The Journal of Charles Wesley
Introduction
By Thomas Jackson
1849
I. RELIGIOUS projects and actions not unfrequently produce results
which their authors never contemplated. When the two Wesleys at
Oxford became impressed with thesupreme importance of Christian
piety, as the great end of their being, and regarded it as an
absolute conformity to the will of God, they adopted the purest
rules of conduct; keeping a constant watch over their minds and
hearts, and subjecting themselves at stated periods to the most
searching scrutiny; that they might ascertain whether or not they
had fulfilled their sacred vows, or had trifled with their engagements
and sponsibilities. That they might be the better able to discharge
the duty of self-examination, each of them commenced the practice
of keeping a journal, in which they carefully recorded the events
of every day, with their spiritual conflicts, victories, and failures;
for the purpose of calling forth increased gratitude, humility,
or emotion, as the case might be. Of course these personal and
moral histories were, in the first instance, never intended to
meet the public eye, but merely to promote the religious benefit
of the writers; for, when these simpleminded, but gifted, men
began this practice, they intended to spend their lives in comparative
retirement and seclusion, not having the most distant thought
of the notoriety which was afterwards forced upon them.
In these matters, however, they were overruled, being providentially
called from the cloisters of Oxford to preach salvation by faith
in the highways and hedges; in consequence of which the world
was filled with the report of their names and doings; and their
journals, which were designed to be nothing more than a record
of their feelings and course of action, the details of which no
second person should ever peruse, are, in fact, the most circumstantial
and authentic history of a deep and widely-extended revival of
religion, such as the world has scarcely witnessed since the apostolic
times. Hence it is that these documents, so private and unpretending
in their origin, possess a profound interest, which they will
possess as long as the English language is understood, and Christianity
in its blessedness, activity, and power is duly appreciated.
After the brothers had entered upon their singular career of
ministerial labour, so as to be in some quarters highly commended,
and in others severely censured,--while multitudes wondered why
it was that gentlemen and scholars violated all the rules of ecclesiastical
etiquette, and voluntarily endured incredible toils and hardships,--Mr.
John
Wesley deemed it requisite to publish from time to time large
extracts from his private journal, as furnishing, in his estimation,
the best explanation and apology that he was able to offer. This
practice he continued till the end of his life: and, notwithstanding
all that has been subsequently written, it must be confessed that
these artless narratives constitute the best history of the origin
and progress of Methodism, and its most powerful defence.
For many years Mr. Charles Wesley followed his brother, as an
itinerant and field Preacher, with equal steps; but he would never
commit his journal to the press. He appears to have written it,
from day to day, upon loose sheets of paper, and to have transmitted
large portions of it to his wife and friends in the form of letters,
some of which have been preserved. Much of it, there is reason
to believe, he himself destroyed; and it is probable that much
more of it has long since perished, through the carelessness of
the persons to whom it was transmitted. That which is now published,
and which is all that is known to exist, was transcribed, with
great neatness and accuracy, by the venerable author himself,
carefully paged, and was bound in a thick octavo volume. This
precious relic he bequeathed to his widow, with a request that
she would retain it in her own exclusive possession. About three
or four years after his death, it was, however, placed in the
hands of Dr. Whitehead, who published large extracts from it in
the Life of the author, which was prefixed to the Life of the
Rev. John Wesley. Extracts from this manuscript, still more copious,
were inserted in the "Life of the Rev.
Charles Wesley," in two octavo volumes, which appeared in the
year 1841; but the entire document is now for the first time presented
to the public. It was purchased some years ago of the writer's
heir, the late Charles Wesley, Esq., of musical celebrity; having,
however, undergone some mutilations, the occasion of which it
would perhaps be impossible to ascertain. A little while before
it was purchased, it was in great danger of being irrecoverably
lost. It was found among some loose straw on the floor of a public
warehouse in London, where the furniture of the owner was for
a time deposited; several leaves in the volume being cut from
the binding, and yet not removed. The intelligent and pious reader,
it is presumed, after perusing and weighing its valuable contents,
will be thankful that its publication effectually prevents the
recurrence of a similar casualty, and will preserve it from oblivion.
It is sent forth into the world, not to gratify an idle curiosity,
but as an instructive record of a work of God; presenting, in
a manner which every one may understand, the omnipotence of divine
grace and truth.
II.
The published Journal of Mr. John Wesley commences with his embarkation
at Gravesend for the North American continent, as a Missionary
to the heathen tribes then bordering upon the infant colony of
Georgia: Charles's begins with their arrival at the place of their
destination. As the mission upon which they then entered was the
first event in their lives that called forth their peculiar talents,
and exhibited their capacities,--especially with respect to the
patient endurance of hardships and privations, and the courage
which never yields to difficulties,--it may not be improper to
give a brief notice of the nature of that mission, and of the
circumstances in which it was undertaken.
The colony of Georgia was projected by James Edward Oglethorpe,
who was in many respects one of the most remarkable men of his
age; having acquired considerable celebrity both as a soldier
and a statesman, but most of all as a philanthropist. He was the
fourth and youngest son of Sir Theophilus Oglethorpe, of Godalming,
in the county f Surrey, and is said to have been born in the year
1698. In 1714 he entered Corpus Christi College, Oxford; but his
destination was quickly changed; for in the same year we find
him Captain-Lieutenant in the first troops of Queen's Guards.
He afterwards acquired a more perfect acquaintance with the science
of war under the famous Prince Eugene, of Savoy, and other eminent
Commanders, among whom was the great Duke of Argyle, who was his
patron. At the recommendation of John, Duke of Marlborough, Oglethorpe
acted as Secretary and Aide-de-camp to the Prince, whom he attended
in his campaigns in Germany and Hungary, where he acquired much
practical knowledge concerning military affairs. He had flattering
prospects with respect to the German service, but sacrificed them
all, that he might apply his talents to the benefit of his own
country.
On his return to England he was elected member of the House of
Commons for the borough of Haslemere, which he represented in
five successive Parliaments, from 1722 to 1754. During this period
many regulations, which had for their object the enlargement of
the national commerce, were proposed by him, and adopted by the
Senate; for he was a man of an active mind, of large views, of
an enterprising genius, and a zealous patriot. While attending
the sittings of Parliament, Oglethorpe, who was well acquainted
with the Wesley family, and had generously assisted the venerable
Rector of Epworth in his pecuniary difficulties, cultivated the
friendship of Samuel Wesley, jun., who was one of the Ushers of
Westminster School, and who for intelligence and moral worth was
every way worthy of the statesman's confidence and respect. To
the honour of Samuel Wesley, it is but just to state that, with
a limited income, a subordinate situation, and many calls upon
his friendly aid in behalf of his own relations, he was a principal
means of establishing a Dispensary for the relief of the sick
poor in Westminster: the first institution of the kind that was
founded in that important city. In the year 1728, probably during
the Parliamentary recess, this upright man, and excellent poet,
addressed "An Ode to James Oglethorpe, Esq., in the Country,"
in which he expresses himself in such a manner as to convey the
impression that a confidential familiarity subsisted between them;
so that the senator would not be offended to find himself publicly
addressed as the poet's "friend." The last five stanzas contain
a fine compliment to Oglethorpe, and not less to Oglethorpe's
father, who had also distinguished himself in the service of his
country, but was favourable to the exiled family of the Stuarts.
