Rev A Brandram No.40

Kingston 21st January 1835

My Dear Friend

I am no longer in Spanish Town, having returned to this city the other day. When I went to Spanish Town some time ago, I expected I should before this date have something more and better to say to you of our affairs there than I have yet written to you, or have now to write. Some of our hinderances you already know, and as you know something of the world, and something of the West Indies, you may suppose other hinderances over and above those I have mentioned. After the Council and Assembly were prorogued, I made some endeavours to get up a public meeting, but was obliged to desist. I requested the Governor to favour us with his presence at such a meeting, but he replied, that, "much as he felt interested in the object which I had in view, he had most particular reasons for wishing not to preside at a public meeting."  I hardly wonder that he came to this conclusion, however much I regretted it, for his path as a governor  among us is not without its difficulties. Another hinderance followed immediately on this, which was, that both the Wesleyan and the Baptist missionaries had to leave Spanish Town to attend conferences held of each of their bodies in other parts of the island.

My time and my attention in  Spanish Town continued to be given to the formation of the Bible Association I before spoke of; and though no great results were produced nevertheless so much as done as to let us see what fruits we might expect by properly cultivating the Bible Association field in that quarter. Mrs Thomson and myself visited a considerable number of houses, and saw with our own eyes, and heard with our own ears, specimens of our poor in that place, and also of some of the better classes. We were uniformly well received, our object met with a favourable hearing, and was readily entered into by a very encouraging proportion of those whom we visited. Our next object was to enlist friends to help us, and on whom the business might devolve after we should leave the place. For a while our success in this enlistment was little, but at length we obtained a few persons whom we saw enter readily on this work of faith and labour of love. In the hands of these we left the matter until in the providence of God we might return again to that town. What has been seen and experienced of this trial of this branch of Bible Society work is, as I have already hinted, amply encouraging. I could wish to see all the towns in our island properly farmed out in this way, and if they were so, together with the Estates, they would yield a good rent to you, besides affording  ample provision for themselves. May the Lord direct to this cultivation, by the farmers and the reapers whom he may choose and honour in so holy and useful a work.

All our vessels are arrived, but and except the Westbrook, and for her we are looking every hours with all our eyes, and with all our hearts too. She will come safe I doubt not, buoyed up as she is with the word of God. I have already apprised you of our protracted day for delivering your Gift Book as I term it. After writing my last letter to you, we obtained some accessions of friends in aid of the circulation of our volume from among the clergy, and but the other the whole of the remainder fell in to us at once. I wrote to the Bishop a few days ago, and on the 17th current I received the following answer:

"The Bishop of Jamaica presents his compliments to Mr. Thomson, and begs to acknowledge the receipt of his letter of the 13th instant. The Bishop is in expectation of receiving from his clergy throughout the Island lists of such apprentices as are enabled to read with a view to the distribution of copies of the Book of Common Prayer among them. The Bishop will avail himself of the same opportunity of presenting such copies of the Testament and Psalter as have been sent out her by the Bible Society if Mr Thomson will have the goodness to transmit them to the Rev G. D. Hill, the Bishop's Secretary and Registrar of the Diocese, who has received the Bishop's directions to forward to Mr Thomson an account of the Books, and of the manner of their distribution."

The Bishop's note conveying the above pleasing intelligence is dated from his residence "Union Hill," a name every way appropriate to the case, and on Union Hill let us stand in the Kingdom of God.

Tomorrow, if the Lord will, I set out on my tour round the Island, going first to St Thomas in the East. After performing this tour, I shall be enabled to inform you of the prospects of Bible Society concerns here better than I can do at the present time. The field is large and interesting, and should the spots that one might be able to till and sow here and there in the course of this journey prove fertile and fruitful, they will prove encouragements to the cultivation of the whole ample field by some one at some future time.

                                                I remain, Sincerely Yours,

                                                                                    James Thomson.

P.S. Please apprise Mr. Tarn that I have this day drawn a Bill for Fifty pounds stg. in favour of Messrs. Jones and Osborn of this place at sixty days sight. To be paid to Travelling Account.

Be so good as to make the address of my letters in future, besides the name, Agent of B & F Bible Society, Jamaica", without directing them to the care of any person here.

Rev A Brandram No.41

Kingston, Jamaica, 14th March 1835

My Dear Friend

On the 22nd of January I left this city to visit some of the out parishes of this Island. Today I returned again to this place, and now proceed to give you some account of my operations in those parts I visited. My first day's journey was to Yallas in the Parish of St David's near to which place is the parish church and the Rectory. I called on the Rector, and talked with him on the objects of the Bible Society, and about your Gift-Book  to the apprentices. The Bishop's note, of which I gave you a copy in my last, very considerably smoothed my way in regard to the latter object. Good Friday next is the day fixed on for the giving of the Prayer Books voted to the apprentices by the Society for the Promotion of Christian Knowledge, and that coincides with the day fixed on for the Second delivery of your gift book. The two objects will therefore be combined with each other, and the efforts made in St David's and in the other parishes, to obtain lists for the one purpose, will subserve the other also.

Morant Bay in the Parish of St. Thomas in the East was my next stage. St. David's is but a small parish, but St. Thomas in the East is a large and populous one, containing about 30,000 inhabitants. From the importance of this parish in many respects, I was very anxious to see a Bible Society formed in it. I spoke with the Rector upon the subject, and found him friendly, which I considered as a great encouragement. I then proceeded to Amity Hall Estate in the district of Plantain Garden River. Mr. Bond the proprietor of this Estate, and who is at present the resident there, had some weeks before kindly invited me to make his house my home, whilst I was occupied in that quarter. At his house therefore I stopped some days, from whence I made visits to some other parts, and informed myself as to the probability of being able to establish a Bible Society in the parish under favourable circumstances. I was disappointed in the unexpected absence of the clergyman serving in that quarter, the Rev. Mr. Panton, a warm and zealous friend of the Bible Society. The absence of some other individuals whose cooperation I had intended to solicit for our purpose formed another disappointment. I therefore gave up for the time the plan of forming a Bible society in that parish, conceiving that on a future occasion I should be able to combine more friends in the object, and so it established the Society under better prospects of success.

At Amity Hall a favourable opportunity occurred of making the distribution of your gift to the Apprentices on that, and that neighboring  estates, and as no distribution had been made in this quarter at Christmas, I thought it best to seize this occasion to supply those who might come forward, and through them advertise all others to whom these presents should come. Mr. Bond kindly offered every facility. He offered the use of his own premises, and sent some of his people to the neighboring estates to give notice of our purpose. All those who could read on the Estates were invited to attend to receive Books, and as many others as might choose where desire to come and hear all that should be said on the occasion, and see what should be done. Sunday, the 1st of February was the day fixed on for this meeting, and as there was no service that date in the church near that place owing to the absence of the clergyman above named, we resolved to make our meeting combined the double purpose of  Divine worship and the distribution of the book in question. Having made these arrangements I returned to Morant Bay, and got one of your large cases sent round to the port nearest the intended spot of distribution, to which port Mr. Bond sent a cart and brought it to his Estate where it arrived on the day preceding our meeting.

On the Sunday our congregation amounted to about 700. I addressed them on the words of the 19th Psalm contained in the 7th and four following verses. I explained also your kind memorial to the Apprentices in the book to be given, and said, as I am sure I was authorized in doing, that the gift would be accompanied by many prayers for the best, and for all the interests, of the persons into whose hands the book should come. I hope there was a respondent feeling towards you all in the minds of those who were present: and I hope I may here say of the several meetings that have been held for notifying your gift, and for receiving it, that the prayers you have, if I may so say, expended on us here, have also been expended for your own weal, on account of the prayers that have been put up for you, often and fervently, in return. True many pray none at all either for you or for themselves, but all the children of the Kingdom do of course pray, and they remember you. There is no respect of persons with God, and the Black Man's Prayer is as successful for you, as yours for him.

At the close of the Service our books were distributed. Many were highly gratified as you may well suppose, and not a few on the other hand were sadly disappointed. Their reading powers were put to the test, and though we were not over severe particularly where we knew that was a fair chance of the individual examined persevering in their studies, nevertheless many learned what they did not seem to know before, that the naming of the letters and the eking out some syllables and short words by dint of spelling and guessing, was not exactly what we called the reading. All those who were thus disappointed we endeavoured to console by telling them that there would be another distribution on Good Friday, and that if they would persevere in their efforts to learn they would be so far advanced as to merit a book at the time specified.

My next movement onwards brought me around the Eastern end of our Island, through the district of Manchimeal, to Port Antonio in the Parish of Portland. On my way I called on some gentlemen whom I found favourable to our objects. In the Port Antonio I was kindly received by the Rector, the Rev. G. Griffiths, and agreeable to a former invitation took up my home at his house. Mr. Griffiths enters warmly into Bible Society work, and into all kinds of work in the Kingdom of our Lord Jesus Christ. He told me he thought he had some good materials in his Parish for a Bible Society, and that if such were established, it would in all probability be permanent, although its funds and operations might not be very extensive owing to the smallness of the Parish, and the scantiness of its produce in exportable articles. Portland is one of the smaller parishes in the Island, is mountainous and wet, and raises comparatively little sugar and less coffee: its population may be about 10,000. About one tenth of the Negroes in this Parish can read according to Mr. Griffiths' estimation, and he is well qualified to judge, for it is chiefly through his exertions that so many have been taught; and not a few also have been taught something better, even that knowledge which has annexed to it the promise of eternal life. How extensive are the means which the Rector of the Parish possesses generally speaking of doing great good temporal and eternal to his parishioners. How noble the prospects of a true man of God in this situation. And on the other hand, how fearful the prospects of such an incumbent when his duties, himself, and his Parish are neglected, whilst he walks by sight and not by faith.

In Port Antonio which is the town or capital of Portland Mr. Griffiths accompanied me in visiting several persons whom he considered friendly to our Bible Society objects, and we found them to be what we expected. Arrangements where accordingly made to have a Bible Society formed, and the day was appointed to hold a small meeting, and to embody our new society. In the meantime we turned our attention to another part of the parish, and set out for the same, in order to form there a Bible Association in connexion with our Parish Society.

The place to which we went is called Moore Town, and is the chief settlement of the Maroons in this Island, of which people you have no doubt heard, and their evil deeds I suppose only. We hoped our visit would lead to statements concerning them of a different nature, and to their honour. I said something to you above about this being a wet parish. This we thoroughly proved in the visit in question. We had traveled only some three miles when the rain came on, and from 8 till 3 we were obliged to remain under cover. At the last mentioned hour we set out again, and though the rivers had considerably fallen, for they rise and fall quickly, yet we found them no more than passable. At one of the worst we were fortunate enough to meet with a man who greatly and kindly facilitated our fording. He was one of the Apprentices, and had received one of your books, being able to read; and after we were got over Mr Griffiths mentioned to him that I had come from the Society that had sent these books, when he expressed himself very glad of having thus an opportunity of doing us a service in return for your kind memorial gift.

As it grew dark we reached the Maroon settlement, and dried and took up our lodging with Capt. Wright the Government Superintendent who had previously given us a kindly invitation to do so. Next morning was the time appointed for our meeting, and at Capt. Wright's house. Accordingly about seven o'clock a general invitation was given to all to assemble there, and it was given in the form of a proclamation as I may call it, in the following manner. A man went up to the top of a little hill over the town, and at the height and length of his voice spoke thus: ―"Hear ye, OOOO." If you want rightly to understand the meaning of the four O's I have put down, you can ascertain by sounding continuously the letter O at the height of your voice and not shutting your mouth till all the breath is run out of it. Well, after our herald had made a pause, which I think he required, he added the main purpose of his proclamation as follows, literatim:"Captain Wright say, all man must come up na him house, OOOO." These two sentences were repeated thrice according to custom, and IK believe there was not an ear in all the village that did not catch the whole, for this is the usual mode of making communication, and from the strength of voice, ear and habit, all is heard and understood. The word na above will from its position explain itself to you, and must mean to.

Soon after this heraldric operation, the people began to assemble although it still rained as it had done all the morning. The place where we met was a large hall in Capt. Wright's house, appropriate for the Maroons to meet in when he has any instructions to communicate to them from the Government, or about minor arrangements. This place was filled, for on a previous day when the subject was mentioned to the people they expressed much readiness to enter into a Bible Association. Mr Griffiths began by prayer, after which I explained at length the nature of Bible operations, the special object of the meeting, and the great importance of listening to the word of God ourselves, and of using our best endeavours to circulate it among all mankind. Mr Griffiths then addressed the people on the same subjects, and reminded them of how much the Bible had done for them, referring to the state in which he found them a few years ago, and to their present improved condition. Capt. Wright them spoke recommending the object that had been set before them, which he told them had his full approbation. After this we read our Rules, appointed our office bearers, and committee, and proceeded to take down subscribers' names. We forthwith obtained sixty six, and were led to expect a considerable number more. You would be surprised to learn how many colonels, majors, and captains we have among the subscribers, but you would understand this by recollecting that this is entirely a military body. I wish all military bodies could make such an appearance in Bible Society ranks as the Maroons.

I have already hinted to you what happy changes have taken place among these Maroons in morals and religion within these few years past, and this has been chiefly effected as a means through the worthy Rector mentioned, for this is a part of Portland Parish which is under his charge. Perhaps the sterling religious people among them may not be many, but of this class some are well known. Of one of these now aged and a leading man among them, the Rector said to me, that he would at any time give up his own expectations in the day of the Lord to take the lot there and then of Colonel Osborn the aged disciple mentioned. This is a fine testimony. One of this man's sons (for he has several) put down his own name as a subscriber, then his wife's, then one of his children, and then another. Three of the old man's sons are members of our Committee. ―The Church Missionary Society has a fine school here numerously attended. It is conducted by the Rev Mr Forbes, who has lately been ordained by our Bishop, and has service in the village regularly every Sunday in a neat chapel which is well frequented. Mr Forbes is very active in doing good among these people, and he speaks very encouragingly of them all things considered. He says he is sure our Bible Association there will prosper: he himself is our Secretary, and he will I think keep the people to the object they have now entered on.

Having finished our main business Mr Griffiths and I hoped to return to Port Antonio on the same day our Association was formed. But the rain continued and increased, and the rivers rose so that we could not move out all day. Next day was ushered in under precisely the same circumstances, and seemed resolved to continue so all through. Nevertheless it ceased or nearly so, and our quick rising and falling rivers became passable. We set out, but we had not gone far before it began to rain heavily, and we soon became thoroughly drenched. In this plight we encouraged ourselves that by and by we should be at home to repair from our inconveniences, but in this we were disappointed, for when we were got to within one and a half miles of Port Antonio a river that lay in our course had got so high as to be quite impassable. We therefore turned back, and took refuge in the house of a friend of Mr Griffiths, where although we found the owner from home, we yet got our clothes changed and a comfortable bed.

The next morning we reached home, and on the evening of the same day we held our Bible Society meeting at the Rectory. Our Society was forthwith formed, and under very encouraging circumstances. One of our Committee gave us Ten pounds for his contribution, another gave us Five, and a third Two, whilst a number pout down their names for the usual subscription of one pound. Two days after we had a meeting of the Committee, and among other things agreed to, one was, to order Fifty pounds worth of Bibles from Kingston for the use of this new Society. I was much pleased with the spirit manifested in Port Antonio in hits good work of circulating the Holy Scriptures. I trust the matter will not flag. Mr Griffiths is the President of the Society, and I doubt not but he will use his endeavours to keep it alive and make it prosper.

My course now should have been onwards, that is Westwards, but the weather had been so wet and for so long a time, that the roads in that direction had been much injured, and in some places next to impassable. Almost everybody who knew the roads advised me not to proceed, and this advice I thought best to follow, the more especially as I had again to visit St Thomas in the East, and also because I could visit the two or three places that  lay before me by riding right across the Island from Kingston the distance not being great. I therefore returned to Amity Hall, and thence to the residence of the Rev Mr Panton who had now returned home. Mr Panton entered warmly into your work, as I told you  before he would. We went from his home to Morant Bay to make a canvass for our object, and left the place in good hoped of succeeding in our purpose, having fixed a day for a meeting there, and invited those friendly to attend. The senior magistrate of the Parish, Thomas Thomson, Esq. resides in Morant Bay. Some months ago I had had the pleasure of being introduced to this gentleman in Kingston when he kindly invited me to his home when I should be in that quarter. I fully counted on his being friendly to our object and giving us his aid to the formation of the Bible Society, and my expectations were not disappointed. He gave us his own name and support, and pointed out to us those persons who might be most likely to serve us not in name only but in reality. It is but justice to say farther of this gentleman that he has all along befriended the religious instruction and education of the Negroes, and that he has stood by the missionaries and given them encouragement, not only in generalities, but also in those times when their friends where few or none. May the Lord bless him with the righteousness of Christ unto eternal life. So, I dare say, many have prayed for him, and may all these prayers be heard.

On Monday the 2nd instant we held our previously arranged meeting, Mr. Thomson being in the chair, and we held it in the Court House my permission of the magistrate here named. All went on encouragingly, and our Society was accordingly formed, Mr. Bond of Amity Hall being made our President and Mr. Thomson our Treasurer. A good list of subscribers followed, and many more are expected. Our Rector after all did not join us, and forsooth because it was not an affair exclusively of his own church!

Having thus formed our Parish Bible Society for St. Thomas in the East, we next wished to form some Bible Associations in connexion with it. On the evening of Wednesday the 4th. a meeting was held at Amity Hall with this in view, and then and then we formed our first Bible Association in St. Thomas in the East. This Association will include not only the people on the Estate who choose to join it, but will also embrace the people on the neighbouring estates, many of which are large. We were led to indulge good prospects of success for this Association, and chiefly because Mr. Panton on whose ministry a considerable number of the people there attend, will give his attention to it, and will urge the people on in this good work of getting the Scriptures for themselves, and of giving them to others all the world over.

I next went to Manchimeal Bay, and there also succeeded in forming another Association. A third was expected to be formed at Bath about 7 miles west of Amity Hall, but previous arrangements for meeting the Committee of the Society at Morant Bay prevented me from attending it. It will nevertheless be formed and soon, as Mr. Panton and the Wesleyan missionary there have agreed to get it up.

On Tuesday the 10th the Committee of the St. Thomas in the East Bible Society met in the Court House Morant Bay, and was well attended. At this meeting orders were given for Bibles and Testaments from the Depository; arrangements were made for forming a Ladies' subcommittee to aid the general committee in making known the Society and increasing its funds and useful operations; arrangements were also made for forming a fourth Bible Association in the town of Morant Bay; 300 copies of the Rules were ordered to be printed, &c.

The two following days were days of public business in that place. On the 13th we had a large meeting of ladies who assembled in our Treasurer's house, to whom I explained the nature of our Bible Society operations. Mr. Thomson, who is well acquainted with all the people of the place, thinks we may expect much good from this department of our Society. On finishing this we entered on our purpose of forming a Morant Bay Bible Association, and succeeded.

I intend to remain in Kingston for a few days to attend some committee meetings of our Societies, and for other general business connected with these objects. I then purpose to go on to the Parishes of Manchester and St. Elizabeth's where I am led to expect our objects will be well entertained.

It may not perhaps be very far out of the way to say a few words here about the state of this Island in reference to the great civil change lately effected among us. You will naturally feel, in common with all the friends of humanity, a lively interest in the result of this new thing in the earth, as I suppose we may consider it. Towards the end of August I gave you some account of the happy state of things on the great transition day, and for the fortnight following. All up to that time had turned out wonderfully, and beyond expectation. During the three following months however there was a considerable change for the worse. True there was little or nothing among us of the nature of rebellion or commotion, but there was a great deal of unwillingness manifested to work in a proper way; the people went into the field but the quantity of work they performed did not much exceed a good half; and this state of things prevailed over about one third of all the Estates of the Island. In consequence of this unfavourable appearance of things the approach of the Christmas holidays filled with some apprehension even those who were disposed to take the most favourable view of things. But, blessed be God, our fears were not realised. On the contrary, the Christmas holidays passed off with even unusual order and quietness; and from and after that time things took quite a new turn, the people generally began to do a proper measure of work, and cheerfully, and also entered pretty generally into arrangements for extra work for wages during the crop season. This happy state of things has continued ever since, and still goes on. We may now therefore on surer grounds than at any period before pronounce the experiment to have fairly succeeded; and now humanly there is every probability of things going on well and satisfactorily during the period of the apprenticeship.

We understand that at our critical period referred to at the close of the year, there were many and many prayers and supplications being offered up on our special behalf throughout the British Islands. Let the unexpected and scarcely hoped for favourable change at that period and the happy results since and now among us explain how your prayers have been answered. The Lord indeed has been merciful unto us and gracious. May you be rewarded for your kind attention to us, and may we all here have grace to pray for you in return.

Two things however are still wanting for the final successful result of this measure for the good of the parties concerned, and for the inhabitants of the Island generally. We want a instruction, religious and educational, and we want something being done in the form of legislation or otherwise to make the transition easy and profitable at the close of the Apprenticeship. As the law now stands, emancipation will come upon us a literally in one day, and the people I fear not quite prepared for it, for the present system of apprenticeship does not seem much a preparation for an easy passage from one state of things to another so diverse to it in many respects. The good will do well pretty generally perhaps after any change, but the indifferent and the bad may do harm both to themselves and to others. Some laws and regulations are required to keep things in order, and it would be well to have these, and not blindly to adventure too much on sanguine expectations and wishes. Let us ever pray for a happy result, but at the same time let us exercise all knowledge and judgment.

I have lately had two letters from Foreign parts, one is from Granada of Nicaragua in Guatemala, acknowledging the receipt of a case of Spanish Bibles and Testaments which I forwarded to that place some time ago from this Island. The other is from Jacmel in Hayti, from the Catholic Priest in that place whose name I formerly mentioned to you. You will recollect that I made an agreement with him to send a case containing one hundred French Testaments to his hands for distribution by sale in that place. This arrangement I communicated to you in due course, and supposed that before this time the books would have been in his possession. But it seems this was not the case on the 12th of January last at the date of his letter. He is anxious for them, and under this feeling he writes. I shall reply to his letter by the first packet telling him that the books in all probability will be very soon in his hands, if he has not already received them. Be so good as to look over your shipments, to see when this case was sent off. I am glad of the delay in one sense, inasmuch as it has afforded an opportunity for him to show his desire for obtaining and circulating the Holy Scriptures. You will recollect that he wished the Testaments to be of the Protestant rather than the Catholic version, and should more be required by him you will please keep his preference in mind.

Be so good as to order for our depository here, the following the following supply: 10 Quarto Bibles, 10 Pica and 10 small pica 8vo all with marginal references; also 5 of each of your other sizes with references; 20 French Bibles, 10 octavo and 10 duod.  10 German Bibles and 10 German Testaments. In your last report there is mention made of 48 French Bibles having been sent to Jamaica, but from all my inquiries I can learn nothing of them. To whom were they sent, and took what part of the Island? Have the goodness to put in with those books above ordered a few copies of Wilkes's excellent pamphlet on the Bible Society: these last it would be better to address to me.

As this is probably the last letter you will receive from me before you put your Report to the press, allow me to say that should you print anything about the city of Santo Domingo, please print the word Santo in full, and not St. Be so good also as charge your Printer or Reader to be careful to have proper names correct, for otherwise they fail in one special end of their being printed, besides being errors otherwise. One or other of these gentlemen, or both, generally contrive to have at least one name in each report transformed into some other of their own choosing, as for example Brown for Bourne in the 29th and Watson for Hutson in the 30th besides Buddon for Briddon, and Petro for Pitre, and I was going to say et cetera, but I must not be fastidious, but recollect my own errings, and overlook those of others.

I may here mention before I close, the dates of your letters come to hand within these two or three months, lest I may have omitted before to notice them. They are, 6th Sep., 16th Oct.,  5th Nov.,  1st Dec., 16th Dec., 30th Dec., 13th Jan. The packets have now taken new courses, facilitating our objects on the one hand, but proving against us on the other. I shall probably notice this subject more particularly soon, pointing out the bearings referred to.

I should have added to my order for supplies above given, the following, and which I beg you to include, namely 10 Pearl Bibles gilt, without Bible Society mark, for general sale at full prices, 2 Hebrew Bibles, and 2 ditto Testaments, 25 Latin Bibles, 2 Cuba &c, and 5 for this place. Let the Pearl Bibles be of the same edition you formerly had, if you still have it, or can get it.

You sent us here not long ago among other books a number of small New Testaments bound in canvas, or as we would call it here osnaburgs. Now it would be better in future not to have the books bound in this way for the West Indies, but in some other kind and colour of cloth if not leather. Our osnaburg days we trust are now in a good measure over, and wishing to forget them we do not much like this remembrance of bygone times.

I now at length conclude, and beg you believe me ever sincerely yours,

                                                                                                                   James Thomson.

Rev A Brandram  No.41

Savanna La Mar, 6th July 1835

My Dear Friend,

My last letter to you was written, I believe, about the middle of March, and gave you some account of my visit to the eastern parts of this island; and now I proceed to give you a general view of what has occurred in your concerns here, in my journey from Kingston to the place from which I write you. I remained one week in Kingston, after my return from the eastern parts; all the days of which week were fully occupied in Bible Society business there remaining to be done, and in preparations for my western tour. On the 21st of March, I set out for Spanish Town, not expecting to stay there above two or three days; intending to leave its Bible Society affairs to be transacted on my return to it, some two or three months after­wards. I found, however, on arriving there, that the prospects of formally establishing our branch or auxiliary Bible Society for that town, and the parish in which it is situated, were better than I had anticipated. I protracted, therefore, my stay in that place to a couple of weeks; and during that time, our Society was formed for the parish in question, namely, St. Catherine's. I do not know that you are sufficiently acquainted with our parish polity in this island, and it may not, therefore, be unnecessary to mention one part, at least, of it, because of its bearing upon our concerns. In each of the parishes, there is a gentleman of high standing in the community, placed as a chief, under the name of custos. The honours, the influence, the power, and the functions of this officer resemble, more than any thing else I can at present recollect, those of the high she­riffs in our English counties; and, indeed, our parishes are small counties in themselves, both in territorial extent, and in popula­tion. From the standing of such an individual, in any parish where a Bible Society is formed, you will see that it would be an acquisition for us to obtain the patronage and friendly help of such an official character; both on account of his direct assistance, and on account of the influence of his name in inducing others to follow his example. The custos of the parish of St. Catherine I had previously met with, and knowing him to be well disposed towards the instruction of the people in this island, not a few of which are under his own immediate care, I counted upon his help on behalf of our newly formed Society. On making appli­cation to Mr. Bernard, the gentleman in question, and explaining the purposes and the plan of our Bible Society, on the great scale and on the small, I was happy to find all my expectations of him verified, and he cheerfully accepted the office of president. The Rev. Mr. Edmondson, of Barbados and Bible Society memory there, as you will recollect, was present at the formation of our St. Catherine's auxiliary, and became, as might be ex­pected, one of its secretaries. The Rev. Mr. Phillippo, whose active exertions in schools and otherwise, are well known, and much appreciated, was also with us; and became a co-secretary with our former Barbados secretary.

I next proceeded to the parish of St. Dorothy, and lodged, during my very short stay there, in the house of a gentleman whom you probably recollect having seen, some years ago, in Kingston, Surrey, at the time Lord Liverpool lived, and resided in that neighbourhood, and so zealously advocated the cause of the Bible Society, both there and elsewhere, notwithstanding the hurry of his high official duties. This gentleman was the warm and active co-labourer with Lord Liverpool in Kingston, at that time, in the cause of our Society, and of all other benevolent institutions. He is still our warm friend, and most ready to do all he can to forward our objects. From his house I visited the curate of the parish, the rector being from home through ill health. This gentleman was very friendly, and offered his assistance in forming a Society for that parish. The Rev. Mr. Taylor, the Baptist missionary there, I also visited, and found him, as I expected, ready to yield us all his aid. This gentleman, and many others I meet with, say, when proposing Bible Society concerns to them, "But give us some school help: I wish our friends in England would send schoolmasters here, or means of paying such, and school books by the thousand. The people cannot read; what profit is there in giving them the Bible till they can?" And again they say, "Pray do give us help for schools." I meet this case, and always answer it direct. Our Society, I say, friendly as it is, in every instance, to educa­tion, cannot touch any thing, or any subject, but the sacred and holy volume itself; to circulate this is our work, and most ample work it is. But, I add, though we cannot, as a Society, give you direct aid in your schools, we can give you no little help in an indirect way. By the circulation of our Bibles, we increase the desire among the people to learn to read; and this desire pressing more and more, will make a noise and a clamour for help, here among ourselves, and abroad in England, until, by one means and another, in the providence of God, all and ample help will be obtained for the instruction of all our people in this island, and over these colonies generally.

I might also refer, as one proof of what good may arise through our Society indi­rectly in favour of education here, to the deviations I have made, once and again, from my usual line of correspondence with you, when I urged upon you to cry aloud by the press, from Dan to Beersheba, throughout all your favoured country, and to tell all what need we had for schools, and for school books; and in stating to you also a plan for raising us effectual aid in this interesting work of educating our negro population here, which, I may truly say, is hungering after knowledge. Again, I meet the above difficulties, not objections, to our Bible Society opera­tions, by roundly stating to the friends of the negroes, and to the negroes themselves, in all our meetings with them, that notwithstanding they cannot yet read, the major part of them, yet nevertheless they ought one and all to come forward and join our Bible Society, and that the people should all use the means we set before them in our Bible Associations for procuring the Scriptures for themselves, and getting them into their own houses and hands without delay. For (I argue with them) if you have a Bible in your house, you will thereby be greatly stirred up to learn to read it; or, on the other hand, should you never learn, some friend calling on you from time to time will read to you from this sacred book; or I say, your children will soon be able to read, and they will read to you: or failing this, you can hire with a little money some boy or girl who has been at school to read your Bible to you; and particularly when you are on a bed of sickness, or of death, will this be a valuable re­source to you, and will be an ample return for all you may give for your book: and lastly, I add, though none of the means I have stated should be available to you, yet get a Bible, and place it conspicuously in your house, for the very sight of it as you go out and come in, and sit in your house with it before you, will do you much good, and more than remunerate your expense in getting it, as it will silently proclaim in your ears as your eyes light upon it, "Fear God. and give glory to his name." Thus I urge upon all to get the Scriptures, and take an excuse from none, being fully convinced that the more extensively the word of God is circulated, the more extensively it will in one way or another be read, and the more it is read the more it will be under­stood and obeyed.—This is like a digression, but it is not so in reality, for these are some of our actual difficulties on the one hand, and the means for overcoming them on the other. I am firmly persuaded that nothing is so effectual in stirring up people every where, and under any circumstances, to learn to read, as the circulation of the Scriptures among them. If we were to take two given estates of the same size in this island, and similarly circumstanced, and were to form a Bible Association in one of them and not in the other, we should I doubt not at the end of a few years perceive a striking difference in the two: where the association was formed many more would be able to read than on the other.—But to return to our locality in St. Dorothy's, preparations were made for forming a Society there on my return, and I have good hopes of seeing it established in due time. I was glad to find that Mr. Slater, the curate, possessed a copy of Owen's History of the Bible Society. I do not know that there is another in the island, but I wish there were many.

From St. Dorothy's I went into the parish of Vere, a parish of small territorial extent compared with other parishes here, being only about 12 miles square, but containing about 10,000 inhabi­tants. Here I saw the rector, and Mr. Forbes, the catechist of the Church Missionary Society, who has a flourishing school on an estate belonging to Mr. Wildman, a gentleman well known in England in Jamaica concerns. Mr. Forbes also, in addition to his school, gives much religious instruction to the people on that estate, and to all who choose to come from others. No Bible Society was formed in Vere, but steps were taken for doing so afterwards, and hopes are entertained of succeeding in it. One of the things I generally attend to in my peregrinations is to search out for a proper place where the Scriptures may be pub­licly sold to all. This I found in Vere, and then proceeded into the parish of Clarendon.

