerly inquiring for “the Gospels” as they said. The Bookseller said he had them not; and this opened my mouth and my object, and in speaking to them men I desired them to come in the afternoon, and they would find the object they were in quest of.  This is like an Emblem of Cuba seeking for the Word of God, whilst you are in the very act of proffering the Holy Book to it. May Cuba perform its part in the emblem: you, I am sure, will perform yours.

I have only to add, —pray for me all of you, as I do for all you; and pray for Cuba, that the Word of the Lord may have free course in it speedily, and be glorified.

                                     Believe me, Your Affectionate Fellow Labourer,

                                                                         James Thomson.

P.S. Please say to Mr. Hitchin, that I drew a Bill for one hundred pounds  in favour of James Wallace & Co., Kingston, Jamaica, dated 5th. May, and which will probably come to hand later than normal.        JT

P.S. Havannah 16th. June 1937.—Owing to the periods of the sailings of the steam boats, and some other circumstances I have been detained here till now, but leave this evening. From expenses & duties paid here, and the probable difficulty of negotiating Bills further on in this Island, I have this day drawn two small Bills for £25 each in favour of Mr. Norman and Dr. Maddan.     JT

 

Rev A Brandram  No.62

 Santiago de Cuba, 16th. August 1837

My Dear Friend,

I sit down a second time to address you from this island, this land of darkness, which so much needs your heavenly light. My present communication will be somewhat chequered, but on the whole, considering the circumstances of this island, we have good cause to give thanks unto God for the entrance which he has granted us, and for the circulation of the Word of God already expected and as probable yet to take place, consequent on this visitation to it which you have made.

After leaving Havannah I came to Matanzas, a place I noticed to you in my former letter. I could not find there a Bookseller or other person, who would buy the small stock of the Scriptures I had allotted fore that city. But a Bookseller, having the most extensive business of any there in that line, readily agreed to sell what I had on commission. I therefore place the books with him, and then advertised their sale in the newspaper of the place for some days running, a copy of which paper, containing the advertisement will accompany this letter. During the short time I remained in Matanzas I was grieved to find that notwithstanding these advertisements, there was little or no demand for the Holy Book which God had brought in his mercy to the very doors of all in that populous place. But there is, as hinted in my former letter, an awful deadness in this island on the subject of religion, and no where is it more conspicuous than in Matanzas. What could I do but pray to God to take away the darkness that blinds the eyes of the multitude great and small on the immense subject of eternity; and may God in very deed awake them from their stupor, and draw their attention to the word of God now within their reach, may they be enlightened thereby unto eternal life. Thus in prayer and hope I left some volumes there, expecting that they would be sought after in due time.

The next settling place in my tour was Puerto-Principe, the law capital of the island, and the second town in population containing about 60,000 inhabitants. Hither I carried the remaining portion of my books, and arrived on the first of July. One of the persons I had a letter of introduction to in this city was a silversmith, born I think in the French part of St. Domingo, but many years a resident in this place. I often find an opportunity to say something to those I become acquainted with in my movements about the blessed gospel of Christ, and I urge them to seek the kingdom of God, and to seek it through the holy scriptures, the only book that can direct us aright in this great concern I found Mr. Sonnier, the person in question, to give a most attentive ear to this subject, and soon found that he had a French Bible for his own use.  To him therefore I applied, considering him interested in my business, as to where I could place my Bibles for sale most properly. He directed me to his son-in-law, a silversmith and watch maker, and prepared the way for me. His relative Mr. Baron I found also to have an interest in this matter, and he readily consented to receive the books, and dispose of them as occasions offered. I placed them there accordingly and forthwith had them advertised.  I may here add that the printer refused to insert the advertisement, until I showed him then same notification in the Havannah Diario, the government paper,  as there were orders, he said, not to advertise any book without the Captain General’s permission, unless the same was found advertised in the paper before named. I thus found the benefit of having begun at the right end in our concerns in the island. I send you two copies of the Puerto Principe paper, containing our advertisement in two different stages.

When I left Kingston the Archbishop of Cuba was there. I thought it would be as well to pay him a visit, although I did not expect much encouragement from him. A friend acquainted with his private secretary, intimated to the Archbishop my wish to call upon him.  He had the discourtesy however to decline seeing me, mentioning through his secretary, that he believed he could not be of any service to me, and that I should not meet with success in visiting Cuba in connection with the Bible Society. This was not all. About a fortnight after, he wrote, printed, and sent a circular to all his clergy, to be published in all the churches of his diocese, stating that there were persons about to visit this island from Jamaica, to distribute Bibles in it, and thereby to stir up the slaves to assassinate their masters. I found this circular had reached Puerto Principe a few weeks before me. Fortunately however the governor had forbad it to be read in the churches,  not on account of these lies about the Bible which it contained, but because it contained something else bearing somewhat on politics, and because it came from the Archbishop under ban and banishment for being a Carlist. In this manner the Lord stopped the evil from proceeding further. Still this prohibiting the Bible was pretty generally known in this place, and I heard it often mentioned.

Notwithstanding however this attempt of the devil and his servant to hinder the reception of God’s word, it was well and readily received in Puerto Principe. Persons of the higher and the lower ranks sought after it with some avidity. In consequence of this demand the Bibles I brought were all soon disposed of, and many persons felt disappointed who came too late. Among the persons disappointed, and sadly, was a Friar, who in expressing his grief said, there was only one Bible in all the convent, and that it was in Latin. To supply this defect of Bibles, I wrote to Montego Bay in Jamaica to send all that were there, which was nearly a whole case of Bibles, Testaments and the small books. The names in the meantime of those disappointed are being taken down by our salesman until the Bibles come, when they will be served in order of their names on the list.

The number of Testaments I had was larger, and these continued on sale. I called on some Schoolmasters and told them of the Testaments, offering them at a reduced price for use in their schools; and I was gratified to see the proposition in different cases accepted. One instance in which a schoolmaster thus procured the Scriptures for the good of his pupils, turned out afterwards a bad case, as he was ordered by the vicar of the place to return them forthwith. This the Master was obliged to do, as the school was a public one, under the direction of the priest and others. The Master however made this backward step very reluctantly, and expressing his grief to me in being obliged to thus act, and contrary to his own feelings and desires. The Lord break down, and that speedily, this legal formidable opposition to the use of the holy scriptures in this, and in every place, where it exists!

Notwithstanding of these partial discouragements, I had much reason to be gratified with my visit to Puerto Principe. In addition to the ready reception given to the holy book, as above noticed, in its being sought after and purchased, I was cheered by the manner in which my observations upon the value of the word of God were received on many occasions in  which I spoke of it to various persons, as the book of God, the book which we ought all to study above every other, because it was the only book that could rightly lead us in the way to heaven. The Lord give his abundant blessing to all who have received his word in that place, and may it prove to them all, salvation through our Lord Jesus Christ!

On the 19th. July I left Puerto Principe with interest & regret. In addition to the subjects of interest above noticed, I ought to mention  that I enjoyed the kind attentions of several friends, to whom I feel thankful, and not least to Mr. Bastian, a Bremen merchant, who gave me free entertainment in his house during my stay there, and also otherwise served me as circumstances occurred. A long land journey now lay before me, and in the unfavourable season of the year. But to this city of Santiago it was my duty to come, partly to get the Scriptures introduced here, and partly as the only proper place from which I could sail to Kingston. I found the roads better than I expected, and managed my journey with less inconvenience than I feared. The distance is 258 miles, which with the 42 miles from the North coast to the inland city of Puerto Principe makes my land travelling in the island exactly 300 miles. On this journey I have had several opportunities of preaching the gospel to individuals,  recommending them to get the word of God, telling them where it was to be found; and in almost every case I obtained a promise from the person to whom I spoke, and who all gave a solemn attention to what was said, that they would forthwith send and procure the book, and make a point of reading it.

On the second day of the journey, I was amused and interested by a gentleman whom I came upon as he was breakfasting, and his company by the road side. I did not know him, but he was from Puerto Principe, and knew me, which he signified by asking me if I had sold all my Bibles. Thus generally known was my visit to that place, and my objects there. It is good to have the attention drawn in this manner to the holy scriptures. It comes to be like a proclamation from heaven, that the word of God is come to the place, and containing also, we may say, a command to all to procure it and to read it. I mention another circumstance. About halfway on the journey I had occasion to write to a gentleman in Puerto Principe, and in my letter I seized the opportunity of recommending to him the daily reading in his family of the Bible he had obtained. I received a reply from him, in which he thanked me for my advice, and promised to attend to it, expressing the hope of good being the result of this practice.

On the 25th. July I arrived in this city of Santiago de Cuba. A few days afterward I fell ill, and continued so for a week, probably from the effects of the journey. During this time a strange adventure occurred, or rather an adventure strange to me. A strong suspicion fell upon me, that I was a person come here to disturb the public peace, and order of things in this island! The gentlemen I had brought letters of introduction to were called up by the government, and closely examined upon oath, as to what and all they knew about me, and my evil designs; and so was also the landlady of the house I lodge in. She was asked, whether I had not a slave with me as servant whom I had promised to make free;  whether I talked much with the servants (slaves) of the house about liberty; whether I did not especially speak to one of them in particular; if I wrote many letters, and to whom I sent them; and a number of other such things. Lastly, the government officer came to my lodgings with his notary to take my own declaration upon oath about my ways, business and designs. Three hours were occupied with this declaration.

I told them, that I was your servant, that all your designs were good, and so were mine. They asked me very particularly as to your objects, and what motives you had in them. I told them that your single only object and business was to publish the Scriptures in all languages among all nations, that your motives in doing so was, to give glory to God by making known his own word as the grand means of advancing true religion in the world, and that you had no connexion with the Antislavery Society, (for this was the main point), nor with any political society whatsoever. They asked from whence I had proceeded to this island, where I landed, how long I stopped at the Havannah, where I went to next, how long there, then where next, then how long a stay I made, then what business I had here in Santiago, &c., &c.

I told them that I sailed from Kingston to the Havannah with two cases of your books, that I there introduced them through the Custom house, and exposed them afterwards to public sale, for all which I showed them documents, that at Matanzas I had also exposed the Scriptures for sale, and at Puerto Principe; and that here, I waited for a case of Bibles that I had written to Kingston for, that when they came I might introduce them through the Custom house and then endeavour to sell them, as I had done in other places, and that having accomplished this, I intended to return to Kingston. These, and many other such and similar questions were put and answered. Afterwards too myself and another were examined a second time.

I thought I owed all this to my friend the Archbishop, but I was assured that this was not the case. It was conceived, as I understood, that I was travelling through the island with some evil designs in regard to the government of the country, or the slave question. They have got, it seems, what I may call a black list, containing the names of suspicious persons, and some how or other, with right or wrong reason, and by favour of somebody, my name had got into this list. Not improbably, the visit of our Antislavery friends to Jamaica at the time I left it, helped me into the bad list, though I know not that it was so. But generally speaking there is much feverishness felt and manifested on the slave subject, under the present attitude of things. Well, in due time I came to know, that the governor’s wish and judgment had been, that I should be forthwith arrested, until I could be shipped off the island, and this to prevent me of course carrying my evil designs into effect. But his law adviser counselled otherwise, and so the matter was dropped, in the understanding that I would leave the place early. The whole of these declarations are sent to the Captain General in the Havannah. I may consider myself as having got well off, as I have just heard that an Englishman has been cast into prison in Manzanillo, though I know not for what cause.

In the mean time, my case of books is come from Kingston, which I wrote for from Principe. But from what has taken place, nothing can be done with them until a reply comes from the Governor General. It would be too long for me to wait for this reply, which will require at least a month; and further I am under a kind of understood compromise to be off without delay; and I shall be as glad to get away, as they are to get rid of me, for I do not much like to come under the benefits of Spanish law and justice, both of which need, like many other things in this Island, –a most  most  thorough reform.  –Well, the word of God is the best means of reforming every evil. It has had entrance into this island, and I pray God it may not now be hindered, but that it may have free course, and be glorified. Every copy of the word of God in any country, is like a cut of the axe at the root of the tree of evil, and by its multiplication, it will cut and cut around and inwards until this tree of evil fall; and then shall the cutters, and all rejoice in its prostration. And let us not doubt of this, for certainly it will be verified, and even so as here stated. Let us labour by hand and prayer in circulating the word of God in every place, and in every tongue, until all iniquity shall hide its head, and till the will of God is done on earth as it is in heaven.

I intend to sail from this to Kingston in a day or two. I leave instructions about the disposal of the books as soon as advice comes from the Havannah. The governor’s law adviser will befriend the introduction of these as far as he can, and says he wants to get one of the Bibles himself. To this gentleman I feel very much obliged, and by his favourable opinion against the governor’s he prevented my arrest; and besides throughout all my examinations he has acted in a most friendly and courteous manner. –I cannot speak so favourably of the governor, who ought to have formed another judgment of me, as I brought to him a special letter of introduction from one of the Judges of the Royal Audiencia in Puerto Principe, the contents of which should have removed the effects of the unfavourable position which it seems my name occupied in their lists.

This Island completes my visit to the West Indies., and this city completes my visit to Cuba. About six years I have been engaged in the tour, and through troublous times. How strange that such things should have happened just at the very close. Or rather how strange and providential that nothing has happened till as it were I had all done. The hand of the Lord has been most graciously upon me in all my long tour; and to his holy and blessed name, I give thanks and praise for all his mercies to me in all this visitation, and in all my journeyings, and ways. Join me, My Brother, and all my Friends in these thanksgivings: –and pray that all my future steps may be directed to the glory of God in the Kingdom of our Lord Jesus Christ.

                         I remain, My Dear Friend,

                                    Truly and Affectionately Yours,

                                                James Thomson.

P.S. 24th. August. Returned to Kingston this day. J.T.

Rev A Brandram No 63

Kingston, Jamaica 9th Sep, 1837

My Dear Friend,

I am once again, as you see, on British Ground, or on ground shadowed by the British Sceptre; and never before did I return to it, after an absence in Foreign Lands, with so much gladness, and with so lively a sense of the National Advantages of our Favoured Country, which God, in his signal goodness has conferred upon us over all the nations, and not least over Spain.

 –Two days after finishing my letter to you in Santiago de Cuba, I went to the Custom house to despatch some routine business. There, to my astonishment, I was told by the Collector that he had orders from the Governor to detain me. I told him that I was greatly surprised with such a statement, as the Governor had given me a passport, and fully understood that I was to leave the Island by the first opportunity of a vessel for Jamaica. The Collector read the letter a second time, and again stated as the import of it, that he was ordered to prevent my sailing, and we observed that his letter was dated a day later than my passport, and hence of course his order for my detention cancelled mine for going. Upon this I went direct to the Governor, and not without fear that I should be forthwith detained by him, and that my papers would be sent for to my lodgings and examined by the government. The Governor, on my telling him what had occurred at the Custom house, denied that there was any such order given by him for my detention; and forthwith he gave me a new passport, and of a date that cancelled the collector’s order, as his had before cancelled my leave to go. I carried this to the Collector without delay. He read it, shrugged his shoulders, and signed it. Thus was the door open to me again.

–The vessel did not sail for a couple of days after this, and just before leaving, I called on the Collector to understand from him a little more of this odd order which he showed me two days previously. He seemed however disposed to eat up the letter and the matter altogether, whether from directions given him or not I cannot tell, but the whole of this affair appeared to me very mysterious.

–I gathered from the Collector’s conversation, the strong impression made on his mind, and on the minds of others, that your society was, in truth a part and portion of the Antislavery Society and further, that your main objects in circulating the Bible, was to lead the people to rebel and destroy the whites, and thus to accomplish the object,  which they imagine the British government has, of making an end of Cuba as a Spanish Colony. Hence their suspicions of me, and all their investigations.  –At length I embarked, and glad enough. But I could not venture to rejoice more than half until I got beyond the Fort Guns at the mouth of the harbour. At ten o’clock at night we reached the wide ocean, whose ample protecting expanse seemed to me above common grand and delightful. Then I rejoiced in good earnest, and thanked God for my deliverance.