"From pole to pole our squadrons go,
Excelling ancient fables far,
Of Argo, when a ship below,
Or when exalted to a star:
Preserved from rocks and storms in vain,
Laden with wealth and fame they come;
Should erring counsellors ordain,
They suffer shipwreck here at home.
"Them Virtue rises to defend,
In spite of numbers bold:
See Avarice awhile suspend
Its wonted thirst of gold !
What Pride or Fraud may have design'd,
See Reason overbear !
And fleets a port of safety find,
If OGLETHORPE is there,
'" The Pious grateful duty owes
To the dear land where he was born;
A glorious debt I which Nature knows
With fairest interest to return.
He merits first his country's praise
Who steers her helm through danger on;
And he deserves the second place,
Who guards her safety with a son.
"'Twas thus the father of my friend
Wisely secured a lasting fame,
Beyond the roach of death to' extend
His public and domestic name.
'Tis single, 'tis imperfect light,
The world, from worth unwedded, shares;
He only shines completely bright,
Who leaves his virtues to his heirs.
"0 thus too may his offspring haste
His glory to improve,
And, fired by love to Britain, taste
The bliss of private love !
With joy his summons I attend,
And fly with speed away;
Let but the Patriot condescend
To fix his marriage-day !"
When these beautiful lines met the eye of Oglethorpe, he was engaged
in an enterprise of mercy, for which he deserves to be ever had
in respectful remembrance, and for which he received the blessings
of multitudes who were ready to perish. He was the generous friend
of the prisoner; and in the order of time took the precedence
of Howard, of Sir Samuel Romilly, and of Sir Fowell Buxton, in
zealous attempts to alleviate the misery of those outcasts of
society,--the debtor and the felon. The mannor in which he was
induced to engage in this service, the nature of his efforts,
and the results to which they led, are all worthy of special record.
Early in the year 1728, an ingenious architect, of the name of
Castel, died in the Fleet prison, where he was confined for debt.
He was a friend of Oglethorpe, who used to visit him, doubtless
for the purpose of relieving his necessities; and here Oglethorpe
received information of the hardships which the unfortunate man
endured, and which were said to be the cause of his death. Oglethorpe
justly concluded that this was not a solitary case, and therefore
moved, in the House of Commons, for a Committee to inquire into
the state of the jails in England. The proposal was accepted:
a large and efficient Committee was appointed, of which Oglethorpe
was made the Chairman.
On entering upon their work, fearful abuses were soon discovered,
and appalling scenes of misery were presented to their view. It
was found that when insolvent debtors entered the gloomy abodes
to which they were destined, keeper after keeper extorted from
them sums of money, under the name of fees; that these harpies
not unfrequently seized, for their own use, articles of clothing
of which they found the prisoners possessed, as well as supplies
of food which were provided for them; that the keepers, according
to their own caprice, tormented the prisoners by loading them
with heavy irons, and inflicting upon them cruel stripes; that
in many cases the prisoners had nothing in the shape of a bed
to rest upon, but were doomed to sleep, if they could sleep at
all, upon the unpaved floors of their several cells; that when
any of the prisoners, driven to desperation by hard treatment,
committed suicide, their clothes were seized by the keepers, as
a perquisite of office; and that some of the most notorious prisoners
of the age had effected their escape by means of bribes, which
the jailers had accepted as the reward of their infidelity.
The Committee had not long been engaged in their inquiries, before
they found occasion to draw up a series of resolutions, which
Oglethorpe moved in the House of Commons, where they were unanimously
adopted. They embody a specimen of the deeds of darkness which
were then brought to light, and are to the following effect :--
"That Thomas Bainbridge, acting Warden of the Fleet prison, hath
wilfully permitted several debtors to the Crown in great sums
of money, as well as debtors to divers of His Majesty's subjects,
to escape; that he hath been guilty of the most notorious breaches
of trust, great extortion, and the highest crimes and misdemeanors,
in the execution of his office; and hath arbitrarily and unlawfully
loaded with irons, put into dungeons, and destroyed, prisoners
for debt, treating them in the most barbarous and cruel manner,
in high violation and contempt of the laws of this kingdom :--That
John Huggins, Esq., late Warden of the Fleet prison, did, during
his wardenship, wllfully permit many considerable debtors in his
custody to escape; and was notoriously guilty of great breaches
of trust, extortions, cruelties, and other high crimes and misdemeanors,
in the execution of his office, to the great oppression and ruin
of many of the subjects of this kingdom
That James Barnes, William Pindar, John Everett, and Thomas King,
were agents of and accomplices with the said Thomas Bainbridge,
in the commission of the said crimes." It was also agreed to address
His Majesty, requesting him to command the Attorney-General to
prosecute these offenders; who were ordered to be committed close
prisoners to Newgate; and two bills were directed to be brought
in: the one, to disable Thomas Barnbridge to hold the office of
Warden of the Fleet, or exercise any authority relating thereto:
the other, for the better regulating the Fleet prison, and more
effectually preventing and punishing arbitrary and illegal practices
in connexion with it.*
These achievements of this Parliamentary Committee, in behalf
of the oppressed, filled the mind of Oglethorpe's poetic friend
with thankfulness and admiration; and hence, one of the finest
productions of Samuel Wesley's genius is entitled, "THE PRISONS
OPENED: a Poem, occasioned by the GLORIOUS PROCEEDINGS of the
Committee of the House of Commons, appointed to inquire into the
state of the Jails of this kingdom, in the year 1728." This poem
is the more valuable because of the intimacy which subsisted between
the author and Oglethorpe; so that the stirring facts which it
describes may be fairly assumed to have been derived from that
benevolent and energetic man, with whose kind feelings the poet
cherished a deep sympathy. The poem is dedicated to Oglethorpe,
with the other members of the Committee, and must have produced
a thrilling interest at the time of its first appearance; the
public mind not being then so familiar with subjects of this kind
as it has been since the press was brought into greater requisition.
A few brief extracts from this admirable composition, which evidently
flowed from the writer's heart, will not be deemed irrelevent;
in this place.
[* Salmon's Chronological Historian, vol. it., p. 210, edit.
1747.]
"What various paths unhappy mortals tread,
Which down to dungeons and to tortures lead !
In jarl a few secure their ill-got store;
By vices many fall, by folly more.
The flatter'd heir in short-lived pomp behold,
How flush'd with youth, and wine, and love, and gold !
All arts, all baits, unnumber'd tempters try,
Friendship's endearing form, and Beauty's eye.
Manors are lost, though petty stakes are won,
And garter'd sharpers urge his ruin on.
By pity some (a glorious fault !) have fail'd,
A friend supported, or a father bail'd:
Some perish void of error and offence,
Cast headlong by resistless Providence:
Orphans, who frauds of guardians cannot shun;
Clients, by legal labyrinths undone;
The trader, strictly just, yet overthrown
By others' crimes, and losses not his own.
Nor more redress the breaking merchant finds
From Spanish seizures, than from adverse winds.