Clarendon is the very reverse of Vere in regard to extent and denseness of population. I made several calls in this parish, going over a considerable portion of it. From all I could gather of circumstances at the time of my visit, it was judged better to defer any attempts to form a Bible Society there until a future occasion. The Honourable Mr. Bravo, who had been recently appointed to the office of Custos, was from home at the time, and therefore I had not the pleasure of seeing him. I wrote him however a few lines when in the neighbourhood of his residence. I afterwards received a very friendly note in reply, which he had written immediately after his return home, but which I did not receive till about a month later, and when I was in another parish. He says, "I yesterday received your note of the 15th instant, and regret that my absence from home deprived me of your proposed visit, but I beg to assure you that I shall at all times be happy to see you at Mount Moses, and that I shall feel great satisfaction in forwarding as much as lies in my power the very laudable object you have in view. Most sincerely wishing you health to prosecute your benevolent and pious intentions, I remain," &c. This note, you see, gives me good encouragement in again visiting the parish of Clarendon, when I shall be able to do so. Mr. Bravo is an individual of that nation honoured in being the early depositaries of the oracles of God, a nation yet to be honoured and signally, at no distant day, but not till they turn to the Lord the God of Israel, whom their fathers crucified. O that the Salvation of Israel would come out of Zion, and turn away ungodliness from Jacob!

The next parish, in order, is Manchester. Here is situated one of the oldest settlements of the Moravians in this island, called Fairfield. I make a point of visiting these establishments of the Moravians, if at all within my reach. You have on many occasions helped this body in publishing the Scriptures, and in supplying their people with them. They feel and express them­selves grateful to you for so doing, and are desirous of giving help to your agent in promoting your work in those places where their missionaries are stationed. On this spot we formed our Manchester Bible Society, our two secretaries being the Rev. Mr. Ricksecker, the senior missionary there, and the Rev. Mr. Hall, one of the curates of the parish, who gives us his most cordial aid. The Honourable Mr. Berry, the custos, upon application being made to him, became president of the Society, and in a note accepting this office he says, "I feel myself much honoured, and accept with much pleasure the appointment of president of the Manchester Bible Society. A society formed for so benefi­cial a purpose as the distribution of the Holy Scriptures, cannot fail to have a very beneficial influence in our community."— Three distinct Bible associations have been formed in connexion with this parish Bible society; one in this Moravian congrega­tion, one in Mr. Hall's congregation, and one on an estate called Huntley, possessed by a Mr. Wilkinson, who resides upon it, and is very anxious to communicate the best instruction to his people, and who has greatly helped us in forming the Bible society in the parish mentioned.

St. Elizabeth's is the parish that succeeds to Manchester in one's course, moving westward. This is rather a favoured parish in regard to society, or to what one would call English families. There is a fine cluster of them here, compared with most other places among us; for, alas! a family, in the proper and right sense, is a plant that has seldom been planted in this island and its fellows. Whether this arises from some antipathy existing between the family plant and the sugar-cane plant, or the slave plant, I leave you to judge; I only speak of the fact. Blessed be God, however, old things are passing away with us herein, and families are being formed in numbers every week in the holy bond of matrimony. This is chiefly among the negroes; but it will speedily work its way back among the coloured popu­lation, and then afterwards, (oh! shame, that it should thus go reversed,) among the whites.

In Black River, which is the county or parish town of St. Elizabeth's, we held a meeting on the 7th of May, to form our Bible Society for their parish. Several gentlemen of the highest standing in the community were present, and among the rest, and in the chair, the Honourable Dr. Robertson, the custos. The society was accordingly formed in a very friendly spirit. Dr. Robertson became our president, as might be expected from his presiding at this meeting, and he has since shown himself desirous of advancing our objects. There are three Moravian establishments in this parish. I have visited these, and formed a Bible association in each. One of the most active of our friends in this parish is the Rev. Mr. Hylton, one of the curates. He has three places under his charge, where he preaches in turn. In each of these we have formed an associa­tion, and under very favourable circumstances, particularly in one of them, called Grossmonde. A considerable number of the people in this congregation can read, owing to the zealous labours of their minister. A fine feeling exists among his people, and a great desire for further instruction. Great numbers of these have put down their names to our association, and they have already paid in a good sum to the treasurer of our Parish Bible Society. I look to this association with more than com­mon interest, from what I have already seen, and I expect it will be a worthy model for others to copy after. A seventh association was formed at Black River; and the eighth at Accompong. These were formed before I left the parish; but others have followed, I believe, since that, as the Rev. Mr. Waters, the other curate of the parish, was about to form three in the place under his charge. From my mentioning once and again three places as being under one curate, you might think we had a kind of pluralities here; and so we have, but they are pluralities of labour only, and not of emolument. In truth, there ought to be three ministers, instead of one, in the places referred to, and so of many others among us. The people have only service once in three weeks under these pluralities, instead of every Lord's day, as it ought to be. See then our need of Christian instruction, as manifested by these scanty dolings out of spiritual food.

In the parish of St. Elizabeth is situated one of the Maroon establishments. It is smaller than the one in Portland; but the people partake much of the same nature and habits. In this settlement they have had less instruction than in the other, and accordingly they are farther behind in the knowledge of letters, and in Christian knowledge and practices. They have had a catechist from the Church Missionary Society among them for some time; but owing to changes and removals in the individual catechists that have been there, the instruction given has not been continuous, and for some time back they have had no instructor among them at all. This latter interruption seems to have done them some good indirectly, in making them more anxious on the subject of their own instruction in letters and in religion. On the same day that I came into the parish I saw two of these Maroons at the house of the Rev. Mr. Hylton, where I stopped. They had come down from their settlement, a distance of about twenty miles, to make inquiry when their teacher would come. Happily I could tell them something on the subject of their inquiry, for I had not long before seen the catechist about to settle among them. I gave them therefore good news to carry home, namely, that their expected and wished-for teacher would be with them soon; and that he was a valuable man, and could do them much good; adding, that I hoped they would give every attention to his instructions. Fur­ther I said, "Your schoolmaster's wife, who is coming with him, is an excellent woman, and will be of great use in teaching your wives and your daughters to read, and to fear God, and keep his commandments." These two messengers, next morning at dawn, went back with merry hearts to carry home the good news. I gave them, on their return, a printed paper, containing an address about Bible associations, and told them I expected to pay them a visit before long, and would then talk with them more fully about the subject they would read of in the paper I had given them. About a week after, other two messengers came to say that they were all much pleased to hear that coolmassa (schoolmaster) was coming, and misses with him; and also, that they all thanked me for the "letter" I had sent them, meaning by the letter the Bible Association Address I had given to the two messengers the week before.

On the 15th of May, when other arrangements permitted, I paid my promised visit to this Maroon settlement, called Accompong, accompanied by the Rev. Mr. Hylton, in whose district it may be said to be. On entering the place, we went straight to the chapel and schoolroom, which are both one, and announced our arrival by ringing with our own hands, the great bell hung in a belfry outside. We were not long seated in the school-house, before the Maroons began to drop in, when our conversations and other communications commenced, and I may say ceased not, till we finally left them, as we had almost always one or other, more or fewer, during our stay of a day and a half. I trust our communications were of such things as are good, and for the use of edifying; at least, so we endeavoured to make them, by setting before our hearers, Jesus and him crucified, and telling them how we ought to walk and please God. We had one public general meeting in the evening of the day we arrived, and another in the early part of the day following. I set before them the objects of the Bible Society as respected themselves, namely, that all of them should get and have the Scriptures in their own possession, and should diligently read the sacred book for their present and eternal good. I set also before them the case of the world's millions who are destitute of the book of God, and hence, know not the Creator or Redeemer, amongst which destitute multitudes, I told them were their own country­men of Africa. I therefore stirred them up to get the Scriptures for themselves without any delay, and to pity and help the poor destitute world, and send to you something to enable you more extensively to preach the everlasting gospel unto every nation, and kindred, and tongue, and people.

Finally, I told them what their brethren the Maroons [in Port­land] had done in this good cause; and concluded by saying, that if they would enter into the objects set before them, and do in the matter what we considered they ought to do, we should, and you would, be greatly delighted with their operations in this good cause, and that themselves and the world would be benefited; but if, I said, you think the matter unworthy of your regard, then don't meddle with it, and tell us fairly and at once that you will not. This appeal was instantly followed by voices at once saying, "Yes, yes, we enter into it, and will do the best we can." We then proceeded to take down names, and speedily got up­wards of fifty. Thus commenced your Bible Association in Accompong, your second institution among the Maroons.

Before I leave this spot, 1 would say a few words respecting this people and settlement, as they have met with less sympathy and attention from the British Christian public and government than they should have done. The Church Missionary Society has the merit of seeking out these wild heathenish people, and of preaching to them the Lord Jesus Christ; their labours have not been in vain. From a former letter you will learn, that not a little good has been done among the same class in Portland parish. Some good has also been done here, though not so much, owing to the interruption before noticed. Their expected catechist is now, however, among them, at the date I write, and I hope much good will be done by himself and his wife, for the male and the female portions of these people. Accompong is a fine missionary station, just such as I should like for myself, should my heavenly Father bid my wanderings cease. I trust the Church Missionary Society will give more and more of their attention to this spot, and to their other missions among the Maroons in this island; and I hope the other missionary bodies will leave these fields in the hands of those who have already taken them up, for there is not room for double labourers, whilst the island still abounds with destitute spots. Had I the ear of the government, I would say, that an annual sum not less than £100 sterling, should be given to the Church Missionary Society for each of the Maroon establish­ments. You who live near the court, and among courtiers, might repeat this, and if nothing should be gained by so doing, neither would any thing be lost. I must not forget to notice our good friend Mr. Griffiths, in connexion with this establishment. You have seen what he has done in Portland. It was he also that began the Lord's work among the Maroons of Accompong. In short, stirred up by the Holy Ghost, he visited all the settlements of this people in the island, about seven years ago, and finding them wholly given to idolatry, he prayed for them, and laboured for them, through the Church Missionary Society, until the present favourable circumstances, in regard to their instruction, have been brought forward. May God reward him, and may the missions among them enjoy in a large measure the blessing of Almighty God, without whom we can do nothing, and to whom in all things, be all the praise and the glory.

I have alluded to this people as being in a heathenish state only a few years ago. Changes have been effected, but some of their idolatrous practices still remain in Accompong, if not else­where also. These we may expect to disappear by and by, as the light of the glorious gospel of Christ increases among them. They have also among them, I am sorry to say, some evil Chris­tian customs. It is an odd expression I am aware, to say an evil Christian custom, for no Christian custom is evil, but there are evil customs among those who are called Christians. Two of these gods or goddesses, if I may so speak, are openly wor­shipped among the Maroons of Accompong; namely, intoxica­tion and concubinage. Of the latter idolatry, we Jamaicans may well blush, when we speak of it; and may we blush into reformation. There are, however, I would repeat, some encourag­ing signs of this reformation already apparent among us; and herein, as I said before, the blacks are teaching the whites.

A few words more respecting Accompong. The place they are settled in is better adapted to cultivation than Moore Town in Portland; the land is richer and less broken; and further, it does not rain here, as it does there, 300 days in the year; but the seasons are of a very favourable nature. On this account, I suppose, though other circumstances also may have contributed to it, there is a good deal more cultivation here than at Moore Town. They grow, besides their own provisions, a good deal of coffee, pimento, and ginger. One of the most pleasing circum­stances I learned in Accompong was, that in six houses there was regular family worship kept up. All these six are families properly so called, being headed matrimonially. The first com­mencement of this took place about a year ago, and I must give you the name of the commencer, and hope you will print it for his honour. It is Lieutenant Wright. He commenced it at the instance of his wife, and I would beg you therefore to print Mrs. Wright's name also along with her husband's. Afterwards I hope we shall be able to show these printings in the same Accompong, and thus add to the means within our reach of in­ducing to this godly and profitable custom. Lastly, it is but justice and duty to say that the Maroons treated your agent and his companion, Mr. Hylton, after a very friendly manner, and supplied our wants richly every day, if not in quality, variety, and cooking, at least in quantity. For most generally, after we had finished breakfast or dining, in came another breakfast or dinner, sent from another house, and so perhaps a third also. And again, after finishing all these breakfasts and dinners, that is to say, by eating the first and otherwise disposing of the rest, we found other supplies in the houses where we went to pay our visits. I think, I may say, without any epicureanism, that we relished most what Mrs. Wright sent us, and because of the circumstance already mentioned in regard to her.

I have detained you long in St. Elizabeth's, and I hope that your attention will be frequently called to this parish in months and years to come, as I trust a good Bible Society work has been begun in that parish, and hope it will continue and increase. Westmoreland parish was the next in the order of my visits, and I proceeded therefore in succession to Savanna-la-Mar, the chief town in that quarter. After remaining there a week in making preparations for forming a Bible Society for the parish, I returned again to St. Elizabeth's to attend the first meeting of the Committee of that Society, which we had been hindered from holding on an earlier day fixed for it by the unfavourable state of the weather. After attending this meeting, which was a very agreeable one, I returned to Savanna-la-Mar by another route, and visited two Moravian settlements in Westmoreland parish, in both of which I succeeded in forming Bible Associations, with upwards of 100 subscribers to each. A fortnight was taken up with this visit and tour, and on returning to Savanna-la-Mar we formed our Westmoreland Bible Society under encouraging circumstances. Last night, which was Sunday, we held a meeting in the court-house, for religious worship and for Bible Society purposes, when I addressed a full and crowded house from, these words:—"Thy kingdom come: thy will be done in earth as it is in heaven." From this passage I opened, and alleged that such a kingdom, dominion, and rule, as might be truly said to be of God should certainly take place in this world, where Satan has hitherto ruled, and still holds his dominion: that the time draws near for the visible establishment of this kingdom of hea­ven: that it is our duty and interest to advance and hasten it: that, seeing the will of God is to be done on earth, it is most obvious, that it must first be made known before it can be done and obeyed: and that hence we ought to exert ourselves to publish, circulate, and spread the Holy Scriptures all around us and over the whole world; even this blessed book, which makes known the will of God. Finally, I urged upon them not to mock God in their daily and weekly prayers when they used these words, by neither understanding nor caring about what they uttered with their lips solemnly in his presence; but to stir themselves up to examine this subject, that they might pray in knowledge and earnestness regarding it, and show the same by active exer­tions to circulate the word of God among themselves and abroad every where, an opportunity for all which was now placed before them in the Westmoreland Bible Society and in the Bible Asso­ciation of Savanna-la-Mar. I am happy to say, that the court­house was freely conceded to us by the magistrates for the purposes above stated; and, I think, I may say, the general feeling in this place is in our favour.

This brings up my journal, if I may so call it, to the day on which I now write you. My next movement will be to Montego Bay in the parish of St. James, whence I intend to fall back westward, to the parish of Hanover, returning again to Montego Bay, and from thence proceeding to Falmouth in Trelawney parish, and thence to St. Ann's, and thence through St. Tho­mas in the Vale to Spanish Town and Kingston. The success and encouragement met with in this tour is, I think, and ought to be, a subject for thanksgiving to Him who directs our steps and our ways, and who has the hearts of all men in his hand, turning them whithersoever he will. My thanks personally, and as your agent, are due to many friends who have helped me on my way in many respects. I pray the Lord to reward them, and to bless them in all their concerns; but especially in those which are spiritual. It is intended to hold the public meeting of the Jamaica Bible Society on my return to Kingston; and afterwards to draw up and print a report of the Bible Society operations in the island; which report we expect will tend to forward our concerns in those places where we have already made a commencement, and also to open up those where we have not as yet done any thing. The number of gentlemen, of the best rank of society in the island, who have given us their names, their subscriptions, and their influence, will draw out others who are less forward of their own accord, and disposed to follow others rather than become vanguard men themselves. The Lord will, we trust, work with us as he has already done, and will prosper his work beyond our expectations; and, surely, if any work may be called God's own work it must be the circulation of that code of knowledge and salvation which he has published for our welfare here and eter­nally. I may here mention, that on several occasions, and by different individuals in distinct places, it has been noticed to me, how much more appropriate is the time I am now travelling through the country than it would have been in September last, the time I at first proposed to set out, and when the weather only pre­vented me. My friends say, they could not have anticipated any thing like the results that have now taken place had I paid my visits at that time. In this manner does God lead his servants, unknown to themselves, for his glory, and to teach them, more unreservedly, to acknowledge him in all our ways, in the confidence that he will direct our steps.

Some incidental notices respecting our concerns up to this date will now be noticed. Your gift book, as I call your pre­sent to the negroes, has been gratefully received. In general, I may say, it has been accepted with those feelings with which you gave it; and, in several instances, I have been requested by individuals, and by many voices at the close of our meetings, to convey to you every kindly expression of gratitude and respect, for your good wishes on their behalf, your good book, and your prayers. I said to you some time ago, when I heard of your intended gift, that I would, when the people should have come into possession of it, urge upon, them, from this your kind act, to stir themselves up, and to come forward to procure the whole Bible for themselves; this I have done in all my movements, and es­pecially at our meetings for forming Bible associations; this advice has been well responded to, as is visible in the cheering numbers of persons who have put down their names for the entire Bible, and not a few have subscribed for a large family Bible, even your fine quarto. Our demand upon you for Bibles during the twelve months ensuing will, I should think, be considerable; and I hope good remittances will follow these demands. It is pleasing to see your gift book in use in every congregation among us, on every Sunday, and to see it in every school.

The following extract of a letter lately received from the Rev. Mr. Phillippo, in Spanish Town, will, I am sure, prove interesting to you. "You will be gratified," he says, "to know that we held another Committee meeting of our St. Catherine's Bible Society, on Monday last, and that we have applied to the Jamaica Bible Society for a stock of Bibles and Testaments to the amount of £90 currency, with which to begin our opera­tions. The utmost unanimity prevailing among us, we quickly despatched our business, and that also with but few unnecessary words. Our District Association has sustained considerable loss by the removal of Mr. A. from the town, but, all things con­sidered, it prospers as well as could be anticipated. A great point is gained when a beginning is effected, however small and discouraging that beginning may appear to be. Zealous, perse­vering, and efficient agency, approved and sanctified of God, is every thing. The cloud which the prophet of Israel saw rising from the west, the harbinger of a plentiful rain, was small on its first appearance, but gradually increased until it overspread the whole surface of the heavens, and thus became the means of happiness to a desolate and mourning people."

"I have an­other gratifying circumstance to communicate. You are aware that at Christmas I had an inadequate supply of the copies of the Scriptures designed for distribution among the apprentices, and that, as a consequence, Easter Sunday was fixed upon as a day on which to receive further applications; the distribution was unavoidably postponed until the following Sabbath, by which time I procured a case of the Testaments, &c., consigned to my missionary brother Taylor, at Old Harbour. I announced my intention on the two preceding Sabbaths, and although many private demands had been frequently and importunately made since the benevolent intentions of the Society had been known, I had apprehended that two or three dozen would be an all-sufficient supply. To my astonishment, however, the whole number contained in the case was inadequate to the demand, so much so, that I begin now to question whether the deficiency can be supplied by the contents of another case of equal size. The scene of the distribution was a most interesting one. Often since it has passed away have I regretted my inability to sketch it with an artist's hand, that it might have been transmitted to the friends and supporters of the Bible Society in England. It could not have failed to have interested them most deeply, nor to have operated upon their minds as an incentive to vet greater and more noble efforts in the prosecution of their Bible-work. You know the stand I occupy in my week-day evening services: no sooner had I ascended that somewhat elevated spot, for the purpose, than I was surrounded by multitudes of claimants, and almost stunned with their importunities. To assist me in ascer­taining the qualifications of each candidate, I had already placed around me six or seven trustworthy and competent individuals, together with an amanuensis to register the names of every one to whom the prize might be awarded. I soon found it impossible to proceed, and repeatedly demanded silence, as a condition on which the distribution was to be continued; but I might almost as well have spoken to the elements; there was, indeed, a tem­porary calm, but it was succeeded by louder and yet more earnest vociferations of entreaty. To keep anything like a cor­rect list of names was soon found to be impracticable, although I must not omit to state it as my belief, that my injunction, under no circumstances to distribute a single book but on the conditions specified in the printed resolutions of the Parent So­ciety, was strictly and universally obeyed. Though gratifying in the extreme, as it must have been to me, thus to behold the predictions of ancient prophecy fulfilled, in the eagerness evinced by these sons and daughters of Ethiopia, to possess themselves of the word of life; yet my pleasure was not unmixed with pain. There were many present who, although apprentices, were in other respects disqualified for the boon, (following the rules of the Parent Society,) whom in consequence of the failure of repeated explanations and advice, I felt it my duty publicly to reprove for their importunity. The most evident disappoint­ment and regret were visible in the countenances of all to whom the denial was made, and some of them turned away in tears. Tell me, my dear Sir, if you can, whether, when a faithful pro­mise is made by such applicants, that they will habitually ensure the services of a friend or a neighbour's child to read it to them, they may not stand on a footing of equality, in reference to the boon, with their more qualified, because more privileged, com­panions and friends ?" In the above you have one striking scene of "Ethiopia stretching out her hands to God," as the Psalmist says; and it must be a subject of grateful thanks­giving, to you and to all your confederates, over the length and the breadth of our land, that you have been instrumental in verifying this sign of the outspreading kingdom of our Lord. "O make a joyful noise unto God, all the earth; make a loud noise, and rejoice, and sing praise."

In regard to the question Mr. Phillippo puts at the close of the above extracts, I have thought it right in accordance with your resolution, to answer it in the negative. Let it be said to such applicants, "Learn to read, and you may still have a book, if you are properly diligent." This will have a better effect than the giving a book to any persons with a promise of its being read to them. In truth, one manifest advantage of your present, is that it has proved a stimulus to many, inducing them to learn to read, that they might obtain your book. Perhaps I should not be far wrong if I should say that some hundreds over the country have learned to read through this incentive. It would be better, therefore, still to use your books for this same end, and thus make them productive of a double advantage. I may here mention a little incident in regard to one of our learners. A man somewhat beyond middle age received a spelling book from his minister, one of the Moravian mission­aries, containing the A, B, C, and other parts of reading made easy. About a fortnight after, he brought back his book and begged his minister to exchange it, and give him an easier one instead, as he could not manage to learn that one. His minister of course told him that there was no easier book could be found than the one he had. Upon this he looked up with a saddish countenance, and begged him to pray for him that he might be able to master this book, and to get on in reading, as he found it very hard work. In connexion with this I may here once more, and again, repeat that great and insatiable is our demand for spelling books. A gentleman told me the other day, that after much ado he procured four dozen such books, and sent them out for re-sale in a small village where he lives. In an instant all were picked up, just as so many grains of barley would have been if thrown among a flock of pigeons. Our ark is not yet come; I hope it is upon the waters.

And now, as to the Bibles that should be ordered for our Bible Association, I am somewhat at a loss. The number of associations in St. Elizabeth's alone, is ten or twelve, and the number of subscribers to each vary from 100 to 300, and all of them subscribe for the whole Bible. It would be too much either to order or to remit a number corresponding with the above appearances, and yet such a number may really be re­quired. What I would say in order to hit somewhere between extremes, is, send us by the earliest vessels, six cases to Mr. George Dale, Black River; to the Rev. Mr. Burchell, Montego Bay, six cases; and to Messrs. Jordan and Osborn, Kingston, twelve cases: nevertheless, you may double these numbers if you should think it prudent. Let these cases be of the size I generally designate a case as formerly specified, that is weighing about 200 lbs. Again, let each case consist of Bibles only; and in each put equal quantities of the following sizes and prices, and no others, namely, Nonpareil 12mo, 4s.; Long Primer 8vo. 8s. 7d.; Small Pica 8vo. 10s., with marginal references 13s. 4d.; Pica 8vo. 10s. 10d.; and Pica 4to., marginal references, £1. Is.

Again, an immense number of cards will be required for our Bible Associations, and printing is extremely dear with us, as are also the blank cards themselves. I have, therefore, ventured in my last note to you, to ask some thousands of these, and hope there will be no difficulty in your complying with the negroes' request in this matter. One short extract of a letter of recent date from a gentleman in St. Elizabeth's will show you our need of these. He says, "I should be glad to know how soon you could send me the cards; they are particularly necessary for the appren­tices." If you could add to the number requested of the printed cards, a goodly number of blank cards, also of the same size, it would enable us to supply our deficiencies at a more moderate rate, as they might occur. I need hardly add, that the sooner they are sent the better, and they should be sent to Kingston. The address, appeal, &c., noticed in my private note, will also be particularly acceptable.

I now bring this long letter to a close, glad of rejoicing your hearts with what has rejoiced my own, through what my eyes have seen, and my ears have heard in this land, and in this tour.

                                    I remain, Very Truly Yours,

                                                James Thomson.

Postscript:  As an addendum to this letter I would beg leave to say to the Committee a few words regarding this West India mission. It is now not far from four years since I entered on it, although half that time was at first considered sufficient for performing the whole tour over the colonies. Providence however opened up the way for your work above our expectations. In truth it may be said I have hastened my way, rather than changed it, in my course, for I have left several places when I might by a longer stay have more effectually forwarded your work. In the arrangements and prolongation of this mission, it gives me great satisfaction that the committee have approved of my proceeding, first when an outline of them was laid before them prospectively, and second after filling up that outline more or less exactly. Being now however in one sense near the close of my visit to these islands being already in our Westernmost isle, I feel a desire to learn and you what is the committee's wish upon the subject, as to whether I should continue my operations, and in what manner. In my private letter dated 24 April you have my views on the whole subject, and I beg leave to refer yourself and the Committee to what I have their said, praying again the Lord may direct you all to what is the best.

One other subject I would beg leave to touch upon, and it is one that I have long intended to lay before you, as it has been much and often upon my mind. It is that the society should send an agent to British India, and another to China. The one in the former would have ample work in visiting the Bible societies over that wide populous country.

Rev A Brandram. Private.

Fairfield, in Manchester Parish, 24th April 1835

My dear Friend, and my Brother and my Fellow Labourer in Christ Jesus our Lord,

I now sit down to write you a few lines individually or privately, not that I have anything secret to say, but that I wish to talk with yourself aside as it were for a few minutes upon the objects in which we are mutually concerned, without subjecting you on the one hand to the necessity of dealing with my letter officially or of showing it to all, and on the other hand to give myself a little more freedom than I could with propriety take in a general and public letter. I have for some months past wished thus to converse with you, because I felt myself a little uneasy in regard to this West India Mission and myself. I received from the Committee of commission to visit these colonies, and also some parts of the Spanish Main in the latter end of the year 1831, in the expectation that the tour would most probably be concluded in a couple of years. Three years and a half however have now elapsed since I entered on this work, and it is not yet concluded. I have endeavoured to act in all my movements with all the integrity and uprightness I could, asking continually of the Lord these graces that I might be enabled to approve myself to our Saviour Jesus Christ, and that my ways might be acceptable to those who commissioned me. I have fully apprised you of all my movements; and this I have done, in the first place, by pointing out to you beforehand the course I intended in the name of the Lord to pursue from stage to stage, and in the second place, by explaining to you the respective causes which retarded or accelerated my course so as to cause alterations in my actual steps from what had previously been projected. I have had the great satisfaction during the whole of my tour to receive the approval on the part of the Committee of all these projects and realized movements; and I feel, I assure you, after lifting my eyes in grateful adoration to our heavenly Father for this blessing, I feel truly thankful to the Committee generally and to yourself individually for the very kind manner in which I have been treated, and your acceptance of my poor labours. May God wash my soiled steps in the Blood of his Beloved Son Jesus Christ, and may he abundantly shower down his blessing with the circulation of his Most Holy Word, that it may according to his promise not return unto him void, but to glorify his Ever Blessed Name in the salvation of men, and the building up of his Everlasting Kingdom.

What then is my uneasiness, you will say. It is this: I feel a kind of undefined uncertainty and unfixedness as to the understanding that exists between the Committee and myself at the present time as to this commission after it has extended to nearly double the time contemplated by both parties at the commencement. The various openings in the Providence of God which have occurred in prosecuting this mission, have lengthened it out as we have seen thus far. Thus far then let us say all is straight: but now what am I to do at the present time and prospectively if our heavenly Father should be pleased to continue me in life and health? This that I have now stated is the subject of my present letter, and of this my private conversation with you.

Should you be pleased to say, Tell us what you think about the subject yourself, and afterward we will show our opinion. Should you thus inquire, I would respectfully say, as follows. First, have the goodness to remove my foolish fear, as to whether I hold now a temporary commission for a specified purpose, to be brought to a close as early as it well can be done, and then that I should return to present myself before you in London to resign the commission you then gave me: Or whether I am considered, or to be considered as a permanent agent of the Society and till a just and necessary cause arise to the result this connexion. Secondly, if you should wish to continue me, on the footing now noticed, what is the work to which you would have me specifically to attend, both in point of kind and extent? On these two points all the matter and subject of this communication rests. Informed that explanation it seems proper that I should state what sphere of labour the West India Colonies and parts adjacent present for the Society's operations. If I were consulted respective of myself as to what was the duty of the Bible Society to the West Indies, I would at once say, that they ought to have one of their Agents constantly employed in these islands: first, because it is a defined portion, and sufficiently extensive, of the great field of the world that the Bible Society has taken in hand to sow with the everlasting seed of the word of God; secondly, because it is a field to which the British Nation which supports the Bible Society is deeply indebted over and above and far beyond what it owes to the world generally; and thirdly, because the constituents of the Bible Society, from the just and strong feeling at present existing among them in favour of the West Indies would fully bear out the Committee in this arrangement. This is the first step towards coming to a definite view in this matter as to what ought to be done. The consideration that follows this is, but would not this be rather too large a diocese  to secure all due and proper attention to be paid to it in Bible Society concerns? I would say, Yes, the field is too large to be properly cultivated in its present unfenced and overgrown state. Give more labour at first until the place is brought into something like cultivated ground, and then afterwards one half of the labour will do it from year to year. I hear you say, how would you apply this observation. I answer, in this way. No one man can properly and effectually establish and keep up the Bible Societies throughout all the West India Colonies in the manner in which they might be established and kept up, by other arrangements. But you cannot afford two men for this field, you say, although you might perhaps venture upon one. To obviate this your difficulty, and to carry forward the work properly, I would propose the following plan. Let the Islands and Colonies in question be divided into two portions; one portion embracing all from Porto Rico to Demerara inclusive, and the other, Jamaica, Hayti, and Cuba; attaching the Spanish Main respectively to the division to which the parts are contiguous. Speaking now of Jamaica alone, without taking any notice of Hayti, Cuba, and the Spanish Main connected with it in the above scheme, Jamaica alone from its extant population and peculiar circumstances would require the constant labour of one of your agents for a couple of years in order to bring it into anything like a cultivated farm or field according to the figure before used. But were it cultivated properly for that time, it might then be expected to be brought into such a state as that, pursuing the same figure, it would require only one half of the labour to keep up the state of its cultivation, and to make some improvements from year to year. When the hassle only of the labour was required, the half only of the expense would be necessary, and your agent might employ himself in some useful work for one half of his time, and give you the other half. The other diocese might be constantly cultivated in the same way, for two years say, and then afterwards by one half of the labour and one half of the expense. Thus by a little extra labour for two years, and then afterwards by the expense and labour of one agent or two half agents, you could have your work thoroughly done and permanently by one agent's cost after the time specified. Now, is it not just necessary that this field to which our Nation is so deeply indebted should meet with this attention and incur this cost? I think it is, and I think the present feeling, and the feeling likely to continue for some years to come would fully justify the Committee in making these arrangements. I have said that this is just and necessary that the cost referred to should be incurred. Certainly it is considering all the circumstances of these colonies. But such a cost will would in effect not be incurred, because I believe the labours of the agents would be the means of raising such sums for general Bible Society purposes in the wide world, in addition to our own supplies here as to repay all the cost, and much more; indeed I should think the produce of Black purses in the West Indies would soon and greatly surprise the White folks of England, and might put some of them to shame, and induce them to do better.

