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letters-第91章

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to Mr。 Jowett; Mr。 Browne; and all friends; not forgetting Dr。  Steinkopff; to whom I shortly hope to write。

(UNSIGNED。)



LETTER: 12th June; 1839



To the Rev。 G。 Browne (ENDORSED: recd。 July 1; 1839) SEVILLE; PLAZUELA DE LA PILA SECA; No。 7; JUNE 12; 1839。

REVD。 AND DEAR SIR; … I received in due course of time your  exceedingly kind letter of the 16th April; and am very grateful for  the various intelligence which you were pleased to communicate。  I  should have replied ere this; but I am one of those; as I believe  you are aware; who are averse to writing; especially from a  considerable distance; unless they possess matter of sufficient  consequence to fill creditably the pages of an epistle。  I could  wish that at the present moment I had more to write upon; and more  interesting details to send you than these which follow。  For two  or three weeks after my arrival at Seville I was unable to  accomplish anything; on account of the seizure of the books; with  which you are doubtless acquainted。  I however by the assistance of  the Almighty; for which I prayed; was enabled; though not without  considerable trouble; to overcome that difficulty; and to obtain  all the Testaments of which I was in need; to the number of two  hundred and upwards。  But still I commenced not operations; indeed  I was quite at a loss; being in a strange place and under very  peculiar circumstances; to imagine the best course to pursue。  I  therefore waited with perfect patience until it should please  Providence to assist me; and true it is that help came in rather a  remarkable manner。

I was standing in the courtyard of the Reyna POSADA; where for the  time I had taken up my abode; when a man singularly dressed and  gigantically tall entered。  My curiosity being excited; I enquired  of the master of the house who he was; when he informed me that he  was a foreigner who had resided a considerable time in Seville; and  he believed a Greek。  Upon hearing this I instantly went up to the  stranger; and accosted him in the Greek language in which; though I  speak it very ill; I can make myself understood。  He replied in the  same idiom; and; flattered by the interest which I a foreigner  expressed for his nation; was not slow in communicating to me his  history。  He told me; that his name was Dionysius; that he was a  native of Cephalonia; and had been educated for the Church; which  however not suiting his temper; he had abandoned in order to follow  the profession of the sea; for which he had an early inclination;  that after many adventures and changes of fortune he found himself  one morning on the coast of Spain … a shipwrecked mariner; and  that; ashamed to return to his own country in poverty and distress;  he had remained in the Peninsula; residing chiefly at Seville;  where he now carried on a small trade in books。  He said that he  was of the Greek religion; to which he professed strong attachment;  and soon discovering that I was a Protestant; spoke with unbounded  abhorrence of the Papal system; nay of its followers in general;  whom he called Latins; and whom he charged with the ruin of his own  country; inasmuch as they sold it to the Turk。  It instantly struck  me that this individual would be an excellent assistant in the work  which had brought me to Seville; namely the propagation of the  eternal Gospel; and accordingly after some more conversation; in  which he exhibited considerable learning; I explained myself to  him。  He entered into my views with considerable eagerness; and  hitherto I have had no reason to repent my confidence; he having  disposed of a considerable number of New Testaments; and even  contrived to send a certain number of copies to two small towns; at  some distance from Seville。

On account of the extreme dearness of every article at the POSADA;  where moreover I had a suspicion that I was watched; I removed with  my servant and horses to an empty house in a solitary part of the  town; where I still am; and where I purpose to remain during my  stay in Andalusia。  Here I live in the greatest privacy; admitting  no person but two or three in whom I have the greatest confidence;  who entertain the same views as myself and who assist me in the  circulation of the Gospel。  One of these is a very remarkable  person:  an aged professor of music; by birth an old Castilian; and  one of the very few who retain traces of the ancient Spanish  character; which with all its faults; its stiffness; its formality;  and its pride; I believe (always setting the character of the  Christian aside) to be the most estimable and trustworthy in the  world。  This venerable individual has just brought me the price of  six Testaments and a Gypsy Gospel; which he has this day sold under  the heat of an Andalusian sun。  What was his motive?  A Christian  one; truly。  He says that his unfortunate countrymen; who are at  present robbing and murdering each other; may probably be rendered  better by the reading of the Gospel; but cannot be injured:   adding; that many a man has been reformed by the Scripture but that  no one ever yet became a thief or assassin from its perusal。

I have not yet addressed myself much to the lower orders in these  parts。  Indeed the quantity of books; at my disposal; at present  remaining unsold in Spain is so small; that I am almost tempted to  be niggard of them; lest in an unprovided hour an extraordinary  call should be made。  However; before leaving Seville; it will be  well to pay some attention to the poor。  I have an agent awaiting  my orders; another Greek; introduced to me by Dionysius; he is a  labouring brick…layer; a native of the Morea; and has been upwards  of thirty…five years in this country; so that he has almost  entirely lost his native language; nevertheless his attachment to  his own country is so strong; that he considers whatever is not  Greek to be utterly barbarous and bad。  Though entirely destitute  of education he has; by his strength of character and by a kind of  rude eloquence which he possesses; obtained such a mastery over the  minds of the labouring classes of Seville that to everything he  asserts they assent; however his assertions may shock their  prejudices and Spanish pride; so that notwithstanding he is a  foreigner he may at any time become the MASANIELLO of Seville。  I  am happy to be able to add that he is an honest; industrious man  notwithstanding his eccentricities; so that should I employ him;  which I have not yet resolved upon; I may entertain perfect  confidence that his actions will be no disparagement to the book he  vends。

We are continually pressed for Bibles; which of course we cannot  supply; Testaments are held in comparatively little esteem。  Allow  me to make here a remark which it is true I ought to have made  three years ago; but we live and learn。  It is unwise to print  Testaments; and Testaments alone for Catholic countries。  The  reason is plain。  The Catholic; unused to Scripture reading; finds  a thousand things which he cannot possibly understand in the New  Testament; the foundation of which is the Old。  'Search the  Scriptures; for they bear witness to Me;' may well be applied to  this point。  It may be replied that New Te
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