On the 24th. Of August I arrived safely in Kingston, after a passage of three days, in which we had delightful weather, and this was the more grateful, it being the middle of the hurricane season. On my arrival I found several letters from you, whose contents were very gratifying to me I assure you; and that part was not least so, you may believe, where you kindly mention the kindly notice made in your Report of your unworthy, and, as he hopes to be, very obedient servant. I suppose you have now thrust my ear through with an awl to your Earl Street door, and fairly made me your bondsman unredeemable. Thus it is, that whilst all the world, black and white, is becoming free, I am entering and entered into bondage, but it is the bondage of Christ, and of his Word, and his church.

I have carefully read what you say in your letter about Mr. Watts, and shall endeavour to attend fully to your suggestions regarding him. You say nothing of him in your letter of the 28th. July which came yesterday to hand. But I had a letter from Mr. Watts himself on the 4th. instant, dated in Carthagena on the 24th. ultimo, the very day I returned. He states that he arrived there on the 15th. of August, that he intended to occupy the first six weeks in Carthagena and the interior parts of that province,  and afterwards to start for his general tour of New Granada. I shall write him by the first opportunity, and in about a week hence intend to sail on a visit to that place and Santa Marta. In addition to seeing Mr. Watts, I purpose paying a formal visit to the Bishops of these two places, having lately learned, and in the Havannah, that these bishops are the two gentlemen, then  heads of colleges, who so much befriended us, and helped in the formation of a Bible Society in Bogotá in the beginning of 1825. I hope I shall find that their sentiments are not altered in regards to the circulation of the Scriptures.

I expect to return to Jamaica about the end of October. On my return I have a wish. Shall I express it to you? I have a desire to obtain a furlough from you of a few months, say three or four. There are I believe certain understood regulations in favour of all officers on foreign service in this matter, and with Missionaries also, as one may gather, in addition to other quarters, from what you have printed among your speeches near the bottom of page 486, where Mr. Williams says he hoped to return to his native country “some five, seven or ten years hence”. My furlough I would propose to spend in the high and cool mountain climates of this Island, which would probably contribute to my health and strength after the continued heats of these six years past. I would not wholly neglect your work during that time, but I want a greater degree and extent of leisure than I could have without your formally granting me such a furlough. –At the close of the furlough, I would propose, if the Lord will, to set out for Mexico.

Your letters are arrived of the 23rd. March, 15th. April, 12th. and 31st. May, 30th. June, and 28th. July. Also Mr Hitchin’s of 1st. May, and Mr. Jackson’s of the 15th. June. The case of Reports has come to hand.

                         Believe me, My Dear Friend, Very Truly Yours,

                                                 James Thomson .

 

Rev A Brandram No 64

Kingston, Jamaica 26th September, 1837

My Dear Friend,

In my last letter I intimated to you my purpose of setting out for Carthagena. My intention was, to go first to Santamarta, where I expected to see Dr Estevez, who, as I had learned in the Havannah, was Bishop of that place, and whose name you will find recorded honourably in the history of the Bogota Bible Society, in the formation of which he took an active part. From Santamarta I purposed to proceed to Carthagena, to meet there with Mr Watts, and also to see Dr Sotomayor the present Bishop of that place, and who, like Dr Estevez took an active part in the Society above mentioned. Upon making enquiries about Santamarta, I learned, that the Bishop had died a few months ago. I learned also, at the same time, that the communication between Santamarta & Carthagena was more uncertain and expensive than I had thought it was. These circumstances, combined with the necessary loss of time, the expense of the whole movement, the slender advantage which my personal interview with Mr Watts would have over my writing to him, and sending him letters of introduction, induced me to change my intention of going to the Spanish Main at the present time. I have written to Mr Watts, noticing those things that seem to lie most in the way as to his work and our intercourse, and I have enclosed him a number of letters of introduction from myself and others which I trust will be useful to him in the different places through which he may pass. The advantages he already possesses in the knowledge of the country and of the language render, of course, any help I might be able to give him personally or otherwise less necessary.

I intimated also in my last, that after a furlough enjoyed, it being of course previously granted, it would be best to proceed to Mexico. Since writing so, a letter from the Trelawny Bible Society has come to hand, mentioning the number of Bibles lately arrived there, which with some formerly on hand, augments their stock above what they expect soon to dispose of. This, and the more or less similar circumstances of one or two other places, have led me very closely to reconsider your interests here. The truth is, that these Bibles referred to were ordered on the supposition of my remaining longer on this Island, than is supposed in my notice of going to Mexico contained in last letter. Well, what is to be done, and what should be done, that is to say for the best in the case? To Mexico I am most ready and willing to go, and at your call, even at the hour you bid. But, I think it would altogether be better previously to employ some months in Jamaica, to stir up and strengthen and increase the Bible Societies among us, but more especially the Bible Associations, that so the quantity of Bibles now on hand may be taken up as early as possible. In this view of matters, I would propose to you, humbly and respectfully, that your Agent should not leave Jamaica for Mexico till about this time next year. Having thus discharged by this representation my duty and my conscience to Jamaica and to your interests in it,  I again say, with perfect sincerity,  that I am most willing to set out for Mexico at your bidding, , and to start, if you will, a few weeks after your answer to this arrives, should that letter say to me Go.

I therefore now wait your instructions; and in the mean time I set out without delay for the West End of the Island where most of our supplies are in waiting, and I trust we shall soon have a good account to give you of the transference of your goods from the parish societies' depots to the houses and hands of the Negroes.

An enquiry was made of me some months ago in a private & friendly manner and as from one of your Committee, whether some or several of the higher classes of men who have become office bearers in our Jamaican Bible Societies were not persons living in the open concubinage which unfortunately is so common among us here. The reply I made to that inquiry, and which I now here openly repeat for the satisfaction of you all, is, that our Rule has been not to number such persons among our office bearers on any account; and this rule, as far as I am concerned, and as far as I am aware respecting others, has been uniformly attended to since my arrival in this Island. And further I would add, that in different occasions we have deprived ourselves of help and patronage because of this Rule, as we could easily have had persons of rank and riches with us but for this defect in their character and practice which kept us from asking them. In three parishes at least we passed over the Custos, the chief personage in the place, solely because of this, and at the expense too of giving offence for overlooking them.

Nearly a year ago I sent you some of our local Reports through the Colonial Office, and afterwards you mentioned that you had learned that it would be better not to send through this medium. I had however a letter from Lord Glenelg himself, saying I required no apology for sending a communication to you through him. His letter was written immediately after the little packet passed through his hands, in November last, but I neglected to notice it to you before. I shall therefore not scruple to send in this way on rare occasions in future.

Yesterday I received a very pleasing letter from Mr Wheeler, and a Barbados newspaper with Bible Society articles in it. His visitations in these islands will I think be truly useful.

             I remain, My Dear Friend, Very truly Yours,

                               James Thomson.

 

Kingston, 6th Oct. 1837

My Dear Sir,

A few days ago I received a letter from Mr Watts, saying he was in difficulty through not having a letter of credit, and begging me to help him. I have drawn a Bill for one hundred pounds, and sent him an order to receive the proceeds of the same at sight in Carthagena. I now advise this Bill, drawn on the 4th inst. in favour of James Wallace & Co. of this place at 30 days. It is to be placed of course to Mr Watt's account.

            I remain, Yours Truly,

                        James Thomson.

Posted
AuthorBill Mitchell

Rev A Brandram No 65

St Ann's Bay, 25th November 1837

My Dear Friend,

In my last letter to you but one, I mentioned certain things which showed that I was under some circumstances of danger in Cuba, and that I considered myself as having made a providential escape from that island at the time I did. The statement I then gave was not exaggerated, for I could have added an item more to strengthen it but which I withheld. Since I wrote I have had a communication from that island stating "on undoubted authority that the Captain General had given orders to put me into prison". But his order came a post too late, for I was then out of his jurisdiction.

By the same conveyance I received notice that a case of Spanish Bibles which I had ordered when in Principe to be sent from Montego Bay to that city had been seized at the Custom House. This I considered an illegal proceeding; and accordingly after consulting with the Attorney General of this Island, a gentleman who has always been most friendly to me, I made out an affidavit, and a representation on the subject, addressed to our Governor Sir Lionel Smith, and gave him the same to be forwarded to the Governor General of Cuba in the form of a reclamation of British goods unlawfully seized.

In the beginning of September I learned that the house of Fesser Picard & Co. of the Havannah had suffered some inconvenience in the form of suspicion on the part of the Governor General on account of what had occurred to me in Santiago, as that house had given me letters of introduction to that place. On hearing this I wrote to the house in question, and also to Mr Schenley one of the Commissioners under what is called the Mixed Commission. As Mr Schenley was on very intimate terms with the Governor General, I begged him to have the goodness to call on him to explain matters, and to make him sensible that I was true man and no spy, and that my object in Cuba was bona fide to circulate the holy scriptures, and not to interfere with nor overthrow the orders of things there established. About a fortnight ago I received a letter from Mr Schenley, of which the following is an extract: "Your letter of the 20th September reached me yesterday. The subject of it was not new to me. For some weeks since the idle reports you complain of so justly had reached me, I then took occasion to contradict them in every quarter. Since the receipt of your letter I have called twice at Government House, but I regret to say that our excellent Governor is very unwell and receives no one. My object was, if possible, to make you a satisfactory reply by the Pickle which leaves for Kingston tomorrow. You may however rely on my attending to your wishes, and it gives me great satisfaction to have it in my power to do so. Of course long ere this, you have forgiven these stupid Spaniards all the annoyance they caused you. The explanation shall be to the fullest extent. I shall have the pleasure to write to you on an early occasion. Until when as always "believe me, etc."

From the house of Atkinson Hozier & Co. of Kingston, the house that recommended me to Fesser Picard & Co. of the Havannah, I received a note the other day, of which I give you an extract, "We have had several late advices from Messrs Fesser at the Havannah, and as they do not again refer to the matter you mention it is only natural to presume that the whole has ended in nothing, and indeed it seems to have been and affair of nothingness altogether, only the officious suspicions of the Santiago folks were anxious to make it something."

I have now given you a view of our concerns on Cuba as they now stand. When I hear further from Mr Schenley, and learn the result of the claim made for the seized books, I shall turn again to the subject, and state what may occur.

Mr Schenley states in his letter, on a brighter side, "Have you heard of the Bible that is printing and publishingat Mexico!!? I am told it is to be extremely well executed. What an event!"

The Bible here referred to is I presume the one noticed to us some time ago by Dr Mora, the subscription to which was Fifty Dollars or Ten Pounds sterling. I am glad to learn that the work is going on. Every thing done in this was will facilitate the circulation of your cheaper volume among the people generally. And no doubt this magnificent publication as we may well call it in view of the place and the book itself, has been got up as the result of your labours there in former years. May the next course of your labours in that country be attended with still greater success than those of times past. I have my eye now full on Mexico, and not many days elapse without it passing through my thoughts.

I am now, as you see, thus far on my tour, my last one over this Island. I have visited several places in this extensive parish, the largest and perhaps the finest in the island. I am glad to be able to report favourably of the state of our Bible Society in this parish which was formed last year about this time, under rather peculiar circumstances as you will probably recollect. The person who figured conspicuously against us on that occasion is now in the grave. Further, a singular circumstance, and I may well say, an awful one has occurred during the year, and that has been made to act to our advantage. The circumstance I allude to was the upset of a boat in this harbour by which eleven persons were drowned, and not a vestige of them has ever appeared. The four daughters of the Rector of the parish were of the number. The Rector's name now stands at the head of the list of our office bearers in the St Ann's Bible Society.

 Yesterday we held our public annual meeting in the Court House. The Clergyman now officiating for a while for the Rector was in the chair. This gentleman, the Rev Henry Brown, is a very warm friend of the Bible Society, and gives it his support in every way and most openly. The Court House was full n the occasion, and contained a good proportion of what we call respectability. Our business was all conducted, as we thought, with animation, and the assembly seemed gratified. The treasury of the Society is as full as could well have been expected, and as I think fuller. The circulation too of the Scriptures has been good and encouraging. Fifty Pounds sterling are to be remitted to you as soon as an expected reduction of the premium will permit. On the whole this Society has done very well during this its first year, and there is every prospect of its doing more in the year now entered upon. The Report will be published in the Falmouth Post newspaper, and I shall endeavour to send you a copy of it. You will be glad to hear that we have among our office bearers no less than Five Clergyman. This is the whole number in the parish, and it is a greater number than is to be found in any parish in the island except one. I hope by and by we shall be able to enumerate in the ranks of each of our Bible Societies here all the clergymen within their respective boundaries, and may you in England soon be able to do the same. Let us see whether the Colony or the Mother will attain to this proper state of things first.

                         I am, My Dear Friend, Very Truly Yours,

                                                             James Thomson.

 

Rev A Brandram - No 66

Falmouth, 14th December 1837

My Dear Friend,

I gave you some account of our Bible Society transactions in the parish of St Ann's, the whole of which was of an encouraging nature, and came not short but exceeded the expectations of the parish under its actual circumstances. The next parish in order is Trelawny, the one from which I now write you. Our public and annual meeting here was fixed for the 12th of this month, and I looked forward to that day with some interest as a period that should fix the standing and future prospect of the Trelawny Bible Society.  About a week before our general meeting took place, I attended a meeting at Stewart Town about 20 miles from Falmouth, and which was held with the purpose of forming a Bible Association. This meeting was of the most cheering kind. Our chair was occupied by a civilian, the best merchant of the place. There were five ministers present, and I may say we all spoke the same thing, and that there were no divisions among us, notwithstanding our peculiar and various insignia. It was a most harmonious and delightful meeting, and we felt all glad that we had come together, and rejoiced in the goodness of God which we had experienced. Our auxiliary or association was formed, and it promises to be a useful branch of our parish society.

On the evening of the 12th the Court House in Falmouth was lighted up and arranged for our meeting. Our audience was respectable and numerous, and we had with us several gentlemen of note of this town and of the surrounding country.  The gentleman officiating as Rector of the parish (in the superannuation of the incumbent), was in the chair, and he was surrounded by ministers of five denominations. The Report was read, and though it contained nothing encouraging as to the labours of the past year, it gave us reason to hope that there would be more done in the one ensuing. The gentlemen who spoke took notice of the defalcation, expressed their regret for the same, and promised to do something that should in this year entered upon redeem their own character and that of Trelawny in regards to Bible Society concerns.

Mr Blyth (whose congregation and Bible Association made so good a figure last year) was with us. He made us acquainted with the progress of his Association, and the continuing diffusion of the Scriptures among his people. They have not fallen off in their Bible Society efforts, but have wrought more excellently in the extension of the Scriptures  among themselves than in the preceding year. The greater part of these praiseworthy efforts however of this Association is lost to our Trelawny Bible Society, and must not and does not appear in our Report,  for our good friends are Scottish in their religion, and must needs have the classical Scottish version of the Psalms bound up in  their Bibles. Now you know these are not within the boards of your Bibles, for the Scotchmen obliged you take them out, or to keep them out on all occasions; and though it seems they afterwards put them in themselves. they still keep the ban upon you. This is not speaking evil of my neighbour, for I am a Scotchman myself. But, soberly, we all regret this circumstance here in Trelawny, because we cannot count these excellent efforts of our friends among our Bible Society labours, though in our own parish; and this is one of the causes of the diminution of our Bible Society work here as appears in our report. I hope our friends, as others of the same denomination are doing, will come into the use of a psalm and hymn book by itself, and thus leave the Bible, free and unencumbered as you issue it, to be taken up by us all.

None of the least interesting circumstances of our public meeting was the presence of the two Baptist missionaries Mr Knibb and Mr Dendy, and the appropriate Bible Society speeches which they made on the occasion. Mr Knibb withdrew from our Committee during last year for certain  reasons satisfactory to himself; though not connected with objections of some of his body with you. He has now however returned to us, the cause being no longer in operation, and he has returned cordially. He stated, and regretted, that his congregation had not done what they should have  done during the last year in Bible Society work, but said that he would venture to say that they would do more in this year. They felt he said deeply interested in the object, and as a proof of their wishes and intentions he begged me to present the Society with a donation of Ten Pounds from his congregation, and forthwith he laid down this money. The whole of his speech was of the tenor here described, and gratified us all.  Mr Dendy's speech also gratified us. He expressed his grief that himself and his congregation had done so little in  Bible Society operations, the cause being in part the occupation of their attention and their means in rebuilding their chapel and in the erection of a school house. He pledged himself however, now and onwards, to bestir himself and his flock upon the very important concern of the diffusion of the holy Scriptures among themselves and among others.  I mentioned the feelings and expressions of these two friends the more on account of what you say in a paragraph of one of your late letters.  We had a collection of Ten Pounds at our meeting, besides the Ten Pounds given by Mr. Knibb: thus making Twenty.