Lo I countless swarms the dire abode receives,
Thick as in autumn drop the sapless leaves,
Whom State deceit and South-Sea plunder drain'd,
Which like a general deluge swept the land;
Whom public faith could no protection lend,
Seeming, and only seeming, to defend.
"When wretches, stripp'd of Fortone's gifts, repair
To the dark dome of temporal despair,
Fast by the prison-gates, with sleepless eyes,
Sits griping, never-sated Avarice;
To him the' admitted fine for being poor,
And ope with gold the' inhospitable door;
Compell'd, since laws and jailers so ordain,
To pay for misery, and to bribe for pain:
To gain the' asylum of the Fleet they strive,
The privilege to be entomb'd alive.
So, as the Pagan fabling poets tell,
Was Charon fee'd for wafting souls to hell:
To pass the lake thick-thronging ghosts desire,
To torments most condemn'd, and penal fire
As if Alecto's snakes they long'd to feel,
Or Tityus' vulture, or Ixion's wheel.
"The jarl (sad emblem of flagitious times,
Revenging virtues, and rewarding crimes,)
Sees only villains thrive, by ruin great,
Who owe to guilt the splendour of their state;
Who, placed by fraud and wealth from justice free,
In ease or pomp enjoy captivity;
Who sure escape by massy gold can force,
While wardens share the wealth of creditors;
Or those who basely join to' afflict the good,
Comrades of theft, and instruments of blood;
Whose well-feign'd worth the merchant's trust deceives,
And stocks with monthly spoils the den of thieves;
Who, as superiors dictate, witness bear,
To riot, murder, nay, to treason, swear;
Who aid to worst barbarities afford,
Relentless hell-bounds, worthy of their lord
Who drink to burning Fever's thirst deny,
And see the famish'd swoon with stony eye;
Permit not prisoners even on alms to feed,
But snatch from starving mouths the scanty bread.
"The Fleet's stern king, circled with guards like these,
Each helpless subject robs, and strips, and fleas;
Incarnate fiends for torturing shackles call,
Except the captive yields them---more than all:
In prison within prison staked he lies,
And keepers under keepers tyrannize:
With weighty fetters gall'd, the sufferers groan,
Or close-screw'd rivets crack the solid bone;
Their only bed dank earth, unpaved and bare,
Their only covering is the chains they wear:
Debarr'd from cheerful morn, and human sight,
In lonely, restless, and enduring night;
The strongest health unsinew'd by disease,
And Famine wasting life by slow degrees:
Piecemeal alive they rot, long doom'd to bear
The pestilential, foul, imprison'd air;
Unless the friendly fumes on reason prey,
And kind Distraction take their sense away.
But each black view of horrible restraint,
What verse can number, and what pencil paint ?
Dire scenes ! which Huggins and his Barnbridge know,
Where ghastly spectres utter tales of woe;
As if the prisoners were condemn'd to dwell
With pains, with darkness, and with fiends of hell.
No smallest glimpse of distant hope they see;
O lowest depth of human misery !
When wish'd for death's approach shows quiet nigh,
The soul just fluttering is forbid to fly;
Then, seeming kind, the curst tormentors strive
To keep departing anguish still alive.
So when the long-robed murderers of Rome,
Inquisitors, a wretch to tortures doom,
They heal the limbs which can no more endure,
Less cruel when they rack than when they cure,
That nature, spent, recruits of strength may gain.
For fresh distortion, and repeated pain.
When wild despair, impatient of its woes,
By fond self-murder would suborn repose,
A life destroy'd unmoved the keeper sees,
And only mourns his loss of bribes and fees.
Here, though his barbarous rigours find an end,
Farther will powerful avarice extend:
Like the Grand Turk, he pleases to declare
Himself, of all that die, the general heir:
What every vassal leaves he speaks his own,
But yields no portion to the wife or son.
So Purgatory's realm the Pope obeys,
The founder he and warden of the place !
There souls are feign'd fierce flames to undergo,
Intense as everlasting burnings glow;
Though Christ had clear'd their guilt, they long remain,
Parden'd, and prisoners to infernal pain;
No charitable Pontiff turns the keys,
Till priestly jailers have secured their fees.
Is ours the land where peace and freedom smile ?
What wrathful influence cursed our age and isle,
Monsters of botmdless avarice to see,
Unblushing fraud, unsated cruelty ?
"Yet, Britain, cease thy captives' woes to mourn,
To break their chains, see OGLETHORPE was born !
Vernon, whose steady truth no threats can bend !
And Hughes, the sailor's never-falling friend !
Towers, whose rich youth can ease and pleasure fly,
And Percival, renown'd for piety !
Cornewall, to aid the friendless never slow,
Whose generous breast still melts at others' woe !
These dare the tyrants, long secure, oppose;
Thus gracious Heaven its benefits bestows,
The antidote is found there where the poison grows.
"Soon as the Fleet receives each welcome guest,
Joy, long-forgotten, cheers the faintest breast;
Pain at their presence stops the rising sigh,
And languid Famine opes her hollow eye;
Horror flies thence, they once appearing there,
And the worst torment of the jail-Despair.
So, at the' Almighty's nod, with rapid wings,
Forth from the throne a guardian angel springs,
Through space immense, quick as the morning ray,
To succour earth distress'd he shoots away,
Bids Peter rise, from bonds and keepers free,
And looks the prisoner into liberty.
"Fear'd, honour'd, loved, long may the Patriots stand,
Support and honour of their native land !
Warm without rage, without vain-glory brave,
Firm to protect, and obstinate to save !
Whom no false scents deceive, no searches tire;
Resistless to revenge, as to inquire !
He who for injured right dares strongly plead,
The prisoner's counsel, earnest, though unfee'd;
To guard the weak, who scorns the mighty's frown,
Despising no man's danger but his own;
In camps his courage as in senates tried,
Daunts with severe rebuff the sons of pride:
0 that his soul with healthier limbs were join'd,
A body less unequal to his mind !
"Proceed, disinterested few, proceed,
Heal every wound, and succour every need;
Let all Britannia's misery be redress'd,
Cite every tyrant to the righteous test
The test which innocence can never fear,
Candid though strict, impartial though severe.
No artful guesses there to proofs advance,
Help'd by dark, dubious, distant circumstance;
Nor bribes, nor threats, nor hinting prompters there
Inform the wavering witness how to swear.
Go on ! let none your ardent zeal withstand,
And shower diffusive mercies o'er the land,-
That Heaven by you may bless our happy isle,
And even the tradesman and the merchant smile;
While crowds unchain'd your fame with shouts declare,
Restored to vital light, and vital air.
So sudden this deliverance which they meet,
Their grief so hopeless, and their joy so great,
Scarce to the change they yet can credit give,
Scarce are they yet persuaded that they live.
So, when the' archangel gives the fated sign,
(If human joys we liken to divine,)
The summons universal Nature hears,
Nor pleads prescription of six thousand years;
Not everlasting hills their dead retain,
Not deep abysses of the' unfathem'd main;
The sleeping saints look up with joyful eyes,
And, quickening at the sacred trump, arise;
Their pains all past, their transport to succeed,
Immortal lives in endless bloom they lead,
From death's tyrannic chain, and earth's dark prison, freed."
