Life of John Coleridge Patteson : Missionary Bishop of the Melanesian Islands eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 1,026 pages of information about Life of John Coleridge Patteson .

Life of John Coleridge Patteson : Missionary Bishop of the Melanesian Islands eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 1,026 pages of information about Life of John Coleridge Patteson .

‘Lat. 9° 29’ S.; Long. 163° S.E.  “Southern Cross:”  October 9, 1859.

’My dear Bishop,—­We are on our way from Uleawa to the Santa Cruz group, having visited the Loyalty Islands, Southern New Hebrides, Banks Island (2), and Solomon Islands.

’The Bishop so planned the voyage as to run down the wind quickly to the Solomon Islands, and do the real work coming home; not, as usual, beating up in the open water between the Santa Cruz archipelago, Banks Islands and New Hebrides to the east, and New Caledonia to the west.  We are thus able to visit Vanua Lava on the way out and home also; and as we meant to make the Banks Islands the great point this voyage, that was, of course, great gain.

’We touched at Norfolk Island....  Going on to Nengone we found everybody away at the distant yam grounds, and could not wait to see them.

’At Lifu, the first thing that shocked us was John’s appearance:  one of those fatal glandular swellings has already produced a great change in him.  He looked sallow and weak, and I fear ut sit vitalis.  He spoke to me very calmly about his illness, which he thinks is unto death, and I did not contradict him.

’We had much private talk together.  He is a fine fellow and, I believe, a sincere Christian man.  Then came the applications to us not to desert them, and letters enumerating all the villages of Lifu almost without exception, and entreating us to suffer them to be connected with us, and we had to answer that already two missionaries from the L. M. S. are on their way from Sydney to Lifu, and that it would do harm to have two rival systems on the island.  They acquiesced but not heartily, and it was a sad affair altogether, all parties unhappy and dissatisfied, and yet unable to solve the difficulty.  Then came a talk with Angadhohua, John’s half-brother, the real chief.  The poor lad feels now what a terrible thing it will be for him and his people if they should lose John.  Nothing can be nicer than his way of talking:  “I know you don’t think me firm enough, and that I am easily led by others.  What am I to do if John dies?  We all respect him.  He has been taught so much, and people all listen to him.”  I gave him the best advice that I could and longed to be able to do something for him and his people.  It was, however, a comfort to leave with them St. Mark, Scripture books, &c.

’We called at Tanna, to see poor Mr. Paton, who lost his wife last April.  He is living on there quite alone, and has already lived down the first angry opposition of some of the people, and the unkind treatment that he received from men and women alike who mocked him because of his wife’s death, &c.  He has had much fever and looked very ill, but his heart was in his work; and the Bishop said he seemed to be one of the weak things which God hath chosen.  I know he made me feel pretty well ashamed of myself.

’Next day we spent a few hours with Mr. and Mrs. Gordon at Erromango.  He has a small house on the high table-land overlooking Dillon’s Bay, and certainly is exposed to winds which may, for aught I know, rival those of Wellington notoriety.  The situation is, however, far preferable in the summer to that on the beach, which is seldom free from malaria and ague.

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Life of John Coleridge Patteson : Missionary Bishop of the Melanesian Islands from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.