It would be wrong in me to close this account of our Trelawny Bible Society without noticing particularly the merits of Mr. A F Robinson one of our Secretaries, and who has latterly (and I might say formerly too,) done nearly all its active business. This gentleman continues his services, and not as a Bible Society man merely, but because he knows, and lives upon and according to the essence of the Bible's contents – the gospel of our Lord Jesus Christ.

To conclude: – From the nature of the public meeting, from the various communications I have had with our friends here of different denominations, and from the improved organization of the Committee, I am encouraged to hope for favourable results from this Society during the present year, and in short confidently believe that it is at present on a better footing than it has been at any former period, and that it has taken an attitude which is likely to give it permanency and fructibility.

The parishes of St. Ann's and Trelawny I now leave behind me, and move onwards in my tour over the island. I have much reason to give thanks to God for the pleasing occurrences, and for the state of things in these two districts; and I shall be truly gratified should things turn out in the similarly in our other parishes. St. James's and Hanover lie next in order, and I enter them with anxiety and hope.

Yesterday and today I have been chiefly occupied in rearranging some of the Bible cases in the Trelawny stores, and in sending out a part of the stock to St. Ann's on the one side, and on the other to St. Elizabeth's; the latter to meet the case of the Ladies' schools there agreeable to your letter and reply to the request of Miss Lloyd on behalf of these numerous and interesting seminaries, in which are being nursed up a great number of our Negro children. – I have after corresponding with the Secretary, and after mature consideration granted them 200 Bibles and 200 New Testaments. The Bibles are sent from the Trelawny store and the Testaments from the depot under my immediate charge in Kingston.

The store of Bibles here now is not too great, and it will I hope by and by be reduced entirely; and perhaps too you may hear earlier than was thought that fresh and further supplies are wanted.

                        I remain, My Dear Friend,

                                    Very Truly Yours,

                                                James Thomson.

Postscript: In rearranging the Bibles as above noticed, and in similar operations elsewhere, I have been much impeded by a defect in the invoice. The number of non-pareil Bibles, for instance, in a case is mentioned, but how many of these are coloured calf, how many are skivar, and how many in cloth, is not mentioned. The consequence is that the whole must be overhaled to ascertain this. The Bibles that came for me to the store in Kingston arrived just on the day before my setting out for Cuba. And I had to dispose of several of the cases without delay and without time to open and overhale them. I could not therefore give an invoice with any of the cases as to sorts and prices. Neither can I send out a case entire in any instance without this uncertainty, or the great inconvenience of taking out the whole, with the chance of not getting so many back again on repacking. Please notice this in the proper quarter, and let all the invoices contain the number of each sort in the case whether the difference is in type merely or in size, paper and bindings.  Allow me to repeat this request, that I may not have occasion to recur to it in future, for this is not the first time I have sent in this petition. Though I have less cause of complaint now than formerly; but let's have all things as perfect as we can.  I have also a little item to add bearing on the same department of your house. It is that several Bibles are pierced and much injured by the nails. Different friends have mentioned this to me, and I have seen it in some instances myself. This too is an old complaint, and of which I trust I shall not have occasion henceforth to complain. I should propose as a punishment for reincidence in the matter of the invoice, that the delinquent be sent out to Jamaica to unpack and repack the cases, in which he will get well stewed and roasted in our climate, and will have a fair chance of being eaten too – by mosquitos.

                                                JT.

P.S. 2nd. 29th December 1837

I have been disappointed of obtaining a copy of the Falmouth Post Newspaper for you of the 20th and 27th current containing articles on the Trelawny Bible society. I shall forward them when they come to hand.

I have received a letter from Mr. Watts, along with the accompanying packet which he desires me to forward to you. I am glad I can send it to you free of expense because of its bulkiness. I may here mention, in addition to what I said some time ago respecting the Lord Glenelg, but I have had a second note from him in which he makes me welcome to use his franking privilege on all such occasions as this. I therefore so use it, and so limit it.

I shall write you early in respect to Mr. Watts letter and packet, and in reply to your letters of 11th October and the first and 14th November, all of which have only reached me.

                                                                                                                                 JT.

Rev A Brandram - No 67

Lucea, Jamaica, 8th February 1838

My Dear Friend,

Since my last I have received your letter of 29th November, with Mr. Hitchin's of the 27th and the Resolution of the Committee of the 24th all on the same sheet.

My two last letters informed you of our Bible Society proceedings here, in the parishes of St. Ann's and Trelawney. My present communication will contain the notice of our proceedings for the parishes of St. James and Hanover.

After finishing our business in Falmouth, as noticed in my last, I came into St. James's. There I visited some ministers and congregations in the country parts, and our friends in Montego Bay, and endeavoured to make arrangements for a public meeting in the shape of the anniversary, for the annual meeting had not been held at the proper time. We were obliged to fix this meeting some three weeks later than could have been wished, owing to the absence of most of the ministers who were about to leave the parish to hold their respective annual meetings in distant parts of the Island. The 2nd February was the earliest date we could fix on in the hope of having the ministers of the different bodies with us. This being arranged I came into the parish of Hanover, and then endeavoured to make some little arrangements for holding a public meeting in Lucea. For the reasons above noticed the day fixed on was some weeks onward, and fell for the  7th February. The interval thus left was employed in preaching in the different places of worship in Lucea in the absence of the ministers; and in which service I made it a point to draw the attention of my different audiences to the Bible, to Bible Societies generally, and to the Bible Society of the place in particular. I thus helped the ministers in their absence, laying them under little obligations to help me and return, whilst at the same time I was pleading your immediate cause and my individual mission.

Some days before the time appointed for our meeting and Montego Bay, I returned to that place. Our meeting was held; and I wish I could say all of it that I said about our meetings at St. Ann's Bay and Falmouth. But I cannot do this, and tell the truth, for our meeting on this occasion proved a kind of failure. Various accidental circumstances contributed to this. First, the notice of it was not so full as it should have been, and secondly the rain poured down on the appointed evening, so that nobody came or could well come. We forthwith announced for the evening of the following day, but that notice could not be made to reach the many, as the time and means were very limited. On this second evening our meeting did take place, but it was, as I have said, rather a failure than a good meeting, and that both as respected the audience and the persons who should have been with us as pleaders of our cause, as all ministers of the gospel at least should be. This Society is in a low estate, but its friends say that something must be done to raise it, and make it move with life, vigour, and perseverance. I hope they will act accordingly, and that the effects noticed may follow. Some arrangements have been made which appear likely to contribute to the desired object. I trust therefore and pray that the next accounts you may receive of the St. James's Bible Society may be better than those contained in the present communication.

Having finished my business in Montego Bay I proceeded to Lucea, and on the evening of the 7th February, that is, last night, the public meeting of the Hanover Bible Society was held in the Court House. It was a good meeting, and all went on and passed off pleasantly. This Society has also been in a languishing state during the past year; but the present aspect of it is good and encouraging. Before this reaches you you will have received £50 from it, and I anticipate a good and prosperous state of things during the present year.  May God himself work powerfully on the minds of all concerned in these Societies, and on all who should be actively concerned in them, and may they all be led in holy accord to advance the kingdom of God in the blessed combination formed to promote the circulation of the Scriptures under the denomination of Bible Societies.

Before I leave this North side of our Island and pass over to the South side I would notice two circumstances. The first is, that in Montego Bay your agent receive all hospitality and generous treatment from John Roby Esq. the Collector of Her Majesty's Customs of that port. I feel greatly obliged by the whole conduct of this gentleman towards me, not only on this occasion but on former occasions also; and it would be a breach on gratitude not here, and thus formally, to state the same. We have now parted, and I suppose for ever in this world. We leave each other in mutual affection and friendship; and my prayer to God is, that the blessed truths of the Gospel may be so attended to by us all, that he and his family, and your agent and his may meet in joy and glory at the right hand of our Lord Jesus Christ at his coming.

The other circumstance I would notice is in regard to the Spaniard of the name of Martin whom I met with formerly and mentioned to you. This individual, who lives about midway between Montego Bay and Lucea, I gave some two years ago Spanish Bible. Last time I visited him I found he had begun to read his Bible, and had got as far as the 22nd chapter of Deuteronomy, and where accordingly I found his mark in the book itself as he showed me. The other day when I saw him he gave me an account of his further readings of the sacred volume which is his daily companion. He told me he had read his Bible through, and four times over. When I was last in this quarter I sent him a few Spanish tracts. These I found with him, and was delighted to hear him say that he read them often, and that he relished the doctrines of the Gospel contained in them. I conversed with him and with his wife on the subject of salvation as contained in the Scriptures, and was glad to perceive the understanding they had upon these great points. They are or were Roman Catholics. On the errors of that communion I touched and dwelt in my several communications with them, and I trust they see the light of the truth. May God unfold it to them more fully, and bless them with everlasting salvation. On the present visit I found with these two a third person, who I understand lives in the immediate neighbourhood, and is a native of the Havannah. This person cannot read, or reads but badly; but Martin reads to him the Bible and the tracts; and he listens to these readings, as they told me, gladly. May he also receive all the knowledge and all the blessings of the Gospel of Christ. Martin and his wife would press upon me a little present of such things as they had, and the same was given I believe under the best feelings. A cup of cold water rightly given will be amply recompensed, and so I trust will be honoured the token of attention bestowed on the present occasion.

The preceding paragraph makes an easy transition from the affairs of Jamaica and to those of Cuba, to which I now turn. My last communication to you regarding that island and your concerns there showed me the darkness of night. But now I am happy to say, that the night seems far spent, and further that the day begins to dawn. I stated to you that I had made application for the Bibles seized at the port of Santa Cruz through our Governor here to the Governor General of Cuba. A few days ago I received the following letter on the subject from our Governor's secretary: – "The Governor desires me to acquaint you that Mr. Tolme, British Consul of the Havannah writes under date 26th December last that he has urged the Captain General of Cuba to order the restoration of the books belonging to the British Bible Society which were seized from you at Santa Cruz, and that he has reason to think the Governor will do so, as similar books likewise the property of the Bible Society were entered there the week before with the express sanction of Ecclesiastical Authority." There are two points to encourage much here. One is the actual entrance of the 200 Bibles you sent under due and full sanction; and the other is a prospect of the liberation of these seized, and this prospect may be considered next to a certainty from the other circumstance mentioned. From these pleasing notices we may consider that the grand impediment to free circulation of the Scriptures in Cuba is now removed. Thus the emblem of Cuba and you seems likely to be realized. Glory be to God for these prospects, and may God himself realize them all, and speedily.

            I remain, My Dear Friend, Very Truly Yours,

                                    James Thomson.

P.S. Please desire Mr. Hitchin to send on receipt of this to "Mr. Andrew Ker, 12 Greenside Place, Edinburgh" the sum of Fifteen Pounds, and to place the same to my private account. JT.

Rev A Brandram - No 68

Kingston, Jamaica, 17th April 1838

My Dear Friend,

My tour over a considerable portion of this island, agreeably to the plan laid before you some time ago, is now completed, and has occupied just one day less than six months. I arrived all well in the city yesterday, and feel myself as it were come home; though a moment's reflection tells me that I have no home, and that literally "I have no certain dwelling place." God however most wonderfully makes up to me this real disadvantage by giving me a home in every friend's house, and by making me feel in some measure at home whenever I am. If I have not the spirit of a pilgrim, I should have it, for a pilgrim verily I am. When shall I rest? God only knows. At present rest seems far from me, and nothing lies in prospect but an outstretching path whose termination seems lost in distance. Forgive me for noticing these things to you. I am indeed a wanderer, yet nobody ever desired more than I to live always at home. But I do not complain. God forbid I should. I am on a noble embassy, and I see a home and a resting place before me, "a house not made with hands eternal in the heavens." May God make me a good and faithful servant of Christ in all my ways and concerns and at last bring me to his home and his glory in heaven. There I shall expect to see you, My Brother, should I not see you before, and all the Committee and Office Bearers of our Society. I pray daily to God that he would so grant, and I hope some or all of you now and then pray for me. Yes, pray for me, for I am always in need of help, and such help as prayer brings.

Well, now for my tour just finished. You are already acquainted with my movements, and with the results of the same as far as Lucea, by my letters already forwarded. I start then in my present notices at Lucea in the parish of Hanover. Having finished my work in the parish just named, I crossed the island over to Westmoreland, and within nine miles of Savanna la Mar at a place called Morgan's Bridge I stopped at the mission house of the Rev. William Niven one of the Presbyterian missionaries. This spot, and all the parish of Westmoreland, form a fine missionary field. I do not know however the word fine should be at all used as I have here used it. I mean by fine, a place where there is much need and much to do. Westmoreland in former times was much neglected. Now there is a change for the better. Yet still religion is rather a new thing for the people there. This is to evidently so, for by calculations made not more than one out of ten or rather fifteen of the Apprentices go to any place of public worship at all. And as to the Whites, alas! the number amongst men that go to the house of God, is I may say none, or very near to it. The day dawns however even in Westmoreland. There the evangelists are lifting up their voices, and numbers flock to hear the glad tidings, and some receive the word into good and honest hearts.

I passed a Sunday at Mr. Niven's place, and had an opportunity of seeing his people, and of telling them of the preciousness of the Bible, and the desirableness of their possessing it for themselves, and of constantly using it. I hope that something was gained in the way of Bible Society work by that opportunity. Mr. Niven fully seconded all I said, and an assortment of Bibles is ordered, and some I hope to have expended.  I saw also Mr. Niven's long rows of readers or of persons learning to read in his several school classes. These readers will all become Bible purchasers; and new rows of readers will be added to those now existing; and these also in their turn will become purchasers of the Scriptures. Thus on will things among us, we may reasonably expect, and still onwards from year to year until all in this Island will be able to meet, and also possess the word of God. Your Bible Society work been in this Island is not ended, but is in fact only fairly begun. You will please therefore not to slacken your endeavours to forward your objects here, but rather increase them, and by the hands of whosoever you made appoint. Pray cultivate Jamaica, and it will gladden your hearts by the fruits it will produce in your own lives to the glory of God.

From Mr. Niven's I went on towards Savanna la Mar. On the way I visited an estate called Paul Island where there is a school in connexion with the Church Missionary Society. Here again you see there is a seminary for readers and Bible purchasers: and such numbers of good are spreading, blessed be God, all over the island. In Savanna la Mar I found established a large school which was not in existence when I last visited that place. This is in connexion with the Mico Charity, an institution which has many schools among us busily preparing youths and adults for the Bible. I should not forget to say that one of the best schools in the Island of a superior class is in Savanna la Mar, in which the higher branches of education are taught. Formerly this school which is an endowed establishment admitted into it white children only. This barrier however has lately been broken down; and now there are in the school all grades of colours from the whitest to the blackest. The Principal of this Academy, as I may call it, the Rev. Daniel Fidler, was kind enough to review his troops and groups before me. The performances were very creditable to both master and scholars. In his Latin class were two boys black as jet, and they went like the rest through that exercises well. A Black Boy learning Latin! Who could have ventured only a few years ago, not to say, but even to imagine that this would be the case? You see then how rapidly things are moving onwards here. May God speed us, you will say: and to this I will rejoind most heartily, Amen.

But why so much of schools from a Bible Society agent to his employers? Why, because of the bearing of these seminaries upon your work. The common school for teaching to read is springing up everywhere; and hence the fair and goodly prospect of a rapid and extensive circulation of the Scriptures among us; and hence the reason why the attention of the Bible Society should be fixed upon a spot under such circumstances. The truth is, I do think this Island will become a most interesting and profitable Bible Society field, and increasingly so from year to year, if properly cultivated.  Nor is it an object of minor notice that black children are learning Latin. Let us suppose these becoming in due time able ministers of the gospel to their countrymen here on the one hand, and let us imagine others going to Africa to preach Christ in that dark land,  let us suppose these things taking place, and then the little incident becomes a great one, and every way interesting.  Let me conclude this notice by intruding upon you my opinion such as it is, on Black Intellect. I have seen and observed on various occasions both white and black children in the same class at school. I would say most unhesitatingly the black is fully equal to the white, and perhaps if  I were not white myself I would say this stronger still. Let both have fair play, and both are likely to have it now, and if we whites do not take very good care of ourselves we shall certainly lose our vantage ground, and perhaps be left to bring up the rear.