Samuel Wesley was not the only poet who celebrated the generous
deeds of Oglethorpe and his associates. The muse of Thomson poured
forth the following strains in honour of" the Jail Committee,
in the year 1729 :"--
"And here can I forget the generous bend,
Who, touch'd with human woe, redressive search'd
Into the horrors of the gloomy jail ?
Unpitied and unheard, where misery moans,
Where sickness piues, where thirst and hunger burn,
And poor Misfortune feels the lash of Vice.
While in the land of liberty, the land
Whose every street and public meeting glow
With open freedom, little tyrants raged,
Snatch'd the lean morsel from the starving mouth,
Tore from cold wintry limbs the tatter'd weed,
Even robb'd them of the last of comforts,--sleep;
The freeborn BRITON to the dungeon chain'd,
Or, as the lust of cruelty prevail'd,
At pleasure mark'd him with inglorious stripes,
And crush'd out lives, by secret, barbarous ways,
That for their country would have toil'd or bled.
0 great design, if executed well,
With patient care, and wisdom-temper'd zeal !
Ye sons of mercy ! yet resume the search,
Drag forth the legal monsters into light,
Wrench from their hands Oppression's iron rod,
And bid the cruel feel the pains they give.
Much still untouch'd remains; in this rank age,
Much is the patriot's weeding hand required.
The toils of law, (what dark, insidious men
Have cumbrous added to perplex the truth,
And lengthen simple justice into trade,
How glorious were the day that saw these broke,
And every man within the reach of right !" *
III.
ONE act of generosity prepares the way for another. Scarcely
had Oglethorpe succeeded, with the aid of his associates, in dragging
to open view the scandalous abuses which were practised in the
public prisons, and in restoring many of their unfortunate inmates
to liberty, before we find him engaged in an undertaking of greater
magnitude and difficulty, the management of which devolved principally
upon himself. This was the establishment of the colony of Georgia;
the idea of which, in all probability, was suggested to his mind
by the situation of the men whom he had rescued from the fangs
of the jailer, and the horrors of imprisonment. Many of them were
without character and without property; and to put them into a
way of providing for themselves, in their own country, was a hopeless
task. Emigration seemed to be their only practicable resource;
and their number was such as to require extensive arrangements,
in order that their case might be effectually relieved.
Upon this subject the friends of the colony laid great stress
when making their appeal to the people of England for help. In
an able pamphlet, which was published in a handsome quarto size,
and entitled, "Reasons for establishing the Colony of Georgia,"
the following course of argument is employed, "in respect of those
who are thrown into prison for debt :"--" I believe the calculation
will not be thought immodest, if I estimate these at four thousand
every year; and that above one third part of the debts is never
recovered hereby. If one half of these, or only five hundred of
them, were to be sent every year into Georgia, to be incorporated
with those foreign Protestants who are expelled their own countries
for religion, what great improvements might not be expected in
our trade, when these, as well as the foreigners, would be so
many new subjects gained to England ! for, while they are in prison,
they are absolutely lost. The public loses their labour and their
knowledge. If they take the benefit of the Act of Parliament,
that allows them liberty on the delivery of their all to their
creditors, they come naked into the world again; as they have
no money, and little credit, they find it almost impossible to
get into business, especially when our trades are overstocked;
they therefore, by contracting new debts, must return again into
prison, or, how honest soever their dispositions may be, by idleness
and necessity will be forced into bad courses, such as begging,
cheating, or robbing." "The colony of Georgia will be a proper
asylum for these. Here they will have the best motive for industry,
--a possession of their own, and no possibility of subsisting
without it.
"I have heard it said that our prisons are the properest places
for those who are thrown into them, by keeping them from being
hurtful to others. Surely this way of thinking is too severe.
Are these people, with their liberty, to lose our compassion ?
Are they to be shut up from our eyes, and excluded from our hearts
?. Many of very honest dispositions fall into decay, nay, perhaps
because they are so, because they cannot allow themselves that
latitude which others take to be successful. The ways that lead
to ruin are various. Some are undone by over-trading; others by
want of trade; many by being responsible for others. Do all these
deserve such hardship ? If a man sees a friend, a brother, or
a father, going to a prison, where felons are to be his society,
want and sickness his sure attendants, and death, in all likelihood,
his only but quick relief; if he stretches out his hand to save
him; if, to rescue him from immediate slavery and ruin, he runs
the risk of his own liberty, and at last loses it; is there any
one who will say this man is not an object of compassion? not
only so, but of esteem, and worth preserving for his virtue !
But, supposing that idleness and intemperance are the usual cause
of his ruin, are these crimes adequate to such a punishment as
confinement for life? But even granting that these unhappy people
deserve no indulgence, it is certainly imprudent in any state
to lose the benefit of the labour of so many thousands.
"But the public loss, by throwing men into prison, is not confined
to them only. They have, many of them, wives and children. These
are also involved in their ruin. Being destitute of support, they
must perish, or become a burden to their parishes by their inability
to work, or a nuisance by their thefts."
The subject and the earnestness of this appeal clearly connect
the origin of the colony of Georgia with the Pariamentary inquiry
into the state of the English prisons, the conducting of which
had been confided to Oglethorpe; especially when we find that
some of the men who were associated with him in redressing the
wrongs of the prisoner, were his fellow-Trustees for the new colony.
Among these we may particularly mention Thomas Towers and James
Vernon, Esqrs., and Lord Viscount Percival.
But Englishmen of desperate fortunes were not the only parties
whose interests it was intended to secure by the transatlantic
colony. Protestant exiles from various continental nations, the
victims of Papal intolerance and cruelty, were invited to share
in the benefits which were provided in this promising settlement.
Of this class of persons who availed themselves of the invitation,
the Salzburghers, as they were called, were the first and the
most numerous. A few notices concerning these interesting people
will serve at once to show the generosity of Oglethorpe, and of
the men who were associated with him; the importance of the colony
at that particular juncture; the execrable intolerance of Popery;
and the spirit of meekness, resignation, and fidelity, with which
Christianity inspires those who are under its power.
Salzburg is a city of Bavaria, the Archbishop of which was a
temporal Prince, as well as an ecclesiastical dignitary. In his
dominions were several Protestants, some of whom held the tenets
of the Lutherans, and others those of the Reformed. True to the
principles of his Church, he declared that he "should be inexcusable
if, as an ecclesiastical Prince, he should tolerate the exercise
of a religion in his Archbishopric contrary to the Roman Catholic
religion; which," added he, "by the grace of God, is of more than
twelve hundred years' standing." He therefore prohibited all public
worship and preaching among his Protestant subjects; forbidding
more than three persons ever to meet together on a religious account.
Finding that even this severe measure was not sufficient to arrest
the progress of alleged heresy, he issued an edict requiring all
his Protestant subjects to leave his dominions; claiming for himself
the credit of "clemency," for granting them permission to leave
their homes and country. "Workmen, valets, or domestics of both
sexes," were to depart, with all their effects, in eight days."