To speak now particularly respecting myself, I would think my duty, as a servant of the Lord Jesus Christ, to undertake in his work this Western West India portion in the way noticed, and in addition the cultivation of Jamaica, would use means for promoting the Society objects in Hayti, Cuba, Colombia, Guatemala, Mexico, Chile and Peru.

I have thus set before you all my main thoughts and plans respecting the objects of our mutual concern in the Bible Society. I have earnestly and often prayed that I might be guided as to what was the will of God in these matters; and I now pray, that you and your colleagues may be guided and directed to do whatever is altogether the best. I have written you with the openness of a friend and brother. Be pleased then to think and pray upon the subject and consult what should be done, and write me with the same openness, telling me all your thoughts and proposals regarding the fields and the person mentioned. You can choose what freedom you choose with this letter, remembering that it is written to yourself individually, and not to the Society publicly like my other letters which are numbered in order.

In my next general letter I shall touch upon the subject, on its arrival in committing a consultant on the whole con... while the private letter will enable you to supply what I could not so well right publicly. In the meantime I shall pursue my tour through the various interior parishes of this Island, which will require probably four months or more. On finishing this I would employ myself in forming Bible Associations in Kingston and Spanish Town, and in such Bible Society work as should offer our until I learn from the Committee what is their wish as to my future relationship and operations. I would here notice before I conclude, as our Bishop is now on his way to England, and it being doubtful whether he will return, if you could manage to send us out a Bible Society Bishop, or to convert our present one in this matter, your work would wonderfully be benefited thereby. Please not to overlook this, as you might be able to do more than you could well anticipate. Let your next Report contain among your Vice Presidents, the Bishop of Jamaica, and add too, the Bishop of Barbados if you can.

In regard to Cuba, I am somewhat at a loss to know what to do, and chiefly because of my non-success in Porto Rico in an direct way. Were I sure that the one Island is in the same state as the other, I would of course not visit Cuba at all. I have been trying from this Island to ascertain how things are there in regard to the introduction of boxes and more particularly of the Scriptures, but I cannot learn much with any certainty. Havannah however I understand to be generally open to all kinds of merchandise, and there the attempt could most profitably be made, it made at all. Books could be sent there without visiting the Island, but a visit no doubt would better observe the object, and tend to remove difficulties that might present themselves. Next, in regard to Mexico, what should be done? It has been much agitated during these two years past, but is now I believe tolerably quiet. If these two places should be visited, or even Mexico only, not less than a year and be required for doing so. Supposing you to enter into arrangements on behalf of the West Indies on the plan I have above sketched, that perhaps it would not be well to interrupt Jamaica work to visit these places before the lapse of a year. When I have said above, that to Jamaica and a portion of the West Indies might be attached Cuba, Hayti, Colombia, Guatemala, Mexico, Peru & Chile, I have said it in the view of attending to Bible Society concerns in these places by way of correspondence only, for in the event of visiting some of them occasionally in addition to Jamaica business, the whole time of an Agent would required and fully instead of half time. The Mexican packet now no longer touches at Jamaica, and thus the means of getting them direct from this our cut off. From the Havannah Belize and Veracruz might be reached, for the Mexican packet now touches there both going and coming.

And now, my Dear Friend, allow me to thank you very gratefully for your kind and kindly given present of ...........    Mrs. Thomson and myself have read it through together with great delight, and I hope with solid profit. It is a delightful volume indeed as you characterise it. How pleasing it is to observe the same Spirit operating in the hearts of all Christians under various diversities and names, pursuits, talents, times, and places: and how can it be otherwise, as it is the selfsame Spirit apportioned to every man severally according to the infinite wisdom of God, the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, of whom the whole family in heaven and on earth is named. O may that Spirit possess and fill all who profess and call themselves Christians everywhere, and soon may the time come when all shall with one mind and one mouth glorify our Father in heaven: unto whom be glory for ever and for ever, Amen.

This day the 24th of April is a memorial day with me, and a day of meditation, thanksgiving and prayer, for on this day 17 years ago I first set out on my missionary pilgrimage. I have much, very much to be grateful for when I consider the merciful voyages and journeyings I have had in manifold dangers; and I have much to be humbled for; and much need to stir myself up to a wise and vigorous service of the Lord Jesus Christ in his kingdom. So I pray: may the Lord hear me. So pray you for me, My Dear Brother, and let us thus help each other in our many infirmities. The time shall come to us both I trust, when this vile body and vile mind shall be transformed in themselves, like to our Lord Jesus Christ, and transplanted into a new habitation, wherein dwelleth righteousness, happiness and glory. Amen, O Lord God, amen, so let it be unto us.

                        Believe me, Most Truly Yours,

                                                                        James Thomson.

Postscript: Savannah La Mar: 10th June 1835.

I have kept this letter till now to reconsider its contents; and on reading it over see nothing material that I could wish to alter. I submit the whole to your mature and prayerful consideration, trusting that the Lord will direct you to be wise and faithful stewards on every hand in the charge entrusted to you, and that through you I shall receive counsel and direction as to the way in which I should go. My success in your work since I wrote you, and on the whole of this tour I am happy to say is very encouraging, and of which in a week or two I hope to give a particular account in the usual way. Old things are passing away here, and all things are becoming new.

Your Report for 1835 will I suppose be about ready when this comes into your hands: please send us as early as possible 50 copies, together with 24 for 1834, and 24 for 1833. A few days ago I found the case of Reports for 1833 that was missing: it was lying at Black River. Send the also 1000 copies of the Abstract of the Report for 1835; 1000 Brief View; 1000 An Appeal; and be so good as to print and send 2000 of the Address here enclosed, as Printer's work is very dear with us: and lastly, print and send us 2000 cards like the specimen, for each of our 21 Parishes, taking care to head each 2000 respectively according to the names of our Parishes, which are as follows: Kingston, St. Andrews, Port Royal, St. David's, St. Thomas in the East, Portland, St. George's, St. Mary's, St. Ann's, Trelawney, St. James's, Hanover, Westmoreland, St. Elizabeth's, Manchester, Clarendon, Vere, St. Dorothy's, St. Catherine's, St. John's, and St. Thomas in the Vale. Let all these be sent to Kingston, and to the same place, always address your letters to me in this Island, without paying attention to the other places from which I may occasionally date my letters.

I think "An Appeal" might be improved by the following alterations. First leave out the word "other" page 1, line 10th from the bottom. See page 2, line 4th from the top, instead of "When did the abominations &c" say, "When did the absurd ideas and practices of the Church of Rome acquire their height and hurtful influence, but during that period of darkness from the sixth to the end of the fourteenth century when the Western Christian world was virtually without a Bible? And are not these errors still kept in existence chiefly by edicts and prohibitions against the reading of the holy word of God, which unfortunately still exist in that church, or at least among many of its adherents? Did not the translations &c."

At length I conclude, and am as before,

                                    Most Truly Yours,

                                                            James Thomson.

P.S. Could to get us also an edition of say 500 or 1000 of Dr. Chalmers's "Influence of the Bible Societies on the Temporal Necessities of the Poor," you would be doing a great service to your own cause. Should you print this pamphlet, as I trust you will, it will be necessary to leave out the expression in paragraph or section 21, "and the poor negro under the lash of his master." You might substitute the following words for this passage, "and that our poor fellow creatures in every country whose lot is to suffer from oppression" "may be told &c."

Rev A Brandram No. 42

Montego Bay, 20th July 1835

My Dear Friend,

You will see that I have crossed our Island since I last wrote you. About midway across I stopped at Knockalva, station of the Church Missionary Society where the Rev. Mr. Betts officiates who was formerly in Sierra Leone. Here I had the pleasure of speaking or preaching to a number of his people assembled in the evening of a working day in his schoolroom, when I laid before them my usual topics, namely those of a preacher of the Gospel of Christ, and an agent of the Bible Society. The formation of  a Bible Association was the result, and a goodly number of subscribers put down their names, several being for large family Bibles, and all for whole Bibles larger or smaller. Early next morning an elderly man came post haste to pay his first monthly subscription of ― half a dollar. I had just one card, and one card only, and that card he had. We greatly need cards as I said to you in my last: and I hope you will readily hear the negroes' petition for these as laid before you in that letter. Mr. Betts thinks that much more might be done in this Association could we have a large meeting after a more formal notice than we were able to give during my transient visit in journeying along. Whether this can be verified will depend on my other arrangements.

I arrived in this place, Montego Bay, on the 9th instant. Your letters of the 30th March and 12th May I found here waiting my arrival. I was of course glad to see them, and with all interest read over what you had written. O how wonderful is the art of writing, and how little do we think of this Divine art for man's advantage; for all things are from God, and his hand should be recognised in all.

Your Annual Meeting is the subject of your letter of the 12th of May. The first cheering circumstance in regard to it, is, that it was not a single but a twofold meeting, thus displaying that London and British interest is not decreased, in regard to this sterling object of circulating the word of life, but that it is on the contrary increasing. Your funds too for the elapsed year speak volumes; and volumes in truth they will enable you to speak or issue out to the nations, even volumes of that volume, which is the volume of all. The lively interest taken at your meeting on behalf of us poor negroes, is and must be, very gratifying to us all in this quarter. We hope that though you gave your Gift to us once for all, you do not intend to do so with your prayers. Please let them be continuous, at least till our Bond-and-Free system is over: and see how many of us you can pray into True Freedom in that time. Your fund of £15,000 raised expressly and exclusively for us, and in so short a time too, is in truth a fine display of British feeling, and will much astonish many foreign nations regarding you. Now what would you say, if we Negroes should surprise you and these nations before long with an equal sum raised by us and remitted to England for the exclusive purpose of enabling you to circulate the Scriptures in heathen lands? Such a hope we have, more or less distant, but first let us remit to you an ample sum to purchase Bibles for ourselves. From what I have told you in my last, you will see a fair prospect of something good and extensive in this latter way. But, now for a novelty: What pledge will you enter into with us in regard to the remittances from this quarter? That is to say, what will you promise to do, by the time the Negroes of the West Indies send you £15,000 of free contributions? I should like to entangle you in something good and great by such a pledge: and pray, what shall it be? We Jamaicans are under the half of the whole number of British Negroes, and somewhere about £6500 therefore would be our share: but say £7000 for even numbers. What then, I repeat, will you the Bible Society, and all your supporters at home pledge yourselves to do, by the time we send you from Jamaica £7000 sterling of free subscriptions, available for general purposes, and over and above what is remitted for Books? There's a glove for you: take it up, and let us hereby decide the merits of White and Black intellect, and who feels most in the kingdom of God. Will you by that time promise and compromise yourselves to raise among all your contributors the sum of £200,000 free subscriptions? But, what do I say? You are 25 millions in the British Isles, and we not half a million in all in this our island of Jamaica. Well then, equals and equals, a fair match: will you compromise and pledge yourselves all over England, Scotland, and Ireland, to raise Fifty times as much as we for Bibles to the world? We give you all the advantage of your Princes, Nobles, and Nabobs, and let us Negroes unite with us our Planters, and other white, and all our inhabitants. For every One thousand pounds then from Jamaica will you raise Fifty thousand. Now for it: speak out. The contest is holy and great, and the odds that starting in numbers and conditions are in your favour. You cannot for shame refuse to enter on this friendly strife with us. Please then give me your answer, and soon. Nay I cannot leave this subject until I press it upon you anew, again, and afresh. For, should we raise £7000 say in a few years, and you not be behind in the contest, the entire income of your Society during these years would be about one million of pounds sterling: and where we to call the number of years Five, your annual income would thus be doubled, and this is no mean consideration surely. You see therefore that it is a subject worth pressing. Be so good then as to publish this, in your Monthly Extracts, and let us see what your Auxiliary Societies will say to it, and all your friends: and let us start on the First of April next. Now then for the Black and White race and let us see which Race prevails.

I have been nearly carried away with this gold mine, and golden object, and with difficulty return to look at your "Great Wilderness of heads" as Mr. Yate would describe your Exeter Hall appearance to his New Zealanders. By the way if we Negroes should succeed as above to arouse your dormant powers, for powers you have ample enough, but they are as yet dormant notwithstanding all you have done, should we, I say, succeed in arousing your dormancy, you may next expect a challenge from New Zealand; and should we hear be so happy as to hasten on your slowness to a million, the New Zealanders may perhaps be honoured to double-fold your exertions. But, I am away once more. To re-return then to your Annual Meeting. The fine feeling of love, sympathy and benevolence, which were so displayed at your Noble Assemblage on behalf of our population in this Island and over the West India colonies, is very honourable to you, and will, on the other hand, be very useful to you, for such is the precious law of our Creator that all our kindly feelings for others, and our good deeds towards them return into our own bosoms. And O how sadly we stand in the way of our own interest when we are backward to do good to others, and to all around us, and everywhere. We here in this quarter have been long oppressed in body, in mind and in spirit, and you do well to sympathise with us. Our bodies however have at length and in part been unbound by the Abolition act; so in part have our minds been unloosed by the little education thus far obtained; and your precious Gift, together with your prayers, and our other spiritual means, will tend to emancipate our spirits, that we may pass from the state of bondsmen to that of sons. But, O My Dear Friend, and Britons all! you have not yet discharged your debt to the Negroes in the way of Education and Religious Instruction. Much I have read in the Report of your speeches at your Meeting of the Nobleness of England, and with all of which I agree: be noble then towards the Negroes in these two items mentioned Education and Spiritual Instruction; and in doing so you will call forth their nobleness in return, and that God may be glorified in all.

I thank you for the newspaper you have sent me, and which bears on this occasion so good a Record of you. I hope you have now made peace with all your opponents, and that they all at length are disposed to move on with you in your great work. Peace seemed triumphant at your great meeting, and long may this be the case in all your Grand Assemblages. Your notice of the third centenary since the Bible was printed in English, and not in England, and the contrasts you drew are exceedingly interesting to every Briton, and to every Christian everywhere. And O what responsibility is ours in occupying the position that God has placed us in. Let us not then, as Mr. Stowell admonished against, keep the pardon in our pockets, but let us speedily pay our debt to all nations. Your Report read, and the speeches made are all very interesting, and doubly so perhaps to one isolated in this far distant spot. Finally, the beautiful halo surrounding the whole of your appearance and proceedings leaves a pleasing and an imposing effect. O what must the heavenly assemblage be, when an earthly one is so sweet and so hallowed!

In your letter of the 30th of March you mention a pleasing circumstance of a coloured woman, who having received a Bible gratis, resolved to pay by instalments the full price of it, with the request that the sum might be paid in to the Negro fund. I shall not let this anecdote sleep, but shall awake with it our Negroes, and stir them up to emulation. A case in receiving your Gift Book a good deal resembles hers; and she paid up the 12 shillings, the full price of her rather costly Bible. I shall stir up our people to pay you back in a Gift, the full amount of your expenditure for us, that is, as before stated, our portion of £7000. I shall leave no stone unturned to get this, and thereby haste and the multiplication of your funds according to the pledge of you, till they reached the sum of one million and upwards. I shall stir up our Negroes too by the accounts given by Mr. Yate and Mr. Williams of the people in New Zealand, and the other islands in the Pacific Ocean, pressing on them to show as much an interest in attaining to a knowledge of the Scriptures as these people do.

By your resolution of the 23rd March last I see you have extended the time of a pertaining the Gift Book to the 1st of August next, and now close at hand. Your doing so is in perfect unison with your other kind feelings and acts on our behalf. All those among us friendly to your Society and to the Negroes wished it to be as you have thus done. Encouraged by the Bishop's note as given you in my letter of the 21st January last, and resolved also I see on the same day, and in the same spirit towards us, to send us forthwith 10,000 additional copies of your Gift Book. It would have been better however in regard to this had you waited till some indication of the want of this additional number had been hinted to you from this place. The accession of clerical cooperation so very gratifying did not however actually increase the number of readers. It is true you have not exceeded the number at first mentioned to you, but I suspect that number was overrated. It was given very soon after my arrival here, and when all my information was drawn from others. When however a smaller number came, nothing was I believe said to you about making up the number. We shall see how we get along, and shall perhaps notwithstanding what I have here said, devour all. But for this you must give me a relengthened term; and perhaps it would be both wise and kind to extend out liberty of giving for the period of one year more, till the 1st August 1836. Some months ago I stated that there was a great probability that many free Blacks and people of colour as well as white people seeing such a beautiful books (as they truly are) in the hands of the Apprentices, would naturally desire to procure books of the same kind in point of size and contents: and with this view I stated my opinion, that it would be well to send out a goodly number that would be for sale. In a letter I received some time after, I found you had acceded to my request. In your letter advising me of this, or in the Resolution itself, I forget which, you said the books so sent out would be without the "address" inside. I write from recollection not having your letter with me. I thought there probably was some oversight in this expression when I read it, as I could not suppose you possibly could put on the outside more than on the inside address saying "Presented" when the books were to be sold. When I wrote about these books I said, as far as I can recollect, that they should be done up like the others. But at the time I wrote this I did not know that there was to be any address on the books of at all, nor did I know this till I saw them in this Island. You have rather involved us a little in this matter, for though I have not seen the books, yet I learn from Kingston in which place they now are, that they actually say, "Presented by the British and Foreign Bible Society in commemoration of the 1st August 1834". But let me give you my authority in a letter from our good friend Mr. Tinson, for as I said I have not seen the books myself. He says, "By the way it is rather awkward that the New Testaments and Psalters sent out for sale have the impression on the cover "Presented by the B.F.B.S. &c". Now if they had said, "In commemoration of the 1st August 1834", it might have been all very well, but when a person has paid a dollar for a book, he might not like that the book should tell everybody who took it up what is not true, that it was given, when he had paid the full price for it: and this may give some handle to Bruce's claim to, which perhaps you have seen." Now to whose superior head and couple of hands we owe this our awkward predicament I cannot tell, but I should think it cannot be yours. Probably some Bookseller may have favoured us with this scrape, as according to all accounts that class of men are not perfect. Bruce's tales to which Mr. Tinson refers are, besides others several, that we are selling the books you sent for a gift, and of course that we are pocketing the money ourselves. We must thank some of you certainly for this seemingly well founded imputation on our character and ways.

Now for a pleasanter subject, the Antigua Ladies, white, black and coloured, you have received £70 from them you say. I have already told, and shall again and again tell our Ladies here about this, and will try to make them also send you £70, and make them if possible repeat the sum as often as their number here exceeds the number in Antigua, which may be about Ten times.

You wish for accounts has particular as can be collected of the distribution of the Gift Book. I shall endeavour to procure them, and shall remit them to you as soon as I get them fully into my hands. The period up to which I shall take the account will be the First of August next, now, as you see, upon us.

It seems you did not understand the allusion to our osnaburg days being nearly over here. My reference was to the slave days, and partly the apprenticeship days too, in which osnaburgs were and are the clothing allowed by the Masters, and worn by the Negroes. With our better days will be put on other clothing, and the osnaburg dress the sign of bondage will be left off and disliked, and so also will be disliked even books clothed in osnaburgs. This was my allusion.

This paragraph private

((You say, "You do not mention having received the Introduction to the Old Testament which I sent you privately, 7000 copies, they ought to have reached you." I have heard nothing of them in any way; and I have been wondering how they were so long and getting ready. In the end of last month however I saw a good number of this book or tract at the Moravian Mission called New Cannil in my return from St. Elizabeth's to Savanna La Mar as mentioned in my last. Seeing these safely arrived, and some weeks or longer before I saw them, I was the more surprised that none had come my way. I hope you sent an invoice and a letter of advice with them, for nothing should be sent at any time without a letter accompanying. But perhaps you did send a letter, and in the manner of Tailor and Clothier in Liverpool once did in sending out to a friend of mine in South America a case of men's clothes for sale. He put the letter inside the case for security and cheapness as he said. The result was that the case lay at the Custom House, and lay long and long nobody knowing what it was. About a year after when all further waiting was out of the question, the case was opened, and out came the said letter, and declared for itself that it had been put there in its master's wisdom, to be safe and save postage. When these little books come, I am thinking of distributing them among our Bible Association subscribers, as I think this will fully meet the donors' wishes, for our subscribers are of all denominations, and those who thus subscribe, from the interest they taken the object will be the most likely persons to read and to profit by this little kindly present.))

Towards the close of your letter of the 12th of May your write as follows: "You will be glad to know that we are in treaty with the gentleman about accepting an agency for us in the West Indies." I am glad indeed that you have resolved on an act which indicates so much attention to this quarter of the world, and I am sure your agent's visit in your name will be very acceptable to many who feel a great interest in your cause in these Islands, and who are persuaded that your work cannot be effectively attended to but by a person whose exclusive business it is. I shall be glad to know as early as you can inform me who this gentleman is and when he is likely to set out, as well as to know the route he takes. My advice would be that he go direct in the first place to Demerara, visiting also Essequibo and Berbice. Your work there to do it properly will require from three to six months. From thence I think he should visit Cayenne and Surinam, returning to Demerara. From these continental colonies he should next go to Barbados, as there is a regular conveyance by Government vessels between Demerara and Barbados twice every month. After finishing your work in the last mentioned place, he should go on and on as follows:― Tobago, Trinidad, Grenada, St. Vincent's, St. Lucy, Martinique, Dominica, Guadaloupe, Antigua, Montserrat, Nevis, St. Kitts, Statia, Saba, St. Barts, St. Martin's, Anguilla, Tortola, St. Thomas, St. John's, Santa Cruz, Crab Island, and Porto Rico. If you intend to make two divisions of the West Indies, and two agencies, then your Windward agent should return from Porto Rico (by way of the capital) to St. Thomas, and from that proceed to Barbados, and thence to Demerara; and being there commence his carrer (?) anew. But should you wish to have only one agent for these colonies then your agent now referred to should after returning from Porto Rico to St. Thomas, proceed from that to Hayti, and thence to Jamaica. In my last letter you will see that I have touched on the subject of my own agency, and requested to know from the committee what is their wish concerning this field and myself; and in my private letter to you of 24 of April I have more fully unfolded my views and my wishes on the whole matter. I shall therefore continue my operations here as already traced to you in outline until I see the result of your deliberations, ever praying that the Lord our God may direct you to what is best for you to do for the glory of his kingdom in this quarter.

Our prospects here in this town and parish, I am happy to say, are encouraging. The Rector is our friend, and that is a great point. But, our various operations here when brought to a close, or in other words, when fairly set in train, will be duly related to you in another letter.

Before I conclude, I wish to say a few words about a subject touched upon, and rather closely perhaps, in an early part of this letter; I mean this proposal made to you folks on that side, to try your strength with us people here, in order to see who and which can do good fastest; and also and mainly, that by this emulation and stimulus, both of us may do more good than we might do without such a contest, and thereby aced and on the kingdom of God. I say, I am afraid I may have touched upon it too closely, and that you will think me extravagant. But nobody should bear little out of the way ideas better than yourselves, for you are the most extravagant people in the world. For instance, a handful of you there, some 30 years ago, with not a good handful of money among you all, met, talked and planned and arranged, and do what? why supply the Scriptures in all languages, to all the world! Now was there ever a more out of the way idea than this, feasibility considered. Neither are you yet cured of your folly, for although you have made a trial now for 30 years and one, and have now been able to give directly and indirectly and altogether some 14 millions, you still talk of your idea as much as ever, and more, of supplying with the Scriptures the whole one thousand millions of our species! Now I do not think that my idea on the whole is more extravagant than this; and to tell you the truth, I think we Negroes would catch you and probably pass you before you attained to one fiftieth of your object, or before you publish altogether 20 millions of copies of the Holy Scriptures. But, to be guarded, what I would say about the whole proposal, is this: think upon the subject for a couple of months, or double that time, and suspend its publication in the Monthly Extracts till I write you again respecting it, and bid you start. In the meantime, I shall be getting more and more knowledge of our capabilities here, and of our wishes to enter upon this trial and course. Could you and we both run well in this race, great and good would indeed be the result. Please advise Mr. Stowell of this project, and ask him what he thinks about it.

            Believe me, Affectionately Yours,

                                                James Thomson.

I give you here an appendix to this letter, something that will probably interest you, on its own account, and on account of the quarter from which it comes. It is a Planter's hymn for the First of August of 1834. It was written by an Overseer in this parish:

1. God of our Fathers! Freedom's God!                    

Thou break'st the captive's chains!                             

Body and soul thou dost unload:                              

Oh: had I seraph's strains                                           

2. To sing the glorious beam which suns                   

Bright from thy holy place                                         

Enlightening Afric's dusky sons                                

To run thy freedom's race                                          

3. O hallowed day! They whom the road                  

Hath chastened and long and sore                             

Shall know our God is freedom's God                      

They shall be slaves no more!                                    

4. Blest God! Who in the rulers' hearts                      

Hath worked to do thy will;                                      

Forbid the people, on their parts                                

Be slaves to Satan still.                                              

5. No! Thou shalt breathe upon their souls

And they shall learn from thee

That they alone by law controls

Are really Truly free.

6. Then shouts to him to freedom's God

Oh could the world all join:

Then Angels from their blest abode

Might blend their song with mine.

7. And the wide spreading the universe

One hallelujah cry

The end of man's first direst curse

Abhorred slavery.

8. Our bonds would then be bonds of love

Our minds with grace endowed

Our mingled song with saints above

Our God is freedom's God.

Rev A Brandram No. 43

Montego Bay, 29th August 1835

My Dear Friend,

The purport and object of this letter is, to tell you of our Bible Society operations in this town of Montego Bay, and in the Parish of which it forms a part, namely, St. James's. I am happy to say in the outset, that the Great Cause you advocate and labour in, has had a very favourable reception here; and though I would not like to speak evil of any part of our island, yet I think it is consistent with truth, and should be so recorded, that Montego Bay and St. James's have come forward in the Bible Society cause a more full, open and decided manner that it has as yet been the case, all things considered, in any other part of Jamaica. This is a true statement, but I have something more in my eye than simply telling the truth. I wish to stir up other places among us to go and do likewise, and hence I would state and hold out our case here as a good example for imitation all around us.

For some time after I reached this town, nothing open nor public was done. This is a matter of course in every new place. One must go about recruiting before a regiment can be presented for a review day. In my visits and canvassing I was received in a very friendly way, and the reception given to your cause which formed the burden of my communications, was more encouraging than I could well have anticipated. The Rector of the Parish the Rev. John McIntyre, whom I had before met with in another part of the island, gave me his ready assistance, a circumstance which has of course not a little contributed to the good success we have had. I feel grateful to Mr. McIntyre for this seasonable and effective aid: and I trust he will find by results produced by the Bible Society that he has been directly labouring to promote the objects of his ministry in thus stepping forward to establish and to encourage an institution whose single object is, the circulation of that volume, which I may say is more honoured, by Public Reading, in the Church of England, by any other church in England or out of it. I do hope the time is coming, (and you are hastening it,) when the Holy Scriptures will be more read than they now are in all the Assemblies for Public Worship: and I hope too that they will by and by be more read in all private assemblies, or friendly parties; and also by all and every individual. I am more and more convinced every day, that the high way to the cure of all our evils in church and state and in all things, is the closer and more frequent reading and study of the Book of the Lord. Well did the Jews exclaim on one occasion, after hearing our Lord instruct, "Never man spake like this man." So may we exclaim after hearing the Scriptures read, "What Book or Sermon can instruct like this?" Sermons let us have, but by all means, let us hear the voice of the Lord our God himself, and at some length too, whensoever we meet together in his name. This is not sectarian I hope, a subject respecting which we Bible Society people declare ourselves to be clear catholic and innocent. But I long to see the Two Prophets ascend up to heaven, in obedience to the voice now sounding aloud, "Come up hither."

On the 29th ultimo a private meeting was held consisting of some friends of the Bible cause who had been invited, and other friends whom they brought with them. Our intention was as on several former occasions to form our Bible Society in this private unsounding way. During our conversation however upon the subject, it turned out that the greater part of those present were in favour of holding a public meeting, and of giving in this manner form and installation to our Society. This was altogether unexpected on my part, and in fact contrary to my plans. It however proved to be better arrangement than mine, giving greater satisfaction generally, and procuring a broader foundation for our Society to rest on, in public patronage and contributions. A day was accordingly appointed for a Public Meeting, and five individuals of those present were named for drawing up Resolutions in reference to this object in order to their being presented to the contemplated meeting for consideration.

On Monday the 3rd of August our Public Meeting was held, in the most public place we could find, namely, in the Court House. The Rector presided on the occasion, as he had also done in the private meeting before noticed. Our Chief Magistrate was present, and took the lead in our speaking arrangements, recommending the formation of the Society. Others followed him more or less on the same topic, and much Christian feeling and interest was manifested on the occasion, and so as to leave all present, I believe, deeply impressed by hallowedness of the Bible which had brought us together, and with the peace and harmony which it produces. Our meeting consisted of all parties, in all their distinctions, and perhaps only a Bible Society purpose could have brought together the various persons who met on that occasion. All the Ministers of the Gospel within the Parish were there, except one, who was then in a distant part of the island. Our denominations were Five; and each of course bore his little banner firmly in his left hand, whilst all with their right and their main hand united to hold up and display the Glorious Standard of the Bible and the Cross. I trust that this congregating of the various bodies on this occasion, and on the others for which they will be congregated in the future on Bible Society business, will greatly tend to their all seeing more fully eye to eye, and in their consolidation of the great object of preaching the Gospel to all the island as effectively as possible, and in gathering in many souls unto eternal life.

We had at our meeting a feature which has not hitherto been seen in such gatherings in this place, namely, the presence of Ladies, and Ladies of all kinds. This struck the attention and gave general satisfaction, whilst not a few absent Ladies afterwards regretted that they did not know that it was understood that they might be present. This is no inconsiderable step in our objects, as Ladies elsewhere have taken a lively interest in the Bible Society cause, and so we hope they will also do in Montego Bay, and over the Parish of St. James's. Our congregation, if I may so speak, consisted chiefly of the Black and Coloured portions of our inhabitants, and nothing could be more gratifying than this circumstance, as to our objects. Nearly the entire population of our island, as you must be aware, consists of these, and if we are to do Bible good to our population generally it can only be done effectually by interesting these in the good intended for them. Again, if Jamaica is to do extensive good, as I trust it will, towards circulating the Bible over the world, it can only be by the excited interest and the mites of the great many. You know I have a scheme on hand upon this latter topic, which I wish to ensnare you for your good and for the good of the world: but of this afterwards.

Another feature of our Public Meeting was the presence of some Jews, and whom we understood to have been gratified by what they saw and heard. It is pleasing to see any class of our fellow creatures, more or less within reach of the word of God, but how can one not feel more strongly than common, at seeing an interest felt in the circulation of the Sacred Volumes, by individuals of that nation to whose especial care and keeping, the first and largest portion of it was entrusted, and the whole of which was written by Jewish pens. Israel must return unto God. The time draws near, and the word of Revelation will no doubt be the means by which the Spirit of the Lord will work in bringing them again into the Church of the Living God, the Lord Jesus Christ.

On the 19th instant we held our first Committee Meeting which was well attended, and we're all is conducted in a spirit of unity and good understanding. The subscriptions that had been collected during the fortnight which elapsed from the public meeting until the meeting of the Committee agreeably surprised us. It amounted to nearly £80 sterling, and what not less surprised us was that by far the greater part of it had been collected by one single member of our Committee, a medical gentleman who has taken much interest in our cause, and whose name deserves to be recorded in your Reports sent forth to all the world. Dr. Patrick Spence is the very active member of our Committee now referred to. His example in this will show what others may do by active exertions, and we trust he will not be without imitators. He has also shown other attentions to your Agent, because of his connexion with your great work, for which I feel greatly obliged to him.