The Westmoreland Bible Society, as you are already aware, is not the foremost one in our county of Cornwall. The formerly neglected state of the parish, and its present backwardness in religious news partly account for this. But things are improving. I hope you have seen this in the shape of a remittance. This Society will go on improving I trust, through the ministers, the schools, and every good work in operation there. We held a meeting of the Committee which was well attended, and at which hopeful things were transacted. We then held a public meeting of the Society which was very gratifying to all concerned. Thus then are things improving, and I hope that your next letter from that parish will confirm the opinion given as to improvement in advance.

From Savanna la Mar I came to Black River, and on through Lacovia to the residence of the Rev. William Hylton. This gentleman as you are aware has been very active in causing the Bible to circulate among his people, and no less active in causing them to learn to read it. The result is that a great number of those under his charge can read and are in possession of the Holy Scriptures, and what is better still many of them are really and truly subject to the authority of Scripture, and that endeavouring to walk worthy of the gospel of Christ. No clergyman in the Island, I believe, has done more than Mr. Hylton in the great objects now stated, and if all had done as much, things would have been further advanced than they are. So much has Mr. Hylton done in the circulating the Scriptures among his own flocks that he has now comparatively little to do. He is stirring them up however to join in aiding you in circulating the Scriptures in the dark and destitute world. He preached one sermon in my hearing in favour of this object and made a collection for you.

In his congregation at Grossmond we held a meeting rather of a novel kind. We requested all those who had received Bibles to meet us at the chapel, and to bring the Bibles with them. It was on the evening of a Monday. The people after labouring all day came to the chapel in good numbers, men and women, but more considerably of the former than the latter. We had of course on this occasion prayer and praise, and we publicly read a portion of Scripture. It was the 8th of Nehemiah; and on reading the 5th verse, at the minister's suggestion all the people stood up till the Scriptures were read. After this we set before the people the value of the word of God, and their happiness in possessing it, exhorting them as sinners to rest on Christ and to do his will in all things. We then desired them to hold up their Bibles. This they did in concert, and the sight was pretty and sublime. In succession we desired them, any of them, who received benefit from the Holy Scriptures to stand up and briefly to narrate to us the same. One rose up and another, and another, and in due course and order many rose, and told us in their own dialect and manner, how God has blessed them through the Bible. Some told us how they had been led to see their guilty and lost condition by means of the word of God, others informed us that they had seen in the Bible how that Christ died for our salvation as the atoning Lamb, and others that they had been led to this and that duty, and had received this and that comfort in distress from the precious word of God in the Bible he had given them. The meeting was all and all very interesting, and we closed it with prayer and praise.  We trust that good will be done by this meeting; and in truth, everything that is done to enhance the Bible in our eyes, leads us more to appreciate and to apply all its doctrines and precepts to ourselves.

We held a meeting of the Committee of the St. Elizabeth's Bible Society, when an arrangement was made for making you a remittance; and this money remitted is in addition to the £40 currency which Mr. Marcy paid in to the Jamaican Bible Society in Kingston, and of which he apprised you by letter. We had no public meeting, for St. Elizabeth being so much of a country parish without town or nearly so, we feared we should not be able to get up anything that could well be called a general meeting. By communications and contributions sent in to the Secretary and Committee we perceived that the work of Bible circulation is going on, though perhaps less rapidly than at first starting of the Society. We hope that through the various ministers and schools in the parish the good work will not flag, but will rather, and ever greatly increase all over this district.

The next parish to St. Elizabeth's in my return route is Manchester. Here also we had the same difficulty as in St. Elizabeth about a public meeting, and even more, so that we never attempted it. I visited however some of the mission and school stations, and from all I could learn I conceive there will be a very considerable circulation of the Scriptures in this parish. Supplies of Bibles have been ordered to it accordingly, and it is hoped that these will find their way speedily into the house and hands of the people.

Clarendon is the next parish. Here a Society has not yet been formed, but some of the ministers in it are much interested in circulating the Scriptures among their congregations. I had opportunities of speaking with these ministers, and of addressing some of the congregations; and on all which occasions I have seen a good feeling upon the subject, and an anxiety to see the word of God in the hands of all. I have ordered several cases of Bibles to these friends in Clarendon, and from the interest manifested I have good hopes that the circulation of them will be early carried into effect.

The only other parish I passed through before reaching Spanish Town is St. Dorothy's. There are some good friends of the Bible Society here but still we did not see all things ready for the formation of the Society.

In Spanish Town I talked about a public meeting, which may perhaps by and by be realized. On the 16th yesterday, as already said I reached Kingston.

A few words may now be said as to the general work and prospects of the Bible Society in the whole course of this tour, say two thirds of the Island. In some places more has been done than formerly, and in other places less, and taking the whole together, there is much reason for thankfulness and gladness. The circulation of the word of God is making steady progress onward, and with every prospect of it increasing, from the increase of schools, from the increasing ministerial labours, and from real advance of intelligent religion. It would be wrong in me however to withhold saying to you, but it seems more than desirable, even necessary that your friends here should be kept apprised of your endeavours and of your noble line of operations in the kingdom of God, by repeated visits from some fit person acting as your agent, one who belongs to no denomination with any exclusiveness, but who is firmly attached to the body of Christ. You are aware that I have repeatedly said to you that this interesting Bible Society field should be cultivated with the assiduity, and that your labours would not be in vain. I have still the same views on that subject precisely, and my words now perhaps will have more weight than before; for on former occasions I spoke of myself as the labourer, but now I do not, as another and a distant field is assigned me, and upon which if the Lord will I shall soon enter. But please send an agent to Jamaica, where he will find plenty of work to do all the months of the year. Jamaica a strong claims on you and on all ......... the goodness to attend to these claims in your ..... All others attend to them in theirs; and thus may ...... in the kingdom of God be made to prosper greatly ..... See you labour well for Jamaica, and for all the West Indies, and may you come in for a large share of the reward in the day of Christ, when all shall reap even as they have sown.

            I remain, My Dear Friend,

                        Very Truly Yours,

                                    James Thomson.

Rev A Brandram - No 69

Kingston, Jamaica, 15th May 1838

My Dear Friend,

Two days ago our packet arrived, bringing the London mails of the 2nd April. I had looked with full and much expectation for a letter, note or memo from Earl Street just to say at least how your funds stood on the 31st March. It was perhaps unreasonable in me to look for this, as you might not know yourselves at the time the packet sailed. You will know however to excuse this little anxiousness of mine on this thermometer point, by reflecting on the kindred feeling in your own minds about the same matter. Next packet will I expect to bring the message. I apprehend from some notices you are so kind as give me in your letter of 8th February that your general sum from all items taken together will be less than last year, whilst there is a real increase in the most important items, namely, foreign sales, and free contributions. If you have less from English sales, it is not to be wondered at, considering what you have been doing these 34 years. Yet England I fear is not yet supplied with Bibles, though it should be.

On the day I arrived in Kingston from the country, I called on our Governor, who was stopping here at the time, and not at Spanish Town. I called to thank him for his prompt interference in our case respecting the Bible seized in Cuba, and for the answers he had remitted me concerning them. I wished also to say, that I would be obliged to trouble him again on the subject, as I had lately had a letter from Cuba dated the 27th March stating that the books had not then been delivered up. The Governor readily offered to aid us all he could; and I may here say of him, that I have always found him friendly on the several occasions when I have called on him. He is also the Patron of our Society in Kingston, and subscribes £10.

Agreeable to my hint to the Governor, I drew up a second representation to be sent to the Governor General of Cuba. This together with a letter I wrote on the subject to the British Consul at the Havannah have been forwarded; and we now wait the result.

I suppose there is something good and pleasant in the extract from Mr. Graydon's letter which you offered me in the close of your February letter, and which Mr Jackson promised by the following packet, but which I have not yet seen. I hope it will be forthcoming, and will come soon.

Since my return to Kingston, I have had two letters from Mr. Watts. One of them was brought by the Rev. Mr. Stanton who accompanied him from London to Carthagena, and through some parts of New Granada. These two letters are dated at Carthagena 15th March and 16th April. In the first of these he mentions that the climate of Chocó had proved unfavourable to him, and had brought on a sharp fever which confined him to bed for a fortnight, and caused to him an illness more or less severe of two months. He had gone out to a village called Turbaco a few miles from Carthagena; and in his second letter he says he had there recovered strength, and was thinking of setting out for Bogotá.

The spirit in which these two letters of Mr. Watts are written is very pleasing; and I may say the same regarding all the preceding letters I have had from him. With the Rev. Mr. Stanton who accompanied Mr. Watts I have had a good deal of conversation since his arrival here; and it is but a mere justice to state to you, that Mr. Stanton gives a very favourable view of Mr. Watts is character, as formed from his private intimacy with him, and from observing his mode of performing his public duties. I would further add as bearing on the same subject, that in my correspondence with Mr. Watts I have taken the liberty which you and he gave me of mentioning my views to him, more or less in the way of disapproving of some little things, and of giving advice on others: and in all these cases and matters Mr. Watts has manifested a very pleasing disposition of mind, and an earnest desire to know what is right, and to do what is best. Encouraged by these manifestations I shall go on with frankness in my correspondence with Mr. Watts, agreeable to your wishes. I have full confidence that he will take in good part anything I say, and shall therefore not hesitate to communicate to him any little notices respecting a path and course through which Providence led me in former years, and which he is now pursuing.  Mr. Watts seems full of spirit and courage in his work, but is not altogether free of some natural fears which the country he is in presents, and of which he has more than a memento immediately before him in the lamented fall of our late colleague Mr. Matthews. Pray all of you for our brother Watts, that all judgment may be given to him, that he may go on courageously and be delivered from all dangers, that he may be successful in the circulation of the holy Scriptures, and that in all his public and private ways he may be an open Bible unto all men.  And please to remember poor me also at the throne of grace in the same terms, for I shall soon be I expect in a country similar to that in which Mr. Watts now is, and though God graciously gives me hopes in all my travels, he has never yet taken away all my fears.

You have expressed regret once and again, that Mr. Watts and I had not an interview with each other in Carthagena, and in your last you say, "Whether you would have been in time to prevent his correspondence with the Bishops altogether, I do not at this moment distinctly recollect."  The first letter I received from Mr. Watts was dated 24th August, and came into my hands on 4th September. On the 9th I wrote you, and stated that I purposed to sail about a week after for Carthagena and Santa Marta, or rather for Santa Marta and Carthagena, for everyone who visits both places, visits the windward one first. About the time I should have sailed I was informed of the decease of the Bishop of  Santa Marta; and received some notices respecting the difficulties and expense of passing from the one place mentioned to the other. These changes presented things different from what I have thought of when I proposed going, and the slender advantages of a visit to Mr. Watts over correspondence with him, together with a loss of time from the Jamaica field and enlarged expenses led me to hesitate as to the propriety in duty of the step I had projected. Under these feelings and doubts I looked anew into your letter of the 31st May, and a copy of the Resolution of the Committee of the 12th  & 29th of that same month. The Resolution is worded thus: – "That Mr. Thomson be requested to put himself in correspondence with Mr. Watts; and should it not interfere with his present arrangements, that he be authorized to visit Carthagena, for the purpose of conferring with Mr. Watts on the subject of his proposed visit."  The re-reading and the wording of this Resolution settled the point in doubt with me. I saw that I was not requested to go, but simply permitted, and that in case my going would not impede business in Jamaica. I said, business does require me here, and especially after my absence in Cuba, and also in reference to my leaving of the Island altogether. Therefore because of the wording of the Resolution, because of the business on hand here, and because of the little advantage to be gained by going to Mr. Watts over writing him, because of all these taken together, I said, it is my duty not to go. Thus exactly things passed through my mind, and thus the matter was settled. Had the wording of your Resolution been "Go," I would have gone, leaving all other considerations.

And, had I gone to Carthagena, would I have been in time to prevent, etc. as you have noticed in the extract above given from your letter of 15 March? According to arrangements made I would have arrived in Carthagena most probably in the end of September. In Mr. Watts letter of the 12th September, he says "I opened the sale three days ago." This would be the 9th September, the very day I wrote you, and just five days after I received my first letter from Carthagena apprising me of Mr. Watts arrival there. Plain it is that I could not have been with him at the commencement of the sale, unless a vessel had offered me immediately, and I had gone in the same, and had had a voyage of three or four days. Four days is the shortest passage I recollect hearing of, and I was myself ten days in 1825 in coming from Carthagena to Jamaica. I thus draw your attention to the commencement of the sale, because of its connexion with the advertisement which I suppose to have appeared in the newspapers at precisely the same time, as it is natural it should. Notwithstanding of what I have said, I do not know that the advertisement naturally did appear on the first day or days of sale. The copy I have of the "Gaceta de Carthagena" in which it is, is dated 26th October, and the Bishop of Carthagena in his prohibition dated 30th October refers to this same date of the newspaper. If 26th October therefore was the first day on which the advertisement appeared, I could have been there before it issued.  But, you will say, why am I saying so much about the advertisement, and its date? My reason is this: because the advertisement bears mainly and primarily on the subject before us; and the Bishop of Carthagena states expressly, that this said advertisement forced out his edict, and but for which it would not have appeared.

There are two or three oversights in this advertisement, in my humble view of it, and I have taken the liberty to notice these to our colleague Mr. Watts, who has, as before noticed, received in a very friendly manner what I ventured to say to him on the subject. The hints given therefore will I doubt not be kept in memory, and will probably be serviceable on future occasions; and in order that this may be the case, I should renew my observations in my correspondence with Mr. Watts, and shall add what else on the subject appears desirable.

This settles the first point of my observations to you on the subject before us, which observations you expressed a wish for, and which I promised in a former letter to give. The second point is the correspondence of Mr. Watts with the Bishops. I do not know that I could in point of time, nor that I would in point of duty, have prevented, if I could this correspondence. I would have avoided however the items in the advertisement that gave rise to some of it. Yet the Prohibitory of the Archbishop is dated in Bogotá the 29th September, and could not have been preceded or occasioned by the advertisement, though it might have been by the notice of Mr. Watts's arrival in Carthagena on the 15th August & bringing loads upon loads of Bibles with him.

Perhaps it is better, perhaps it is not, that all this correspondence has taken place. I do not know exactly what would have been my own action in the case. God will rule it, or overrule it for good. One thing is certain, we cannot well keep in terms and in understanding with the Roman Catholic Rulers of the Church. Our Principles are diverse, and diverse is our practice. Diverse therefore we must needs be in appearance as well as reality. First, their Bible, is not ours; for we exclude the Apocrypha. In the second place, a Roman Catholic priest is bound by his oath of office, and by his conscience, if he have any, not to allow, and less to recommend the general indiscriminate use of the Bible without notes, and our Bibles are without notes. Thirdly, we differ essentially as to the mode of studying the Bible. They read it, to follow the church only: we read to understand what God has said to us, according to the intellectual construction which he has given us, and according to his grace vouchsafed to mankind in Christ Jesus, and in answer to prayer. Fourthly, we cannot honestly state, that we do not wish and intend to destroy Roman Catholicism by the circulation of our Bibles; for we do in truth aim at this: and from a conviction that the Roman Catholic gospel is another gospel, we labour to circulate the word of God to make men take up Protestant principles, in which are involved the true and saving gospel of our Lord Jesus Christ. On these Four Points then we are in fact diverse, and cannot and must not meet, nor agree. It comes then to this. Who is on the Lord side, who? We who circulate the Bibles, to lead men to the Pure Gospel of our Lord Jesus Christ, that they may receive it and be eternally saved, we are on the Lord's side. The others are not. But nevertheless I would not, like some, cast them with violence out of the window down upon the street. I would sap and undermine the foundations of their house by the word of God, and avowedly (though we need not always be saying so) to bring it down to the ground and to entire destruction. But this must be done in all wisdom and judgment, in truth and benevolence. May the Lord give unto us all, and richly, this wisdom, judgment, truth and benevolence, in all our work, in all countries, that so his blessed name may be magnified in us in the kingdom of his Son Jesus Christ, in which he has called us, and honoured us, to labour!