A month's time was granted to such Protestants as were worth one
hundred and fifty florins, and two months to such as were possessed
of property to a greater amount, that they "might sell their effects
in the best manner they could;" and in the mean while, all Protestants
who were engaged in the public service were dismissed, and their
wages discontinued. This merciless edict bears the date of October
31st, 1731; it was sent forth in the name of "Leopold, by the
grace of God, Archbishop of Salzburg, Legate of the Holy See Apostolical,
and Primate of Germany," and addressed "to all our ViceDeans,
Bailiffs, Provosts, Governors, their substitutes, Judges, and
to all our other officers, greeting ;" and was therefore brought
into general operation in the middle of winter. At this inclement
season, therefore, TWENTY THOUSAND SIX HUNDRED AND SEVENTY-EIG
T PERSONS, men, women, and children, the aged, the sick, new-born
infants, with their mothers, were driven from the land of their
fathers, and sent forth through fields of snow, in quest of a
people who were not hardened into fiends by Papal superstition,
and among whom they might dwell in safety and peace.
These persecuted exiles divided themselves into different companies,
and went forth in various directions, as circumstances might dictate,
obtaining sympathy and aid from the pious and humane, but often
cruelly insulted by the sons of Rome. Letters from Germany, detailing
the hardships and wrongs which these people endured, with the
meek and devout spirit by which the sufferers were actuated, were
sent to England; and some of these narrations were presented in
translations to the public, producing deep emotion in many an
English heart; for the Protestant monarchy of this country was
then comparatively weak, so that many British subjects trembled
for their own liberties and rights. We select a few paragraphs
from a scarce and interesting pamphlet, entitled, "An Account
of the Sufferings of the persecuted Protestants of Salzburg, with
their Reception in several Imperial Cities in Germany: together
with their Confession of Faith: taken from Authentic Papera To
which is added, the Archbishop's Decree and Passport, and two
Letters relating thereto, from the Evangelic Body at Ratisbon.
1732."
"KAUFFBEYERN. On St. John's day, after Christmas, 1731, late
at night, when the city gates were shut, about eight hundred Protestant
exiles of Salzburg, of both sexes, arrived here, under the guidance
of a Bavarian messenger. They had been driven out of their native
country for the sake of their religion, and forced to leave their
all behind them. A report was spread that they had themselves
desired to be conducted hither; but, upon inquiry, they solemnly
protested that they had not known whither they were to go; and
that all they desired was, to be admitted into some Protestant
town, for the spiritual comfort of their souls. After the arrival
of these poor people, (who were very meanly clothed, and were
for the most part labouring people and servants, and had brought
a few children with them,) they patiently waited without the city-gates
for admission, (which they had earnestly solicited by about forty
of their deputies, who arrived just before the gates were shut,)
singing, with great devotion, Luther's hymn,
' God is our Refuge in distress,' &c.
"Orders were soon given for their reception; and some of them
had lodgings assigned them in the Protestant inns, whilst many
were received into private houses, not without many tears. They
were as hospitably entertained as the smallness of the place would
admit of, and provided with spiritual and temporal food till the
30th of December. On Innocents' day they heard, for the first
time, the morning sermon; and at noon they attended a sermon suited
to their present circumstances, at which they expressed an uncommon
desire and zeal for the word of God. Their behaviour among us
was as became true Christians. They were modest, humble, peaceable,
contented with, and thankful for, whatever was given them; and
expressed the greatest delight in praying, singing psalms, and
reading good books.
"As they had been expelled their country on a sudden, and not
permitted to furnish themselves with necessaries for their journey,
our Protestant citizens have testified their charity to them,
by furnishing them with useful books, and better clothing for
this cold season, and with food and money. Several of them have
been taken into service in the town; some of the children put
out apprentices, and to school; and their sick and weak provided
for in the hospital. "When the Roman Catholic members of our Magistracy
had complained in form of the stay of these poor people, and other
circumstances had intervened which rendered their further entertainment
here very difficult, (especially since nineteen thousand more
were to make their pilgrimage through these parts,) we came to
this resolution, that all who could not be provided for here,
should be sent through three different roads to Memmingen, Augsburg,
and Kempten, under the conduct of some of our Protestant citizens.
The necessary passports, with the money collected at the church-door
towards defraylng the expenses of their journey, were delivered
to the deputies that went to conduct them; and four waggons were
provided for carrying the old weak people and the children, with
the few things they had brought with them.
"On the day of their departure, after they had heard the morning
sermon, and had taken necessary refreshment, they repaired to
our Trinity church, at noon, where they heard a farewell discourse,
with many tears, and a hearty affection for the word of God, and
concluded with the hymn,
' God is our Refuge in distress,'
which was sung only by themselves. After this, the deputies led
them, two by two, between the Mayor and Aldermen, on one side
of the church door, and the reverend Ministry on the other. Being
dismissed by the citizens with innumerable blessings, they took
their several roads in God's name, like so many flocks of sheep,
with great patience and humility.
"Although we could not imagine that the quiet march of these
poor exiles would be anywhere obstructed, yet they that were ordered
to go to Kempten found that not one of their number could be permitted
to pass that way. The deputy went to lodge them in Ober Beuern,
a village belonging to this city, till further orders. But the
Roman Catholics of that place opposed their entrance in so violent
a manner, that all their lives had been in danger if they had
not retired. They therefore came back to this city, and were lodged
at the Golden Crown. The next day, being the 31st of December,
they were sent to Memmingen, where they met with a joyful reception."
"AGSBURG. On the 30th of December, 1731, the Protestant Magistracy
of Augsburg, having had notice given them, by the Magistracy and
Ministry of Kauffbeyern, that eight hundred exiles of Salzburg
had arrived there, and intended to march thither, earnestly desiring,
for the sake of Christ, that they would receive them; the same
was immediately communicated by the reverend Ministry of this
city to the congregation at the cathedral church of St.Anne. As
soon as the sermon was ended, the Protestant Senate met, with
our head Almoner and Recorder; and, having resolved to make a
collection on New-Year's day, for the benefit of these poor people,
they desired the senior Rectors to draw up an account of them,
to be read after the noon and evening sermons. But When the Protestant
part of the Senate acquainted the Roman Catholic part, that many
Salzburg exiles were expected, and should be divided among the
Protestants, without the least molestation to the Roman Catholics,
the Roman Catholics opposed their admission, under several pretexts,
insomuch that nothing could be effected; but we were obliged to
quarter them among the Protestants of the suburbs, some in inns,
others in silver and copper mills, in sawing mills, the hospital,
and garden-houses. To all this the inhabitants expressed so great
a readiness, that they who were not able to 'receive any, lamented
it as their misfortune. So great was the charity of all ranks
of people, that they had not patience to wait for their coming;
but, some on foot, some on horseback, and some in coaches, went
to meet them several miles out of the town. Two hundred of them,
with their deputed Commissary of Kauffbeyern, arrived that evening,
and marched two by two over the fields, amidst some thousands
of people, both Papists and Protestants, some of whom distributed
money among them. Every Protestant was desirous to comfort and
relieve these distressed brethren. Several tradesmen and merchants
were not ashamed to call them brethren and sisters in the fields.
They were ordered into their assigned quarters; and there they
lifted up their hands to heaven, and gave thanks to God.