It is now my duty to record the services rendered us by Mr. Holmes the Editor and Proprietor of the Cornwall Chronicle published in this place. This gentleman has not only inserted notices of all our meetings and operations, but has also put into his paper several articles of a general nature on Bible Societies will, the insertion of which has done us much good by informing the Public respecting our objects. Several hundred copies of some of these articles where afterwards thrown off by him at a very moderate sum and much under the market price. He has also printed for us several thousand cards for our Bible Associations on the same reduced terms. Lastly he has inserted all our advertisements free of charge, and in other ways this gentleman has more favoured us than anyone in the same line in the island; not to say that we have had some disfavours from a gentleman or two of the press that we could have as well done without. The Jamaica Standard, another paper printed in this town, has also considerably favoured us, by inserting all our advertisements gratis, and by publishing articles on Bible Society objects. I send you copies of each of these journals, by which you will see with your own eyes what good they have done us. We should now, encouraged by these favours, look for more help than we have hitherto met with among the journalists of Jamaica.

In taking a review of all that has occurred in this quarter of our island in a public and in a private way since I have come here, we have much reason to be pleased with the friendly feelings manifested towards your cause and towards your Agent personally on your account. I trust a good beginning has been made, but lest it should come to an ending, we, must keep throwing fuel to the fire, now I think fairly kindled. So the people here say themselves, and this is the best authority. But so too it is with all people everywhere, and every flame needs to be fanned. If I continue in this island, I shall endeavour to keep up and extend what has been begun; and should I remove, or be removed, you must still remember the adding of the fuel and the fanning. You know I have some hopes of making, or rather seeing made, a great flame in our island, and so as to add fuel to your Bible Society fire in England, and that thus by our united light we may rapidly enlighten the whole world with the word of God.

I have written you, as you will recollect, once and again about cards for our Bible associations. The want of these has given us much perplexity and distress as they are so much needed, and so much desired. I gave you in my last an extract of a letter received from a gentleman in St. Elizabeth Parish upon this subject, and I now give you an extract from a note lately received from Hanover parish, from the Rev. Mr. Betts formerly noticed to you. He says, – "I am a good deal disappointed in not receiving the subscription cards you promised the people of this neighbourhood when you were here, it having been mentioned them that they were to have such, and one being actually left with one individual, they look for them, and I do not think I can go on successfully without them. Be pleased there for to let me have some by the Bearer if possible. I think I could make good use of 100." – I have now happily got out of all my difficulties on this score, partly by the aid of Mr. Holmes as before noticed, and partly through an unwitting help afforded by our Ladies here. You know the Ladies must have bonnets, as we must have hats, and perhaps you know that one of the ingredients that go into the construction of a bonnet, or of some bonnets, is pasteboard. Well, what would you think, in rummaging about for cards, I had the good fortune to light on a lot of broad sheets of this article. On this I pounced most gladly, and carried it off without delay. Then with the help of compass and rule, and a shoemaker's hand and knife, I got these sheets cut up into cards, and forth with printed. The whole amount of the cards so obtained is about 8,000, which with those printed elsewhere and before for the object amount to about 10,000. My only regret, amidst this joy, is, the loss the Ladies will be at for want of bonnets at least of this kind, for I have not left them a single good sheet to make a single bonnet with in all this place as far as I can learn. But that is their concern, not ours. We have got our cards, Mr. Betts has got his 100,  Mr. Marcy his 500, and thus are we marching onwards, and shall march, until our 10,000 are all gone. But before that time we expect to receive a rich supply from Earl Street; and should we not, we must again have recourse to the Ladies' Bounty, and make our next depredations in Kingston.

But I have not yet done with Mr. Betts' letter. He writes further in these words: – "I had almost forgotten to mention one chief thing: some of the people have paid up much more than what they put their names down to pay monthly for the Bibles, so that some of them are desirous of having them at once. Others wish to see the sizes in order to judge what size to choose. Be pleased therefore if practicable to send one of each sized Bible by way of specimen, and the prices; and a further supply as soon as convenient. If you send me the specimens, I will get the people to fix on the size of book they wish to have, and then I shall inform you what we shall be likely to want, if you inform me where to apply for them."

Is not this another fine proof of Ethiopia stretching forth her hands to God? Thus you see the people are exceeding our expectations, in contributing for Bibles, and in their desire to obtain this Sacred Book. I do hope, as I said in a former letter, that the demands upon you for Bibles during the twelve months ensuing will be great. May God grant this for his glory, and for the good of this people now brought in one sense at least, out of darkness into light.

What shall I add to this in the way of requesting more cases than those already mentioned? We may need more and many more, but, as formerly stated, I am afraid to overshoot the mark. Do then, as before said, as your discretion shall direct, only send cases and sorts as already pointed out. One order however I must specifically give: it is for some of your inferior quality Bibles. I have a memorandum of a couple of years standing to request you to get some in this way, but I was afraid to mention the subject, as I had formerly noticed it from Mexico about Spanish Bibles but without effect. It was only the other day I observed that you have now got these as noted in your Thirtieth Report. Please then to send us Four cases of them to make a trial with, one to Montego Bay to John Roby Esq., one to Black River to Mr. George Daly, and two to our depository in Kingston, directed to Messrs. Jordan and Osborn there. Let each case be of the size before mentioned, and containing equal quantities of each of your eleven kinds as printed at the top of page xiv of your Report for 1834. – I may here mention that it will be necessary for us to have minor depots of our books in this place, and in Black River, and from these depots the various parts of this end of the island can easily be supplied. More minor depots in other parts of the island it will be necessary to form should we get on successfully, and of this you will be apprised in due time. You will of course always send invoices with the books forwarded to these places, but at the same time it would be well to send a duplicate of each to the secretaries of the Jamaica (or General) Bible Society at Kingston.

We have procured a sale place for our books here, and I have ordered a supply from Kingston to meet our immediate demands. The store where our books will be sold is the same place where the Christian Knowledge Society books have been sold, and Mr. McIntyre who is the organ of that Society here, having fully joined in our Bible Society, as you will see, states that henceforth he will procure no more Bibles from the Christian Knowledge Society, but leave our Society to meet all demands for the Sacred Volume. This is precisely the course I have recommended on various occasions to our friends of that institution. Join our Bible Society, I have said, heart and hand, and let us unite our forces in this object in which we are both agreed, leaving it with all who please to cooperate with you in the other parts of your work, and for which you will have more disposable funds. Thus I argued with the Bishop of Barbados, but did not succeed. When our Jamaica Bishop returns I intend to apply to him in this view of the subject, and hope I may be successful. I trust you have seen him and have duly attended to the hints I formerly threw out. I shall be delighted to see his name among the Vice-Presidents in your now expected report. Mr. McIntyre is one of the four commissioners who act for the Bishop in his absence, each one having a certain number of parishes under his charge. His cooperation in our Bible Society is more valuable on this account, as it is both directly and indirectly advantageous to our cause. The transition to or step from him to the Bishop is not so very great; and thus in fact we consider ourselves as having partly obtained our object. Besides, as I said to you before old things are passing away among us, and all things are becoming new.

Having learned that there was a good deal of intercourse between this port and some ports of the coast of Cuba, I ordered a case of Spanish Scriptures to be sent round from Kingston. It has arrived and I have placed the books at our sale shop and duly advertised them in their own tongue as you will see in the newspapers sent you.

You will also see another of my advertisements in these papers. It is on the subject of the Gift Book. You will see that I have mentioned that I have expressed to you a wish something like it, that the period for giving these books might be extended and if it meet with the approbation of the Committee to extend it to the 1st August 1836, I should be glad to know it as early as convenient, that I might give notice accordingly. You have books here on hand, and as many wish to try for the prize who hitherto have not had means and opportunity, I should think it would be well so to extend.

I enclose you a copy of "Bible Association Address" as printed here with enmendations, and a copy of the "Appeal" also brought up to the present time, with a correction and an improvement I think at the place marked on the margin. Should you not have printed these as yet, be so good as let us have an exact reprint of those enclosed. Of the former, I have got 500 printed here, and of the latter 1000. You will also see in the newspaper sent, and address of mine on our Bible Associations, continuing through three numbers or parts. I thought it necessary to give all the information I could upon these matters. I may perhaps trouble you to reprint this for me with a little addition, but not at present. Please however to keep the papers carefully.

Being now on the subject of printed communications for this Public upon our Bible Society concerns, I may notice what has been long on my mind. I think it would be very useful to have a Brief History of the Society extending from 5 to 10 sheets. It would be very convenient to have such a small volume to put into the hands of persons desirous of knowing more about the Society than can be seen in the small papers at present at our command. Another little volume also we stand much in need of, for the use, not of strangers to the Society, but for its friends. I mean a work on the plan of Mr. Dudley's Analysis, but comprised in 100 or 150 pages. These two publications would I conceive greatly forward your cause and at present they are desiderata.

And now to conclude with the notice of one subject more. It is the subject of your Agencies. I have touched upon this in a former letter. But feel a desire to return to it, and to draw your attention to it, and at greater length, for I consider it of great consequence in regard to the extension of your operations, and let me say, to the completion of your grand design and grand it is indeed. The world is your field. It is not utopian to attempt its conquest, or in other words, to overrun it – with the word of God. Though I said something in this way in my last, you would see that was only rallying to defend myself. But if you are in good earnest in your scheme, you must gird and arm yourselves to it better than you have yet done. The wise man says (Eccl. 10:10) "If the iron is blunt, and he do not whet the edge, then must he put to more strength: but wisdom is profitable to direct". You have a noble iron in your hand, but it would cut better if whetted, and if you not only whet your instrument, but also put more strength, then will more exertion be done; and yet still more, if wisdom direct. I beg your pardon for thus speaking to men much wiser than myself, and who feel so much more for the prosperity of the kingdom of God. But on the other hand, just because you are so, do I venture thus to write, being assured that your wisdom and your zeal will gladly listen to every suggestion, including to advance your great objects, however humble and inferior may be the quarter from which it comes. Now what I began with, and now continue, is the increase of your agencies. Your missionaries, (for what else are your agents?) ought to fill to a certain extent all nations. You have found the necessity of increasing your agencies in England. Just these same reasons will lead you to what I am now recommending, and as I conceive with double force. Should you, by multiplying your agents in the world and over it, increase the desire for the word of God and hence extend its circulation, as would undoubtedly be the case, then would the Public in England meet your utmost wishes in the shape of supplies. Would they allow your work to lag and flag for want of means? – Never. Force then, I would say, your circulation of the Scriptures by sending your messengers to the four winds of heaven, and into all countries. Call upon the nations formally all over the world, and arouse them to receive the light of heaven. But such are the present times that the nations are waiting for you, and one might almost say, they are more alive to receiving the word of God, than we are to give it. See the advantage of your Agents in Germany, in France and at Smyrna. Thus then plant them over the world.

In acting upon this plan, I would in the first place strongly recommend the sending an Agent to British India, where undoubtedly there is ample work for one; and where soon after there would be sufficient work for three, one in each of the Presidencies. I am confident that great good would flow from this arrangement, and that all your constituents, as well as British India itself, would have great reason to be satisfied with the results. Send another, I would say, as before said, to China, and let him look into Japan, the most interesting country in the world to the Bible Society, and to all who look for the kingdom of God. That is literally the extremity of the Earth, and Satan's last stronghold. But if some should think me fanciful in this, the millions on millions in China form a most ample field in that quarter, and I cannot think the Bible Society justified in neglecting it much longer in the immediate way I am now speaking of. May the Lord teach you what is his holy will herein; and if you think of sending, may he direct you whom to send. – Again, Europe, I think, demands more of your direct help than it has yet got from you. Your two Agencies in it fully justify themselves. Others probably would also do the same. Now, turn to British North America. There, there is most abundant employment for an Agent, and there would soon be enough for two; and well, I am sure, the fruits would repay all the labour that might be expended on it. The West Indies I have at large spoken about elsewhere. Lastly Mexico with Guatemala and the great continent of South America, should have two or at least one Agent devoted to that interest permanently, in order that they might seek out, and if I may say so, make openings for the Scriptures, and then supply them. Some of these Agencies would more than pay themselves, and very soon I think this would be the case in all the British colonies, in the East, the North, and the West. But in the other places they would in one sense be a burden. But what Missionary Society looks for anything else in general? The preaching of the Gospel and the evangelization of the world is the remuneration they seek and get in return for the burden of their Missionaries. Now in the same way, the great remuneration you should look for on account of your Agents, is the circulation of the Scriptures, and advance of the kingdom of God. You are a Missionary Society like the rest, though of a peculiar kind. Though the whole world is your field, you are after all in practice rather a home Missionary Society than a foreign one. Compare the circulation of the Scriptures effected by you in England with what has been done abroad in all nations, particularly beyond Europe, and you will see the truth of what I say. I see notwithstanding your mighty foreign efforts in the way of translations.

Look at the list of your agents, the immediate subject in hand, and where they are distributed. Four in England alone, and Five in all the rest of the world! Other Missionary Societies send the most of their men abroad, and when the destitute among the nations cry to the missionaries for help and more help, and the missionaries through their pens resound the cry at home, funds start up and more missionaries like magic, so that we can scarce tell where all has come from, so unexpectedly. I would have your adopt something more than you have done of this general plan, and particularly in the present day, when the world, I may say, has got itself ready for you. – I have thus dwelt at some length upon this subject: first, because of the great importance of your work, and the desirableness of turning every means to the best account in these deeply interesting times, and that your work may increase in the most rapidly, and acquired a greater and a much greater momentum; and in the second place, I have said thus much about agents, because I think that is some kind of understanding with you, that such are rather a burden than anything else, or that the fewer you can employ the better, or that you should never employ one till the force of some particular circumstances command you. I do not know whether this feeling is to be found among yourselves only in Earl Street, or whether it is to be found among your constituents also. Now if this is the case either with yourselves or your constituents, it must I think arise from some misconception of the nature of your Society, its field of operations, and the means to be employed. In what I have said, I have endeavoured to place things, as I conceive, on the proper footing. If I am wrong, forgive my intrusion; if I am right, or if you think of there is some truth in my view of the matter, then take the subject into formal considerations and by prayer and full consultation, labour to ascertain what is the will of God in the matter laid before you, and how you may acquit yourselves best in the great work which our blessed Saviour has committed to your trust in his Kingdom. It is required of stewards that they may be both wise and faithful. I am sure you all daily pray that you may be so: and perhaps, the Lord is now answering your prayers in the suggestions thus laid before you, by your poor unworthy fellow labourer, –

                                                                                                                    James Thomson.

Rev A Brandram No. 44

Lucea, 28th September 1835

My Dear Friend,

I told you if I recollect right, in one of my late letters, that from Montego Bay I intended to fall back upon the parish of Hanover, and on finishing my business there, to return again to Montego Bay, and from thence move onwards, and if I may so speak, homewards, through the parishes of Trelawney and St. Ann's, to Kingston. The first part of this movement is taken, namely, my visit to Hanover, and the second I intend, if the Lord will, to undertake tomorrow. In the meantime allow me to lay before you the state of your concerns in this parish of Hanover of which Lucea, the spot where I now am, is the capital or parish town.

We have in the Rector of this parish, the Rev. Mr. Stainsby, an old and good friend. On my arrival here, I delivered to this gentleman, a letter of introduction which I received for him from the Secretary of the Church Missionary Society in October 1831, nearly as you perceive four years ago. Little did you or I think, at the dating of this letter, that this mission would last so long, and little did we think of the gracious openings that would be met with in my tour throughout these colonies, for the circulation of the Holy Scriptures. Let us rejoice in what God has wrought, let us give glory only and solely to his own Blessed Name, and let us exert ourselves to turn these openings to the greatest advantage in promoting the kingdom of heaven.

Well, my letter of introduction as I said, as old as it was, was at length duly delivered. You would not expect me to say after all this, that my introductory note, from this very respectable quarter and to this worthy gentleman was of no use, but such was the fact. The truth is, the Bible, and the Bible Society object which form the burden of my poor labours was introduction and recommendation to our good friend above all others, and thus superseded and rendered without effect any notes from any quarter. The Curate of the Parish, Mr. Stone, I found equally interested in the Great Bible Cause, and so were in like manner the Baptist missionaries, Mr. Abbott and Mr. Ward, and also Mr. Bleby of the Wesleyan Mission. Several persons in this town and neighbourhood we also found friendly to our objects and ready to promote them. Having these materials for a Society, and the public feeling generally in our favour, we made arrangements for holding a public meeting in the Court House, for explaining to all who might come the Bible Society plans and operations, and for giving a general invitation to all to join us in this holy object of making God's will to be known upon and all over the earth, for the purpose of its being also done, and God hereby glorified, and the world blessed.

On the 11th instant our meeting was held after being duly advertised. We chose the evening as the best time for expecting a large assemblage, and our expectations were not disappointed, for the meeting was numerously attended. We had on this occasion, as well as Montego Bay as formerly noticed, the pleasure of seeing the Ladies present themselves in order to hear, feel, and be interested in this work of circulating a book which has done so much for them in particular, besides what it has done for all. The number present at our Lucea a meeting was greater than it was in Montego Bay, for there it was new and our number was small, because one and another was hindered from attending feeling that it would be an impropriety, and that none else would be there, and so forth. Here we had the advantage of their precurring example, and besides we took means more than we had there done, to induce them to attend.

Altogether the meeting was very respectable and encouraging. I need not tell you what this one said and put that one brought forward, as I send you a newspaper which will in some measure place these things before you. One thing however I may say as the substance of what was spoken, namely, the advocacy of the circulation of the Scriptures in this parish, in this island, and over the world. We all say no doubt better than we do; and there are many who speak about circulating the Scriptures, and sincerely approve of reading them, whilst the readers and the studiers and obeyers of the sacred volume are not over numerous. Nevertheless it is pleasing to see such numbers cordially acquiesce in and recommend the general distribution and use of the word of life. Readers without doubt will increase as the Bible is numerically multiplied, and in not a few cases herein perhaps will it prove the first shall be last, and the last first; or in other words those who sent forth the Scriptures and recommended the reading of them will be the last, whilst those to whom they sent and gave them will be the first. This is an encouragement to us to labour, and an admonition to us to watch and to pray.

On the 14th we held the first meeting of our Committee which was well attended. We framed on this occasion the necessary By laws for the regulation of the Committee in conducting the affairs of the Society. We also took a glance at the whole extent of our parish and fixed upon certain spots on which Bible Associations might be formed; and in order to carry these better into effect, we pitched upon some two, three or more individuals near these spots respectively, and friendly to our purposes, and agreed to invite them to lend us their aid in commencing and in carrying on these same associations.

On Sunday the 20th I went to Green Island, a place quite at the West End of our Jamaica. Here I preached in the Baptist Chapel in the forenoon, and at the same treated of our Bible Society operations and purposes, recommending to all who felt well disposed to these objects that they should go to the church close by in the afternoon, when we would all meet on the grand, broad foundation, not of sectarianism, but of Bible Unity. About half an hour after the service closed I went up to the church which stands on the adjoining mount, and was followed by a long train. When we got up we found Mr. Stone, the curate formerly mentioned, and his congregation getting ready for us. As soon as all had got in and were settled down I addressed them immediately on the object of our meeting, and encouraged all present to enter into a Bible Association for their own good as I pointed out to them it would be, and for the good of the world which they might benefit by their united help, more or less now and amply after they should have procured the Scriptures for themselves. On concluding these explanations and recommendations, numbers came forward, and about 100 put down their names as subscribers. We could have got many more, but we were obliged to stop with our lists as the time for the afternoon service came on. Arrangements however were made for taking the names of all well disposed to this object in this district which is pretty populous, and I should think there will be 500 contributions and upwards before long to the Green Island Bible Association commenced as above stated.

On the 21st we held a second meeting of our Committee in Lucea, at which appeared the same cordiality and interest in the object engaged in as were manifested previously, and when the same operations were further attended to which had been commenced at the first meeting.

On the following day we had a meeting of a different kind, or rather, composed of different individuals. It was a meeting of Ladies, and was held at the Rector's house, where we counted 22 present of various ranks and colours, for there is no respect of persons with God and with the Bible, and there should be none in a Bible Society. The Ladies who assembled on this occasion have been visited at their own houses by Mr. Stainsby and myself on the preceding week, when we explained to them our object, and the part we wished them to taken it after the example of our English Ladies, the first and best Ladies in the world herein, and probably also in all things else.

At a meeting of the sub-Committee of our Parish Bible Society held some days previous to this Ladies meeting, we had arranged for forming a Lucea Bible Association, and had divided the town into four districts, three of which were placed respectively under the care of the three ministers at present settled in Lucea, and the fourth fell into the hands of our Treasurer. After explaining to the Ladies this division of the town into parts and for what purposes, and telling them that the gentleman who had taken immediate charge of these would visit that districts from house to house and would afterwards beg to employ them to assist in collecting from month to month the sums put down by the various subscribers, they cordially agreed to these arrangements, and promised their willing help as far as their abilities and opportunities would permit. This being agreed to, the 22 ladies present were divided and distributed among the four gentleman and their four districts, which concluded the business of our meeting. We were helped on this occasion by the Barbados Ladies, inasmuch as we had our Barbados newspaper before us giving an account of their good working in that island, and which paper I suppose you have seen, bearing the date of 8th August last. I read this account to our little assembly and commented on it, in which I was assisted by one of those same Barbados Bible Society Ladies who has lately come from that to this island, and who formed one of our 22. Mrs. Padmore, the lady in question, from her well known, steady religious and active character, we expect to be of great service in our Bible Society concerns in this place.

Yesterday I preached at the Presbyterian Church in this town, and made a collection for our Bible Society agreeable to an arrangement that had been entered into at one of the meetings of our general Committee, namely, that a sermon should be preached at all the places of worship in the parish, and collections made for the Society. The Presbyterian minister being absent from the island I took his place as above stated.

I cannot conclude my notices of the Hanover Bible Society, and Lucea without saying that we have in Mr. Costello an individual who bids fair to be a most industrious and intelligent Secretary, a circumstance of no mean consideration in the permanency and prosperity of any institution.

Tomorrow, as I said, I intend to return to Montego Bay, and after a few days stay there will proceed to Falmouth in the Parish of Trelawney where probably my next letter may be dated. In the meantime remember poor me in my wanderings, and in my poor soul which is poor enough, and in my little attempts to promote and extend the kingdom of God and of our Lord Jesus Christ, that kingdom which is being aggrandized rapidly and highly, and shall never fall. I forgot to say, though I do not forget the doing, that I pray for you daily and perhaps you will allow me to ask a return in kind. O may God Almighty shine on you evermore, and on yo­urs, and on you all through Jesus Christ our Lord and Saviour: to him be glory forever and forever.

            Truly and Affectionately Yours

                                                James Thomson.

 

Postscript, Montego Bay, 29th September 1835

On coming here I have found in the Post office two letters fromHayti, one of them is dated 27th of May and enclosed the letter I here forward and which has been detained somewhere. The other is dated the 10th current, and is as follows: –"Mon tres estimable Ami: On vient de donner lecture d'une lettre que Monsieur Frith notre commun ami reçu de la Société de Londre pour l'impression de la Bible, par quelle il semble que cette respectable Société n'a pas .... [1]  ma lettre de remerciement ainse que l'imprimé y contenu annoncait l'usage que j'ai fait des exemplaires du Nouveau Testament par moi reçus de la susdite Société. El ce qu.. plus etonnant il semble qu'on ait ecrit á la susdite Société que je ... savais pas quel usage je devais faire des susdites exemplaires dans la lettre surmentionée on s'exprime ainsi, 'Nous som... bien etinnés d'apprendre que le Curé Jourdfain ne sacha quel .... faire des cent exemplaires de Nouveau Testament que nous avons ...voyé á Jacmel.' Il semblerait par lá, mon cher ami, que vous n'avez pas reçu ma lettre du 27 Mai année courante dans laque... etait incluse une autre pour les Membres du Comité de cette respetable Société. Ca doute m'afflige beaucoup y je vous prierais de méc... lá-dessus. J'ai l'honneur, mon tres estimable ami, de vous saluar affect..ment: J. Jourdain."

I shall write to our good friend and encourage him by post. Please let Mr Jackson also write him in French or Spanish, and explain and undo the unfavourable report you have received. He will be I trust a valuable auxiliary to us in Jacmel and Hayti.

[1] Certain parts of  the  postscript  are  hidden by binding tape and impossible to read and are indicated by '....'.

Rev A Brandram No. 45

Falmouth, 14th November 1835

My Dear Friend,

You see from the place whence I now write, that I am moving onward in my intended course of circulating this island. Before however I state to you what has occurred in your work in this town and parish, I shall beg leave to go back for a little to the parish last visited, namely, St. James's. On returning from Lucea to Montego Bay, I found it desirable to make some little stay in the latter place before proceeding further.

I have already mentioned to you the friendly aid we received in the formation in the St. James's Bible Society from the Rector of the parish. The curate the Rev. Mr. Smith, who is one of our secretaries has also cordially united with us. On my mentioning to whom that I should be glad to go out to his quarter of the parish to see if a Bible Association could be formed there having for its centre his chapel and congregation, he very readily consented. The day fixed on as the most suitable for seeing and addressing his people was the Sunday as they would be gathered together for the worship of God. When I went I found a good congregation, chiefly of course consisting of  Blacks, but where also I found him more than common number of Whites, a class of people not very much addicted in this island to church going, at least in times past, but these times are going by, and may they soon be gone altogether. After morning, alias forenoon service, I addressed the congregation from the altar on the great subject of the Bible, and the light and salvation which it holds forth. I urged upon all, as I generally do upon such occasions, to make this blessed book the great object of their study and attention; saying to those who already possessed it, that they ought to give more heed to this volume than they had yet done, and saying to those who had it not, that they ought to procure it without delay, from a consideration of the advantages which might be derived from possessing and using this guide to our welfare on earth, and guide to everlasting happiness. The subject was listened to with every attention, and at the close of the address we took down a considerable number of names, both of apprentices and free persons.

You are aware, that in all our Bible Associations we endeavour to lead the people, in the first place, to subscribe for a Bible for themselves, if not already fully supplied; and at the same time we tell them, that after they have so supplied themselves, it is expected they will think upon and commiserate the many millions of our fellow creatures who are destitute of the Holy Scriptures, whose pitiable case through want of this book, we always set before them. In almost all the attempts that have been made to form these associations, we have been much encouraged by the considerable number of subscribers, often beyond our expectation, which we obtain; and I may add, that from the sympathies shown on various occasions at these meetings in regard to the multitudes still destitute of the Scriptures, we are led to hope and expect that no inconsiderable number of free contributors to your general object will be obtained, after each and all have procured Bibles for themselves. – Under the circumstances now described the Marley Bible Association, in the parish of St. James's, was formed; and we were additionally encouraged concerning the same some ten days after, by Mr. Smith's bringing in at our Committee meeting following, about ten pounds of our currency, as the first fruits and produce of this Association.

I should have mentioned in a former letter that I had an opportunity of addressing the Baptist, Wesleyan and Moravian congregations on this same subjects, and that it is expected the ministers of these congregations will each be able to procure a considerable number of subscribers for Bibles from among their people, and that the same subscribers will most likely contribute afterwards to the general object. The Baptist congregation in particular is very large, and we expect large results from it, in the consumption of Bibles in the first instance, and in the production of Bibles, if I may so speak, afterwards. All the missionaries, as might well be expected, are friendly to our Bible Society operations.

Soon after the formation of the Marley Bible Association above noticed, there was a meeting held of the various ministers of different denominations in this county of Cornwall, embracing five large parishes. The object of this meeting was to promote Christian union, cooperation, and harmony, among all in this quarter who are labouring to build up the kingdom of God. The invitation was general, and for the first meeting of this kind the attendance was good, whilst several who could not attend sent letters expressing a friendly disposition to the object. Less was effected both in quantity and quality than could have been wished for, nevertheless some good I trust will arise from this commencing meeting, and I sincerely hope there will be a continuance of efforts of this kind to make all the labourers in the Lord's vineyard to work to each other's hands, and to give help to each other mutually in the holy work in which they are engaged. This was hardly perhaps Bible Society work direct enough for your agent to engage in actively, and yet on the other hand it was; for our Bible being the Bible of all, and forming a rallying point to all, and thus creating and strengthening union and cooperation in every way, it was meet that I should be engaged in it. And further, in contributing to this, I have an opportunity of seeing and conversing with various ministers on our Bible concerns. Our Bible meetings and operations may indeed be said to have suggested, and directed to, this catholic meeting I am now speaking of; and from its effects no doubt our Bible cause will meet with additional encouragement.

On the 10th ultimo I arrived in this town, and began to make preparations for the formation of a Bible Society in this parish of Trelawney, by visiting various persons who might forward the object. I was soon however interrupted in this by having to return to Montego Bay to attend to a meeting of the Bible Society Committee there, it being the first held in regular course. – The Committee, I was glad to find, was well attended, and the same friendly cooperation with which we had on a former day commenced our work, was happily seen to prevail. Several measures were adopted for forwarding the general object, and it was pleasing to see on all hands an ample prospect of great demands for the Scriptures throughout the parish. A question occurred about the price you charge for your Bibles, and a desire seemed to be manifested to obtain these as cheap as possible. It seems you gave Mr. Burchell, some time ago, a case at subscribers prices, and this therefore was considered by the Committee as the price at which they might expect their books. They wish to keep clear accounts with you paying in the first place for the books they get, and then remitting you what free contributions they can, but directly under this name. I said you were disposed to deal with them on any terms I believe, so that the Scriptures were extensively and usefully put into circulation; whilst at the same time you would of course be glad to get as large returns as could be obtained, under whatever name, to enable you to send the Scriptures over the wide field of your labours. Perhaps then you will not object to debit the St. James's Bible Society books at the subscribers prices, and keep accounts with it accordingly. I shall notice at the close of this letter what additional books to send to Montego Bay, for the use of the Society, whose demands I think will be extensive. It just now occurs to me to say that it would be well to open a little separate account for each of the parish societies here, when books are sent to them direct, or monies received, as I suppose they will rather act separately, than in connection with Kingston.

A second and a third interruption to the getting forward of our Trelawney Bible Society took place, in my visiting the Rev. Mr. Waddell and the Rev. Mr. Blyth, for the purpose of forming Bible associations in their congregations. Both these gentlemen are connected with the Scottish Missionary Society, and are labouring effectively in the kingdom of God. In both these places associations were formed, but the success in the latter was by much the greater of the two. You will see a notice of Mr. Blyth's Association in the Falmouth paper I lately sent you. No less than 214 persons put down their names for Bibles on the day I was there, and that too in the interval between forenoon and afternoon services. A few days afterwards I received a note, stating that there were 100 more subscribers, and now the number has extended to about 400, and not a few of the subscribers have put down their names for a large family Bible, even your one guinea quarto.

You are I dare say pretty well aware that a good deal of time must be expended in a new place in endeavours to get up a new object, and this is our case in getting up a parish Bible Society. Some persons must be visited again and again, and through their means you get acquainted with others, and these others help you to more, and so on. The convenience too of persons engaged in business of various kinds, must of course be consulted, which circumstance, with others, hinders one from getting forward and through so rapidly as could be wished. It was not therefore till the 12th instant, that we could get all things ready for holding a public meeting. Our arrangements being made for that day, and notice was read of the same, on the Sunday preceding, in all the places of worship in Falmouth. This general inclination to give public notification of our Bible Society meeting by all the various ministers in the place, was a kind of intimation that we should have a general and a friendly meeting of all classes and denominations. On the given day, this hope was not disappointed, but was verified, and to the fullest extent. The Rector of the parish took the chair, and showed himself a true Bible man, disclaiming all sectarianism, and manifesting the greatest cordiality with his brother ministers of different denominations. This spirit manifested by the Rector was displayed in return by all the others towards him, and each to each other, making an impression unexpected and delightful to all present. I do not here specify all that took place on the day and occasion referred to, as I send you a newspaper in which you will find a pretty full statement of what occurred. I may say however in a few words that it was indeed a peaceful, joyful day; and it will I believe be long remembered as such, by the inhabitants of this place; and it will form, I doubt not, a starting and a rallying point for all and every good work in this spot. Such blessings new Bible Societies bring and leave.