The breaking out therefore in Colombia, and elsewhere, between the Bible and the Priest is not to be wondered that, nor regretted. It is most likely therefore of God, that this correspondence and controversy have taken place in the case of the Bishops and our Brother Watts. But let this business in all its parts be conducted without guile and in the greatness of Christian character in the face of all men.

Our only apparently vulnerable point in this controversy which has taken place, as respects the Bible Society and Protestants, is the point in fact of the variations in the versions and editions. No doubt there are several and considerable variations in the different English versions and editions, from the first appearance of the first portion of the Bible in our native tongue until King James's Bible which we now use was issued. This has been brought to view and well trumpeted by the Archbishop of  Bogotá and the Bishop of Carthagena in their published edicts which now lie before me. This, I say, appears our only vulnerable point. How shall we meet it? First, by showing up and forth that there are also great differences in wordings among the several Spanish versions of the Scriptures, and all published under full papal authority: and secondly, by showing forth the various readings in the Codices and early printed editions of the Vulgate, the Catholics own Bible; and by making visible and palpable the differences between this same Latin Vulgate Bible as published in all authority by Sixtus V in 1790, and by Clement VIII with equally full authority in 1792.

The pointing out of these variations will clear us of bad faith, or involve themselves in the same; and will bring us both to the true ground on which this matter rests. There are, as must needs have been, such and similar variations in the transcribing and in the translating of the Scriptures; but yet these variations cannot be properly charged against either of the two bodies, and they do not affect the authenticity of the word of God. By the way, could you procure for me, and for Mr. Watts, and others similarly situated, a copy of Korholti's work "De variis scripturae editionibus", or in preference, Thomas James's Bellum Papale, published in London in 1600? One of these two works and a copy of Sixtus's Bible would be of real service to us in your work. The smaller the editions, the more convenient for Travelers. Paris or Spanish edition of Sixtus's Bible would carry more weight than a London one. See Horne's Introduction Vol 2, page 203, of the 3rd edition. Please also to send us Thomas Ward's work on the variations of the English Bibles published in 1688, and which is referred to by the Bishop of Carthagena who says it was republished in Philadelphia in 1824.

I have thus, you see, treated of this subject at full length; and hope that where you do not agree with my observations, you will generously excuse them, though of course, I should be glad to learn that we agree. You observe in your last letter, that, "In one respect the correspondence does Mr. Watts much credit, being conducted on his part with evident ability." I think with you that it has been creditably managed by him; and I speak as you do, of the portion I have seen, and which passed through my hands. Another voluminous packet has just been forwarded to you, as I learn by his last letter. This I have not seen. He promised in his penultimate letter to send it to me, but has forwarded it to you direct through I suppose some favourable conveyance which presented itself to him. I should think that now at least, he had better lie on his oars, so far as writing is concerned, to see how the currents and the winds move. I shall write him to that effect by the mail which will be in made up here for Carthagena in a few days. The only thing I would recommend him to write or publish would be a brief, moderate and judicious statement on the subject of the variations in our Bibles, and in their own, accompanied with an open declaration of the Bible you publish and circulate is printed verbatim with the utmost fidelity from the Madrid edition, the notes and the Apocrypha being wanting.  Please always to put into the title page the place where the Bible is printed. We are accused of not doing so in some instances, and I believe fairly. Also in printing new editions, let double treble care be taken in correcting the press, for a slight variation in a letter or two might much perplex us by the error it might make, and would affect our declaration of fidelity. I think I recollect seeing in your first edition of the Spanish Bible an n changed into a y, and which in fact changed the word from no to I.

I cannot conclude this letter though already long, without saying how glad I am that you have appointed an agent in Bengal, and are looking out for one for Madras. This is really good news to me. But pray add a third for Bombay. These three are the fewest you should have for British India. The Lord will soon show you the good of these appointments. You will recollect that I spoke particularly upon the subject in my letter No. 44. The appointment of your agent for Canada was also truly gratifying to me. You want one still in that quarter, namely, for Nova Scotia, New Brunswick, Cape Breton, and Newfoundland. I shall soon hear, I doubt not, of an appointment for that district. My reasons I gave at large in the letter referred to.

Your agent for China will I dare say soon find plenty of work either in China proper, or among the emigrated Chinese in the South, and through them he may move the Celestial Empire itself without even setting foot upon it.  Take the map into your hand, and look on the West of the Indus and on to the Mediterranean. Might not an agent of the Bible Society find work there? Lastly on this score: I am rejoiced to hear what you say about the distribution of the Scriptures in Brazil. Look at the whole East side of South America, and see who whether it does not claim some messenger from you.

Since returning to Kingston from the West End of the Island, I visited the parish of St. Thomas in the East. Things are doing well there, and of likely to do better. All the funds of that Society are paid in to the Jamaica Bible society in Kingston, and therefore it is that you get no direct remittances from it. It should however have its own merits for itself. We had advertised for a public meeting, and had a wonderful number of Ministers and other Bible speaking men. But down came the rain before the hour of assembly, and continued, and so prevented our anniversary.  Not to lose all, the friends present made me get up and go over Cuba to them, and tell them of all the state in all things, and of all that happened to me there.

We had a meeting of our committee in Kingston, and had arranged for another, and for a Bible meeting at port Royal. But these attempts were frustrated, by the very sudden removal from life to death of one of our number. The Rev. Mr. Gardner, one of the Baptist missionaries, and the ablest Minister perhaps in Kingston, aged only 31, sat at table to breakfast on the Friday, took fever on that day, and on the Wednesday following was buried. How sudden the stroke! how warning and how instructive to us all! The Lord make us, and keep us always ready, with our loins girded and our lamps burning! So may it be with you, My Dear Friend, and so with all your colleagues in the Society. Pray that it may be so with

            Your Brother and Fellow Labourer,

                        James Thomson.

Rev A Brandram - No 70

Kingston, Jamaica, 24th May 1838

My Dear Friend,

My last letter was nearly all taken up with Colombia, or rather New Grenada, as that section of Colombia amounting to about one third is now called. This letter also will be up on Spanish America, on a part farther west, namely, Mexico and Guatemala. From your Resolves and from my Duties connected therewith, these countries have been full before my mind for many months past as I have hinted to you in more than one of my letters. The plan to be adopted respecting these countries that might prove the best has been the subject of my meditations. I think I have now come to a clear understanding of what I should do in the first part of my descent on those lands, and I here proceed to lay the same before you in anticipation, in order that you may, after considering my views and statements, confirm me in them, or alter them, as may seem best in your judgment, considering the objects you pursue, and the long and varied experience you have had, and daily have, in all countries over the globe.

Whilst I was meditating on these subjects, a letter came very unexpectedly into my hands from Belize, and from an individual their entirely unknown to me. It was from the Rev. Alexander Henderson the Secretary of the Belize (or Honduras) Bible Society. The letter was written by him at the request of the Committee to make some inquiry how to do things best in Bible Society matters, as the subject, they said, was new to them all. I wrote an early reply to that letter, stating my views regarding the objects of their inquiries. At the same time I made my inquiries in turn, bearing  upon the situation of  Belize with Mexico and Guatemala, and wishing to know what connexions, relations, and intercourse there subsisted among them. My questions bore very particularly on the relations between Belize and Yucatán. Yucatán, you will recollect, is one of the States of Mexico, and it is one of those parts to which I formerly drew your attention in regard to the native tongues spoken throughout that extensive country. I think I stated to you the population of that peninsula amounted to about half  a million, and that one native tongue is spoken over the whole, and so generally as almost altogether to exclude the Spanish language. This native dialect is called the Maya. The same language is spoken also I understand in the smaller neighboring state of Tabasco. Some inquiries and efforts were made whilst I was in Mexico to get one of the Gospels translated into that tongue, but which proved ineffectual from my leaving the country. No part of Mexico appears to have stronger claims than Yucatán in regard to the rendering a portion of the Scriptures into the native families everyday and acceptable language of the people at large. I had thought therefore of making special efforts in regard to this part on my return to Mexico, and of visiting it for that end, if it could conveniently be done. I wished to know from Mr. Henderson, if I could easily get a conveyance from Belize into the state of Yucatán.  About a month ago I received a reply  to my letter from Mr Henderson, and got valuable answers from him to all my inquiries. He says in regard to Yucatán, that there is very frequent intercourse between it and Belize, and that it would be easy to get a conveyance from the one to the other.

This being the case I would propose, when I leave this island, to go direct to Belize. There I would stop some little time to encourage and help our friends in their Bible Society in which they seem to take a good deal of interest. This would put a finish to my West India tour. I would then proceed to Yucatán, and should there direct the main part of my attention to the procuring the translation of a portion of the Scriptures into the Maya language. The circulation of the Scriptures in the Spanish language would also of course be attended to as circumstances might direct. It is probable that to accomplish the translation referred to, and to get it into proper circulation and use, would require my stay there for a considerable time, at all events long beyond the time required for a visit. Tabasco also might have to be visited for the same objects, or rather for the latter portion of them.  These are my views regarding Yucatán, and its native tongue, and your Agent's visit to that part of Mexico. Be so good as take them into full consideration, and let me know what you think I should do.

One of my inquiries to Mr. Henderson was respecting the quantity of Spanish Scriptures which they had in their stores in Belize, and my object in making that inquiry was, to see whether it would be necessary to request you to forward me a supply to that place for the use of Yucatán and Guatemala. From the reply which I have received, I should think it will not be necessary to send any more there for the present.

From Yucatán it would be easy to pass over to Veracruz and from thence to the heart of Mexico. Would you have me to do so, and by that means see at once how our cause stands in the city of Mexico itself and over the country generally? Or, would you have me to return from Yucatán to Belize, and then pass into Guatemala. There are frequent conveyances from Belize to different parts of Guatemala. In case of going into that country, it would be best, I should think, to proceed at once to the capital, where of course most could be done both directly and indirectly. There are several native languages, and spoken extensively, in Guatemala as well as Mexico. The population of the whole nation is about Two Millions, whilst Mexico may be considered as containing Eight Millions: the two countries together Ten Millions; that is about the same as Spain.

As I have just been speaking of Guatemala, I may mention a circumstance that I might have noticed earlier, but it was desirable to make some delay to see a greater certainty in the case. I mentioned to you a good while ago that I sent a case of Bibles to Nicaragua a part of that country. A portion or the whole of them were disposed of and the proceeds were remitted by the hands of a brother of the person who sold them as he was coming to Jamaica to purchase goods. The vessel in which he was did not arrive at the time expected. Weeks passed on and there was no appearance of it, so that now it seems fully confirmed that the vessel was lost and all on board.

After this unpleasant digression, I return to my immediate objects, namely, as to where I should make my first descent on Guatemala and Mexico, and as to how I should direct my journeyings there, and what should be the main object of my attention. Should you wish me neither to go in the first instance to Belize, to Yucatán or Guatemala, but direct to Veracruz and the city of Mexico, be so good as instruct me accordingly that the proper arrangements may be made. To the spot to which you direct me by your finger or your pen to go, I go, as it respects the first instance or movement, the second, third and the rest. You perceive I am doing in the present case what I have different times done before, that is, I have anticipated my movements to you, in the form of thoughts and purposes as they appear to be best in a prospective way; and my object in doing so was that I might either obtain your sanction to the same before hand, or your better directions as to my movements plans and purposes. Have the goodness therefore to weigh the several things stated in this letter, and let me early know your mind frankly and fully regarding them all.

One of the things I would have you weigh fully in regard to your Agent's work among the ten millions of souls in Mexico and Guatemala, is, what portion of his attention should he gave to the rendering of the Scriptures into the native languages spoken in those parts. That, and the general circulation of the Scriptures in the Spanish language, form the only two branches of your work there. But, what is the proportionate attention to be given to each of these branches, is the object of the present inquiry. It might be, for instance, that not much could be done in a given quarter in the way of circulating the Scriptures in the Spanish tongue, whilst in the same quarter something could be done towards procuring a version of some parts of the Scriptures into one of the native tongues. What is your Agent to do in such and similar cases? Again, it might be, and probably enough will happen, that the Ecclesiastical hinderances will impede, and to a great extent, the circulation of the Spanish Scriptures. Is your agent to turn his attention to the native dialects in such cases, or to leave the country or portion of it as it may be? And further, interdicts might be preseen, and perhaps partly prevented, by attending for a while rather to the versions into the dialects than to the other branch of your work.

In both Mexico and Guatemala the native languages are extensively spoken as already intimated. By far the major part of the inhabitants of those countries are at the present day, the descendents of the people found there at the discovery of the New World. These nearly all still speak their original dialects, though many of them in market towns, and where there is much intercourse with the Spaniards, speak also the Spanish tongue. So much is this the case, that in all the small towns and villages even in the immediate neighborhood of the city of Mexico the capital of the country, the native dialect is spoken generally by the people in their daily intercourse with each other, although most of these from their proximity to Mexico speak the Spanish language likewise. But farther from the centre of the country there are many who understand nothing of Spanish, and cases of this kind came under my immediate observation in my journey from Mexico to Oaxaca in 1828.  The question then is, and it is an extensive one in regard to these countries, what should be done to bring the Scripture message home to these peoples, differing in language, as they do, from the leading patrician body of the country, and greatly differing also from each other in their several tongues. What is to be the measure of your benevolence towards them? Whilst the Scriptures are spurned away in a considerable degree by those to whom they were first sent, namely, those speaking the Spanish language, perhaps it is an intimation to pay more especially attention to the others who form the more numerous and poorer body. Thus did the Apostles in regard to the Jews and the Gentiles. Your success in the Catalan language in Spain is very encouraging.

You have means, I understand, of communicating with Dr. Mora. I should be glad if you would learn from him, who is the person or persons engaged in the translations with which he was concerned. He did not notice these names in his letter of which Mr. Jackson sent me a copy, but rather said he wished to keep them concealed. It becomes however now absolutely necessary, if I may so speak, that he should either give their names, or afford a clue by which they may with certainty be found out; or otherwise your Agent's work there will be much hindered, by his being obliged to act without the knowledge of what has already been done. Further, you should get from him, a statement of your monies expended in these translations, and otherwise, as a note of the same would be of great service to me, and indeed is essentially required.

Lastly, in regard to the mission in view, I should be glad to have a note of the number of Bibles in Mexico at the present time, and where lying, in Veracruz, Mexico or elsewhere. Mr Graydon's address, and some notices regarding him would be acceptable, and likely very useful. The names of the gentlemen who may have latterly corresponded with you from Mexico, and a little notification of their services, would prove a useful remembrance of, and would enable me to treat, and treat with, these gentlemen in the view of these things.

Now let us pray, that God himself may direct us to the best arrangements and workings for the advancement of his Kingdom among the Ten Millions to whom your agent is now sent.

            I remain, My Dear Friend,

                        Most Truly Yours,

                                    James Thomson.

P.S. Since my last I have received a little tract published in Bogotá containing the Archbishop's letters to the Lord Bexley and Mr. Watts, including theirs to him. The Archbishop's reasoning is fair and cannot be answered; but his premises are wrong. What, as a Bible Society, it becomes us to show, is, that we do publish God's Bible only and entirely, and faithfully. I have some thoughts of writing a letter to the Bishop of Carthagena saying and showing so, which I think we can do with good proofs.

On a reconsideration I find I asked you for too much when I begged a copy of Sixtus's Bible. It is an only and rare edition, and of course scarce and dear. You need not mind Korholti and Ward mentioned in my last. The latter I am sending to the United States for, and the former I shall do without. James's work mentioned, and a subsequent one on the same point, I should like to have. Be so good as verify for me, and most carefully, all the differences between Sixtus's Bible, and Clement's as noted in Horne, and write me if they are absolutely correct. You have both Bibles in your library. J.T.

Rev A Brandram - No 71

Jamaica, 7th June 1838

My Dear Friend,

Your letter of 26th April has this day come to hand, containing the Resolution which you say will surprise me much. It certainly was most unlooked for. My face was full to the South at your command; and this Resolution says, "Right about wheel, to the North: march." Like a good soldier, I obey, unhesitatingly. Your wish I exceed two, and cheerfully, believing that the Lord, in you, directs me.