"On New-Year's day, after the morning service, the Protestant
Senate ordered the two senior Rectors of the Augustan Confession
to preach to these poor exiles, in two different places without
the city. This was done accordingly, in the presence of a great
multitude of people, in Mr. Schawer's garden. The service began
with singing the hymn,
'Commit thy ways and doings'
Then followed a prayer, suited to the circumstances of the exiles:
then a discourse on the name of Jesus, with a particular application
to the occasion; showing how this holy Name ought to influence
the conduct both of the Augsburgers and the exiles.
"They are generally of good courage, and, notwithstanding all
the misery they have gone through, of a cheerful temper. There
appears so much honesty and fidelity in their countenances, that
one may almost affirm they are without guile. They are, for the
most part, of a robust constitution, and from twenty to thirty-six
years of age; though some few of them are from forty to sixty.
"These people behave themselves not only very thankfully, contentedly,
meekly, and patiently, but, when they have an occasion of mentioning
their afflictions, they do it without the least bitterness or
murmuring against their former superiors: and they incessantly
pray, with many tears, for their relations whom they have left
behind, not knowing what sufferings they may have to undergo.
"As to those who were sent to Memmingen, they have been received
as brethren and sisters, and carefully provided for. The greatest
part of those who are yet come are poor labouring people and servants;
but some of those who are to follow are of better condition. Some
are still in prison, where they content themselves with bread
and water, praying, and singing psalms or hymns.
"The third part of these exiles, who went to Ulm, found their
way prepared by God. They were conducted, amidst a great concourse
of people, from the Danube-gate to the Town-House, singing all
the way the hymns which begin thus :-
God is our Refuge in distress,'
and,
' He that confides in his Creator.'
Many thousands of people were excited by these exiles to join
with them in praising God. They were immediately ordered out of
the cold, into a warm room, every one being desirous to give them
some refreshment. After the Magistrate had taken an account of
them, they were quartered in the several inns of the town, which
were hardly large enough to contain the great concourse of other
Protestants who flocked thither, who all joined with one accord
in praises and thanksgivings to God, and continued till late at
night.
"The next day the Rev. Rector Frick preached a sermon upon Gen.
xii. 1, 2. As this discourse was chiefly applied to the Salzburgers,
it is impossible to express with what attention they heard the
word of God. They stood like people who have had no food for a
great while, and therefore wait with greater eagerness to receive
some to satisfy their hunger.
"Being averse to nothing more than idleness, and ready to undertake
the hardest labour, many have already found a subsistence, as
we hope the rest very shortly will."
In their own country, "at first, all pains were taken to dissuade
them from the Protestant religion, by arguments from worldly interest;
and when that would not do, their books, which they had been many
years in collecting, were seized in several places; and it is
reported of the Dean of Werffen, that he burned them. After they
were thus deprived of the word of God, their enemies proceeded
to more violent means. Many were apprehended, particuarly those
who were suspected to be leaders, and sent in fetters, dressed
in derision with white caps, which hung down to their breasts,
into the deepest dungeons in Salzburg; and others have been sent
away, their relations not knowing whither. When this would not
do, the Papists threatened them with beheading, drowning, the
galleys, and the like. To all this these poor people made only
the following reply: ' In God's name; in God's name.' When it
was found that they could not be brought by any of these means
to love their lives and fortunes more than God and His truth,
they were on a sudden ordered to leave the country; and these
orders were immediately executed with all imaginable rigour. Some
were taken from the field; others were dragged naked out of their
beds. All had a sudden summons to depart; and very few were permitted
to sell their goods, or take anything necessary with them. Many
have been obliged to leave their wives and substance behind them,
and to go away deprived of all they had in the world. And what
increased their calamity was, that they were forced to begin their
journey in the depth of winter, when the cold is most severe.
The first eight hundred spent five whole weeks in their journey,
and that in the most bitter cold and stormy weather; and were
a fortnight in wandering over mountains and hills, not knowing
whither they went. This fatigued and emacerated them so much,
that they were almost starved, having been in want of bread for
three days together. This is the case of these poor exiles, whose
number will be considerably augmented by those that are yet to
come."
"AUGSBURG. Jan. 26th, 1732, there arrived in our neighbourhood
five hundred more exiles of Salzburg, besides their women and
children. One of our Protestant Aldermen was immediately sent
to meet them, who read their passports, registered them, and provided
a dinner for the whole company. After which they were divided
into parties; so that one hundred in one place, eighty in another,
sixty in a third, and fifty in a fourth, might be quartered for
this first day without the city; and, when they were arrived in
their lodgings, they sang hymns and prayed with great devotion.
There were with them three waggons full of women, new-born children,
and old people, who were taken to the hospital. It was a signal
mercy that they did not all perish with cold; considering that
they came in a severe frost, being poor, and many of them very
bare. Indeed, some did fall sick by the hardships they endured;
among whom was an old man, since dead, who, being asked whether
he was not sorry for having left his native country, answered,
' No: I die with joy, and in a hope of a better life.'"
The publication in England of details like these could not fail
to make a deep impression upon the public mind. Several persons
of known probity and honour engaged to receive contributions for
the relief of these suffering people; and British charity placed
in their hands the noble sum of f33,000 for that purpose.* Oglethorpe
not only mentioned their case in Parliament, but also proposed
to his brother Trustees of the projected colony, that they should
give a general invitation to these pious strangers to accept of
a settlement and asylum there. To this they readily assented;
so that the invitation was given; and by many of the expatriated
Salzburgers it was gratefully accepted.
[ * The following persons offered their services as treasurers
of the Salzburgers' fund :--the Rev. Mr. Archdeacon Denne, Rector
of Lambeth; Benjamin Hoare, Esq., Banker, Fleet-street; Sir John
Philips, Bart., Bartlett's Buildings; William Tillard, Esq., Spital-square,
Bishopsgate-street James Vernon, Esq., Grosvenor-street;the Rev.
Mr. Ziegenhagen, Chaplain to His Majesty, and Preacher in the
German chapel, St. James's, at Me house in St. James's Place.]
In the mean while arrangements were made with all practicable
expedition for the commencement of this great undertaking. The
House of Commons voted f10,000 in behalf of the colony; congreg
ational collections were extensively made for the same object;
and the general fund was greatly augmented by private liberality.
A ship was engaged, of about two hundred tons' burden; the emigrants,
consisting of thirty-five families, including one hundred and
sixteen settlers, among whom were farmers, carpenters, bricklayers,
&e., embarked at Deptford, November 16th, 1782; Oglethorpe
accompanying them at his own expense, and being debarred by the
charter from receiving any pecuniary benefit from the scheme which
he had originated, and engaged to carry into effect. On the 13th
of January following they arrived at Charlestown, in Carolina,
where they were kindly received; and from thence Oglethorpe proceeded,
with his fellow-voyagers, and such help as he could obtain, to
the tract of country which was assigned them, and which is situated
between Florida and the province of Carolina. Here they formed
the plan of a town, to which they gave the name of Savannah, from
the river with which it is connected. Portions of land were also
allotted to the settlers.