I come now to treat of remissions of Bibles from London hence. We shall need I think large supplies for the Trelawney Bible Society. Our first item will perhaps surprise you: it is for 100 of your guinea quarto Bibles, and chiefly for Apprentices. This will probably not more than half serve us during the first few months after that arrival, as Mr. Knibb says he will require this number himself for his own congregation in less than a year. But I am afraid, as before, of overshooting the mark; but you may draw your bow as you like. In addition to these 100 quartos by themselves, send us ten cases, eight of them such as I before described, one containing the inferior quality Bibles, and another school Testaments. In regard to the osnaburg bindings, the bad effect formerly noticed may be avoided, by having the cloth coloured. Let these books be sent to Falmouth direct, addressed to A.F. Robinson Esq. who is one of the secretaries of the Trelawney Bible Society. As to the St. James's Bible Society, the same number of quarto will I believe be required for it, and to which add, one case of school Testaments, and let all these be directed to John Roby Esq. and sent direct to Montego Bay. – To the Rev. John Stainsby, direct to the port of Lucea, send six assorted cases, besides one of school Testaments, and one (same size) of quarto Bibles.

I believe from a notice specially given some time ago about the size of what I call a case, you fully understand me; but lest you should not I repeat that the size I referred to, is the size you used to send out to Mexico, weighing about 200 pounds. By the word assorted I mean assorted as described in my letter No. 41[1]: and as respects the inferior quality Bibles, you will see a notice of them in No. 43; and it is in respect to these, and to school Testaments that I have referred to osnaburg bindings, requesting that the natural colour of this material may be changed into some other, and for the reasons before assigned. One amendment I would make to my description of assorted cases, and that is, that you would put into them Pearl Bibles also in equal quantities, as these are not mentioned in my former description, but which I wish to be included in future unless otherwise stated. If possible send the Pearl Bibles like the London edition of 1824. – Please let all these books be sent off as early as possible, for they are immediately needed.

I had a letter lately from La Guayra (though the date is old) enclosing another from the Province of Truxillo in that quarter. The letter is from a gentleman I met with in Bogotá in 1825, who took much interest in the formation of our Bible Society there. His private letter is accompanied by an official one from the Agricultural Society of that place, which had taken under its care the circulation of some of the small books sent them when I was in St. Thomas's. Twenty dollars have been sent to the La Guayra for these, but which have not yet come to hand. The writer of the letter is a Mr. Mannhardt, the German, who has been many years in those quarters. I give you some extracts from his letter, which will throw some light on the state of things in that country, still in darkness through destitution of the word of God, and ignorance of its contents. The letter is in English. He says, – "A good chance threw us together in Bogotá in 1825; another, I trust, as done so in 1834. At my departure from Bogotá in the year alluded to, I left you still there pursuing your pious labours, which however I apprehend have been lost through the intervention of political events and revolutions. This is much to be regretted, inasmuch as the establishment of a Bible Society in the capital of New Grenada, could not, had it continue to exist, but introduce the most beneficial effects on the whole country, considering that it numbered among its members some of the most conspicuous characters both of church and state". – "Of your subsequent journeyings and labours in the cause of Christianity I had never any information until the Governor of this Province mentioned your name in a session of our Agricultural Society held some time ago in Truxillo, and then only I presumed it to be yourself from the benevolent offer you made to him respecting the little books in question". – "One of the members of our Agricultural Society, Dr. Ricardo Labastida, is now in Valencia, and would be very happy to have an opportunity of seeing you. He would be able to give you some explanatory details of the state of things in this province, political, moral, and ecclesiastical. An inquisitorial fanaticism which here and there raises its ghastly head, is highly unfavourable to the circulation of the revealed word of God, and consequently to the dissemination of the pure and regenerating doctrines of the Gospel; for instance, the Vicar of this district offered to buy the whole of the little books ordered by the Society to be distributed within the range of his vicarial authority, with a view of burning the whole; and according to his command the Curate of this village (Betijoque) publicly declared in his church, that those who possess these little books should burn them. From this you may judge of the difficulty of introducing the word of life as contained in holy writ, at least at this time; but yet I do not despair of its taking root eventually under the protection of the Government, and gradual abolition of ecclesiastical authority and intolerance, where they have hitherto operated in keeping captive the consciences of men by excluding the light of the everlasting gospel." – "With presentiment of this kind, – and may the grace of our Lord soon bring it into reality, – Dr. Labastida with myself have agreed to take a number of these little books on our own account in order to distribute them at the original price, and as opportunities may offer, with the object of spreading their sacred contents before the people that they may learn to know in whom to believe to be saved."

Your letters of the 10th and 14th September came into my hands three days ago, and will be duly noticed in my next.

In the meantime, I remain,

Very Sincerely Yours,

James Thomson.

P.S. – I have this day drawn a bill in favour of the Rev. William Knibb for £50, to be charged to my Travelling Account. Please notice this to Mr. Tarn.

Kingston 28th of November 1835

I have kept this letter open till I should reach this place. Today I arrived, and have found your letter of  the 13th October, and have just time to acknowledge the receipt of it by the packet which sails tomorrow morning. The Planet with Mr. Wheeler has not yet arrived.

1] Note inserted above 'should be 42'.

Rev A Brandram No. 45[1]

Spanish Town, 14th December 1835

My Dear Friend,

I begin this letter with the pleasing announcement to you of the safe arrival of Mr. Wheeler. The Planet cast anchor late on the 8th current, and on the following day our dear friend and fellow labourer set foot on this our Island of Jamaica. In a few hours after his landing I had the pleasure of saluting him, and of welcoming him as your messenger, to this field of evangelising operations: a blessed field it is, and I trust the Lord will bless him in the West Indies, and make him a great blessing to all its inhabitants. – I met with Mr. Wheeler, I may say, half accidentally, as I went from Spanish town to Kingston to attend only to the cases of books come by the Stately; but when I arrived there the first thing I learned was, that the Planet had come in, bringing Mr. Wheeler, and many other passengers. Not knowing where our dear friend might be, I went first to one house after him, but there I found nobody at home; I then went to another, which I found in the same circumstances: but on returning from these empty abodes, and passing the Church Missionary Rooms, I stepped in, if perchance he might be there, and there I found him. He has had a short and the pleasant passage in the company of many fellow voyagers where all were very cordial with each other. He is now, as you see, here, and entered on his labours; and I do earnestly pray for him in his great undertaking. I pray that he may be a good and faithful servant in the sight of Jesus Christ in the commission which he has received to serve among the troops of the Lord in this West India detachment of the Army of Christ, an army whose object is to overrun and to conquer the whole earth from the hands of Satan, and to bring back the King, the Lord of glory, to his house, and to put the uttermost parts of the earth into his possession, that our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ may reign over this world which he made by his power, and redeemed with his most precious blood. Blessed is He, let us all say, who cometh in the name of the Lord. Hosanna in the highest.

I now leave Mr. Wheeler for a little to rest himself after his voyage, and proceed to tell you of my own little movements since I last wrote to you. – My last letter was dated in Falmouth on the 14th of last month. That letter was accompanied by a newspaper containing a painting, if I may so speak, of our cordial, harmonious, gratifying public meeting in the Court House in Falmouth in the formation of a Bible Society for that place and parish. After this public meeting was over, my business in that quarter was nearly finished. What only remained was, to have the Committee brought together, and to get it initiated into business. You know I am your faithful registrar, and give you the bad weather as well as the good. This compels me to tell you that Satan came also among us at our Committee meeting in spite I suppose for his enchainment during our public meeting. In other words some little personal discord arose which hindered us for a little time, but which I saw, as I conceived, healed up and covered over with the veil of peace and friendship before I left. We must, my dear friend, in all our operations, strive directly and indirectly to destroy the works of the devil, for he is ever throwing stumbling blocks in our way. Here, it is mercy to give us no quarter.

Leaving Falmouth I proceeded to the parish of St. Ann's, the first part of which that I touched upon was a place called The Retreat. It is a beautiful spot, and one of its chief beauties is a school nicely conducted. The Honourable S.M.Barrett to whom this property belongs, and who supports this school entirely at his own expense, has long been friendly to the education and religious instruction of his people theoretically and practically. I examined the school, and was much pleased with the advances made by the children in the reading and understanding of the Scriptures. In the evening the school room was filled with adults, to whom I spoke of the glorious gospel of Christ, of the duties incumbent on them in the sphere in which Providence has placed them, and of their duty to learn to read that they might peruse God's holy word for themselves, which book I strongly recommended them now to get individually for themselves in the terms of my printed address which by this time I suppose you have read; and further, I stirred them up to come forward now or soon to help on the great cause of circulating the Scriptures over the whole world.

Leaving The Retreat I came, three miles further on, to the residence of the Rev. Mr. Rose, one of the Curates of St. Ann's Parish. I always make a point of calling officially on all the Ministers from place to place in my course as I move along. On reaching Brown's Town where Mr. Rose lives, I was about to call on him, but learned he was [away] from home. Five miles farther on my way, I came to the house of the Rev. Mr. Alloway one of the missionaries from the London Missionary Society. With him I stopped till next day, and of course found no difficulty in enlisting him on the Bible Society side and cause. From his residence I passed on to Dry Harbour, and on calling on a gentleman there to whom Mr. Alloway introduced me, I found him most ready to lend his aid to a St. Ann's Bible Society when it should be formed; and he further added, which pleased me much, that should no society be formed for that parish he wants to subscribe to some of the Bible Societies formed elsewhere in the island. From Dry Harbour I came next to St. Ann's Bay which may be called, such as it is, the metropolis of the parish. Here I called on the Rev. Mr. Johnson who is at present acting as Rector in the parish in the absence of the incumbent. Mr. Johnson I found friendly to our objects, and ready to give them his aid. The same was the case with the Rev. Mr. Williams the Wesleyan Minister resident there, and who has very recently arrived from England. Nine miles or ten from this, and right on towards the mountains, I came to the residence of the Rev. Mr. Coultart who is one of the Baptist Missionaries. Mr. Coultart is an old friend, for I found him in the island and became acquainted with him on my very first visit to Jamaica ten years ago on my way from Carthagena to England. He is very friendly to our objects, and will help them forward all he can. I addressed the people who assembled at his place on the Sunday I was there, and told them, among other things of their duty to get the word of God, and to learn to read it. The Rev. Mr. Clark, Mr. Coultart's colleague, lives also here, and was fully with us. Pursuing my course on still neither to the mountain ridge which divides the island, I came, after traveling seven miles, to the Rev. Mr. Whitehouse's. Here also I find myself quite at home, for Mr. Whitehouse till lately resided in Kingston where we often met on Bible Society business, and indeed almost all our Committee meetings were held in his house. To this I need not add, what you will easily suppose, that he was our friend and ready coadjutor to circulate the Scriptures.

Thus closed my visitations in St. Ann's, and though all were friendly whom I visited, nevertheless no Society was formed, and for three reasons. The first, because I thought it would be better to wait till the return of the Rector who was daily expected, and also from the absence of some other persons of influence in the parish to whom we looked for encouragement. My second reason was, my desire to return soon to Kingston to receive Mr. Wheeler, and to make arrangements for the reorganisation and extension of the Jamaican Bible Society by a public meeting, after due preparatory steps should be taken. Shall I tell you the third reason? It was in truth, that I felt paralysed by the arrangements you have come to in regard to your West India operations. By the plan you have fixed on, it will be impossible, as I suppose, to keep up a system of Bible societies in this island to any considerable extent. On this account therefore I think it better to give my attention during my time here, to the strengthening of the Societies already formed, rather than to the formation of new ones, which would do little more I fear than come into existence to die. For the above reason then the St. Ann's Bible Society was left unformed; and from another reason besides, namely that it could easily be visited on a future occasion should it be judged proper owing to its comparatively short distance from the place where I now write you.

After leaving our kind friends Mr. Whitehouse and his family I crossed Mount Diablo, and entered the parish of St. Thomas in the Vale. The Rev. Mr. Clarke, another Baptist Missionary of this name, has his chief mission establishment here, and at his house I passed the night. Mr. Clarke will be our warm friend, whenever it shall be judged proper to form a Society for the parish in which he lives and labours. I did not call on the Rector as his house lay out of the way, and because I hoped to visit him more at leisure when I should next be passing that way. The following day I passed through the Bog Walks the most romantic road in the island, and came to Spanish Town, the next day the 28th ultimo I reached Kingston, and saluted some of our Bible friends there. I was sorry to find the Rev. Mr. Tinson in very poor health and just recovering a little from a severe attack of fever. Owing to his illness it was necessary to wait some time before our Bible Society business there could be attended to, as he has been and is the chief active friend and business secretary of the Institution. I returned then to Spanish Town where I wished to be for some time that I might see those gentleman who had befriended our cause in the country and who are now attending their duties in the session of the Legislative Assembly. Here then I have been for these ten days past, with the exception of my going into Kingston, where I met with Mr. Wheeler who is now with me in this place, where we are paying visits to our Bible Society friends in company, and talking much together about Bible Society concerns, in these colonies, in Earl Street, and in all the world. We pray for you, and you all, and for all the Bible circulators and readers every where. Do pray for us in return, and for each, and for both.

Thus have I brought down my journal to the day on which I write. And now to say a few words prospectively. The day after tomorrow we return again to Kingston where and when we are to have a meeting of the Committee of the Jamaica Bible Society, as Mr. Tinson is now happily restored in a good measure and increasing in strength daily. At that meeting I intend to lay before our friends and necessity of having their Society remodeled in some measure and fitted better than it is for acting the part of the central and uniting Society in and of the island. I have hinted that there is what I may call a necessity for this remodelation, and I say so now more than I could have said before I performed my tours through the country, for in my movements I have learned that there is a considerable unwillingness on the part of many in the out parishes to join themselves even at all with the Society in Kingston, and a determination not to join it as it is. I hope and trust our friends will have wisdom given them to act with all prudence and judgment so as to be approved by the country societies, and thus to benefit and extend the great cause in which we are all engaged. May none of us seek our own things, but may we all seek the things of Jesus Christ, and thus at once adorn and extend the glorious gospel of our Blessed Redeemer. Should our Committee meeting be propitious in the ways mentioned, we shall call a public general meeting in order to form in due order, and to sanction and make known the remodelation in question.

Soon after this public meeting Mr. Wheeler and I intend to take a tour into the country together for the purpose of revisiting some of the societies lately formed. This we have resolved on after taking into due consideration the letter and the spirit of the instructions you have given us. It will be well for Mr. Wheeler actually to see operations, and in different places, as this will be evidently preferable to any verbal directions. The time we may occupy in our tour will of course depend a good deal on occurrences that may happen as we move along. As you have given us a sufficient latitude in the rules laid down for us, we shall interpret them to our convenience, or rather to what is most likely to produce the effects desired, and to meet with your approbation under all our and your circumstances. Our course will be nearly that which I have just gone over, and three months may be probably required from our starting to our return. We go cheerfully, knowing that you are fully with us, and disposed to put the best construction on all our deeds. We go as the Lord's reapers, and believe that the Lord of the harvest is with us. And O may we returned richly laden, not with the fruits of the earth, but with the fruits of heaven, to your full satisfaction, and to ours. Our Bibles are now happily and abundantly come, by which a very great facility is given to our operations, and many joyful faces and hearts do we hope to make and to see, by the filling of the hands with the word of God, in a kind of holy consecration. May God Almighty be with us, and may his most blessed name be magnified in us in his son Jesus Christ.

The two cases 19 and 20 are come along with the rest by the Stately. Their contents will greatly facilitate our work. Many thanks, and thank you again, for the pretty and the many Bible Association cards you have sent us. They are most acceptable, and nicely done every way. They quite surpass, I assure you, the Ladies Bonnet articles which we got up in our necessity. I am sure they will please the Negroes, and I hope they will profit both them and you. The other articles in the cases are also all well done every way; so thank you over again for them all, and for the very kind manner in which you have attended to all the requests of your poor petitioner.

I should say too in respect to our perspectives, that we wish to obtain a public meeting in this town of the St Catherine's Bible Society. There are, further, two openings that have presented themselves since I began to write, as better prepared for forming in them Parish Bible Societies than I had supposed, and with the prospect of continuance under the direct and indirect guardianship of our good Barbados friend Mr. Edmondson and some others. It is uncertain how far these operations mentioned, and openings noticed, may affect the before projected to her that I have noticed. Should Mr. Wheeler have seen what we may consider a sufficient specimen of our West India plans and operations previous to the prospective setting out the referred to, he will of course not go, whether I should or not. He must not of course stopped too long here, as it is a kind of defrauding of the Leeward Islands of his expected services. But you know it was your particular wish that he should come here, and your reasons were assigned. When he goes, he will go direct to St. Thomas's, and will make his tour just the reverse of what I sketched before, that is, the beginning and the ending will be interchanged, but the line gone along will be the same. I shall endeavour to furnish him with a bag-ful of letters to our numerous friends in those quarters, who I am sure will all be glad to see him. – As to myself, I know not well what to say, but I shall think a little more, and shall then be able to speak. I am a little disposed to believe that I am wiser than you as to matters and arrangements regarding ourselves and this place. I feel therefore somewhat inclined to be disobedient, but in the meantime until further notice, I remain as before,

            Your very obedient Servant,

                                    James Thomson.

P.S. Your letter of the 30th October has come to hand today during the writing of this sheet.

I found in Kingston the other day, the two cases of Old Test. extracts, and learned that they arrived in March. The Bookseller is very culpable in not having sent with them a letter of advice. It was by mere chance that they were at all landed from the packet, and of one of the cases the books are greatly damaged by the salt water which somehow got into them.

[1] Following the sequence from the previous letter, this should be numbered '46'.

Rev A Brandram No.

Kingston, Jamaica,  23rd January 1836

My Dear Friend,

I stated to you in my last the arrangements Mr. Wheeler and myself have before us, in fulfillment of the wishes of the Society has to our being in each other's company for some time. The first sketch for our operations was given up, in consequence of facilities arising nearer home for accomplishing our object. In the neighbourhood of Kingston and Spanish Town we have found openings for forming several Bible Associations, and these institutions I always consider in every point of view the chief part of our work, and that which brings more particularly into view the West India features of  Bible Society operations. In addition to this we have had opportunities of  being together in Kingston in different meetings of the Committee of the Jamaica Bible Society.

Lastly we planned an excursion into the Parish of St. Thomas in the East, in order to revive things there, and to add to the number and efficiency of our Bible Associations in that quarter. This excursion being over it was intended that Mr. Wheeler should leave Jamaica for Hayti, and the Islands to the Eastward of it. But on the 13th instant Mr. Wheeler was taken ill of fever, and though that has left him, he is not yet sufficiently recovered to set out in his tour through the numerous and interesting islands that lie before him. He is at present at Amity Hall Estate – a place I formerly mentioned to you, and I expect him here in a few days. He will not write by this Packet, as the shortness of its stay here precludes people in the country from knowing of its arrival in sufficient time to forward letters to Kingston to go by it. But for this illness Mr. Wheeler would have sailed this day according to our calculations.

In what I have said about you will see the manner in which we have occupied our time since the date of my last letter. The success of our labours is encouraging; the desire to obtain the Bible by the Apprentices increases, our subscribers are numerous in many places, and not to be despised in the others: and in short the Bible bids fair to pay a visit to every negro's house in the Island, and there to take up its abode permanently as an ephod for daily use. May God effect this object of our fond and encouraged hope. Our prospects, I say again, are cheering, and scarcely a cloud but one is seen to dull and discourage our expectations. That cloud, strange as it may appear, seems to arise from Earl Street.

I now give you some extracts from letters I have lately received from our Bible friends in the country; and these will show you how our affairs stand, and how they move, in various lights.

"In the business of our Parish Bible Society, [says one correspondent,] I regret to say, we have made no further movements. I saw Mr.__________ last week, but could come to no conclusion. Indeed the chief reason of my addressing you today, is to urge you, if you can, to take the matter into your own the vigourous hands, or nothing will be done, and no preparations made for the public meeting. To my sorrow I shall be unable to take any active share in the Society, but I think it right to inform you, that having before me the prospect of leaving the Island in a few weeks, for six or eight months, a variety of preparatory engagements entirely occupy my time and attention."

Another correspondent writes as follows: – "I fancy that in the course of another week all the subscriptions for Bibles will be filled up. There are upwards of 300 subscribers in my congregations, and I do not think there are cases enough of Bibles at Black River to supply the wants of the Parish. I took occasion in my sermon on the New Year's Day from the text, 'Lay hold on eternal life,' to allude to the claims of the Bible Society, and to urge upon the people the propriety of getting the Bible into their houses, one and all, as the best way to commence the New Year; and told them, that it would be an era in their lives, when everyone would see a Bible in their houses. There are numbers who have been enlightened through the simple perusal of the Scriptures. During the days of oppression and ignorance, there were many whom I taught to read in the Sunday schools, but who had no other guide, I may say, than the Bible; for what was one sabbath's sermon in three weeks to avail in the blessed work of reformation which has taken place among them, had it not been for the New Testaments which they used to study, I was going to say, by night and by day many of them, especially the Grossmonde congregation. I have heard them say over and over again, numbers of them, that having been awakened in the first instance by the preaching of the word, they were afterwards drawn on to know the will of God simply by reading the Scriptures. I here mention the gospel of John as more frequently referred to by them. I take not a little comfort in knowing that almost 500 of my people will soon have a copy of the whole Bible in their houses. The married people's names I have promised to enter in my own hand writing and those of their children, which appears to please them much. I hope to be able to do something among them toward subscribing for the perishing millions who have not the word of God, and I trust that in this the Lord will favour us with his blessing."

The third correspondent thus writes: – "I am sorry that you still think of going to the continent of South America, contrary I am sure, to the remonstrances of all your friends. Why leave Jamaica where you have so much to do? – and where you have been so well received? I am most decidedly of opinion that you have had your share of the difficulties and fatigues of America, and that someone of the younger agents should  proceed to that country, and leave you to manage us in Jamaica. I am sure very few succeed so well as you have done in obtaining the concurrence of persons of such various characters and opinions as to be found among the members of the Bible Society in this Island. But I suppose you have already made up your mind on the subject which renders it quite useless to reason with you. I am sure however Mrs. Thomson will be on our side, and she will be a powerful auxiliary. You will have our prayers, that the Lord may direct you in this matter."

"In reply to your query, I will give you the following information, which I trust will convince you that I have acted according to the criterion of wisdom to which you refer. I attended the Committee of the Trelawney Society, and got satisfactory arrangements made in reference to Auxiliary Associations. On the same day I called on Mr. Knibb, (with whom I met Messrs. Burchell and Dendy,) and invited him to assist me in forming the Hampden Association. To this he readily assented, and on the day appointed came up with Mrs. Knibb and Mr. Robinson. It was an interesting meeting, the church being nearly full of people above and under, and both Mr. Knibb and Mr. Robinson addressed them with much effect."

"My time at present is so much occupied that I cannot make out an exact statement of the New Testaments distributed among the Apprentices, but I will do so, as soon as my annual letter and other pressing business is finished; at the same time I shall inform you, as you desire, of everything regarding them of an interesting nature. – I should have mentioned to you above in its proper place, that the proceeds of our first month's subscription to the Bible Association was – Twenty Pounds."

The first of these extracts is written by the Rev. Mr. Zorn, the superintendent of the Moravian Missions here; the second extract is by the Rev. Mr. Hylton, and the third my the Rev. Mr. Blyth, all of whom a good and zealous friends of our Society. – I do not know that I should make any comment on what they have said, and probably it is better to leave you to make your own comments, non- note-and-comment-man though you be.

Turning now, at the conclusion of this letter, to my poor self, I would say, as I said before, that I know not well what to say. I was foolish enough in my last, to signify that I was wiser than you, in regard to arrangements for this Island. I am sorry to say, that I am not yet quite cured of this foolish fancy. Perhaps a little more time may make me better, and if so I shall inform you. –You say in your letter of  the 30th October as follows: –"I think that you hardly have the correct idea when you imagine that Agencies are considered by us as burdens. I think our one and common feeling is, that if there be a prospect of circulating the Scriptures judiciously with a fair and reasonable expectation that they will be read we should think that, quite apart from pecuniary returns, the expenditure wisely and fitly incurred in each and every country you have named. But the question to be solved is, what is the amount of distribution, probable distribution, that would justify an experiment being made."

I feel disposed enough to gainsay this statement of your views; for I have named among other parts, the Island of Jamaica, and I think facts have shown you the prospects here in regard to distribution, come up to, and greatly go beyond, what you here say would warrant you to keep up an Agency: and yet you say – No; and your further add, as you have done by enactment, that you will not even adventure half an Agency in this case. Now judge where the truth is.

Pray, my dear Brother, excuse this freedom of writing, and believe me, though it seems otherwise, that that I am very respectfully yours, and also affectionately.

                                                                                                                     James Thomson.

P.S. Your letter of the 30th of Nov. arrived on the 13th instant.

Rev A Brandram No.49

Kingston, Jamaica, 13th February 1836

My Dear Friend,

My last letter conveyed to you some discouragement regarding Mr. Wheeler, in stating that he had been taken ill, and though better, was unable to proceed on his way according to our previous calculations. I am now happy to report favourably regarding him, and what is better, he will give you a report himself. In his illness he has been in great danger, and for some days during it his life hung in doubt. But now blessed be God, his disease is quite gone, his health is gradually recovering, and in about a couple of weeks he expects to be strong enough to set out for the Leeward Islands according to your arrangements. The Lord make him strong in body, soul and spirit for the blessed work of circulating the Holy Scriptures.

My report of progress since my last is, that things are going on encouragingly in regard to your concerns. Wherever the people have been specially addressed about getting the Scriptures into their own houses and hands, they have attentively listened to the statements made to them, and not a few have come readily forward to obey the directions given, and have put down their names for a copy of the entire word of God. Again, the accounts received from the Bible Associations previously formed have been encouraging; and in truth everything that occurs in this matter tends to strengthen us in the prospect of what I stated in my last, namely, that "the Bible bids fair to pay a visit to every negro's house in our Island, and there to take up its abode permanently for daily use." May God dispel every cloud that would darken so fair a prospect, rise it where it may. The thing above-mentioned and hoped for, is I conceive within our reach as the land of Canaan was placed, so to speak, within the power of the Israelites almost on their leaving Egypt. But they would not believe nor act, and they reaped the corresponding results. Let us therefore fear, lest a promise being left us, or held out to us, we come short of it in any degree or from any cause.

I have during these few months past made request to you for pretty ample supplies of the Holy Scriptures. To these requests you have as usual most cheerfully acceded, and most of the books requested and sent, and now among us; and in due time will leave the towns and the stores, and take up their homes and family quarters over the country. But we are not yet satisfied with what you have sent us; and our cry is, what was before, Give, give. To half of your kingdom I know you are willing to grant us, and hence it is that I ask freely. My present request, modest as it may be or otherwise, is for three thousand copies of the Holy Scriptures. Two thirds of these we want in Kingston for our general depot which is almost empty, and the remaining one third is for Black River for the Parish of St. Elizabeth, and contiguous parts. – But I must come to particulars, and tell you the kinds respectively, and sizes, and addresses of those we want. They are then as follows [see below]:

 – For Kingston, to be addressed to Messrs. Jordan and Osborn.

For Black River, and addressed to Mr. George Daly there, please send one half of the above quantities, in all the variety of sorts, excepting the small Pica Quarto Bibles.

– The cases may be about one fourth larger than those you sent by the Stately; and I would say, that care be taken in packing every case, as we found some of the Bibles injured lately by being too closely wedged together to the permanent deformation of some of them. I am sorry to have something to say once more about invoices. Chalmers pamphlet was said to be in one of the two cases 19, 20. After rummaging both cases well for them, and more than once, they were not to be seen; but some weeks after, they were found at the wharf by accident, in a separate parcel by themselves. I think it would be better not to put Reports into the cases, except when formally sent, and then they should be noticed in the invoice, mentioning the number of them, the year or year of their date, and the particular case into which they are put.

– Before closing this account of errors, it is meet I should notice one of my own. In my letter from Savanna La Mar of the 6th July, which you have printed as a pamphlet, I have said at page 5, Wilkinson instead of Tomlinson. Please correct this should you print the letter in the Appendix to your next report. But I have a greater errors still to confess. In my letter of the 21st of January 1835, I thought I had given you a copy of a letter from some Apprentices written in acknowledgment of the Gift Book which they had received on the preceding Christmas. I know not how I omitted this letter, and indeed fully thought I had given it to you, till I saw my letter printed, and wondered that it was not there. I now give it to you, as it is an interesting little document; and if it should be too late for your forthcoming appendix, you must try to interweave it into the body of the report the best way you can. I am really sorry for this omission, pray forgive me: and now here comes the said letter, verbatim literatim, with the exception of a few points I have stuck into it:

– "To the Rev. Mr. Phillips: – Grange Pen, 1st January 1835: – Our society has taken the liberty of addressing these few lines to you in return of their best thanks to you in respect of the Bibles that was presented from you to the leader on the 25th December 1834, and which we received from our leader on the 26th instant, which we have received with great comfort and happiness, and we hope and trust by the goodness of divine providence we may be all able to act and to do as a good book directs; and this is to inform you that as soon as the books was giving out by the leader the 3rd chapter of the Gospel of St. Matthew was read by Thomas Barnes, and the next George Reid read this the 2nd C. of the Gospel of St. Matthew, the third Edward Barnes read 1st Psalms of David, and the fourth Alex Ross read the 4th Ch. of the Gospel of St. Luke; at the same time these chapters was reading there was an assembly of about 100 and upwards was standing and listening to the chapters very attentively, and after they were finished reading every soul went home well pleased and joyful to their several habitations.

– Rev. Sir, we are your most humble and well wisher servants, Joseph McLean, Edward Barnes, William Hibbert, Alexander Ross."

I need not make any comment on this letter, further than by saying that it is a native, religious, and affectionate expression of what was felt by these persons for your book: and such feelings, I may add, have often been felt and expressed elsewhere by many on the same subject. Your book will live among us for years and generations, and this remembrance of the Bible society will live with it.

You have been so kind, in answer to petitions made to you, to extend the time of presenting your Gift Book from period to period. There are, as you are aware, a considerable number of copies still ungiven in this Island. Perhaps the best thing you could now do in this matter would be to authorise some general extension in the giving until the books were all taken up. Should you think it proper to do so, we shall endeavour here to make such arrangements as may bring about the most good. Please early to communicate your wishes on the subject, that we may publish the same generally, and procure the best results we can by holding up this volume as a stimulus towards learning to read; and this, with our various stirring up means now at work among us, will with the blessing of heaven produce, we hope, readers over our Island, thick as the drops of morning dew. And then I trust, if not before, everyone will get for himself, and by himself – the whole Bible.

In my last letter of the 14th November last, I mentioned some difficulties that occurred at Montego Bay about the prices charged in your invoices. Similar difficulties have since arisen, and are I believe often likely to occur and recur. It would therefore be well to settle the matter once for all. Can you then, and is it convenient for you, to let us have the Scriptures at the reduced or subscribers prices? Tell us all your will upon this point. Again, please let me know how you calculate the cost of your books, giving an example, and say also whether it you get drawback on all your shipments. Did you get it for those contained in your invoice of 12th October last?

In reflecting on the mode of packing the books above requested, I think the best will be, to make the Kingston order into 20 cases, each containing 100 volumes, and being one 10th of every sort named as nearly as may be. Make the Black River assorting the same, and in 10 cases.