And now as to the time of setting out from this. If I leave Jamaica in the beginning of October, and arrived in Canada in the end of the same month, there will be time for your circulars arriving there some little time before me, which will be desirable. If the Lord will then, I shall sail from this Island on my way to Canada in the first week of October; and in the mean time, I shall write to our friends there apprising them of your appointment. The interval between this date, and the beginning of October, will be filled up according to arrangements already formed here.  May the Lord make this movement, so unexpected, greatly promotive of his Kingdom and glory in the field now before me.

            I remain, My Dear Friend,

                        Very Truly Yours,

                                    James Thomson.

P.S. A draft for £20 will be presented to Mr Hitchin, of this date, payable to the order of James Morrish, Esq.

Posted
AuthorBill Mitchell

Rev A Brandram - No 72

Jamaica, 14th July 1838

My Dear Friend,

Your letter of the first June came into my hands a few days ago, and was very acceptable, as all your letters are. Before I touch upon the subjects you bring before me, I would state, that I here enclose you a Bill on the Treasurers of the Wesleyan Missionary Society for Thirty Eight Pounds. I received this from Mr. Baudry a few days ago, and the sum is, I understand, to be placed to account of contributions from the Bible Society there, the sales of the Scriptures not being distinguished from other sources.

And now let us turn to Canada, to which with a right about you have turned me; and a right about not a wrong about I trust it will be, in respect to all concerned, you, me, and Canada. I go with all readiness, as you could wish; and chiefly, because the directions of Providence in it is so manifest as not to leave me for a moment to doubt. How a Torrid Zonian will stand the polar regions, I know not, and leave that to the event.

It is curious, if not something more, that your letter of the 26th with the Canada Resolution was brought by the earliest packet we have had for a long time: it came several days before being due. But it was more singular still that I was able to answer you by the return of the same packet. Living as I am 20 miles from Kingston, I could not have done this in the usual stay of the packet here. But it was detained for two days to take home the Apprentice Abolition Bill. This however after all it did not do: but it took home my letter.

When your letter above noticed came I was all busy getting up a statement in the style of a letter from the Bishop of Carthagena, explaining and justifying the object and operations of the Bible Society, as publishing God's word, that only, and that wholly, for a statement of this sort is, I think, absolutely required from us before God and before men. We profess to act as faithful servants of God, and of our Lord Jesus Christ, in the line of publishing to all the world the Holy Scriptures. But in the very front of this declaration there seems a manifest flaw, nay a falsehood. In the eyes of many we do not publish the Bible faithfully: we are seen as withholding a part of this sacred book, whilst we declare that we give the whole: we are seen as mutilating parts we do give, and as altogether unfixed ourselves as to what is the Bible from the variety found in the English versions of the Scriptures. Now this matter ought, in my humble judgment, to be cleared up, and honestly and fully set before all concerned. This is to be done, by showing that we do in fact publish the entire Bible unaltered, and in all its and entireness and purity, as it was held and esteemed in the church from the earliest notices on the subject by ecclesiastical writers, and by their successors down and down till we come to the Council of Trent exclusive. Let us show to the Catholic world, that we publish the whole sacred canon of Revelation and Inspiration, as it was held, and as it was published by St. Jerome, and by Cardinal Ximenez. And here on this subject, let us take our stand. Catholics who are anxious to know the subject as it really is, will be led by our statement to look into this matter; and in looking into it they will see that we are right; and this perception may not only give them confidence in us as publishers of the Bible, but may at the same time unhinge all their Catholicity, and bring them round to what is right. In the second place our statement should show the nature and natural effects of making various copies and reprints of any work or book; and say plainly that from hence have arisen Various Readings of the Bible, and that alike with the Catholic and Protestant Bible: and further, that in all translations of any book into another language, there must needs be a variety of expression and sometimes of sense in different versions; and that this is found so, and equally in Catholic and Protestant versions. Lastly, we should show, that, in the case of the Spanish Bible for instance, we print the version of Scio verbatim et literatim, in all that was considered Canonical Scriptures in the Ancient Church.  Such a statement on our part, I again repeat, is justly and absolutely due from us in the sight of God and man.  We should, of course, not go one jot beyond this. We have nothing to do with the question whether the Bible should be read  with or without notes; nor with any doctrine or precept in the Scriptures, nor with any subject whatever between Catholics and Protestants.  But we are bound to show that we are faithful publishers of God's word.  Excuse me for giving my sentiments so fully and so strongly upon this subject: it is to me both a Bible Society subject, and a personal one. Consider the matter directly and fully, and see what you are called of God, to do in it: and may God himself direct you.

Well, when your letter came I was engaged in the subject and business above noticed; and I intended to print my letter, as my own, when I had it ready, for the use of Mr. Watts in New Granada; and for my own use in Mexico and Guatemala. Your letter stopped me as you spoke in it of withdrawing Mr. Watts from the field he is in, and turned me away from the field I was looking to. The subject however, though taken out of my hands, as I may say, by occurring circumstances, is not lessened thereby as a subject of consideration and action by the Society.

And now again let us turn to Canada. I am at a loss to comprehend the state of things and matters there regarding Mr. Smart. They are mysterious to me, and I shall be glad of your furnishing me with all needful information on the point before I enter on my labours there, as I suppose such information will be required, to enable me to act right.  It would be a favour to me also, and an advantage could you give me a few hints and notices about persons connected with the societies in that quarter, beyond what you may suppose I already know.

In regard to arrangements and movements in that large field, when the Lord shall bring me thither, it appears to me at present from contemplating the country according to the knowledge I now have of it, the best way will be to go first to Montreal from New York, and to operate there and westward in Upper Canada during the winter; and then in the summer following, to go to Quebec and other parts of Lower Canada, and thence to Nova Scotia, and parts in that direction. That is all I can see you at present; but when I reach Montreal I shall get information about things that will enable me to speak more to the purpose.

In regard to my letters, it will be better not to forward any to me to Jamaica after you receive this. In the best arrangement for all letters for me whilst in the Canadas will be to send them by the New York American Packet ships, to the American Bible Society House, New York; and none by the Halifax packet, or in any other way. When you send your first letters for me to the American Bible Society House, please accompany them with a note, begging them to take charge of them till I come. I may reach New York in all September, or I hope by the middle of October.

You bring Cuba before me, and I bring it before you. I have had another and a final communication from our Governor here on the subject, in stating to me the information he had from the Havannah. The confiscation of the Bibles cannot it seems be reversed. What would you say, if this hermetical sealing, were broken up soon and completely, in Cuba, as the Lord did the sealing up of Samaria, mentioned in the 7th chapter of 2nd Kings? I am laying a plan for that.

In Spain there is still war I see according to your accounts, and it should seem that latterly it is waged against you. I am glad to hear that the prison doors were opened to our colleague, and so remarkable as you state. Please say what was the false accusation lead to Mr. Borrow. The Archbishop of Toledo, you may depend upon it, will prove a broken reed; and if you do not take care, it will run into your hand. You have my views this matter fully in my letter of the 15th of May, about Mr. Watts and our friends the Bishops there, and of all the Catholics everywhere.

[You take notice in your last of the Black Latin Scholar, and are interested, as I supposed you would, with the circumstances: but you have only perceived the one half of the thing, for I said there were Two. But you are more out in the Grossmond case, and have misperceived my wording altogether. You talk of lads at Grossmond. I have said that, "the people after labouring all day came to the Chapel in good numbers men and women." I have said nothing about lads; and I may now say, to make it further away from what you suppose, that the half of them might be well on as old as yourself, and some of them much older. Please read the paragraph again, and be set right; and I know you have (what few have) the noble honesty to confess an error  when you see it, and I shall soon see you acknowledge this. Why I thought you would have rejoiced in the Grossmond affair, but what an affair you have made of it!]

I thank you for the notice you give me a map and book in a present from the Committee and yourself. I shall peruse them with many kind feelings towards the parties sending them. I am truly glad to see a Bible Society map published. I have often thought of such a thing, and felt the want of it in public meetings. And I recollect publicly noticing it at the Anniversary of the Westminster Bible Society held in Argyle Rooms in 1825 or 26, where you and I were together with our worthy president Lord Bexley in the chair. I hope the Society will give this map all encouragement, and will modernise it from year to year, or at proper periods, so as to represent the Travels and Triumphs of the Bible over the earth; and I hope the world will rapidly take the colour of the Bible, for I suppose it is coloured to show where the Bible has come, and where it prevails.

I see, and with very great delight, that the East Indies is greatly opening upon you. Do listen to every petition and every suggestion from that most populous land, and meet every demand from it to the fullest extent, even though you should have nothing left for your work elsewhere. Were you reduced to necessities by this means, you would see how money would flow into you whenever your wants were made known.

I am sorry to learn that your Bible Anniversary Meeting passed off less favourably than you could have wished. But there must be comings and goings in these matters. I think you say other anniversaries were less interesting in a similar way. I like your reflections on the same. [And now, as affecting this case, perhaps you will allow me to refer to a  subject, I once referred to before, I believe in 1828, that is 10 years ago. It is in regard to our thanksgivings so much to men at our public meetings. I wish to see the Bible society lead in a form here, for verily that is in need of it. Look at your report for last year. That are six resolutions and it, and four of them, two thirds, are thanking ones. The only natural and excusable one is that concerning the Auxiliaries, though that also could well enough be omitted without loss. And the last one is both full some and ridiculous to a person present. Nobody esteems my Lord Bexley more than I do; but I would not compliment Gabriel so, and nor would Gabriel sit to hear it. Pray excuse and forgive my folly and rudeness; but a fool sometimes may give a good hint to wise people.]

            Believe me, My Dear Friend,

                        Very Truly Yours,

                                    James Thomson.

You see the brackets, and you may leave them out, or leave them in just as you please. I write frankly, knowing to whom I write.

Kingston, 10th September 1838

My Dear Sir,

I advise a Bill drawn this day in favour of Thomas Groom Esq. for Fifty Pounds sterling, which please to put down to my Travelling Account. It is drawn at ninety days, that being found more convenient on the present occasion.

The first of August packet has arrived here, but I have not yet received the note of my Private Account, which I could always wish to receive by the first of May packet.

Be so good as to say to Mr Brandram, that I received two days ago his letter of 26th July with the enclosed printed circular.

            I remain, My Dear Sir,

                        Very Sincerely Yours,

                                    James Thomson.

Posted
AuthorBill Mitchell

To the Bible Societies in British North America

Jamaica, 12th September 1838

Dear Friends,

It has pleased God, who does all things according to his own will, to turn my face very unexpectedly from the South to the North – from Mexico to British America, in which latter your lot is cast. You are already apprised of this, I understand, by a circular from the Bible Society House in London. It was my intention to address a few lines to you, immediately after I had written to the Society signifying my willingness to go whither they desired me; but afterwards I thought it better that you should hear of this arrangement first from head quarters rather than from me; and now learning that you have been written to on the subject, I follow after with my secondary communication.

 

I am not yet able to state on what they I shall leave this Island for your quarter; but I expect to reach you within the month of October ensuing. Neither can I yet say to what Province I shall first direct my steps, as that will partly depend on the Port I may first arrive at on your continent. On my arrival however on your territory, or their neighbourhood, I shall endeavour to communicate early with you, in order to our coming to a clear understanding of the best times and seasons of my visiting the several places; and also as to what plans we had best adopt in common for the attainment of the great end we mutually have in view, namely, the circulation of the Blessed Volume of Inspiration throughout your extensive and interesting country.

 

My attention, as already indicated, having been turned from the South to the North, has been a matter of much thought with me, and has led me frequently to consider the two quarters referred to in a sort of juxta-position and comparison. To Mexico I would have returned under strong impressions of the great lack in need of the Bible there, in combination with the many difficulties in the way of circulating the Sacred Volume, partly from ecclesiastical prohibitions, and partly from that awful religious apathy which prevails over that extensive and populous country. To you however I look with more encouraging feelings. You have been made aware of the value of the Bible, there are no prohibitions of this blessed book with you, and that is less general apathy as to the receiving of it. My intercourse therefore and labours with you will be more cheering than they would have been in Mexico. I think it is a fine field that God has called me to traverse in your Provinces, and I anticipate much pleasure in my intercommunion and labours with you. I trust God will visibly direct us in our arrangements and operations, and that we shall see holy and blessed fruits arise all around from the direct and indirect influence of an extensive circulation of the Bible, through which God may be honoured, and we comforted.

 

The Bible directs us all to God himself through our Lord Jesus Christ, commanding and inducing us to seek after a similitude to God in our knowledge and practice. By our all pursuing this object and track we shall necessarily converge more and more to each other in holy unity and fellowship. The Bible is indeed a unity book, and all who join in circulating it ought to endeavour as much as possible to be of one heart and soul. Unfortunately the Christian world is at the present time separated into various flocks; but as we all anticipate a unity in the future and glorious days of the Church on earth, we ought to tend towards unity now, as much as in us lies; and as, moreover, we fully and confidently anticipate a grand reunion of all true Christians in heaven, let us as far as we possibly and conscientiously can, assimilate to one another here below: and thus, as in all other respects also, let us grow in a meetness for the inheritance and fellowship with the saints in light.

 

There is a further comparison, besides the one noticed above, which I am led to make in turning my face towards you at this time. I have been now about seven years labouring in these West India islands. All this time I have been among Ham's degraded race, and have seen in their slavery the fulfillment of the Bible declaration, in that they should be servants of servants to their brethren. I have seen, however, likewise the dawn of the deliverance both in a civil and in a religious point of view. Their chains have now been broken, and cast into the depths of the sea; they have received the Gospel preached to them; and many are now perusing the Sacred Pages with great delight and advantage; and many again poring over the Alphabet and their spelling book to qualify themselves to enter on the study of God's own volume. I have, on hundreds of occasions I may say, addressed large assemblies of these people congregated together in order to hear about the Bible and of Christ. The attention paid by these rude untutored people, and the impressions made on their minds and conduct by what was brought before them, was striking and delightful, and was an evident sign of what God is now beginning to do in favour of the outcasts, and of our degraded race all over the earth. These sons and daughters of Africa have sought for and procured the Holy Scriptures to an extent far beyond what could at all have been anticipated; and this desire goes on and increases.

 

Turning then my face from these people to you, and in the prospect of seeing you before long, I am led to expect great things in your quarter, considering on the one hand the people here in their low condition and their anxiety for the Scriptures, and considering on the other hand your great superiorities through the favour of God in many ways, I am led, I say, to hope that great things will be done among you in the way of a lively and high Bible interest which will powerfully unite all classes and names, civil and religious, in the holy work of effecting a general and useful circulation of the Holy Bible throughout all your population, and also that you will use great and benevolent exertions to send forth this Blessed Book into every nation and house over all the earth.

 

From what I witnessed during my short visit to two of your Provinces in the year 1830, I am confirmed in my hopes and prospects of what the Lord will be pleased to do among you in his great Bible work. I shall set out therefore for your field with these cheering expectations, and I doubt not but your desires and hopes run in the same line. Let us then in the meantime, and continuedly, pray to the God and giver of the Bible, that we may all possess the spirit of the lively oracles, and that God would honour us greatly in his own sacred and dignified work of revealing his will to mankind. Pray for me, my dear brethren, that I may reach you safely in due time, and that I may arrive among you "in the fullness of the blessing of the Gospel of Christ." May God direct you in all things in his Kingdom, and bless you with all the blessings of this kingdom below, and at length with all its glories above, world without end, Amen.

            I remain, Dear Friends,

                        Truly and Faithfully Yours,

                                    James Thomson.