While Oglethorpe was thus employed, the Trustees of the colony,
whom he had left behind, were not unmindful of the persecuted
Salzburgers. A ship was sent to Rotterdam, for the purpose of
receiving such of them as were willing to embark under the British
banner for the American wilderness. They were first conveyed to
Dover, and doubtless received there the requisite supplies for
their voyage and ultimate destination. From thence they sailed,
January 8th, 1784, for the far west, accompanied by two of their
own Ministers, and by Baron Von Reck, as Commissary. They were
cordially received at Chariestown, where they met with Oglethorpe,
and afterwards at Savannah, where the English settlers saluted
them with a hearty cheer, to which they gave an equally hearty
response. The choice of a situation was offered to them; and they
selected one, the scenery of which bore some resemblance to that
of their own country. Here they knelt down before God, in grateful
acknowledgment of all His mercies to them in their extensive and
perilous wanderings; with the Bible in their hands, they then
marched up to the place which they deemed the most suitable as
the site of a town; they then sang a hymn, and one of the Pastors
pronounced the usual benediction. To the town which they intended
forthwith to build they gave the name of EBENEZER.*
Having made these arrangements, and provided for the maintenance
of order during his absence, Oglethorpe left the colony, May 7th,
1734, and arrived at St. Helen's, in the Isle of Wight, on the
16th of June; bringing with him several Indians of distinction,
who declared their desire that both they and their people should
be instructed in the Christian religion, and also stand in a friendly
relation to the British subjects who had recently become their
neighbours. He was received in England with the greatest respect;
and was everywhere met with congratulations on the success of
his benevolent enterprise. Among other persons who addressed him
in this strain was the venerable Rector of Epworth, who, though
labouring under the infirmities of age and disease, had still
a heart to feel for the welfare of mankind. The following letter,
which was written by him, has never before appeared in any work
that has issued from the British press :--
[* A very interesting pamphlet, bearing the following title,
was published in London in the year 1734 :~" An Extract from the
Journals of Mr. Commissary Von Reck, who conducted the first Transport
of Salzburgers to Georgia; and of the Reverend Mr. Bolzius, one
of their Ministers: giving an Account of their Voyage to, and
happy Settlement in, that Province. Published by the Direction
of the Society for Promoting Christian Knowledge." 12mo]
"Epworth, July 6th, 1734.
"HONOURED SIR,--May I be admitted, while such crowds of our nobility
and gentry are pouring in their congratulations, to press with
my poor mite of thanks into the presence of one who so well deserves
the title of UNIVERSAL BENEFACTOR OF MANKIND! It is not only your
valuable layouts on many accounts to my son, late of Westminster,
and myself, when I was not a little pressed in the world, nor
your more extensive charity to the poor prisoners; it is not these
only that so much demand my warmest acknowledgments, as your disinterested
and immovable attachment to your country, and your raising a new
colony, or rather a little world of your own, in the midst of
wild woods and uncultivated deserts, where men may live free and
happy, if they are not hindered by their own stupidity and folly,
in spite of the unkindness of their brother mortals.
"I owe you, Sir, besides this, some account of my little affairs
since the beginning of your expedition. Notwithstanding my own
and my softs violent illness, which held me half a year, and him
above twelve months, I have made a shift to get more than three
parts in four of my Dissertations on Job printed off, and both
the paper, printing, and maps, hitherto, paid for. My son John
at Oxford, now that his elder brother is gone to Tiverton, takes
care of the remainder of the impression at London; and I have
an ingenious artist here with me in my house at Epworth, who is
graying and working off the remaining maps and figures for me;
so that I hope, if the printer does not hinder me, I shall have
the whole ready by next spring; and: by God's leave, I shall be
in London myself, to deliver the books perfect. I print five hundred
copies, as in my proposals;
hereof I have about three hundred already subscribed for; and
among my subscribers, fifteen or sixteen English Bishops, with
some in Ireland.
[* These Dissertations are comprised in a large folio volume,
in Latin, which was published by subscription. Oglethorpe subscribed
for NINE copies, two of them large paper: a greater number than
was subscribed for by any other man.]
"If you will please herewith to accept the tender of my most
sincere respect and gratitude, you will thereby confer one further
obligation, honoured Sir, on "Your most obedient and humble servant,
SAMUEL WESLEY.*
"To James Oglethorpe, Esq."
The learned writer of this beautiful epistle was disappointed
in his plans. Instead of going to London the following spring,
to deliver with his own hands to the subscribers the elaborate
volume upon which he had expended much time and thought, he passed
to his final reward; dying on the 25th of April, 1735, in the
seventy-second year of his age. After his death it was proposed
to his sons John and Charles, to accompany Oglethorpe to Georgia;
John as a Missionary to the Indians, and Charles as Oglethorpe's
Secretary. To this proposal they demurred for some time, particularly
on account of the situation of their mother; but when the matter
was proposed to her, she at once gave her free consent. Notwithstanding
her widowhood, and the straitened circumstances in which she was
placed, this noble-minded woman said, "Had I twenty sons, I should
rejoice that they were all so employed, though I should never
see them more."+
[* This letter is copied from c, Biographical Memorials of James
Oglethorpe, Founder of the Colony of Georgia, in North America.
By Thaddeus Mason Harris, D.D. Boston, 1841." This production
of the American press is characterized by extensive research,
and the facts which it embodies are extremely interesting.
+ Moore's Life of the Rev. John Wesley, vol. i., p. 234.]
The brothers were considered to be eminently qualified for the
work which they were requested to undertake, by the zeal and earnestness
with which they applied themselves to the duties of religion and
benevolence, and by their habits of strict self-denial; each of
them possessing what they afterwards so appropriately expressed,-
"A soul inured to pain,
To hardship, grief, and loss,
Bold to take up, firm to sustain,
The consecrated cross."
It is not generally known that Mr. John Wesley went to Georgia
under the sanction of the Society for the Propagation of the Gospel
in Foreign Parts. He was well known to Dr. Burton, the estimable
President of Corpus Christi College, Oxford, who was one of the
Trustees of the colony. Dr. Burton introduced him to Oglethorpe,
who pressed him to undertake the mission; and, having gained his
consent, the Trustees recommended him to the Society, by whom
he was readily accepted; and it was resolved that he should receive
f50 a year from the Society's funds. He was to take the place
of a Clergyman of the name of Quincy, who was already in Georgia,
but wished to return; and Mr. Wesley's salary was to commence
from the time of Quincy's departure.*
During Oglethorpe's stay in England, several other emigrants
found their way to Georgia. The Indian Chiefs, after an introduction
to royalty, and a sight of the most interesting objects in London
and its vicinity, returned to their native land, laden with rich
presents, accompanied by many more of the Salzburg exiles. A considerable
number of hardy Scotchmen also removed, with their families, to
this genial soil and climate, where they had every reason to believe
that their labour would be rewarded by plenty. Oglethorpe himself
prepared to return, accompanied by a large number of additional
emigrants; and greater caution was used in the selection of them
than was deemed necessary in the first instance; for some of the
men, who had formerly been taken from the streets and jails of
London, being unaccustomed to hard labour, were rather a burden
than a benefit to the new settlement; their habits being indolent
and litigious. Two ships having been engaged, the "London Merchant"
and the "Simmons," and all things being in readiness for the voyage,
on the 13th of October, 1735, fifty-six men, women, and children,
Salzburgers, accompanied by Von Reck, who had attended the transport
of 1733, and Captain Hermsdorf, went on board the "London Merchant."