Mr. Jackson's letter of the first of January was received two days ago. – Please to correct the numbering of my letters from that of 6th July which ought to be No. 42. – I should be glad if Mr. Tarn would send me some dozens of steel pens, of all the various kinds, that I may find out which is best. – If Mr. Jackson has got an old or a new scraper that he can spare, tell him I shall thank him for it that it may scrape for me when called on. – Lastly, I advise a bill for £50 drawn to Travelling Account on the 4th instant in favour of Messrs. James Wallace & Co. of this place.

                        Believe me always yours, and truly,

                                                            James Thomson.

P.S. Please desire Mr. Cockle to send one of your 21/- quartos in coloured calf to Mr. Morrish of Bristol, and to place it to my Private Account.

P.S. I believe you to know Mr. Morrish's address, but lest you should not have it by you I give it – it is at Mrs Jeremiahs, No 1 Meadow Street.

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Rev A Brandram. - No 50.

Kingston, Jamaica, 22nd February 1836

My Dear Friend,

I am happy to say in commencing this letter that my colleague Mr. Wheeler is rapidly recovering his strength, and is in full expectation of leaving this Island in prosecution of your arrangements by the first packet which is due here tomorrow, and which will sail four days after its arrival. May the God of the Bible Society go with him to preserve him and lead him in his way, and to prosper him in his holy work of diffusing God's blessed word among these Islands. Let your prayers continually ascend for him, and great may his success be in your service, which truly is the service of God.

In two or three of my late letters, I have intimated to you, that in my slender judgment, the conclusions you had come to in respect to this Island and of the West Indies generally, were not the best considering the openness of the door for your work at the present time. I have prayed much for instruction from on high regarding the whole of this matter, so far as you are concerned on the one hand, and so far as I am concerned on the other: and I rest fully satisfied that God will direct us, and lead us on step-by-step, as he has heretofore done most graciously, and to his most holy name be all praise and glory for ever and for ever.

You will recollect that that in my letter of the 24th April last, I stated to you at full length my views respecting your West India work. After nearly a year's consideration of the same subject since that letter was written, I still retain precisely the same views of what I think the Bible Society ought to do in this matter; or rather I ought to say that my views on the subject are much stronger, and that because of the developments that have taken place since that time, and the manifest, and I may well say glorious openings that have presented themselves to us for procuring a very general circulation of the Holy Scriptures among the entire population of this Island; and what has taken place here I presume, would take place all over the West Indies if the same means are employed and kept at work. You know that in the letter referred to, I divided the West Indies into two portions, and ventured to recommend you to have an agent in each portion; stating it is my opinion that there would be most ample work for them of the most encouraging kind, and that the favourable leanings in England towards this quarter of the world would fully justify and bear you out in making such appointments, and further that the results of such operations would not only be almost cheering circulation of the Holy Scriptures among this interesting people, but that also there would soon arise such a pouring in to your funds from hence for your general purposes, as would not only amply repay your outlays on the our behalf, but would also surprise you. All this I still believe, and see you more strongly before my own eyes since I gave you the above noticed views and statements.

In the same communication, I suggested that at the end of a couple of years your two agencies might be merged, into one, or what is the same in point of expense, into two half ones. One of these entire agencies for the first two years, and its half agency afterwards, I signified to the Society that I was willing to undertake, namely, the Jamaica one. I signified at the same time that with this island the island of Hayti and Cuba might be connected, and that your agent here might also correspond with his friends in Mexico, Guatemala, Colombia, Peru, and Chile, for the purpose of forwarding your interests in those places; and I further hinted that he might perhaps visit one or other or more of them from time to time as circumstances might direct; but that in the event of having to visit the places mentioned it must be a whole agency continuous, instead of a partial agency before stated.

The Resolutions of the Committee of the 7th September last bearing upon these points came into my hands on the 11th November, and they have been before my mind, and been often on it ever since. They are different from the suggestions above stated, and they may prove better than the plans I had ventured to propose. May God grant they may, for his glory, and for the good of the portions of the world under consideration. Man deviseth his way, but the Lord directeth his steps: the Bible Society have devised their way, and surely God will direct their steps to the advancement of his great work committed to their charge.

So far then as the Bible Society's duties. The next thing to be considered is, what is my own individual duty amid all the circumstances in which I am placed. My first thoughts were, to make a second round of this island, and to enter into such arrangements, according to your instructions, as might contribute the most effectually to the keeping up and extending if possible, your work in this island, after I should give up your concerns here. In calculating how I might do this, I felt myself a good deal perplexed. I did not see how I could comply with your wish, on the lowest calculation of real utility, as expressed in your Resolution under an entire year. The Resolution referred to is, "That the Rev. James Thomson be requested as soon as the winding up of the concerns of the Society under his care in Jamaica will permit to proceed on of visitation, etc." But to have taken a year to this would manifestly have been beyond what you at all calculated on or would have allowed; and I considered that had I made such an arrangement is this I would have been going beyond the line gone to me.

Thus far as to the part of the resolution bearing upon the winding up of your concerns in Jamaica. The other part of the same Resolution is a graver subject still, at least so far as I individually am concerned. You will naturally suppose that I have made this subject a matter of very earnest prayer and supplication. I have indeed entreated the Lord to counsel and to lead me to what would the most effectually promote his glory in regard to the poor earthen and earthly vessel concerned. And in connexion with prayer, I have pondered the subject and pondered it again, by day and by night in all its bearings, I do not say on time and eternity, but on eternity and time, for that is the proper order in which all things should be considered.

Here in this island of Jamaica that is very ample work for a servant of Christ, in various ways, with a fair prospect of his labours not being in vain in any of the departments he may be employed in. There is work too in Spanish America, but the prospects at present are not the same. Here too I can in a twofold capacity engage in the service of the Lord, for my wife and myself may both be engaged in it. In Spanish America I could only act singly, according to your proposal of a visitation, and not of a fixed agency. Certainly when God has united two in one, it is not inconsiderately that arrangements should be entered into which would unavoidably separate them for years or for life; whilst on the other hand when God in his Providence points out, that through arrangements leading to such a separation his glory may be the more promoted, then evidently we should rise up, leave all, and follow the Lamb whithersoever he goeth. Such a case as is here supposed in the latter instance is not now before me. Two fields of labour are presented unto me, and asking for my selection. In the one that is a greater prospect of success than in the other; and in this same one, the advantage of adhering to God's union on the one hand is given, and on the other hand the labour may be twofold, whilst it could not be so in the other field of operations. These reasons then combined, lead me to consider that it will be most for the glory of God, that I should make this island the field of my operations in preference to Spanish America.

I have said above that that is ample work for a servant of Christ in this island in various ways. One of these ways is a Bible Society work. To this I have, as before stated, very fully drawn your attention, and have made you a tender of my own poor services. Your work, as here noticed, still bulks in my views the same as ever, and even more. But I cannot now with any propriety urge this subject more in reference to myself, for if I should it would be difficult to avoid the appearance of pleading for attention to this field for the sake of my own advantage. I am therefore though reluctantly compelled to choose another department of the Lord's work, as the object of my chief attention. In thus breaking off from the Bible Society in the full relationship in which I now stand to it, I wish it to be understood that the objects of the Bible Society are and ever will be as dear to me as ever, and that it will always be a pleasure to me to be in correspondence with the Society and to promote its work here, so far as my main duties in another department will allow.

The fields of profitable labour here, as more than once said are various. A good deal of consideration and prayer have been given to the ascertaining the precise line I should choose, but during the time I was making the subject my inquiry, one field, quite new I may say and unexpected, came before me, and one more congenial to my wishes and desires for many years than any other. It seemed then to be a directive of Providence that I should forthwith engage in this newly presented field, and believing this to be so, I have acted accordingly. To be in a situation where I could have a number of children entirely under my management, that I might train them up in the way in which they should go, and lead them in that way step-by-step through life to heaven, has long been the object of my desire; and the more I have considered the subject of early training which has been I may say my favourite topic for years, the greater has been my desire to settle down in such unemployment. I have prayed much for heavenly guidance in respect to this for a long period; and now it blends through your arrangements, answering new and unexpected circumstances, God has given me, I may say, all I could wish for in regard to such unemployment in the service of Christ. I am to have put into my hands, a house, some land, and a number of children, with liberty to educate these children according to the best plans I can devise and carry into effect. This is, I conceive, a noble occupation, and may God make me faithful in it for his glory, and for the salvation of my own soul, and for the salvation of a multitude of souls of those to be placed under my instruction. The establishment of which I allude is to form a part of the operations in this island of the Mico Charity.

The location of this establishment is to be in the parish of St. James already familiar to you through our Bible operations there. My residence in that quarter will be favourable to the lending of my aid continuously to the Bible Society work in that parish and neighbourhood, and perhaps it is above all other parts of the island the most suitable for an agent of the Society to reside in even if he happened the charge of prosecuting your work throughout all the island. From this spot then I should be glad to give you all the help I could in the way of correspondence with all parts of the island, and which my knowledge of persons and places would enable me to do with I trust no little advantage to your interests. Still however it would be well to have the island traveled over in your service from time to time for the purpose of keeping alive and extending your work. The plan I propose for you is this, that you should authorize me to expend £100 or more per annum in procuring help in this way, sometimes from one friend and sometimes from another of those engaged in the ministry of the Gospel here. I think I could procure this aid, and at this cost, and with this advantage, and believe you would not expend this sum more profitably either in promoting the circulation of the Scriptures, or in afterwards raising funds for furthering your wide-world operations.

The time of my entering on this new engagement is the first of April next. In the meantime I propose, if the Lord will, to leave this city in a few days, and to proceed towards Cornwall by the north side of the island, making as many useful visitations on the way as I can. On reaching the quarter mentioned, I shall endeavour to visit each parish in the County to strengthen and enlarge the societies already formed there, and I hope to conclude the visitation of the County about the period of change above-mentioned.

Altogether independent of this new regulation in our affairs I should have considered it my most immediate duty in your work to visit the quarter noticed, and you are aware that I had proposed going there with Mr. Wheeler before I dreamed of the new arrangement here stated. The two reasons for leading me to consider that part as the most profitable field to be engaged in for you at present are, first, because we now have a pretty good supply of the Scriptures there; whereas here, I may say, we are out of supplies; and I beg you to consider both these outs in, and put in, not by oversight, but purposely in order to tell you what urgent need we have for the supplies I wrote for in my last letter; which I entreat you to send in whole by the very first ship, or at least as many of them as you have immediately ready without detaining till the whole might be prepared. – The second reason for working immediately in Cornwall, is that I consider our affairs are so circumstanced there at present as to produce very good fruits by proper attention and more so than in any other part of the island.

I have now laid the whole of this matter before you as it stands and as it is proposed to stand. In thus dissolving our present connection, I beg you notwithstanding ever to consider me as your cooperator, and I should be glad would you still allow me to bear my present title with you, and to give my agency in the way I have noticed, leaving you to remunerate or not just as you see fit, as on this score there shall be no disagreement. – For the confidence the Society has reposed in me during my present and former connexions with it, I feel very thankful; and for the kind and liberal manner in which you yourself have corresponded with me as the organ of the Society, I have I trust something of an affectionate feeling, not soon I think to be worn out. Your kindly notice of my supplications to the Committee and other members of the Society, that they might make supplications at the throne of grace on my behalf, that I might ever be faithful and wise in your work, and faithful in all things as the servant of God, – your kindly noticing this in the body of the Report at the Public Meeting, and in printing the same request in the Appendix as you have done at page 100 of your 31st Report, – is and will be most deeply impressed upon my mind. This paragraph I may say now enters us part of my private devotions: I thank the Father of mercies for the ministry granted me in this paragraph; I pray the Lord to hear all the supplications offered up for me through means of it; and I pray that everyone who supplicates for me in view of this paragraph, may be blessed with eternal life, and all the graces here below of the Holy Ghost. Thus you see is formed through your kindness also: a round of prayers, I trust in the Holy Ghost, which must contribute through the merciful and gracious arrangements of our heavenly Father, to build us all up in Christ Jesus, and to make us for ever blessed with the Lord. You, my dear friend, come in, and will come in for an ample share of these blessings, and ample may it be to you as the Love of  God to us in Christ Jesus our Lord.

Only one thing remains for me now to say, and it is this: should you consider it incongruous to have any formal connection in the same individual with a distinct though kindred body, and should you at the same time see the importance of cultivating this field in your line as I see it, and have pointed out to you, – then should you wish to send an agent here from England, and not be able readily to find one to your mind, then in that case, or in all these cases combined, I think your best plan would be to authorise me to seek you out an agent here, as perhaps one might be found already ministering in this field, and who would have no objections to give his whole time to your work. As to Mr. Wheeler's taking the whole of the West Indies it is really more than sufficient work, and I do trust you will at once arrange that he should confine himself to the limits noticed in describing your Eastern diocese in these colonies; and your doing this at once would be a great advantage, as it would enable him forthwith to make a proper arrangement for a regular and periodical visitation. In one of your letters you allude to the number of Missionaries in this and the other islands as a reason for expecting that your work will be done by them for you. This, I humbly think, is a conclusion not consistent with the premises, and certainly not consistent with my little experience in these parts. But might you not as well say that you need no immediate agents in England, as there are so many Ministers filling every county and town. But you do not say so, nor act so. Why then should you count on these labours in your service from Ministers in the West Indies, to the extent in question, and such as you cannot count on from Ministers in England? And further, you must remember the extent of the labours of the Missionaries in these islands as you will see indicated in my letter of the 6th July, page 6. No, my friend, the Missionaries here will of themselves be able to do comparatively little in your work, but if they were aided, encouraged, and led on by one of your agents they might and would do great things for you. This is not my testimony only, it is the testimony also of all the Missionaries themselves.

The object of this letter is now accomplished, in as much as I have communicated to you all my arrangements, and thoughts upon the same. I now send on my letter to you, and whilst it is taking the usual course and time of several weeks on the ocean hastening on towards your Bible mansion, I shall pray to the Father of lights, to give you all light and understanding in respect to all the matters contained here requiring your judgment and action: and may God Almighty bless you in all your great work: and may he bless your soul, my dear brother, and the souls of all who are privileged at your great depository to give counsel and the labour of the hands towards making the will of God known all over the world.

                                    Believe me, my Dear Friend,

                                                Truly and Affectionately Yours,

                                                                                    James Thomson.

P.S. Be so good as to have two or three blank leaves of good paper put into the front of all the quarto Bibles. ―I should be glad to have a few copies of Mr Cockle's printed statement of the contributions of the various Counties of England to the Bible Society. Your letter of the 12th January arrived here on the 24th instant. Mr Wheeler drew a Bill for £50 on the 24th in favour of  James Wallace & Co. and though my name is on it, the money is for him only.

Rev A Brandram. - No 51

Montego Bay, Jamaica, 19th April 1836

My Dear Friend,

My last letter to you was dated the 22nd of February, and contained notices of arrangements in respect to you and to me, and to this island of Jamaica. That letter is most likely now in your hands, and has been and is under consideration in its various bearings. I again pray whilst you are actually considering it, as I did when I sent it off, that the Father of lights may give you all understanding in the things concerning his kingdom here placed under your immediate, or rather mediate care.

The Packet alluded to in the first paragraph of my last letter, came in on the 24th just one day after due. According to my anticipations mentioned regarding Mr. Wheeler's recovered strength, so it was: he was nearly quite restored, and sailed in the packet on the 27th for Jacmel in Hayti.

Agreeably to your request I provided, or I should say, wrote letters to our Bible Society friends throughout the line of islands I passed along, introducing to them Mr. Wheeler as your agent for them and their portion of the world. In writing out these letters I began at the place nearest to Jamaica, namely Hayti, and drew up introductory notes to our friends there. Porto Rico I passed over, because I believe, or suppose, we few or no friends there and because it would not be in Mr. Wheeler's way to visit that island at the present time. The next island of our friends is St. Thomas, and to several of our friends there I wrote. Santa Cruz (as they pronounce it, or St. Croix as they spell it) came next in order, and for various friends there several letters were prepared and put into the introductory packet to be carried along by our friend and colleague in his onward course. The other islands were then prepared for in a similar way in succession, which is as follows: – Tortola, St. Kitts, Nevis, Montserrat, Antigua, Guadaloupe, Dominica, Martinique, St. Lucy, Barbados. On arriving at the last mentioned island, and a favoured spot, I found that the revisitation of our many friends in these islands, and the more or less letter conversation which both as a pleasure to me, and as a matter of course I had to hold with them, – I found that the time I had allotted to this work of writing introductory letters for Mr. Wheeler was exhausted. I was compelled therefore to close my packet with letters as far as Barbados exclusive of that island; and on closing I found the number of letters 45. To meet the case of the other colonies, I afterwards wrote out a general letter, and forwarded it to Mr. Wheeler by the following packet to Jacmel according to agreement. I give you here copy of that letter.

– "To the Friends of the British and Foreign Bible Society throughout the West Indies. – Kingston, Jamaica, 4th of March 1836.

– Dear friends, – I take the liberty of addressing you in the form of a general letter or circular in order to introduce to your acquaintanceship Mr. Joseph Wheeler the gentleman who will a this note before you, and who has recently come out from England to visit the West India colonies as the Agent of the British and Foreign Bible Society.

During my own tour or tours through these colonies already extending to the period of more than four years, I have met with many persons very friendly to the objects of the Bible Society, and have received from them much help and encouragement in carrying forward the views of the Society whose interests I have the honour to represent. I have also received from the same individuals a large measure of kind treatment and personal attention.

On the part of the British and foreign Bible Society, I beg leave on the present occasion to renew my acknowledgments to you for all the assistance afforded me in the great cause of circulating the Holy Scriptures in which that Society is especially engaged; and on my own part individually, it is with pleasure I again express my very sincere thanks to all those friends who have favoured me personally, and in many ways contributed to my convenience and comfort.

From the same obliging friends, and from all others well inclined to the holy cause of circulating God's word among these Colonies, I beg leave very respectfully to solicit renewal of the same help and encouragement in favour of my friend and colleague Mr. Wheeler in his endeavours to promote the object of the Bible Society with which he is connected. I would also venture to plead for renewal of those friendly attentions met with by the writer of this note, attentions for which he felt and now feels greatly obliged, and which he shall long remember.

Having thus introduced Mr. Wheeler, allow me now with all earnestness to recommend to you the deeply interesting subject of the general second circulation of the Scriptures in the Colonies. Much has recently been done in this great work in the form of commencement, but of course the mass of the work is still as yet undone. The field is delightfully open, as the people generally show a very considerable readiness to procure the Scriptures and to learn to read that they may profit by them. Give them all the weight of your influence to favour the pleasing indications now being manifested, and rest assured that very happy results will arise sooner or later from a general circulation of the Scriptures in these parts. Stir up the people to come forward to procure the Scriptures through their own means, by paying for them before hand in small monthly contributions according to the size and price of the Bibles they wish, and this is by far the best mode of furnishing them with this sacred book. Let not the circumstance that many or most are not able has yet to read of great to hinder or discourage the, or nothing will contribute more effectually, as experiences amply shown, tinges and to urge on to learn to read than the procuring in this way a Bible for themselves. Let every proper measure be taken in your respective places to cause the holy Scriptures to come into every house among you, and into the hands of every individual; and use your influence in all wisdom that the Holy Scriptures, maybe daily read under every roof. Pleasing commencements have been made in all that is here recommended, and further and continued exertion in the strength of God will crown us with success in the object before us. Great good must be necessarily result from this honouring God in that Revelation he has given us and that's good will be visible when in the advancement of Society in general, and in the welfare of families and individuals; but chiefly shall we benefit thereby in respect to our everlasting condition. The will of God, we are taught to expect, this to be done in this world as it is in heaven. The will of God however must first be made known before it can be done, and to make it known is the grand object of all Bible Societies. When the will of God shall be done on earth as it is done in heaven above, O how different and blessed shall then be the condition of this hitherto sinful and suffering world! Let us all pray, and let us labour in unison with our prayers, – Thy kingdom come, thy will be done in Earth as it is in heaven.

– I remain, Dear Friends, With Great Respect, Yours Very Truly,

– James Thomson, Agent of the British and Foreign Bible Society."

A few days go after Mr. Wheeler sailed I went from Kingston to Spanish Town, partly to attend to the business there, and partly as a step onwards in my tour to the other end of the island. It was my wish, and somewhat my expectation, that we should at length get up a public meeting there for our Bible Society; but this time alas like many of the preceding ones happened to be a wrong time. Mr. Phillippo was all busy in preparing for the meeting of the Baptist ministers about to take place in Kingston, and so could not command sufficient time to aid in our meeting. It was undesirable that we should have our meeting without him, and so once more the postponement of necessity to place.

On the 7th of March I left Spanish Town, and passing through St. Thomas in the Vale, and the parish of St. Mary, I arrived at Arnott's  Bay in the parish of St. George. The Rev. Mr. Bolton is the Rector of St. George's, and from what I knew of his desires and endeavours to instruct the Apprentices in his parish I counted on his help in promoting a more general circulation of the Scriptures in that parish. On the day after my arrival at Arnott's Bay, I went to Buff Bay, 10 miles to the eastward near to which he resides. Here I had the pleasure of meeting with him, and just in the circumstances under which I wish to view him: he was catechising, instructing, and praying with a large assemblage of people in an outhouse belonging to one of the estates in that quarter. After he had concluded his work, I had some conversation with him, and found him ready to promote our object in the general circulation of the Scriptures. We were however prevented from taking any active measures together as he was obliged to set off on the afternoon of the same day for Kingston to attend an ordination there on the following Sunday. – I returned to Arnott's Bay, but neither there could I enter into any Bible Society measures, as Mr. Barlow the Baptist minister in the place was moving on towards Kingston. Thus than I was obliged to give up all hopes for the time of forming any Bible Society or Bible associations in St. George's. On another occasion I hope there may be a great concurrence of circumstances in favour of our objects as it seems there was at this time against them.

On the next day I set out for Port Maria in the parish of St. Mary's. After I had proceeded a few miles I found the roads exceedingly bad, and afterwards they exceeded this, and became literally impassable. We were obliged therefore to turn back. We called at the nearest house we came to on our backward course, where we found a very friendly reception and that aid which we stood in need of under our then actual circumstances. The place I speak of is Agualta Vale, and individual who so kindly befriended us is John Oldham Esq. a gentleman possessing some estates in that quarter, and the acting Attorney of a great number. Mr. Oldham very courteously treated us and lodged us till the following day, and then taking charge of our gig, which we could not get along with, he promised to forward it to us by water, or by land should the roads in a few days somewhat improve. Thus arranging we set out on horseback, and with no little difficulty waded now through the deep roads, and now avoiding them by passing through cane fields, we at length arrived at Port Maria. There we arrived on a Friday, and partly from the necessity because the chaise had not come forward, and partly from choice, because something could be done, I stopped over that Sunday and the following. On the former of these I preached in the Presbyterian Church in that place, and drawing as usual the attention of my audience to the Book of God and exhorting them to get it, study it, and follow it, I took down at the close a few names; they were but a few for owing to the badness of the weather, the assembly was small. On the following Sunday I preached in the forenoon in the Baptist Chapel, and in the afternoon again in the Presbyterian Chapel. On both these occasions we obtained subscribers for Bibles, the whole amounting to about 100. We have on many occasions, as you are aware through former letters, had longer lists of subscribers than this. But here the thing was more new, if I may say so, than in some other places; and on the other hand, there is great reason to expect a lengthening of the list of Bible subscribers in Port Maria and also in other parts of the parish of St. Mary. But it is not despise things of the smaller nature, and overlook them among others more bulky. One hundred Negroes however in the corner of the Jamaica parish putting down their names to procure the Holy Scriptures for themselves by their own means, is in truth a bulky object, and for which high feelings of praise should arise in our minds in seeing and contemplating all the circumstances of that case. But what shall I say at the close of this paragraph? – Why, that we have not 100 Bibles to satisfy this subscription list. In Kingston, as before said, we have none, and westward in Falmouth, Montego Bay, and Lucea, there are I believe very few to give or to lend. Hasten and then, if you please, to supply requested for Kingston in my last letter but one.

The Rev. Mr. Simpson the Presbyterian minister in Port Maria and the Rev. Mr. Baylis the Baptist minister are both of them most friendly to our Bible Society objects and work. They requested me to stop longer with them, and to attempt to get up a parish Bible Society there. I was obliged to decline complying with their wish, as it would have taken a longer time to form a parish Bible Society than I could then spare. The Rev. Mr. Cowan another Presbyterian minister lives and officiates about 12 miles from Port Maria. I had not the pleasure of seeing him as he was then in a distant part of the island; but from communications I have had with him, and from other circumstances, I know well that Mr Cowan is very friendly to our objects. The Rev. Mr. Seccombe, one of the Wesleyan missionaries lives also in this parish about seven miles to the westward of Port Maria, and he also, I know, is a true Bible Society man. These and other right materials may in due time be formed into a distinct district Bible Society as has been done in several of our other parishes, when a favourable opportunity may occur for cementing them together. Speaking of cementing, I am happy to say, that for some time past in this place the Presbyterian, the Baptist, and the Wesleyan ministers have held public prayer meetings together in each other's chapels in turn, and on the great missionary prayer day or evening, the first Monday of the month. This is a most pleasing circumstance, and long may this cemented band continue together, and may their spirit be diffused among us all here and everywhere. (Do not the love of Christ, the obedience  to Christ, the glory of Christ, the salvation of the souls around us, and the salvation of our own souls form a cementing material adhesive enough to bind the members of Christ together? And should not those servants of Christ who are near to him in his service, and ministers and administrators in his kingdom be ever and ever foremost to make, and never break, this holy adhesion? O shame upon us that it is not so in every case in place; and may God by the anointing  of the Spirit make it so badly, and in every country.)

When our gig came to hand, through the kindness of Mr. Oldham in forwarding it, we set off westwards. At Oracabessa we had a pleasing stoppage, as we passed by the door of Mr. and Mrs. Seccombe, where after a sweet half hour of Christian conversation we knelt down together, and prayed for the grace of our Lord Jesus Christ to be upon us, upon our fellow labourers around us, and upon our whole island. Thus refreshed we moved onward, and in the evening came to Ocho Rios. Here there is no minister stationed, but that is preaching once a fortnight by one of the Baptist Missionaries, and it is visited also occasionally by the Wesleyans. Next day we came to St. Ann's Bay where we called on Mr. and Mrs. Williams the Wesleyan Minister and his wife who reside in that place. In this parish also there seem to be material sufficient for forming a good Bible Society, and on a future day I trust it will be established.

On the 25th of March we arrived in this town of Montego Bay, grateful to the Lord for having preserved us through the dangers of another journey, and in perils more than we had formerly been in this island. The truth is, on the day we reached Arnott's Bay we had a narrow escape from serious injury, as we were thrown out of the gig into a small river but providentially received very little hurt. This occurrence reminds us anew of many mercies in many perils by sea and by land, and has turned our hearts afresh we trust to give praise unto God whose mercy endureth for ever.

On the Wednesday the 6th current was the day for the quarterly meeting of the committee of the Trelawney Bible Society, and I went to Falmouth to be present at it. Probably, before this reaches you, you will be informed of part of the proceedings in the form of a printed remittance to you for £50, accompanied by a note of expectation, that, on the next quarterly meeting, there would most probably be voted and sent to you another sum of £50. These two indicators show that Trelawney is not idle in Bible Society work among the items of the treasures receipt that appeared, from Mr. Blyth's congregation alone, the sum of £50 of our currency, what about £32 sterling. Several other circumstances of an encouraging nature occurred during our meeting, and calculated to open up pleasing prospects for after days. Your letter to me of 12 January last was read, in which you treat of the prices of Bibles as charged to the Societies, and I accompanied it with some explanatory observations. There was a desire manifested on reading it that the Scriptures might not be sold here too high, and I hope that you would enable them to act accordingly. I intimated to the meeting conformable to the contents of the same letter, the supply of the Scriptures written for on  the 14th of  November from Falmouth might be expected there by the first ship.

On the Wednesday following, the 13th instant the quarterly meeting of the St. James Bible Society to place, at which we had a goodly number of members of the committee present, as we have had in Falmouth. Here also your letter referred to was read, and its contents discussed at some length. The substance of what passed and repassed on the matter in question was this, – that a re-request should be sent to you begging you to consider that our case here is not exactly the case of your Auxiliaries in England. Their chief object, it is alleged, and it is true, is to collect funds for general distribution, whilst at the same time their own wants were attended to and supplied; whereas here, our chief object is to make a general circulation among ourselves, it being quite a secondary object that we should contribute towards general purposes our own wants being so great and requiring a long time to supply. Hence, it is argued, that you might treat with us here on more favourable terms than with your domestic Societies. This appeared to me, as well as to them, a sound argument. The St. James Bible Society from an honourable feeling desires to keep the accounts with you in debtor and creditor, and to pay off all that may be charged against them, and this they think they could do should you grant them the 25% reduction they request, for they would rather thus treat with you then receive boons and grants. On the same side I would beg leave once more to put in my advice, and request that you would in this manner deal with this Society; and in truth you may well make a difference between Jamaica and her population and Societies, and the same in England. If this Society will clear off all scores charged at the reduced prices, it will be more than you have hitherto got from this quarter, and therefore you had better make a good bargain when you may. What sums might be sent over and above the payment on the scale mentioned the St. James Bible Society would of course wish to be put down as free contributions. By the way you have put down in your last report some money as a free contribution from Kingston. Is this correct, and is this sum over and above paying for all books sent, or how does it stand? The same may be said of some other Societies in the colonies. Please to consider these things, and do the most you can for us, remembering what we have been, and what we now are.

Mr. Jackson's letter of 9 February and invoices came to hand the other day and the ship bearing the books is expected here soon from Kingston. But we shall need, and very early, many more Bibles here; and my cousin request or order for the St. James Bible Society, and to be sent to Mr. Roby as before, is for 500 nonpareils, best paper, calf, not brown; and 50 of the same size, 2nd paper, plain calf, ¾. This does not affect the order sent you some three months ago for 100 nonpareil Bibles (not "imperial"), 100 Brevier, 20 Pearl, and 36 Pearl Testaments with Psalms. To Falmouth I would say, send the same of the same, namely 500 and 50 as above mentioned. These two orders put together will make 1100 for these two parishes. – I feel I have written for too few Bibles for Kingston. We have been hampered again and again for want of books, and at present are particularly so in different parts of the island from the emptiness of our Kingston depot. Please then to send there 400 nonpareils, first paper, calf; and this now makes up my order to 1500 Bibles for this island, in addition to the order of 13th February last for 1500 Bibles and 1500 Testaments. – I should be glad if you would always send me a copy of every invoice of books sent to this island, besides sending the same to the places and parties immediately concerned.

As to the opening of a separate account with each parish Bible Society here that may correspond directly with you, you seem to say there will be no objections, whilst I think Mr. Jackson's observations which follow seemed to say it will not be very convenient. The St. James's Bible Society particularly wish this, pray grant it to them. The sum of £52:10/- or £32:2/- sterling paid by this to the Kingston Society for books as you will see in their printed report ought in strict justice to be put down to our account. Indulge us here also, if you please.

I should mention further in regard to the price of books, that due to various circumstances the general selling price with us has come to be at the one fourth reduction as in your subscribers' prices, and it cannot well now be altered. And may not the Negroes, so lately slaves, and so little removed as yet from the same, may they not look for their Bibles at this reduction from the hands of the English, into whose hands they and their forefathers for these 200 years have put so much? A truce then to niceties of calculations and comparisons between your auxiliary Societies there, and our negro Societies here. To grant the request of the St. James's Bible Society, and make the same price the price general for Jamaica.

I have more than once intended during these few months past to say a few words about Cuba. I have had serious thoughts of visiting that island again and again, and with that view I have made many inquiries as to the state of it, the results of which inquiries are, that there is very little probability of my doing anything there at the present time, so that nothing but time and means would be lost in paying it to visit. Here in Montego Bay I have some Bibles and Testaments in Spanish, and as there are frequently vessels passing from this port to that island and back again, I shall endeavour to send in to that place by this means a few copies of the Scriptures from time to time as circumstances may direct.