 

Tag. . Ham's race, liberation

Posted
AuthorBill Mitchell

Rev A Brandram No 73

Kingston, Jamaica, 12th October 1838

My Dear Friend,

I am still in Jamaica, as you see by the words of the top; and the cause is, that no vessel has offered for New York for some weeks past. In the beginning of last month, I came into Kingston from a place in the country 20 miles off where I had been residing from June. On my arrival I immediately set about writing to the British American Societies agreeably to the intimation you had given them in your circular of the 27th July, which reached me on the day I came in. A copy of that circular I send you by this same packet, and you will see that I forwarded it to each of the 16 Auxiliary Societies, which according to your last report (1837) is the number of these within the Four Provinces. I hope the wording of my letter will not be unsatisfactory to you, nor to our friends to whom it was sent. I felt as if I would rather not write, as I could add nothing to what you had said; but the reference to my writing being particularly noticed in your circular, I could not do otherwise than write, and forthwith. I pray that the letter itself and its contents may prove acceptable to our friends, and profitable towards the end in view. And now before I dispose of this paragraph of my letter allow me to thank your kind self, and all my kind friends of the Committee, for the manner in which you have spoken of your agent in your circular. I feel ashamed in reading what you have said, remembering my own weaknesses and inefficiency. But God has done most graciously with me, and made my poor labours acceptable and successful greatly above the nature of these labours in themselves. To God therefore, I say with all my soul, be the praise and glory. But further, and not least, I thank you for your prayers respecting this new mission on which I am entering, and for calling on our friends in the Provinces to join with you in the same. O may the Hearer of Prayer prosper this mission, thus begun in prayer, and so to be continued I trust, and ended.

On finishing in forwarding the circular now noticed, my attention was given to the packing up my little things, and to various Bible Society concerns which required execution. All these have been settled I may say a fortnight ago; and since, as well as for some time before, my eyes had been directed sea-ward looking out for the vessel every day expected from New York. Here I am then in statu quo as respects place, but not so in regard to business, as I find still something to do in our concerns. Should the expected vessel from New York not arrive and sail soon, nor any other vessel offer for a convenient port of the United States, we shall I think sail for Halifax, to which place, I understand, we are more likely to find a passage at the present time, than to New York. By next packet you will probably hear something more certain on this point.

The Lady Clarke arrived in Kingston on the 21st September; but notwithstanding every effort, we could not procure the case of Reports till yesterday, the space of three weeks. This was owing to the case having been shipped with the first articles, and the whole of the cargo nearly put on the top of it. To secure an early discharge of a case under circumstances like this one, it would be well to make arrangements that it should be placed at the top of the cargo. In consequence of this I have merely had time as yet to glance at and taste the report, and must postpone the feast of a full reading till the packet is gone. Wilberforce's life and the Bible Map are come in the case; and for which I tender many thanks to the Committee for this kind memento. Wilberforce will be another feast for me, and of some continuance: and the Bible world that now lies spread out before me will be a constant treat. The expression, by the way, which I have here used respecting the Map, reminds me of what the world at present is not, but which it is your object verily to make it – a Bible world.  Many thanks also, my dear friend, for your own personal present Williams's Missionary Enterprises and, and the Missionary's Farewell. All these will be read in due time, and when we have time, with much interest, and with prayers for our kind friends – the Donors. We read your Venn and your New Zealand so; and the last work we perused was the Legh Richmond's Life sent us by a dear Christian friend Lord Chichester whose personal acquaintance I had the pleasure to make during my short stay in his neighbourhood in 1831. These readings, along with many other things, form a kind of fastenings which tend to bind us to our native land whilst wandering after distance from it.

One of the things which have engaged my attention during the last few weeks, is the proper distribution of the remaining copies of the gift book. In the course of my last journey I made preparations for this by writing and issuing a sort of circular letter as I went along; and which after my return to Kingston I sent to those places in the eastern portion of the island which I had not visited on my journey. The following is a copy of this letter.

+++ "Allow me to take the liberty of requesting you to favour me with answers to the following queries respecting the Gift Book, or New Testament and Psalter furnished for the Apprentices by the British and Foreign Bible Society, as it is the wish of that body to obtain as accurate information as possible  regarding the distribution of these books, and the circumstances connected with the same.

First: – What number of these books you received, of the large and small size respectively, and that what periods, and from what quarters?

Second: – How many copies, of the one and the other size, you have at different times distributed to the Apprentices under your care?

Third: – How many copies of each size you have still on hand?

Fourth: – What prospects you have a further distributions to persons of adult age or to children, now learning to read or who are likely to learn during the period of the Apprenticeship [say till August 1840]; and what quantity you think would be required to meet this prospective demand for these books, according to the rules of distribution laid down by the Society?

Fifth: – In what manner of these books been received by the Apprentices, and what beneficial effects have been produced by them, in general, or in any individual cases?

You early attention to this circular note, without inconvenience to yourself, will be esteemed a particular favour; and to make sure of your reply come to hand, be so good as send it to the Kingston Post Office."

Of this circular I wrote and put into the hands of the parties concerned eighty seven copies. From time to time I have received answers to them, but not amounting to one half of the number that should have been returned. According to the replies received, and other circumstances, we are making the present distributions. The notices contained in these answers respecting the fifth query are very encouraging, and will come before you soon in the general survey of your work in Jamaica which I am just about to prepare according to your Resolution of the 24th November of last year.

The information obtained as to the number of Gift Book received and distributed is but scanty and unsatisfactory, partly owing to various removals in the persons who received the books, some by death, and some to other stations. The truth is, this inquiry ought to have been made at a much earlier period: and in fact I began to make it when in Montego Bay in August 1835, as you will see noted in my letter No. 44 of the 29th of that month. About that time I received a letter from you requesting me to procure such notices; and finding an unusual facility for our advertisement in the two newspapers of that place, I prepared a general advertisement on the subject addressed to all concerned with these books: and this advertisement was most readily inserted gratis, and was so worded as to give the hope that all the island newspapers would copy it. The [Jamaica] Cornwall Chronicle containing this advertisement was sent to you, and therefore I suppose you observed its contents. To my great surprise the Committee of our Society in Kingston took offense at this advertisement, judging it somehow, though I know not how, derogatory as to their privileges, and actually hindered it from making its way into the other newspapers. This led to some communications between us, which all ended in a friendly way. But nevertheless the inquiry was stopped on my part, and thrown into their hands, and never taken up. I would have mentioned this matter before, but was prevented from a certain delicacy connected with it. It is but fair however that you should, though late, know it, that you may be aware of the cause of my not sending you the statements, and of my silence on the subject. Notwithstanding this our defalcation in accounts respecting the distributions of the books in question, you may rest satisfied that they have been in general well distributed, and believe, what I know to be true that they have produced many excellent results, and such as you wish; though not to the extent of your wishes I dare say, as in these I believe there is no moderation with you, for you no doubt wish for the greatest and for eternal results from all the copies of the Blessed Book which you send forth into all the world.

Believe me, My Dear Friend, Affectionately Yours,

                                                                                    James Thomson.

Kingston, Jamaica 25 October 1838[1]

On the 24th of November, 1837, a resolution was passed by the Committee that I should prepare a statement, containing a survey of the operations of the Bible Societies in Jamaica, and an estimate of the effects of their labours on the population generally. In obedience to this resolution, I now proceed, at the close of this mission in October, 1838, to draw up the paper wished for by the Committee.

The commencement of Bible Society operations in Jamaica was in the year 1828. The person who put his hand first to the good work in this island was William Taylor, Esq., a merchant in Kingston, who, among all his findings, had found the pearl of great price. This pearl he estimated highly; and he felt, as is usual in this case, an earnest desire that others, and many, should find the same. In order to lead to this, he was anxious to put into their possession the Holy Scriptures, in which there are directions where and how this pearl is to be found. This gentleman communicated with you on the subject, I understand, and received from your stores supplies of the Scriptures, which he used means to put into circu­lation in this island, and also in some of the foreign islands adjacent.

Mr. Taylor being desirous of having fellow-labourers in this work, induced others, holding views of the value of the Scriptures similar to his own, to join with him; and thus, in Oct. 20, 1830, a Corresponding Committee was formed, for keeping up intercourse with you on the one hand, and on the other, for combined and more extended labour in the diffusion of the Sacred Volume, over this island, and elsewhere around, as circumstances might direct.

In about six months after this Corresponding Committee was formed, it gave rise to, and place to, a regularly constituted Auxiliary Bible Society, which was formally installed by a large public meeting, held in Kingston, on February 3rd, 1831.

The Jamaica Bible Society thus formed, began its operations with some impetus. Its seat and centre was in Kingston; but it early endeavoured to throw out branches from its trunk, in the shape of cooperating Societies, in different parts of the island, and succeeded in procuring the formation of Bible Societies at the four following places: St. Anne's Bay, Spanish Town,  Arnott's Bay, and Stoney Hill.

The insurrection which took place in this island, in the end of 1831, and which continued during a part of 1832, greatly tended to check the opera­tions of this Bible Society. On the 13th of June, 1832, a public meeting was held in Kingston, when it was found that 536 copies of the Scriptures had been issued, and more than 200 pounds currency raised, or say £120 sterling. From that time the Society seems to have declined, and no other public meeting took place before the arrival of your agent, in 1834. Still, however, meetings of the Committee were held, some correspondence was maintained with the country parts, and the Scriptures in some degree were circulated in Kingston, and in other quarters of the island.

It would appear, from documents left by Mr. Taylor, that he received from you, say in November 1828, 500 Bibles, and 300 Testaments; and again, say in February 1830, 225 Bibles, and 556 Testaments. These two shipments joined together, make 725 Bibles, and 856 Testaments. Deducting from these, 190 Bibles and 521 Testaments, which were delivered by him to the new body formed, there will appear to have been distributed by him 535 Bibles, and 332 Testaments, that is, in all, 867 copies of the Scriptures.

On the 4th of November, 1830, Mr. Taylor delivered to the Cor­responding Committee, as already referred to, 190 Bibles, and 524 Testa­ments, which formed their first stock. Their second supply was, as recorded in your invoice, No. 2227, dated March 21st, 1831,1,000 Bibles and 1,000 Testaments, Adding these two quantities together, we have 1,190 Bibles, and 1,524 Testaments, or an aggregate of 2,714 copies of the Sacred Book.

Through the Committee in Kingston, and through their correspondents and associate Societies, most of these books were brought into useful circulation, some by sale, and others by donations to schools, and persons in indigent circumstances. Nevertheless, some copies lay undisposed of, in various parts of the island, until they were considerably injured, and had, therefore, to be hastened into circulation in any reasonable way that could be found. Allowing for some stock that might be still on hand in the middle of 1834, we may pretty fairly calculate the circulations of this Society, with its originating Committee and its branches, together with Mr. Taylor's previous issues, at, or somewhat above 3,000 copies, and these about equally divided, in regard to Bibles and Testaments;—the value therefore of this Society, in furtherance of the general object of all Bible Societies, has, we see, been considerable. But at the same time it may well be stated in addition, that its merits were greater than its labours: a truth that will be understood when we consider the then darkness of the West Indies, and the indifference and natural disinclina­tion to the spread of a book that is all light, and which must and does wage war against darkness in all its forms, in all countries to which it comes. Lastly, the value of this Society was seen by its effects in a distant part. From their depot in Kingston, they sent a supply, in 1833, to New Providence, in the Bahamas. This grant produced a double effect, inasmuch as it served for the circulation of the Scriptures there in the first place, and then led to the formation of a distinct Society, which I understand is now numbered among your many auxiliaries.

On the arrival of your agent in Jamaica, in the end of June, 1834, he found this Bible Society in Kingston still in existence, but not much more; for no public meeting had been held after the one noticed, on the 13th June, 1832, a period of more than two years. The Branch Societies, in number four, that had been formed in different parts of the island, had ceased to act altogether. The Scriptures however, as already indicated, were still partially in course of circulation, by sales in Kingston, and in some other parts. Nearly the whole Society, in short, consisted of its Secretary, our worthy friend the Rev. Mr. Tinson, whose individual labours had not ceased, but had, in fact, become greater, as he was next to being alone with all the weight on himself.

One of the first concerns of your Agent, on arriving in Jamaica, was to revive and strengthen this Society in Kingston. For this purpose various meetings of the Committee were held, and the whole subject of Bible Societies discussed, with the especial bearing of the same on this island; and the more so, considering the then actual state of it, on the eve of a change in the condition of most of its inhabitants, unheard of in the preceding history of the world. Endeavours were made to re-organize the Society, and thereby to fit it for new and extended ope­rations. One of the measures projected was that of forming Branch Societies in each of the various parishes of the island, amounting to twenty-one in number, and to combine all those with this one in King­ston, as a head and a centre.

To carry into effect this important measure of forming Bible Societies in our several parishes, I set out, in the first place, for the eastern parts of the island, and succeeded in forming Branch Societies in the parish of St. Thomas in the East, and in Portland: and as appendages to these, some Bible Associations also were formed, one of which was in Moore Town, the chief Maroon establishment in the island. It was my intention to proceed onwards at that time from Port Antonio, along the north side of the island, and to return by the south side; thus completing my tour all round in order. But the weather having proved unfavourable, and the roads in consequence being somewhat broken up, I was obliged to retrace my steps to Kingston.

After a few days' stay in Kingston for arrangements, I set out westward along the south side of the island. The parish of St. Catherine came first before me, in this route. Here in its capital, Spanish Town, we succeeded in forming a Bible Society; and chiefly through the aid of our friends, the Rev. Mr. Phillippo and the Rev. Mr. Edmondson.

I next proceeded through the parishes of St. Dorothy, Vea, and Cla­rendon, making the necessary inquiries to ascertain whether there were means and prospects in these three parishes for forming Bible Societies; but the result of my inquiries was unfavourable; and it was judged the wisest plan not then to make any attempts, in regard to our object, but to wait a more favourable opportunity. Friends, however, we found in all these parishes, who were well disposed to give us their aid.

In the next parish I came to, Manchester, I found things better, and a Bible Society was there established, under favourable circumstances. In the parish of St. Elizabeth, at Black  River, we formed our next Bible Society, and under circumstances still more encouraging. It was here first that I began to gather a little courage as to our Bible Societies in this island; and I shall not soon, probably never, forget the gladdening impressions I there and then received, in regard to this our great concern of Bible Institutions, and their prospective bearings on this island. We had with us on that occasion the Custos, or chief magistrate of the parish, and several gentlemen of influence, forming a good representation of the respectable inhabitants of this favoured parish.

I proceeded next to Westmoreland, and commenced a Society at Savanna-la-Mar, the concentrating part of the parish. Here I received further encouragement, by being allowed by the magistrates to preach in the Court-house; and thus, on a neutral, authorized spot, to explain and urge the object of Bible Societies generally, with all their happy effects, in bringing the word of God into every house, and the means of salvation to every individual.

I here crossed the island to Montego Bay, in the parish of St. James. A Bible Society was also formed here, and the circumstances attending it gave an additional impulse and confidence to my mind as to our objects on this island. The Court-house was freely granted us, in which we held, properly speaking, our first open public Bible Society meeting on a week day, that is, so far as my personal tour and operations were con­cerned; there we had with us on our platform a fine band of ministers, of all the denominations in the parish, with the rector in the chair, and also a good proportion of the respectable civilians having influence in Montego Bay: of these latter, our Treasurer, John Roby, Esq., ought to be first mentioned, for his valuable services to our cause, and next to him, Dr. Patrick Spence, and the Custos of the parish, John Manderson, Esq.

From St. James's I stepped back, or westward, to the parish of Hanover, where under every encouragement from the rector, the Rev. John Stainsby, and the other resident ministers of different names, but of the same nature in this business, we formed and installed a Bible Society by a public meeting in the Court-house; some Bible Associations also were in succession formed, and particularly one in the town of Lucea, which place was divided into many parts, and these were assigned to a troop of ladies, about twenty-two in number, who met at the rector's house, and being there marshalled, were appointed to the several districts, two and two. This latter circumstance of a Ladies' Bible Association, formed under such auspices and prospects, served again to raise my hopes one step higher in our holy calling.

From Hanover I proceeded through St. James's to the parish of Trelawny. In Falmouth, a town of considerable size, and the capital of the parish, we held a public meeting in the Court-house, which was numerously and respectably attended; the rector of the parish was in the chair, and was surrounded by numerous ministers of different denomina­tions, all of whom showed a manifest satisfaction in having had such an occasion and opportunity of seeing each other face to face, and combined in one body to cause the word of God to abound among their own flocks and elsewhere. A Bible Society was formed at this meeting, and with cheering prospects of success. Bible Associations, in continuance, were formed in different congregations, and all seemed encouraging.

From Falmouth I returned to Kingston, passing through the parishes of St. Ann's and St. Thomas in the Vale, in neither of which did I find things sufficiently prepared for forming in them Bible Societies, although some measures were used to prepare for such institutions in them on some future occasion, should that be afforded.

Passing over intermediate operations and circumstances, I would now notice that I attended the anniversary meetings of the St. Elizabeth, the Hanover, the St. James's, and the Trelawny Bible Societies. These public meetings had different aspects, but all of them were gratifying to the friends of the Bible, of the negro, and of Jamaica. The fact that the sum of £620 sterling had been raised by these four Societies in one year for the Bible, and chiefly by the negroes, was of itself most satisfactory, gratifying, and cheering.

Another encouraging fact connected with these Societies is the praise­worthy efforts made by several Bible Associations formed in negro con­gregations; the chief of these were the congregations of the Rev. Mr. Hilton, in St. Elizabeth, and of the Rev. Mr. Blyth and Mr. Knibb, in Trelawny. The sums raised by these several negro congregations were considerable, and nearly all for Bibles for their own use.

Subsequently Bible Societies and Associations were formed in St. Ann's and St. Mary's, and Kingston parish, and most of the rest were again revisited.

In Kingston two public meetings were held of the Society formerly established, and a general sale of the Scriptures has been constantly maintained under good encouragement.

Some of the Bible Societies formed in the different parishes are con­nected with the Jamaica Bible Society in Kingston, while others, indeed most of them, stand in the light of distinct Auxiliaries.

Let us now see how many copies of the Scriptures, exclusive of the Gift Book, have been received and brought into circulation, say from the end of June, 1834, to the same time in 1838, a period of four years. By an examination of invoices the numbers appear to be 14,929 Bibles, and 5,806 New Testaments, making together 20,735 copies of the Scriptures. A considerable number of Scotch Bibles have also come here during that time, and as these have been sought for and circulated as part of the effects of the Bible Society operations above noticed, they may with all propriety be included in our enumeration. Call these only 300, and this addition will make the whole amount to 21,035. Allowing 1,035 for stock on hand, we have 20,000, or say 5,000 for each of the four years. In this account it is worthy of observation that the number of Bibles is nearly triple that of the Testaments; part of this may be set down to the account of the gift books, but there is more in it than this, it is a desire to see, have, and read the entire word of God; a circumstance, in my opinion, always indicative of an advanced state of things in the circulation and estimation of God's holy word.

Some remaining stock, as we have seen, is still on hand, but at the same time there have been lately ordered fresh supplies to a considerable extent, and judging from the present aspect of things, larger orders will soon follow. One order alone, from one parish, will more than prove what I here state in prospect; it is an order from the parish of Manchester for 2,400 copies.

Again and again, as the Society is well aware, we have been ham­pered and hindered, and to a considerable extent, from the want of Bibles; this was not owing to any backwardness of your agent in ordering, nor of the Society in sending, but to the demand exceeding the calculations made, and the books ordered and sent; perhaps we might safely say that 1,000 copies more would have been put into circulation had this obstacle and the consequent discouragement not occurred. After these lacks had again and again been felt, larger supplies were ordered with a bold shot; this caused, on the other hand, from three Societies, a cry of overabundance. On your agent arriving at one of these places, the surplus was speedily sent out to parts around, where they were immediately needed, and he was begged by the Secretary not to leave them with too few. In the other two places your agent gave directions to forward a portion of the over-supply to other parts; but in both instances they were not sent to the amount desired, as they soon found that they themselves would require more than they had supposed.

In the notices above given of the formation of parish Bible Societies, it will be seen that only twelve were formed, though the parishes are in number twenty-one; one cause of this deficiency, and probably not an inconsiderable one, was the circumstance of your agent being, as it were, in the attitude of leaving this island during a considerable portion of these four years he remained, together with his actually leaving it for some time on his visit to Cuba; to which may be added his partial disconnexion from the Society for three months. The idea that he would soon leave, hindered him from forming Societies, with few and slender materials, fearing and believing that such Societies would only be brought into life to die, as he stated formerly on the subject; had he, however, contem­plated a sort of stay here, he would most probably have constructed other Societies with the means and materials at hand, and these Societies would, by constant watching and helps, have been able to continue in existence, and have grown into healthy and flourishing branches of our general Jamaica Bible Institution.

To give honour to whom honour is due, is always our duty, because our Book commands it; on this scriptural ground therefore it is meet that I should here notice, as I have before done in my correspondence, that your work and your agent have met with a very general friendly reception  from the inhabitants of this island, of all classes and conditions. That the negroes should have given you this reception, and the ministers of the gospel, was to be looked for; but perhaps you hardly expected that the Bible, and Bible circulators, would meet with a favourable acceptance and encouragement on the part of the higher classes in this community. We have been favoured in this beyond our expectations, for the class of which I speak has been friendly to us, and not inimical. Of course I do not say that all the upper class and classes here have been well disposed towards us, and ready to give us their aid; I only say that many of this sort have actually given us their countenance and support, and openly in the face of all the community; whilst, on the other hand, of those of the same rank who did not thus come forward, I do not recollect receiving from them any opposition, but rather otherwise; and further, the support and benefit which the Bible cause received in the quarter mentioned, might, your agent thinks, have been more largely enjoyed had it been more largely sought. The circumstance of our having so generally received the Court-house for our public meetings in the various parishes, is strong testimony on the point here noticed; other circumstances could also be mentioned on the same side.

I come now to treat of the Gift Book, of which thus far I have said nothing, having purposed to treat of it by itself. The origination of this boon may very properly, I suppose, be set down as an effect of Bible Society operations, if not in Jamaica, yet at least in the West Indies, of which it is a part. This Gift Book was brought forth by two circumstances; one of them was the emancipation itself, but this would not have produced it, had not the negroes previously shown so much interest in the Bible, and Bible Societies, and had not the same been made known to all your friends, and to Mr. Stowell among the rest, by the monthly and annual publications of the Society.

If the origin of this Gift Book is a part of Bible Society operations, not less so of course is its distribution, its reception by the negroes, and its results. This book and gift had an action and a reaction; and I believe also that it will act and react for a long time to come. This Sacred Book was presented at a happy time, and considerably turned the thoughts, it is believed, from an earthly to a heavenly emancipation." Re­joice," said the book to the negroes, "not so much in the temporal fellow-sonship with Britons which you have obtained, but receive through me a spiritual sonship, in which you may rejoice with joy unspeakable and full of glory." Of a truth the book had, to a certain extent, that effect, and produced and left salutary impressions on many.

The repeated statements made to the negroes, in giving them from time to time this book, as it became due to them by the terms of the gift, tended very considerably to draw their attention to the Bible Society, and to the Bible, as the great and only book you publish. This enlivened them in Bible Society concerns, led them to seek the whole book of God for themselves, and to contribute little sums to send this book to others.

One of the very visible good effects produced by this Gift Book was the exciting a general interest in favour of learning to read. Some hundreds without doubt began their letters, and went on till they could read, having before them, as their main purpose, the obtaining of one of these books, which could be procured only in this way.

Thus far you have my testimony on this point.  But naturally you would like to have the testimony of others also. This you shall have; and I would insert them here, but that they are too numerous, and I feel unable to make a due selection. I shall give them to you at large in an appendix to this letter. The witnesses are twenty-four in number, and every way unexceptionable; and if a matter may be established in the mouth of two witnesses, it may be so certainly, and more, in the mouth of two dozen. On reading these testimonies you will see how all our mouths and pens bear witness to the happy hit, and happy effects of this interesting donation—a donation which was of a novel kind, and given under very novel circumstances. Had you given the whole Bible, you would not probably have done the same good, and might, in fact, have hindered what you wished to promote. But though you gave not the entire volume, nevertheless you did in effect put the whole Bible into the negroes'  hands; for the excitement you produced by giving the New Testament, induced them to get the entire Bible, and to the very great extent mentioned above, where it is seen that the negroes purchased, say three Bibles for one New Testament. You wisely withheld, and by withholding gave, and gave with more profit. Wisdom is justified of all her children.

The summary view of your Bible Society operations thus far given, applies only to Jamaica, agreeably to the order given for drawing it up. But let us, for a moment, glance at the entire group of these islands. Your operations began in the eastern portion of this Archipelago. God wrought wonderfully with you in those parts, and extended his word and work there very far beyond the expectations of the most sanguine. It was there first that the negroes were addressed on the subject of a Bible Society, and there first they honoured God and your work by ranging themselves among your Auxiliaries. It was in the Island of Antigua, on the estate called Gilbert's, and at the suggestion of its resident owner, the Rev. N. Gilbert, and not least, of his amiable lady, that the first Negro Bible Society was ever formed. This sacred fire, as you know, rapidly spread in the island, and forty Bible Societies were formed there among the negro slaves. It was by the encouragement here, and thus received, that your agent was animated to attempt the same in other places, and among the rest in Jamaica, where the success has been as above detailed. It may here be stated, also, that the Scrip­tures have been circulated in these eastern West India Islands to an extent corresponding to what has taken place in Jamaica.

All that is said above applies only to the British West Indies. Your operations, however, have not been confined to these islands. Agreeable to instructions received, your agent visited all the islands in that quarter, of any size and note, both British and Foreign. Into all these foreign islands visited by him, God gave entrance to his word, and that too, notwithstanding the difficulties and obstacles which in some cases were met with.

To sum up now the above statements in brief, I would say:—

First, That through your mission to Jamaica (and also to the West Indies generally) the Holy Scriptures have come into circulation among the negroes to an extent very considerably beyond what would, I think, have been the case had it not been undertaken. Mr. Blyth's congregation is one of the best proofs of this. He entered on the formation of a Bible Association among his people with doubt and hesitancy;  but afterwards was astonished and delighted with the results produced. To the effects of a Bible stir, and Bible Societies and Associations, and the multiplication of the Scriptures generally, add also the Gift Book, as produced by your mission, according to an indication above.

Secondly, The considerable number of Family Bibles, of the large quarto size, purchased by the negroes, may in a great measure be set down to your mission; and it is a very cheering item in our Bible Society operations in Jamaica; and this circumstance is enhanced in value, when their scanty means and late degradations are considered. I estimate highly the getting the quarto Bible into the family, as a means greatly conducive to family worship, and to all the good which follows in the train of the domestic altar.

Thirdly, Bible Society meetings and speakings have drawn the negroes' attention to the Bible in a special manner, as the book whence themselves and their ministers have all their religious instruction. They, therefore, I may say, receive their instruction more from God, as the source and the medium, than otherwise they would have done; and this is a matter of great consequence. Your humble servant, as an instru­ment in thus drawing the attention to God's book, has been styled by some of the negroes, of their own accord—"The Bible Parson." I may also mention here, in this connexion, that a little Rhoda that came to hearken, when I knocked at a friend's door at Antigua, ran in and announced—"Mr. and Mrs. Bible Thomson."

Fourthly, All this noise, and stir, and action, about the Bible as God's, has tended to its being more read, and with greater attention; and at the same time it has added an authority and weight to every text read, preached from, or quoted, which but for this would hardly have been the case. I know of one man, who, after having made out with difficulty a certain verse in our Lord's Sermon on the Mount, was greatly arrested by its statement, and saw that sin in thought and purpose was guilt as well as sin in action.

Fifthly, Your Bible Society matters, without doubt, have in various ways produced an increased desire among the negroes to learn to read. This has been so, strikingly, in respect to the Gift Book; but the whole of your operations have tended the same way. A most delightful feature of all the Negro Schools is—that the object of learning to read, is to be able to read the Scriptures; and the only book to be seen in the schools, besides the Spelling-book, is the Bible and Testament.

Sixthly, Your Bible mission in the West Indies has had good effects on the foreign islands in that quarter. Into all these the Scriptures have been introduced by you, as above related. But besides this, the Bible harvest to be reaped by your sowing the Scriptures so extensively over the English West Indies will, by and by, produce further and happy effects in all these foreign possessions.

Seventhly, May I not say, in the last place, that the great and godly rejoicings on the 1st of August, last, in and over the West Indies, was owing, not a little, to the direct and indirect influence of the book your mission spread so extensively among the negroes? Your book, no doubt, greatly tended to render that memorable day a sacred, rather than a common festival. Your agent, as representing you, was a joyful witness of the joyful things of that day in Kingston, and some other places in Jamaica. It was indeed a glorious day; not a day of common rejoicing (for that was postponed till the following day), but a day of loud and warm thanksgiving to God. Every place of worship in the island was filled to crowding; and the united sounds of praise and glory issued from the island all over, in one great and general volume towards heaven.

To conclude, Let us, my beloved brethren and fellow-labourers in the sacred work of making the will of God known on earth, in order that it may be done as it is in heaven,—let us give thanks unfeigned, and glory to God for what he has wrought in this mission. All is his work; and to him be all glory and praise, both now and evermore, Amen.

                                                James Thomson.

 [1] BFBS 35th Annual Report 1839, pp.82-92.

Rev A Brandram No 74

New York, 26 November 1838

My Dear Friend,

The day before yesterday – the 24th instant – at dusk I arrived safely in this city. It was the Saturday night when we arrived, and that evening and the following day afforded us fit and gracious opportunities for giving thanks and praise to our God and Father, again and again, for his merciful goodness in bringing us safely from Jamaica to this city, and for all his past mercies and benefit in our various voyages and journeys. And among all our thanksgivings, we give thanks to God, that we have your prayers, the prayers of all the Committee and friends of the Bible Society, the prayers of many dear Christian brethren, and the whole Church of God offered up continually on our behalf. This is a great consolation to us, I assure you, in all our voyages, journeys, labours, and dangers. As it is fit, we pray and give thanks to God for you all in return; and more especially at such seasons as this, on closing a portion of our journeyings on Saturday night, and meditating on the same on the Lord's day that follows in order. – We say to you, and to all, pray for us more and more; and we promise on our part to pray continually for you.

From the middle of September we held ourselves in readiness to leave Jamaica. But just at that time, and for some time onwards, there was an unusual hiatus in the running of vessels from thence to the United States. We wished to sail direct for New York; but fearing further delay we seized the first opportunity that presented itself of a vessel for any part of this country. Accordingly we took our passage in a vessel to Baltimore, being the first one that offered.

We sailed from Port Royal at daylight on Monday morning, the 28th of October. We had a hard and long beat, with some bad weather, before we got past the east end of Cuba. After that we had a pleasant run through the small islands in the quarter northward. Soon after, however, our crew began to fall sick, and there came on a heavy gale of wind, which lasted three days; during which we were under very unpleasant circumstances—with a lee shore, this storm, and only one man before the mast able to work; besides which, the cook and the mate were also seized. By God's merciful hand upon us we weathered the Bahamas; on accomplishing which, the captain judged it wise to make for the most reachable port; and, accordingly, we put into Charleston, in South Carolina, in distress. Here our sick men were sent to the hospital, and others taken in their places. The delay this occasioned, and our being further hindered by the weather and other circumstances from leaving Charleston for a few days, induced us, with our northern journey before us, and so late in the season, to make our way onward as quickly as possible. We left the vessel, therefore, and took our passage in a steam-boat for Baltimore, and thence, through Philadelphia, we came to this city, where we arrived on the day above noticed. Here we stop, of necessity, a few days, to furnish ourselves with northern winter clothing, and to make full inquiry about the political state of the Canadas, previous to our setting out for Montreal, according to our original intention; or for Nova Scotia, should the two provinces above named be in such agitation as might hinder Bible Society work.

I write this letter to forward it by the first opportunity, that you may be apprised of my arrival in this quarter. My further arrangements and movements will be communicated to you as they occur, by the many facilities of vessels to England from this part.

Your letter of the 28 September, and Mr. Jackson's, I have received at the American Bible Society House; and our good friends there offered to serve us in any way they can in our communications. All my letters you will please forward there as before arranged.

            I remain, My dear Friend, again and a new,

                        Affectionately Yours,

                                    James Thomson.

 

Postscript, 4th December 1838

I have been detained here till today in the objects above stated, and also waiting for the arrival of a vessel from Kingston having most of my luggage on board. This vessel has now arrived, and today we expect to set out for Montreal.

I advise on a Bill drawn on the 28th in favour of Joseph Hyde for Fifty Pounds, to be placed to my private account:- also another Bill of the same amount for this day, in favour of Goodline and Co. to be charged to my Travelling Account. J.T.

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AuthorBill Mitchell