From the contents of my last letter being now before you, you will be aware that the line of time that half divides us is already past. I am however according to arrangements made still attending in part to your concerns, as you will see in my visiting the Bible Societies in Trelawney and the Spanish in their quarterly committee meetings. In a short time from this I expect to get through with some of my other business here, and then proceed to visit the Bible Societies in Hanover, Westmoreland, and St Elizabeth's, and preparatory to this I am now corresponding with various individuals connected with these Societies, by way of making arrangements that my visitation may be well times, and hence the more effectual.

            Believe me, My Dear Friend, Ever and Most Truly Yours,

                                                                                                James Thomson.

P.S. I find I have omitted in the order for Books to this place, 10 small pica, 4to broad margins, 30/-.

Rev A Brandram. - No 52

Montego Bay, Jamaica, 10th June 1836

My Dear Friend,

In commencing this letter, I mention in the first place the receipt of your letters of the 14th and 30th of March, and of the 14th April. The middle one of these three is the one whose contents I have most dwelt on in my mind, and you will naturally suppose that I should feel and reflect much more upon what you have written. The very friendly strain of your letter, and expressions of confidence in your correspondent, and your regret at our separation, and your willingness to have met my wishes, and your concerns in the whole matter, as seen oozing through your every word and phrase, – have, I assure you, be deeply and affectionately felt by me.

But what could I say, or what could I do, other than what I did say and do, when I wrote the letter to which yours now referred to is in reply? I have stated to you at length, and with long anticipation, my views on your work and your agencies in the West Indies, and more particularly respecting this island, and a certain individual then and still there or here. I had followed up that same view by witnessing statements in the words of our well-wishers, and I had laid before you facts amply manifesting the delightful and extensive openings for the glorious Bible Society work here. You differed from me as to what ought to be done, and as to the field for your agent; and you had most assuredly a very good right to do so. And what was I that I could venture to include myself, and my wishes, and my personal duties upon you? I had not presumption for this; and so it was, that I thought it my duty to consider very especially, what where the leadings of Providence in this case, and what was the line of conduct which I ought personally and individually to attend to under all the circumstances than before me. My resolves you have seen, though you do not exactly agree with them. But, my Brother, I could not have felt comfortable to have forced myself upon you, or have forced myself into a field not in entire accordance with your views. Had I ventured in my presumption to do so, I might have expected the rebuff I deserved; and had your goodness not so treated me, I should nevertheless have felt discomfortable, and under a unpleasing degree of responsibility, because I had presumed, or say chosen, to adopt a field of operations not willingly entered into by you.

You know that I have all along wish to act in entire conformity to your views, and when I was doubtful I was wont to trace in prospect for some months what appeared to be to be best, in order that I might have your mind on the subject and plan before I ventured on it, or to any great length. To act with your reluctant consent, could not have been, as I have said, comfortable to me. Hence it was, that I felt myself forced as it were by circumstances to adopt the line of conduct I did. Had our views corresponded, I could not perhaps have felt myself at liberty before God to disengage myself from your service, however much I might have relished that which I forthwith stepped into. Further, could I have by any means known beforehand the very friendly manner in which you would have been treated me had I thrown myself upon you, under my difficulties as to duty, and that you would so cordially have met me in all my way, as you have liberally and feelingly stated in the letter I am now replying to, – could I have known this, I would not have left your work, and my personal connection with you all, which had been so very pleasing to me and gratifying for the course of years. The Scripture tells us, that man deviseth his way, but the Lord directeth his steps: and the same Providence that appeared to me to lead away from you, may yet be seen as leading me back to you again. Should anything of this kind occur, my way will be rendered very clear, by the affecting friendliness of your letter, and by your expressions of willingness to meet me more than halfway in all my proposals, thus far at least made known to you. Well, shall I say, now at this early period of our half separation, that I never intended it should be more than a kind of half: shall I say it, that already something has appeared as a Providence to trace out a path of return to your always pleasing and accepted service? I believe there has.

I entered the employment of the Mico Charity with the intention of living and dying at my post in their work, and thought I had there found a resting place for my long wandering feet. Such was the thought of my foolish heart: but the Lord Jesus seems to say to me, Turn again to your wanderings through the wilderness, and therein abide till I come. The call I obey, and return to you again to march under your standard, for you are great Standard Bearer in the kingdom of Christ and of God. The circumstances and conditions under which I entered the Mico Charity have so changed, that I consider it my duty to retire from it. I stated to you in my letter of the 22nd February, as follows in respect to my new employment then in contemplation: – "I am to have put into my hands, a house, some land, and a number of children, with liberty to educate these children according to the best plans I can devise, and carry into effect." I am recently given to understand, that the view sketched and understood in the above statement as to my work, cannot be realised, and that too although the Public have been led to expect the plan I had in prospect by an advertisement kept standing in all the newspapers of the island for weeks in succession. This is so great a change and non-fulfillment in the eyes of the Public, as well as in the terms of my agreement, that I consider myself, not only authorised, but as somehow half bound in terms of  common honour, to save my credit by withdrawing from this connexion. I did not enter further into the subject, but I am glad that these changes in the business have happened at this early stage rather than later.

And now in regard to your business and your pleasing employment, to which, if the Lord will, I shall return on 1st July next, after an absence, or as I have always thought it, a half absence, of three months. In regard to your work here I have much to say, and much more than will justify you in your liberal treatment of your old servant in granting him all his desire in respect to this island. First then I would say, that your work has appeared more and more to open upon me in its extent and importance since my sidelong turning in regard to you. I have had several calls from various places, with goodly prospects of advancing your cause, but could not attend to them from the nature of my other and main employment of late: and by not being able to attend to these, has caused things in the places from whence the calls came, to remain not to say worse, in statu quo. Secondly, the opinion of others here most friendly to your cause has been much against the dissolution, our half  dissolution, that took place between us. I have been often rallied as to whether I was right in taking the step I did. I justified myself in these cases, and with all the delicacy I could towards you by saying in substance more or less what I said to you on the same point in my letter of the 22nd February. I give you one instance of this friendly rallying, and it is a written one, and from the pen of an old and long tried friend Mr. Tinson. He says in a note I received from him on the evening previous to my leaving Kingston on my way to this quarter in the new service: – he says, – "As you requested I have said nothing about what you spoke to me the other day but I have thought considerably. It does not become me perhaps to offer an opinion respecting your proceedings, and indeed I have not time to write and if I had it might not be well. You are much better capable of judging as to what is best than I am, but pardon me, it does seem to occur to me that your whole energies might well be employed in this island, solely as a Bible Agent, and never did it appear so necessary to me for such a man to be so engaged. Excuse this freedom, some day I may write you more fully."

Such are the views of the subject as taken by one most decidedly in your interest, and having local knowledge of the circumstances and work going forward in this island, and whose testimony ought to weigh greatly as I am sure it does, with the Committee in their arrangements respecting this place; and in the same too they will find a full justification of an ample and liberal line of conduct in the furtherance of Bible Society work in this peculiar land.

The views of another friend of the Bible Society on the point in question you already have in my letter of the 23rd January last. I referred to the Rev. Mr. Blyth's judgment and testimony in the same, were it not that it would savour perhaps of something I do not much like either in myself or others. Nevertheless for the purpose of seeing through this matter more fully, it would probably not be out of the way to read that extract at the time this letter is read, and its contents taken into consideration.

To these statements I would add, that in every conversation here, with everybody at all interested in your work in this island, the view I took of the subject in my letter of  the 24th  April last year, has been the decided view held on the subject by all the persons now referred to. You see what Mr. Tinson's view is at the present time, and I have been made to know the coinciding opinions of others as still more recently expressed on the subject in the rallyings I have had respecting this whole concern. – Shall I say then, that we are now fully agreed on the matter in question, and that I may and do proceed in the spirit of your letter I am now immediately replying to, namely, that bearing date of the 30th of March. So I shall consider the case is settled, and in this view of the matter I shall act until I hear from you. – In my letter of the 22nd February, and in what I have written above in this letter, you will see how unwilling I am to act except in most cordial conformity to your will and wishes as you may think best for the prosperity of the great cause God has entrusted to your stewardship. Please then to keep in mind that I still feel the same delicacy in this question and case, and that I by no means wish to intrude myself upon you, nor desire that you should bend your great concern to meet my convenience of my private duties as an individual before God. We may both be justified of our Lord Jesus Christ  though we take opposite views of this matter, and act under the separate judgments. – I have thought it my duty under present circumstances, and from the tenor of your letter now before me, thus to retender my poor instrumentality to you in all its earthiness, in order to reengage in your work and which indeed I have never fully left. It does seem by the present leading of God's providence not to mention others, that I should take up as my main and chief employment in the kingdom of God, that same work to which by the grace of our Lord Jesus Christ I have been called and in which through a long series of years, under many trials, and perils, and difficulties, I have been so very mercifully sustained and favoured. – I wait in prayer for your decision and your answer, and in the meantime pursue and prosecute your work as in former times, and in the name and strength of our Lord Jesus Christ, who is blessed forevermore, and in whom may we all evermore be blessed.

You will be pleased to learn [see at the bottom of next page.]

So much as above in the form of adjustments, and now for actual business. The first item will please you and I daresay the following items will not be otherwise felt by year. The first is a remittance of £50 from St. Elizabeth's Bible Society. This I have had in my hands for some time, but was somewhat at a loss as to the immediate application of it. It is now settled as to that, and I herewith remit the sum in the form of an order on my Private Account. Please therefore to debit me with this sum, and credit the St. Elizabeth's the Bible Society for the same. I have lately heard that the stock of small Bibles at Black River, the depot of the St. Elizabeth's Bible Society is totally ordined of small Bibles. I trust the supply requested for that place and Society on the 13th February last is now well forward on its way towards its proper destination. – I remit also the sum of £3:3:2 sterling, being a donation from the Rev. Thomas P Williams, Rector of St. Elizabeth's, "in furtherance of the object of the B.F.B.S. beyond the British dominions".

Falmouth, I have just heard, is again without small Bibles. 550 were requested in my letter of  the 19th April. These are on their way I hope; but they will not last long for that place, therefore be so good as follow them as early as you can with the same number and kinds. Trelawney will take as many Bibles from you, and will distribute them usefully.

In my last letter I spoke of St. Ann's and St. Mary's as ready for the formation in them of Bible Societies. I hope I shall be able to revisit these places before the lapse of many months, and to take measures for the commencement of the parish Bible Institution in each, and also to form some Bible Associations in connexion with them in favourable localities. Allow me then in the meantime to prepare for these, by begging from you a supply for each of the two places, the one to be sent to the Rev. Mr. Williams, St. Ann's Bay, and the other to the Rev. Mr. Baylis, Port Maria. The quantities for each place should be, 200 of the 4/- nonpareil Bible, 100 of the 3/4 nonpareil, 50 of the 6/8 Brevier, 50 of the 5/3 Pearl, 50 small pica at 10/- and 50 of the 21/- Quartos. Of Testaments 100 Brevier sheep, 50 Pica, 25 English and 25 Pearl; the three latter in calf, or sheep as you may please.

The £30 worth of Bibles formerly noticed, as got from you by Mr. Burchell were not, as I understand direct from you, but through some member of the Society or rather Committee, and hence the non-appearance of them in your Books, and also the anomaly respecting the price.

I should feel greatly obliged by your forwarding to me a note of all the copies of the Scriptures sent to the West Indies from the beginning of January 1830, up to the date of making it out. Also I beg leave to repeat my request for a copy of all invoices of books sent to Jamaica from the date of that request, and onwards.

            Believe me, My Dear Friend,

                                    Very Truly And Affectionately Yours,

                                                                                    James Thomson.

You will be pleased to learn, that there is no unpleasantness of feeling between my dear Brother Trew and myself in this case. He urges me not to give up what has been put into my hands. But in view of all the circumstances of the Mico Charity as they now stand before me, and considering all the circumstances of the Bible Society concern, I decide for you. May God be glorified in us, and the more, through all these occurrences.

So much as above, etc.

Rev A Brandram. - No 53

Montego Bay, Jamaica, 12th June 1836

My Dear Friend,

Since finishing the enclosed letter, I have been favoured with the communication from our worthy coadjutor the Rev. Mr. Blyth, which I beg leave to transcribe for you, leaving it to speak for itself. –

"To the Rev. James Thomson: – Hampden Manse, 11th June 1836: – My Dear Sir, – In compliance with your official notice, I subjoin a statement of the number of New Testaments and Psalters which I have distributed among my people, from the generous grant of the Bible Society to the Apprentices. – Number of these of the large size was 176: of a small size 226: total 402. – It may be proper to inform you, that I have given only four or five large Testaments to the parents of children who were learning to read, but not so far advanced as to be entitled to copies for themselves. Had I taken advantage of the Society's permission and given to all who had children beginning to read, I would have distributed at least 200 more. I thought it better to encourage the children to persevere by the hope of obtaining a Testament for themselves; and the heads of families have now an opportunity of purchasing Bibles from the Society. I have not a single copy of the small size left, and only a few of the large ones. I am happy to learn that there is a prospect of the grant being continued for some time longer to the Apprentices as they make sufficient proficiency in reading.

Although a few may have abused the generosity of their British friends by neither valuing the precious gift, nor taking care of it, yet as a whole the grant of Testaments and Psalters has been productive of excellent practical effects upon the minds of the Apprentices. The very announcement of it convinced them that they had many friends in Britain accordingly congratulated them on their change of situation, and who would continue to feel interested in their future conduct in welfare: and that this conviction produced a favourable impression on their minds has been evinced by the general good conduct as Apprentices. A great many were also induced thereby to learn to read, by the hope of obtaining Testaments gratis, – excited probably by the honour more than the value of the book. As an illustration of this, I may inform you that at first I only found 250 in my congregation entitled to Testaments; but such has been the stimulus given to reading principally by the donation of the Society, that, as you will perceive from the number distributed, 150 more have since learned, besides many more will have commenced. There are at present in our Testament classes a considerable number who could not read a word at the commencement of the Apprenticeship. A large proportion of those who got Testaments are subscribers for Bibles.

Your visit as agent of the Bible Society created a considerable sensation in my congregation, and I trust your address tended to deepen their sense of value of the word of life. Indeed the circumstances that 400 names were immediately enrolled as subscribers, and that seventy pounds [currency] have been paid for Bibles during the six months of our Association's existence prove beyond doubt that your exertions among us were not in vain.

I cannot conclude without remarking, that if a single congregation after being supplied with 400 Testaments, besides 150 copies of the Scriptures which I formerly procured for them, still requires 300 or 400 Bibles, the demand for copies of the word of God must be immense throughout the West Indies. Even to supply every family in Jamaica alone with a copy of the Bible would be an important item in the sum of benevolence expended by the Society.  May it continue to prosper in its course of well doing, and be the instrument of dispensing the treasures of Divine knowledge to many more of the benighted inhabitants of the world."

What is here and thus brought before you in the letter which I have now copied, will, I am sure lead you, and those with you, to say, – "Glory be to God for what he has wrought through our inefficient hands, and be his holy name glorified in us forever, through Jesus Christ our Lord."

            Believe me, Truly and Sincerely Yours,

James Thomson.

Posted
AuthorBill Mitchell

Rev A Brandram No.

Montego Bay, Jamaica, 28th September 1836

My Dear Friend,

In the beginning of July I made some arrangements for visiting towards the end of the same month, the parishes of St. Elizabeth and Manchester, and also some parts of Westmoreland. An unforeseen circumstance hindered me from verifying my purpose exactly at the time intended; but early in the month of August, I set out. The roads were heavy, owing to considerable falls of rain that had taken place over a good part of the district through which I passed. This circumstance led me to require more horse power than I myself possessed, and what I thus required was kindly furnished by two of the many friends which you have in these parts. On the second day of my journey in, when I was about midway across the island, I met, all in a moment, a new and unexpected adversary, in the shape of a huge tree, which during the preceding night had fallen right across the road on a mountain steep, and rendered it altogether impassable for a wheel carriage or even a horse. I hastened to get help to remove this barrier, but with all the speed we could make, it was five hours before we could remove it and get onward.

In the afternoon of the day mentioned, I came to the house and property belonging to one of our warm friends, Mr Marcey of Kepp of in the parish of St. Elizabeth. I believe I mentioned to you, and one of my communications last year, that Mr. Marcey had formed a Bible Association at his own place, and that it was likely to do well. I found in my arrival on this occasion, that it had done well as had been anticipated of it. It has raised £33 of our currency, and it would have produced more had there been a proper supplies of Bibles on hand of the required size and price.

From Kepp I went to Lacovia where there is a chapel and congregation of the establishment under the Rev. Mr. Hylton, a clergyman well known to you through my statement of last year. The Bible Association there has done very well during the elapsed year, and stands No.1 in its results among the Bible Associations of St. Elizabeth's. It has raised £60:16:8. I had an opportunity of addressing this Association, and urged its members, from all the motives of the Bible, to persevere, and grow greater in their good work. – From Lacovia, I went with Mr. Hylton to his residence, situated in a large and hot  plain, which at that time strongly resembled Gideon's fleece in one of its states, as the whole district has been suffering a severe drought for months together, whilst the rain was falling plentifully, and at times in torrents, nearly all around, and reaching to within a very few miles of it. From this quarter I paid a hurried visit to our good friend Mr. Tomlinson (high up on the mountains of Manchester,) whom I injured last year by calling him Wilkinson, and thus making you to print the same. I hope that however is now rectified, through my notice of it to you about the beginning of the year. I return soon to St. Elizabeth's, to have an opportunity of addressing the Grossmonde Bible Association, one of our best in the parish. It has competed nobly with Lacovia, and was thought all along to be ahead of it till the closing of the accounts, when it was found that Lavovia had exceeded it by a very little – only two dollars. Grossmonde has raised £60:3:4.

You will wonder perhaps when I tell you, that I had to appear, both that Lacovia and in Grossmonde, as a kind of culprit, and for what do you think? Why for not having fulfilled my promise made last year, to send them a proper supply of Bibles. Now it is right that you should know this, as part of the blame is attachable, I should think, to you. You will recollect that I desired you to send for that parish six cases, intimating that several more might be required. I said, I was afraid of overshooting the mark, by ordering more than would be taken up, but said that you might draw as long a bow as you like. You did draw stronger than I did, and sent nine cases. But we have both failed in this matter through our darkness, like the King of Israel, in striking on the ground at Elisha's command, thrice only, instead of five or six times, as the prophet said he should have done. Thus have we thrown, so to speak, only nine shells into the enemy strongholds, whereas we might have thrown fifteen or twenty, had we known the demand there would be for the word of God in that place. But this is a discouragement of a very encouraging kind. Let us speedily meet these demands and thus hasten on the kingdom of God. Surely, we who are of England should pull on the glorious car of our Redeemer with as much alacrity as the poor negroes of Jamaica. – Since I left that quarter, and came over to this the North side of the island, I have learned that nine other cases have arrived there, a circumstance that will liven many negroes' hearts in the parish of St. Elizabeth.

On my way to Black River to attend our anniversary meeting I went over the Santa Cruz mountains, and passed a couple of nights cool enough at Malvern near the top of the same, the residence of Mr. Millar and his family, all warm friends of the Bible, and of those who circulate it. On Friday, the 19th of August the meeting took place. Our president, the Honourable Dr. Robertson, the chief Magistrate of the parish was in the chair, and a considerable number of the members of the Committee were present. We had however, we may say, no congregation of people, partly I suppose from a misunderstanding of our object on the part of the public. This we must try to remedy on a future occasion, should the good hand of our God be upon us in bringing us together again in that place in the furtherance of the good work entered into. The Report was read, and contained in it much that was calculated to encourage, and to lead to renewed and further exertions. A copy of this report will be put into your hands along with this letter, and I doubt not but you will have pleasure in perusing it. The year's funds you see come to £243:4:3; and nearly all the sum is from the negroes or apprentices.

On Saturday the 20th the day immediately after our meeting at Black River we had an appointed meeting at Mandeville in the parish of Manchester. A force of circumstances threw us out of our arrangements, and obliged us to have these two meetings so near each other in time, though the places are 50 miles apart through hot, hot plains, and over mountains. I duly arrived at Mandeville at the appointed time. There I met our friends of the Manchester Bible Society, and then again I had to stand – the culprit, for your crimes in my own, as before stated in regard to St. Elizabeth's, – for failing to send the people Bibles in conformity with the expectations we had raised. I made the best figure I could in this plight, and endeavoured to make up for past promises by making new ones, which I hope will be more to the purpose than the others, and will produce satisfaction on all sides. I warn you now will in time of the part you have to take in these promises, and shall before I close state to you particulars. I know you will not fail to send us all we want.

After leaving Manchester, I rode down the same day to the southernmost parts of the parish within a very few miles of the sea. My ride was through a delightfully cool country, that is cool for the torrid zone, and through delightful plantations of coffee, interspersed with extensive provision grounds in rich luxuriance. When you take it into your head to visit Jamaica, you will find in the mountains of Manchester a very pleasing and temperate clime to lodge or reside in, and in my opinion much superior in the point of weather to you Blackheath, or all your heaths put together. – But, I have forgotten whither was traveling. In the southern parts of Manchester I came to the residence of the Rev. Mr. Paterson one of the Scotch missionaries, who was last year in Montego Bay, but has now taken up his station in that quarter. It is a fine place for a missionary field, as it is a populous and hitherto a much neglected spot. Here our friend Mr. Patterson is, as I said, settled, and his family, all with their hands and hearts most fully occupied in the things pertaining to the kingdom of God, and with every prospect of success. I saw his congregation on the day after my arrival, being Sunday, and addressed his people on the grand subjects of the Bible, and on the Bible itself. They will hold themselves in readiness to form a Bible Association so soon as we can get Bibles to put before them.

After leaving Coco Walk, for that is the name of Mr. Paterson's place, I came to Comfort one of the stations of the Mico Charity, and the chief one for the county of Middlesex in which it is situated. Mr. McMurray who is at the head of it, has lately become one of the secretaries of the Manchester Bible Society, and promises to be an efficient office bearer in it. Next I passed on to Fairfield the Moravian station from which I addressed you a letter last year. The Rev Mr Rickseeker is still pursuing his heavenly course there, and carrying on the Bible Association formed in his congregation; but he like others has been hampered for want of Bibles. Some six miles onward along the mountain ridge lies Huntly the estate of Mr. Tomlinson, where I again passed another night, and made further arrangements respecting the Manchester Bible Society.

I next descended, I may say, right down the mountains steep, into the hot and dry plain before mentioned, where Mr. Hylton resides.

On the 28th of August I was again at Kepp agreeable to an arrangement made with Mr. Marcey on my visit there some weeks before. Mr Marcey is one of the few proprietors who in the dark years of this island thought about the souls of the slaves. His conscience moved him in 1822 to try himself what he could do to instruct them in the way of God and of Christ. He made his attempt, and the Lord blessed his efforts. The people were inclined to hear, and he continued his instructions. All was dark around when he commenced. Gradually however thereafter, the beautiful feet of the Preacher of the Gospel of peace were seen in the neighbourhood. But having, as I may say, formed his congregation, he still went on with it, and he still goes on to teach and to preach Jesus Christ, and thus acts as a very effective auxiliary to the Rector of the parish, the Rev. Mr. Williams, who is himself a faithful and zealous Preacher of the Gospel, and the diligent labourer in the kingdom of God.

According to previous agreement and notice given, I addressed Mr. Marcey's flock, on the way of salvation, and on the Bible Society concern in which they had embarked, and in which they had done so well. The day was pleasant to us all, and the presence of the Lord was I trust with us. In Mr. Marcey we have an effective friend, and he will now be able to give us more assistance than formerly, as he became a co-anniversary meeting one of our treasurers. Mr Millar before mentioned is the other; and they take the parish between them, the Black River which runs diagonally through the whole parish, dividing it into two pretty equal halves, forming the boundary of their respective operations. We expect good results from both our new officers, they being both men of business, and we hope they will make a business of our Bible Society concerns.

In the neighborhood of  Kepp there live two proprietors, both friends to the Bible cause, Mr Coke and Mr. Scott. I visited these two gentlemen, and also the Rev. Mr. Collis the Moravian minister near there, whose station is called New Carmel, and where there is one of the largest congregations connected with that body in this island. This station is within the parish of Westmoreland. A Bible Association was formed there last year, and it has raised about £25. It would have raised more, like the rest, had there been a proper supply of Bibles. The people here, I may well say, as likewise in the associations before mentioned where the Scriptures were not in sufficient quantity, have exercised much faith and patience, believing that they should in due time be supplied, and patiently waiting, whilst they continued to pay their subscriptions from month to month. There were some doubters here however and it was not wonderful that there should. These in hopelessness of the Bibles coming, spoke to their treasurer to have their money returned. But Mr. Hamilton who fills that office, knew well how to manage the people, and refused to give them their money back again. For Bibles he had received it, he said, and for Bibles he would keep it, and till they came. The present supply come to Black River will put all this matter straight, and encourage to go onward. – I wish I could give you a sketch of Mr. Hamilton's career, the valuable treasurer to our New Carmel Association. He was till of late a slave, and one of those who follow the Lord diligently. Every means were used to compel him to give up his religion, and his attendance at the house of God. But all proved ineffectual; he stood firm amidst dangers and sufferings; and now the Lord has set his feet, I may say, in a large room: he is now free, and the overseer of an estate. – At the close of my address to the New Carmel Association last year, in which, among other things, I noticed your gift of the New Testament and Psalter, and which many of them had in their hands, – at the close Mr. Hamilton stood up, and in his own name, and the name of the rest of the congregation, expressed his and their thanks to the Society for their liberal and Christian gift, and begged me to convey these their sentiments to your great Society. Did I omit this notice in my letters to you last year? If I did, I beg pardon of all the parties concerned for the same. Now, at all events I have given it.

My last stopping place was a Beaufort, and the Moravian station where the Rev. Mr. Pfeiffer resides, this too is in Westmoreland; and here also the Association has suffered for want of Bibles. – The day I left that station, I arrived in Montego Bay.

I came here just in time, and according to previous arrangements, to attend a meeting of the St. James's Bible Society committee preparatory to our anniversary meeting. The 8th of September was fixed for it, and on that day we met; but from deficiency somehow in the notifications from the pulpits the attendance was very scanty, so much so as to dispose us all to an adjournment for a week, with the intention of getting more full advertisement in all the places of worship. This was accordingly done, and on the 14th September we met again, when we found our audience more numerous, but still much less than we could have wished. Of the Ladies however we had not to complain, as they numerously graced that part of our hall allotted to them. That example we trust will prove useful to us on another occasion, when we shall expect to see more manliness exhibited by a deep interest being taken on the part of our men, and that of all ranks, in favour of the circulation of God's most holy word. Our meeting however though not numerously attended was interesting, and we parted all in gladness that we had been there, yet sorry that there were so few to enjoy what we enjoyed. I will not add more in description of our meeting, as before this reaches you, a couple of newspapers will be in your hands in which our proceedings are noticed. In these you will have that happiness to see that our two Editors, though diverse in almost all things else, unite and agree to encourage our Bible Society. This is, as you will recollect it was, last year. So friendly were both papers that the committee in Earl Street begged me to convey a vote of thanks for the same, which I had the pleasure of doing. They are still friendly as before: and is it not a great happiness to be connected with such a Society of Peace as yours in principles and practical results is!

The results of the St. James's Bible Society in its first year are very encouraging. The income from the several sources is £273:3:4. Now think for a little of this sum raised in one parish of this island, for Bible Society purposes, in one year, where but for this Society, we may say, nothing would have been done in this way. Again think on the increase circulation of the Scriptures as a consequence of this, and in connexion with it. And further, consider the many thoughts that have been directed to the Bible as the effect of this stir made about the much neglected Book: and we may add, I think, that many eyes, and hearts too, have been led to the word of God from the influence of the Society in our parish. Think of all these things, and you will then be able to weigh and measure the good that may reasonably be expected to have been done in a year by the St. James's Bible Society of Jamaica.

Two days after our public meeting here in Montego Bay, the Hanover Bible Society held its first anniversary, in the town of Lucea in that parish. It was held in the evening, and the attendance was a good; and all ranks seem to balance their credit in the matter, by proportional representation of their several classes. Here again, you and your Society, are uniters. The Black, and White, the Bond and Free, the Rich and the Poor, and I may add, he that feareth God, and he that feareth him not, – all are brought together about the Bible. If the very exterior of the Bible so unites, O how united and happy should we all be, were its peaceful and gracious interior better known by us all! But, the mechanical operation must precede the spiritual. Let us not be discouraged but animated in our work. The labour of our hands will by and bye affect men's hearts; and a corruptible book, will grow up into and incorruptible one, that shall live and abide for ever.

Our Hanover anniversary exceeded in interest, I think, our St. James's one, pleasing and profitable as that was. I suppose our numerous and interesting assembly might have given the stimulus, for numbers are animating. In income however the Hanover Bible Society was less, and there were obvious circumstances which led to its being so. The amount is £173. Here again we might make the same observations as before, when speaking above of the results of the St. James's Bible Society; all of which results we may consider, so to speak, as the creation of our Bible Society, and formed in one sense out of nothing, that this is where nothing of this specific kind would have been but for this institution: and to him who only can create out of nothing, be all the praise and glory.

Since I returned here from Hanover I have in addition to other things connected with our objects, been attending to the printing of the First Annual Report of the St. Elizabeth's and the St. James's Bible Societies. Two copies of each I now forward to you, the sight and reading of which, I trust, will prove gratifying to yourself, and to others in the Committee. We do not compare ourselves here, nor must you, with your auxiliaries there; but in estimating our poor labours, you must consider who and what we are, not say what we have been, and till very recently to.

I avail myself in forwarding these reports do, of my Lord Glenelg who is one of your Vice Presidents, and whose name, and part of whose speech at your last anniversary we have noticed in one of these reports. We hope his Lordship will not be displeased, either with the use we have made of his name, or of the liberty taken in sending you this little packet through the Colonial Office. If he is, we shall not trouble him again.

I come now to speak of supplies of Bibles. You see, from the statements above, that all the places through the course of my late tour were quite out of books, and to the injury of our objects. I may add also, that they are out of supplies in Hanover, St. James's, and Trelawney; that is, they are out of  Bibles of the size chiefly in demand. – (In Hanover Mr. Jackson has a little account to settle, inasmuch as by a letter which they there have from him, and which I saw, dated so far back as the 30th April, he promised that the supply of 250 Bibles which that Society had written for, should be sent them immediately after, – and they are not yet come, nor has anything been heard of them.)

The books lately come to Black River as above noticed, will supply the immediate demands there, or at least will appease for a time. The books ordered from Montego Bay and Falmouth, which must now be on their way, and near, will meet the pressing wants of those places. The large supplies ordered for Kingston will also for a time meet demands in that quarter. – We must however, if possible, make such arrangements as shall prevent our running out in future. This will be best done, I think, my having a good stock always on hand in Kingston in a General Depot, so that all local wants occurring anywhere in the island, may be from thence supplied with as little loss of time as possible. This, of course, will be in addition to all quantities sent direct to the out ports for individual Societies. Of this depot I would take the exclusive charge, and would render you an account from time to time of the books sent to parish societies out of it, so that you would be able to regulate your separate accounts with them accordingly. – To this General Depot then, please send, for a commencement, 500 nonpareil Bibles, coloured calf, – 500 nonpareil, plain calf, 2nd paper, – 250 Ruby, 24mo coloured calf, – and 500 Brevier 8mo coloured calf; in all 2000 Bibles: – and to this add 500 Minion Testaments 24mo skivar, 2nd paper, – and 500 Brevier Testaments, 12mo skivar, also 2nd paper. – Him these supplies you will please forward at your earliest convenience, invoice to me, and consigned to James Taylor Esq. Kingston, to whom please send a duplicate of the invoice.

I expected lately some of those Bibles come to Kingston by the United Kingdom and the Calypso, for meeting our need in Manchester, but for want of an invoice and notice of their arrival, I found when I applied that all the Bibles in request were disposed of, amounting to about 600. See what a demand there, for the Scriptures! Sad as I was, and Manchester also, I could not but rejoice in the disappointment. O may God continue among us this ardent desire for the Precious Volume, and more and more precious may it be to us all!

Your last letter dated the 22nd June came into my hands on  the 30th August, and was very acceptable. It is full of interesting matter, and has much gratified our friends in this quarter. Many thanks to you from Jamaica, for two years privilege of purchasing at the reduced prices. Your generosity, I trust, will not be lost in this matter. (I shall be glad to see Mr. Wheeler's speech when the Monthly Extracts come to hand. Spain and Italy I see are opening. Your accounts about Wales, and the appointment of an Agent to it, and a meeting of 20,000 on the Green at Bala, are all truly gratifying.) May your £10,000 legacies be often repeated. There are many in England who could well afford to give or to leave a sum of this amount; and it would be well for all such to have their books and accounts in a proper state, to present to our Lord Jesus Christ at the date of his reckoning. But you, my dear friend, and I, and all the ministers and administrators in the kingdom of God, have the longest accounts to make out. The Lord make us faithful and good servants, with our accounts always ready, and our loins girded! O let us pray for each other! The Lord grant unto us, that we may all obtain mercy of the Lord in that day!

            Believe me, Ever Truly Yours,

                                    James Thomson.

Note (BM): We have not at this point been able to locate the 16th August 1838 letter from St Elizabeth's or the 27th September 1836 letter from Montego Bay.

Rev A Brandram  No.56

St James, Jamaica, 3rd November 1836

My Dear Friend,

Your letter of the  29th August has within these few days come into my hands. You may be sure I read it over with a deep feeling of interest in all its contents. My first impression from it is, that of your own kindly feelings towards me; for which, and for all your former friendship, I beg you to accept of my sincerest thanks, and may God reward you.  My next impression is, that of thankfulness to our heavenly Father, that the Committee "cordially welcome " me to them again, "unfeignedly rejoice" in our reunion, and "hold out the right hand of fellowship" to me "with the same sincerity as ever". Our former cordiality and fellowship in all our operations has often been with me the subject of  thanksgiving to him who gave us grace so to live and act with each other. My third impression from your letter is, that of sincere regret and brief for having "put the committee into an awkward position" by my movements in regard to their statements to the Public. I seceded, or rather receded, from the Society because of the circumstances detailed at length in my letter of the 22nd February last; and unexpectedly finding myself soon after without embarrassment in my engagements, and having in the meantime received your very friendly letter of the 30th March, I thought it my duty to return to you in the terms of that letter, in the belief that my return would be acceptable, and not counting on any chances of giving you perplexity in your public statements. I am grieved at this alloy to our reunion, and had I known that I should thus have given you trouble, I should most probably have avoided the occasion. But we are now again united, and I trust of God; the trouble has already been incurred, and cannot be undone; and now we must study how best to act as the servants of Christ, that the kingdom of God may be promoted by us, and that our former harmony may reappear and be continuous.

In regard to my not having mentioned my resignation to Mr. Wheeler, I would say, that it was agreed upon by Mr. Trew and myself that neither of us should say anything upon the subject to anyone until the Packet should be gone. Mr. Wheeler was included in this, along with all our friends; and I had no particular hesitation in including him, as I knew it could not possibly operate on his immediate arrangements. This reason did not exist when I wrote Mr. Wheeler to Hayti; but somehow I neglected to do so, in the first instance, for which I am to blame; and afterwards I knew not where he was; that I might send a letter to him. – But on the other hand, I did intimate to him when here as much as might have prevented him from being much surprised at my resignation; for I told him that I had entered into some arrangements which would keep me in the Island, of which I could not been speak distinctly but of which he would soon hear; and this I did in a conversation I had with him, to lead him to send letters to me without hesitation to this place, offering him through our corresponding all the assistance I might in any wise be able to afford him in the prosecution of his work. – You are not to suppose by my letter of the 29th June, which is now before you, that there was any quarreling between my Brother Wheeler and myself, and that on this account I concealed from him the subject in question. There was nothing of this kind between us. In the letter noticed, I have stated regarding some of our affairs, that things might have been better managed in my judgment than they were; and this I did very reluctantly, and only in justification of myself, as I conceived there was blame unfairly laid upon me as contained in the expression of Mr. Jackson's letter alluded to and quoted. In Mr. Wheeler's work, and in himself personally, I feel much interest. I remember him daily in my prayers with affection, God is witness, praying that the Lord may counsel and guide him, and prosper him in himself, and in all his work. I should be glad to hear more from him of his movements in progress, but I suppose he is often like myself scanty of time for necessary correspondence, and more so from what is not immediately required.

I turn now to Mr. Jackson's letter of the 15th September just come into my hands, and containing copies of two letters, one from Dr. Mora, and the other from his correspondent in Mexico. I am sorry to learn that there is so much dilatoriness in Dr. Mora in settling his accounts with the Society, and much fear he has not what he should remit. In regard to the translation of the Scriptures into the tongue spoken in Mexico, I made no further arrangements than for procuring the Gospel of Luke to be rendered into the Mexican, the Otomi, and the Tarasco languages. The first mentioned only was in hands when I left that country, and Dr. Mora proposed to give the Translator for his trouble one of the sets of versions and reports which you sent me there, and which were put into Dr. Mora's hands. There was no arrangement beyond this, and I never contemplated the translation of the whole Bible into any of these tongues. From the letter of Dr. Mora's correspondent it would seem that the whole Scriptures are nearly rendered into Mexican. You cannot help it now: and as to the remuneration to be given, of which Mr. Jackson inquires, your best guide will be what you have paid for the Catalonian and Peruvian versions. This would be the utmost, but very probably much less would do under actual circumstances. Please put the question to Dr. Mora as to what he thinks should be offered.

Should the whole Bible come to you from Mexico translated into the ancient Aztec, I would not advise its entire publication, but only the New Testament, and the book of Psalms. The Aztec or Mexican tongue is spoken, I should think, by not less than Two Millions of people. It is the language throughout the State of Mexico, of one half of Puebla, and of a good part of the States of Querétaro, Jalisco, etc. There are two other languages of those spoken in Mexico, in which it would be desirable to have a translation of some portion Scriptures, namely, that is Zapoteco, and the Maya, the former spoken extensively in the State of Oaxaca, and the other by everybody throughout the whole State of Yucatán. – I notice these points in case of opportunities offering; but it may perhaps be profitable, by and by when Jamaica is well arranged in Bible concerns, that your former agent in Mexico should again visit that country, to arrange about these versions, and other matters connected with your work. This will be further touched upon in a subsequent letter.

I remain, My Dear Friend,

Very Truly Yours,

James Thomson.

Rev A Brandram No.57

Falmouth, Jamaica, 16th November 1836

My Dear Friend,

My last details of our work here brought things down to the date of my letter No. 55, namely the 28th September. I now proceed to notice subsequent operations. – On the 7th October I set out on another tour. I went first, right across the island, from Montego Bay to Black River, but stopped a little at two places on the way, namely, at the Moravian establishments that Beaufort and at Mr. Marcy's. My chief object at Black River was to see about the proper disposal of the nine cases of Bibles that had recently arrived there from London. When I reached that place, I found that some of the cases had already made their way into interior parts, according to directions I previously gave by letter. The rest were soon disposed of in accordance with the claims that had been made for them; and I have once more the pleasure and the pain of saying, the supply is not nearly adequate to the demand in that quarter for the Holy Scriptures. I had better therefore before I proceed further, item down the particulars of another shipment for Black River, to be sent as soon as you can to Mr. Daly, who is our depository and salesman gratuitously. Have the goodness to send us 1000 Bibles at once, for all that number will be required there and soon; and double the quantity I hope soon after: send them thus, – 100 pearl, coloured calf; 100 Ruby, col'd. calf; 200 Ruby, plain calf; 100 Ruby, canvass; 200 nonpareil, coloured calf; 200 nonpareil, plain calf; and 100 nonpareil, canvass.

Having as above stated, disposed of all our stock at Black River, and having now as you  here see, begged only 1000 Bibles more for that place, I leave it and go onwards. Savanna La Mar lies about 34 miles westward from Black River, by a road running along near to the sea coast, forming a very hot  ride to a poor European. Five miles on the road from Black River lies our house whose hospital roof had taken me in on a former occasion. I turned aside to it with my mind full of preaching directly and individually the glorious gospel of Christ as contained in the holy book we circulate. But, I was too late. The individual to whom I intended thus to preach, closed her period of time, and entered on eternity about one hour before I arrived. O what true wisdom is it, to be always ready for appearing before our Lord Jesus Christ! – And what consummate folly the contrary! May we Bible Society men be always found properly ready; and hard will it go with us, if we are not, having the Bible so to speak always in our hands, and sending  it forth to all, with loud declarations as to its immense value, and its imperative demands.

In Savanna La Mar, and other parts of the parish of Westmoreland, I found some Bible Society friends, both good men and true, but nevertheless our cause has not prospered there as it has done in other parishes of this county of Cornwall. Several things have combined to hinder us, though it is unnecessary to detail them. It is better for me to tell you, that I think and hope these hindrances will by and by disappear, and Westmoreland will yet, and I trust soon, take its proper stand among the parochial Bible Societies of the county. To bring about this better state of things I used whilst there, such measures as I thought best, partly of a public, and partly of a private nature. I cannot help stating that one gentleman, Mr. Hutchinson Scott, the proprietor of  two estates in this quarter, came no less than 20 miles to attend our public meeting. I made arrangements with some of our friends to give increased attention to Bible Associations in their own congregations, and visited some of them and addressed the people on the subject. I look forward to the fruits; but we must have patience until the spring and the summer be past, and the harvest times arrive. By that time and before it we shall need a fresh stock of Bibles there. Please then to send to the Rev. John Hutchins, Savanna La Mar exactly one half of the quantity and kinds of Bibles ordered for Black River.

From Savanna La Mar I proceeded round Negril Point, the westernmost part of this island. There is a little village at that point to which I went and preached, and where a Bible Association will be formed. It is a wild place, but has been wilder. The Gospel, so to speak, is now tolerated among them, and I trust by and by some and many of them will be subdued by it. The word of God forced in among them by a Bible Association will greatly contribute thereto, we may confidently expect.

After leaving Negril quarter I proceeded to Hanover, and to one of the Church Missionary stations in that parish. This Society has a good school here kept by their catechist Mr. Holt, on an estate called Rock Spring. I had an opportunity of addressing the people there, and of leading them into the formation of a little Bible Association. They had previously formed a Missionary Society, and it is always pleasing to see the two objects combining in the same places and persons. I next went to Green Island, where, you will recollect a Bible Association was formed last year. That Association has not prospered as was expected owing in a great measure to the removal of the Curate who was there, and the indisposition of his successor. Still it has prospered in other respects as well as it could, for the chief hindering cause of it, has been the want of Bibles. Green Island is in Hanover, and connected with the Bible Society of that parish. A supply for it will therefore be included in that presently to be noticed for Lucea, from which they can be forwarded by boats from time to time.

In arriving at Lucea I found the former scarcity of Bibles still subsisting, Mr. Jackson's supply as noticed in a former letter not having come. In addition to that supply, and to all others ordered for the Hanover Bible Society, be so good as send 500 Bibles, the same as ordered for Savanna La Mar: and let them be sent as before to the Rev. John Stainsby. At Lucea I found the Rev. Mr. Betts of the Church Missionary Society, whose place, far up in Hanover parish, I had intended to visit, but was hindered by his being from home. Mr. Betts complaint is that of everybody else's – want of Bibles. "We cannot get on," said  he, and say all, "for want of Bibles."

I next proceeded towards Montego Bay, but before I reached that place I may tell you a little incident that occurred in the way. On a former occasion I found the Spaniard residing about 10 miles from Lucea. I sat down in his house to have some conversation with him. He was of course pleased to have me speak to him in his native tongue. We talked of the Bible. He said he had had one, but that he had lent or given it to his brother, who was also residing in this island and has a large family. I promised to give him another Bible, and begged him to allow his brother to keep the one he had. I afterwards sent him the Spanish Bible I promised. On the present occasion I inquired if he had got the book. He joyfully said he had, and thanked me much for it. He then brought it and showed me how far he had got on his reading. He began formally at the first chapter of Genesis, and had reached in the regular order, where I found his mark, the 22nd chapter of Deuteronomy. I talked to him of the contents of the Bible – of the Gospel and especially noticing the errors of his native, the catholic religion. I was very much pleased and surprised that his views on these subjects. – When we parted, he would have me take a fine large chicken with me, which he said the servant would carry. I was unwilling to take it, and unwilling to refuse it. But devising a medium, I said, that it would be better to leave it till I might return, and then we would each together.

Our Bible Society friends in Montego Bay are, I found, not satisfied with somebody, not to some Body in Earl Street. It seems they requested a supply of Bibles in January last, pointing out the ship in which they should be sent and which ship it would appear arrived long ago, but brought not be expected Bibles; nor are they yet arrived. The disappointment is much felt, because there is a great demand for Bibles there, and none to meet that demand. Further, an additional supply was requested for that place by my hands, by letter dated the 19th April; but up to the end of October nothing has been heard of them. I shall feel obliged by your noticing these things to the somebody or some Body in question. Thus I clear myself, let others do the same as they can.

On the fourth of the present month I came to Hampden in the parish of Trelawney in order to join with the Rev. Mr. Blyth in celebrating the first anniversary of the Bible Association formed in his congregation in that place. I noticed to you the auspicious beginning of this Association in my letter from Falmouth last year. You will be pleased to learn that the ending of the first year is as auspicious as was its first beginning. £150 of our currency have been raised by this Association during the year. Of this sum £118 have been applied in the purchase of Bibles including a small free contribution, and £32 have been sent as a donation by the Scottish Missionary Society with which this congregation is connected. This is a noble result from a church consisting of apprentices, by whom almost exclusively the sum has been raised. As an example to other congregations, I endeavoured to turn this to account in my letters and addresses. – There are about half a dozen other congregations in this county that have done very well likewise as Bible Associations, but Hampden has taken the lead, as another Hampden did, and has justified its name.

On the ninth instant we had a Committee meeting of the Trelawney Bible Society, preparatory to the anniversary meeting two days after. There was a goodly number of the members present, and in the chair sat the Rector of the parish, the President of the Society, of whom I must here say what is justly due to him, that he has regularly attended every meeting of the Committee during the whole year, from the formation of the Society. – On the 11th the anniversary to place, in the Court House. This house, and all such known by the same name, we considered now as our own, that is to say, at all times at our command for Bible Society purposes; and this is as good as if they were ours by right and title, and something better, as we have them not to keep in repair. Please to put this item to the credit of the Jamaica Public, and it is truly creditable to the parish authorities, from whom the leave has always frankly been obtained; and as a specimen of the favour your noble institution has obtained in this island.

The Rev. Mr. Frazer, the Rector, was in his place, in the chair, at the public meeting, and the assemblage present was good, though not equal to what we had last year. The Report was read by the secretary, and its contents gratified all present, and surprised not a few as to the extent of its operations and the amount of its funds. Trelawney has got to the top of our parish Bible Societies in the county of Cornwall, and this is the more honourable to it, as it was the last formed. It has raised in the year £340 of our currency, which makes about £211 sterling; and if I may here once for all give you a key to the value of our money as compared with yours, that you may always know the true value, or near it, of the items that may be mentioned; and you will be pleased to observe in connection with this, that we always mean currency unless we write or say "sterling". After general average five of our pounds are equal to three of yours, and about one thirtieth more. – The satisfaction enjoyed by the assembly in the reading of the Report at the meeting seemed to be maintained amongst all by the addresses of the several speakers which followed; and I believe I stated correctly the general feeling of all present, at the close of the meeting in the word – gratification. – This latter will be accompanied by a newspaper containing an ample notice of the meeting in question, and I conclude this account by referring you to the same.

I have now in the gracious providence and mercy of God closed our Bible Society concerns county of Cornwall, Jamaica, for the present year, say 1836. And what is the result of this one, and the first year's operations in this district containing one third of the island? It is upwards of £650 sterling, collected chiefly from the Negro apprentices, and for the purchase of Bibles mostly for their own use. This would procure at an average price for a Bible 3000 copies. The Bible is the book in demand, and not the Testament by itself. The Testament with the Psalms came upon us, as a shower, in your liberal boon, never to be forgotten here or among the nations; and you see what your shower upon our prepared ground has produced. Let us give all glory to God, who prepared the ground, sent a shower, and has produced these results: to his name only give glory, and for ever and ever!

I have, within these few days received your 32nd Report. It is deeply interesting in all its parts, and fully bears out the expression contained in the first paragraph, namely, "a year surpassed by none in the variety and extent of its operations, especially in foreign lands; – and the expression also of Mr. Forster, who says, "I do not think that any report has been brought forward that has exhibited a greater variety of proofs of the blessing of the Most High on the labours of the Bible Society." May God Almighty make every succeeding Report of more and more interest as exhibiting the rapid diffusion of the Holy Scriptures, and the blessed effects which must flow to mankind through the circulation of this divine book.

The happy reception given to the Scriptures in France, and to so large and extent, is truly gratifying; and the labours of our Brother in Germany seem to be crowned with great and delightful results. – I observe the sums received from these two countries, from the former, it is £1216, and from the latter, £1033. Is it not singular that the sum raised for the Scriptures in the same period by the Negroes in one county, or third part of Jamaica, should more than reach one half of the former sum, and be nearly equal to two thirds of the latter?

I send you six copies of the Trelawney Bible Society Report just issued from the press, and avail myself once more of one of your Vice Presidents, Lord Glenelg, intending not to intrude upon his Lordship again unless I should have leave given me for the same.

In addition to all other requests, please send 1000 Bibles to Montego Bay, and 1000 to Falmouth, of the same sorts as those mentioned for St. Elizabeth's. I have thus begged, you see in this single letter, for 4000 Bibles for our county of Cornwall.

I lately received a letter from our good friend Mr Baudry of Port au Prince, Hayti, dated the 4th October last, of which the following is an extract. "Mr. Wheeler must have written you on the formation of a Haytian Bible Society, which at first steps was very encouraging, and fell back quickly. Last Sunday afternoon we met for the purpose of establishing a new Society to be connected with the British and Foreign Bible Society, and the success has been beyond our expectation. We are few in number, but the Lord will give the increase. Subscriptions on the occasion amounted to 118 dollars. The Officers of the Society are E.C. Hennig Esq. Treasurer, H. D. Baudry Secretary: Committee  J.C.Pressoir, L.H.Frost, and J.L.Hippolite. Do pray that the mustard seed might to grow."

I remain, My Dear Friend,

Very Truly Yours,

James Thomson.

P.S.  Please desire Mr. Tarn to add the British and Foreign School Society to those mentioned for an annual subscription of one guinea, and tell him to make all the subscriptions guineas instead of pounds.

 

Rev A Brandram No.58

Kingston, Jamaica, 27th January 1837

My Dear Friend,

My last letter to you of the 16th November, finished, as you would perceive, the notices of our Bible Society concerns for the County of Cornwall in this Island for the year 1836. A retrospective view of the whole county was then also set before you, as to the wishes and the efforts of the people generally in that portion – the third part of our land, in regard to the purchase and possession of the Holy Scriptures. May God grant that the gratifying exertions made in this matter, may be attended with blessed effects never to end. – You will see by the request made for 4000 Bibles that we calculate on future distributions.

Leaving Falmouth and Cornwall, I entered the parish of St. Ann's, and our county of Middlesex. Previous to my entering this parish I had written to the various Ministers in it from whom I expected immediate help, apprising them of my intentions soon to be with them, and of my wish to form there a parish Bible Society similar to those formed elsewhere. On the 25th November a public meeting was held in the Court House at St. Ann's Bay for the end just mentioned, and our Society was accordingly formed, after being advocated by the presence and the speeches of Ministers and persons of different denominations. There was a large assembly present; and I might truly say, where it a propriety so to speak, that the house was full inside and out.

I have, I believe, on several occasions noticed to you the good order exhibited generally or universally by our Bible Society audiences in the West Indies, and the interesting close attention of the people to the great objects set before them. In the public meeting at St. Ann's Bay this was not, all through, the case. After moving and seconding our first resolution, it was of course proposed from the Chair to the meeting for that approval. Upon this, a considerable murmur and noise commenced. We endeavoured to bring all into quietness, but without effect for some time. At length silence was half restored, and we began our second resolution, thinking that the Speaker's voice would produce order, and which accordingly it did, though not instantaneously. Well, the mover finished, and the second reading having begun and ended, the Chairman proposed this second resolution to the meeting, when lo, and behold, up got the noise again, and as loud and general as before. We poor platform people, and those near us, were all in wonderment as to what could be the cause of such an unusual occurrence. For the noise was chiefly from the middle of the room onwards to the end. The Chairman tried to lecture the audience into order, and some others of us did the same, but we could not produce the effect desired. After talking and waiting for a good while, being obliged to begin our third resolution amidst a half commotion still continued. The Speaker's voice once more brought about order, and the third resolution was moved and seconded. At the Chairman's suggestion, we forbore putting the resolution, having perceived once and again before, that this gave rise to our troubles. We therefore passed the resolution among ourselves privately, and proceeded to the next, in the midst of all order and quietness. In the same manner we passed the remaining resolutions, and all went on quietly to a close, when the meeting broke up in peace.

We went to our homes, about why and the cause of this commotion we could not one of us divine. Next day however there was light thrown upon the subject. And what was the cause of the settlement, and the ebullition, do you think? Why cause enough, and something more. The people had got it into their heads, put there by somebody or not, as the case might be, – the purpose and object of our meeting, was, to lengthen the Apprenticeship, and to bind the people, forsooth, for yet Seven Years longer. Was not this cause enough think you for commotion among an audience consisting chiefly of Apprentices? When we asked the people to hold up their hands in approbation of our resolutions, they thought we asked them to give a show of hands to signify their consent and acquiescence to be bound for a period of Seven Years more. The noise therefore arose from dissatisfaction with this feigned proposal of hours. "Don't hold up your hand," said many voices to many ears, "but if you do, you agree to be bound for the seven years more." Thus and thus did those who thought they were fully initiated in our wicked designs call out to those who had not heard of it more than we ourselves, and dissuade them from acquiescence; and then there was the pulling down of hands held up, and all the talking and talking about it, and all the talking that this gave rise to; and hence all our commotion and disturbance. We heard that some persons not themselves instructed in the Bible, and not willing that others should be instructed in it, had put this lie into the people's mind, and two or three accidental circumstances seem to lend an apparent confirmation. [Some said, but that might be a lie too, that Satan himself was there embodied, not with a black face as we feign him, but with a white one; and that he was most active with his tongue from place to place among the audience persuading the people that our whole and only plan was to lengthen out the Apprenticeship. I did not see, not hear, nor know this διάβολος myself, but some acquainted better with that place than I was gave me the number of his name; and some time afterwards this number was given to the public in the newspapers. It was not however given by your agent, whose duty it is to avoid entering into a railing accusations.]

On the day following, after we had found out the matter, we talked to several persons on the market place, (for that was market day), and elsewhere, and also on the Sunday succeeding, showing what a gross mistake the people had fallen into, and how improper it was to give ear for a moment to the report in question, as of their Ministers in whose word they might have learned to rely, and who had always sought their good and never their hurt, – as if they would ever have proposed such a thing to them. It was about the Bible – the Bible – and only the Bible we said [as] we talked to them, as their own ears might have testified. They were ashamed of the whole concern, and signified that they would act more wisely in future. A reaction, I doubt not, will take place; and thus, as in all other devices of the devil, his evil designs will be made to work for the glory of God. How noble is our object! How great is He who is for us! How abortive all the wiles of the devil! Let us go on, for we shall prosper!

From St. Ann's I moved into the parish of St. Mary, lying contiguous on the Eastward. Here I had been in March and had done something in the forming of two Bible Associations. These were, on the present occasion, reminded of the object they had entered upon, and are urged to go onward. The next operation was to form a parish Bible Society here. A public meeting was held in the Court House for this end at Port Maria on the 9th of December and a Society was formed under the countenance and support of Ministers of different denominations. I wish I could have said – of all denominations in the parish; but I am sorry to say there was an exception as regards the largest, and which I need not, and shall not name. The saying of this leads me to look over all our parish Bible societies in the Island, and I am gratified in the review, in observing that none of them are in the predicament of St. Mary's, but that all of them are supported by some of the Ministers of the largest denomination referred to.

After forming this parish Society I proceeded into the interior of the country, and formed an association in one of the Scottish Missionary Stations, namely, Carron Hall, the congregation being under the Rev. John Cowan, a true Bible and Bible Society man. – Into this interior spot we found that the lie formed in St. Ann's Bay had reached. We calculated on having a large meeting, but were disappointed not a few having kept back purposely, and in order that by keeping away they might not be bound to a longer Apprenticeship. Few lies lose by travelling, but this one fortunately had; for the seven years had diminished into Four: still this was a long enough time to be dreaded. On Mr. Cowan's afterwards rallying some of the people who had stayed away, they acknowledged that it was wrong for them to have given ear to the report, but that in truth, their hearts have been broken down on hearing it, and feeling it, and that they had not courage to come. On a second trial we found things better; and here too, I trust, we shall have reaction, which will produce much good.

On finishing matters in St. Mary's, as far as he could well be carried at the time, I left that parish, and came on, to St Ann's, St. Thomas in the Vale, and Spanish Town, to this city, where I now write, and arrived on the last day of the elapsed year.

January is the time we hold our May Meetings here. We venture not of course to compare our Meetings with yours, yet we have here in the city of Kingston several interesting meetings and anniversaries calculated to remind us at least of your many meetings and great assemblages. We have about seven meetings, and probably they will increase in number as the years follow each other. This is a most wonderful contrast to former things and times here, and serves to remind us of the wonders God has wrought for us.

We all agree to set the Bible Society forward first, as the best and the basis of all. Our meeting was held on Monday last the 23rd instant, and was well supported by Ministers of various denominations. We trust good has been done, and that the notoriety we endeavoured to reduce would lead to a better understanding of our great object, and an extension of our sacred work. I send you a newspaper giving you some account of our anniversary, and notices also of other analogous institutions.

Your letter of the 28th November, and Mr. Jackson's of the 29th came to hand the day before yesterday. I notice what you say about £10,000. The error is mine, forgive me. I put in the word sterling, as all monies here are considered to be in currency unless the word sterling is written, and I overlooked the "three percent consols". The effort will not do any harm I trust, as it stands only in these two local reports, and will not appear in the Report now to be printed.

The publishing about the reduction in our prices must also be laid to my charge, and not to that of our friends. You gave us a boon, and why should it not be known. No evil will arrive from its publication I should think, but we will keep it also out of our forthcoming report. – Including for the reduction of prices, I followed not my own judgment, but was compelled to it by the impossibility of inducing our friends generally to sell at the full price, after various attempts in person and by correspondence. I exhibited what you said in one of your letters on the subject; but many and most were anxious to encourage the circulation of the Scriptures among our people by a reduced price, and they conceived that the endurance of former times, and our low estate still, justified some abatement in their favour. And this is true. Nor do I think you will ultimately lose by your concession. I think the people will gain by it, and that you also will gain by it.

I am delighted to hear of Mr. Wheeler's success in Berbice, etc. Pray do send me all the accounts you print about the same, for I shall read them with much interest. I am sure Mr. Wray will be greatly cheered by what his people are doing.

And so Mr. Simon is gone! May our end be like his, which you describe to be – "pre-eminently peace, solid peace, perfect peace."

Believe me, Ever Sincerely Yours,

James Thomson.

P.S. Your letter of  the 24th October came into my hands on the 31st December: and Mr. Jackson's of the 7th December reached me this morning. – We are all looking our eyes out for the Bibles.

I send a remittance of Fifty Pounds from the Manchester Bible Society.

Rev A Brandram  - Private

Spanish Town, Jamaica, 14th February 1837

My Dear Friend,

I have just finished the second reading of your last Report, and find it on an additional perusal additionally interesting. Blessed be the Lord our God who has given you such cheering things to relate in regard to the circulation of the Book of Life, whose leaves, we humbly trust, will be the healing of the nations, kindreds, tongues, and tribes to which it has been sent. I am sure you feel from year to year the work of circulating the Scriptures in which you are engaged is less and less a mechanical concern, and that is more and more in it of spirit and life. May the Lord stir up all nations and peoples to receive his word, and may the Bible Societies furnish them with it with all speed.

My present object is to give you some notices respecting the office bearers in our Bible Societies here, to be used in printing your next Report. They are as follows [see below].

In looking over your list of West India societies to the Eastward of this, I beg leave to give you the following notices: –

In Antigua, you may leave out "Falmouth & English Harbour", for there is no Branch Society there now, but two Bible Associations similar to many others in the island. Sir Patrick Ross is not there now, nor has been since 1833. In Barbados leave out the Rev. J Taylor, deceased. In St. Lucia a leave out Gov. Farquharson, deceased. In Montserrat, put in the Rev. John Collins, Sec. In Grenada, the out Dr. Callender, deceased.

In page lxxii of your Report there is a parenthesis, saying, ("among whom I found a large proportion of apprentices"). It ought to have been ("consisting almost entirely of apprentices"). I mention this in case of the same subject passing through your pen in the next Report.

I am sorry to see you have again printed Wilkinson instead of Tomlinson notwithstanding the correction of I sent you.

Be so good as make some inquiry about the Danish Bible you publish. Is it the most approved edition or version in Denmark? I noticed this as Mr. Bronsted of St. Thomas said something to me, as if it were not, and I do not know whether I stated to you before, or not.

What shall I say to you about that frightful and outlandish word – Colporteur – which you are labouring so zealously to introduce into the English language. You have printed it sixteen times in your last report!! Would not the English word Hawker meet the case sufficiently? Very few Englishmen, I am sure, will or can pronounce it right, as the last syllable is one of the hardest French sounds for us to attain. Most will call it Coalporter, and think of it accordingly; and they will wonder how you wise folks should employ men of such unclean occupation to carry about and sell your so beautiful books. I should be glad this Frenchman were never seen in England again.

I observe that you state Mexico and parts of it, and languages of it, as in South America. Now you will perceive by the map that it should be North instead of South; but perhaps the word Northern would be the more appropriate. You will find the expression Northern and Southern Asiatic versions in a note at page 25, but the cases are not exactly parallel. Should you have occasion to speak of Guatemala, please say "Guatemala or Central America." – By the way, is the word "completion" in the second note at page 25 exactly the proper word for the case?

I am a little confused in reading every successive report about the Persian Scriptures. They seem always to be in course of translation by many, and at the same time is still yet to be translated.

Please ascertain why the Arawack is not put to the press. Several inquiries were made about it in Demerara when I was there. I forget what I said this to you before. The Indians are now coming into view more than formerly, and if the version you have is good it should be printed.

Be so good as say what is the case which made it necessary to suppress Mr. Palmer's name.

I now come to a close you see this letter is what geologists might call a conglomerate, consisting of many little nodules of all sorts of things. I know you always put up with, and overlook, my freedoms. I have marked private to save you the necessity of reading it publicly. – Believe me Ever, and as I truly am, Affectionately Yours,

                                                                                    James Thomson.

P.S. The Castle Lachlan has arrived with the Bibles for Montego Bay and Falmouth. They will be most acceptable, for the Negroes were beginning to despair and flag in the good work. I have received Mr. Jackson's two letters of 12th October and Mr. Tarn's of the 14th of the same month. JT.

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AuthorBill Mitchell