The charge of their subsistence and journey from Ratisbon and
Augsburg to Rotterdam, and from thence to London, was defrayed
by the Society for the Propagation of the Gospel in Foreign Parts,
out of the collections which were committed to them for that purpose.
These interesting strangers were accompanied by some members of
the Moravian Church, who, being persecuted by the Papists in Bohemia,
sought an asylum in this new colony, where religious liberty was
offered as a common boon. The next day the two Wesleys, the Rev.
Benjamin Ingham, who was one of the Oxford Methodists, and Charles
Delamotte, the son of a London merchant, who voluntarily offered
his services as the friend and assistant of Mr. John Wesley, went
by water to Gravesend, for the purpose of taking their places
on board the "Simmons ;" where they were joined by Oglethorpe,
and by a great number of poor English families, who were sent
out at the expense of the Trustees. The two ships soon after sailed
for their destination.
[* Historical Notices of the Missions of the Church of England
in the North American Colonies, previous to the Independence of
the United States. By Ernest Hawkins, B.D. Pp. 92--95.]
This renewed and enlarged expedition of philanthropy was regarded
by religious and benevolent people with entire satisfaction; and
the energy, patriotism, and disinterested generosity of Oglethorpe
commanded universal admiration. One of the King's sloops was ordered
to convey him across the Atlantic; but he chose rather to sail
with the Missionaries and the poor emigrants. Amidst the general
excitement the poets celebrated his deeds of valour and benevolence.
Samuel Wesley, who had sung the praises of his friend on the occasion
of his interference in behalf of oppressed prisoners, now published,
a handsome folio pamphlet, under the title of, "Georgia, a Poem;
Tomo Chichi, an Ode; and a Copy of Verses on Mr. Oglethorpe's
Second Voyage to Georgia." He thus addresses the former settlers
:--
"See once again, see on your shores descend
Your generous leader, your unwearied friend !
No storm of chance his vessel thither drives;
No ! to secure and bless you, he arrives.
To Heaven the praise,--and thanks to him repay,
And let remotest times respect the day.
He comes, whose life, while absent from your view,
Was one continued ministry for you;
For you he laid out all his pains and art,
Won every will, and soften'd every heart.
With what paternal joy shall he relate
How views the mother Isle your little state;
How aids the Senate, how the nation loves,
How GEORGE protects, and CAROLINE approves !
A thousand pleasures crowd into his breast;
But one, one mighty thought absorbs the rest:
And 'Give me, Heaven, to see' (the patriot cries)
' Another Britain in the desert rise ! '"
With reference to the same occasion Thomson poured forth the
following laudatory strains :-
"Lo ! swarming southward on rejoicing suns,
Gay colonies extend; the calm retreat
Of undeserved distress, the better home
Of those whom bigots chase from foreign lands.
Nor built on Rapine, Servitude, and Woe,
And in their turn some petty tyrant's prey;
But, bound by social Freedom, firm they rise:
Such as, of late, an Oglethorpe has form'd,
And, crowding round, the charm'd Savannah sees."*
[* Liberty, Part Fifth, line 638--646.]
Even Pope, who was far more inclined to satirize than commend,
could not withhold his meed of praise front the founder of Georgia
:-
"Or, driven by strong benevolence of soul,
Will fly, like OGLETHORPE, from pole to pole."
The labours of the two Wesleys in Georgia, the defectiveness
of their religious views at this period, the failure of their
mission, their return to England, the manner in which they were
more perfectly instructed in the way of the Lord, their subsequent
labours and success, are all matters of history, and are generally
known; but, upon all these interesting subjects, further light
will be thrown by the two volumes which are now before the reader.
The particulars of Oglethorpe's life which have just been related
possess a more than common interest; inasmuch as they present
a striking illustration of the fact, which is continned by the
entire history of the church, that it pleases Almighty God often
to accomplish the most important objects of His wisdom and mercy
by means the most simple and unpromising. An insolvent debtor
dies in one of the prisons of London, in circumstances which awaken
suspicion in the mind of his friend, Who obtains a Parliamentary
commission to inquire into the state of prisons generally. The
inquiry leads to the emancipation of large numbers of poor men,
the victims of oppression, with damaged character, who are thrown
upon society in a state of destitution and helplessness. A new
colony is projected with a special reference to their relief;
and pious foreigners, suffering persecution from Papal governments,
are invited to share in the benefit. The two Wesleys, impressed
with the supreme importance of spiritual religion, But still "carnal
and sold under sin," their consciences sorely lacerated by their
daily failures, meet with these devout strangers, who teach them
the all-important doctrine of present salvation from sin by faith
in Christ crucified; the truth of which becomes to them matter
of personal experience. They are thus qualified for the work that
is assigned them in the divine purpose, and are a means of promoting
a revival of religion, the benefits of which are at this day felt
in all evangelical churches throughout the world. "Behold, how
great a matter a little fire kindleth !" "Whoso is wise, and will
observe these things, even they shall understand the lovingkindness
of the Lord."
This is not the proper place for any extended details respecting
Oglethorpe. It will appear, from the Journal of Mr. Charles Wesley,
that this great and generous man had the weakness, for a short
time, to yield to the influence of some females of doubtful character,
and to listen to the tales of parasites, so as to treat his secretary
with a harshness which was nearly fatal to his life. But his unworthy
treatment of one who was every way entitled to his confidence
and affection was of short continuance, and was succeeded by substantial
and permanent kindness. Oglethorpe, who was afterwards raised
to the rank of a General, having achieved the establishment of
the colony, and defended it against a formidable attack which
was made upon it by the Spaniards, returned to England, where
he lived to a very protracted period, perhaps as much respected
as any man of his age. He was intelligent, frank, and gentlemanly
in his demeanour, and enjoyed the friendship of statesmen, and
of the first literary characters of the times. Dr. Johnson proposed
to write his Life, if the General would supply the requisite facts;
and Burke said, that "he looked upon him as a more extraordinary
person than any he had ever read of; for he had founded the province
of Georgia; had absolutely called it into existence; and had lived
to see it severed from the empire which created it, and become
an independent state." * Oglethorpe was a subscriber to the concerts
of the musical sons of Charles Wesley, which were held in their
father's house in London; so that he and his former secretary,
in all probability, had frequent interviews when they were both
very aged men. General Oglethorpe died of fever at his seat at
Crantmm,
[* Mrs. Hannah More's Life and Letters, vol. i., p. 204.]
June 30th, 1785. The following epitaph is inscribed upon white
marble, in the chancel of Cranham church. It was written by Capel
Lofft, and is far more copious than such compositions usually
are :--
"Near this place lie the remains of James Edward Oglethorpe,
Esq., who served under Prince Eugene, and, in 1714, was Captain
Lieutenant in the first troop of the Queen's Guards. In 1740 he
was appointed Colonel of a Regiment to be raised in Georgia. In
1745 he was appointed Major-General, and in 1747 Lieutenant-General,
and in 1760 General, of His Majesty's forces. In his civil station
he was equally conspicuous. He was chosen Member of Parliament
for Haslemere, in Surrey, in 1722, and continued to represent
it till 1754. In the Committee of Parliament for inquiring into
the state of the jails, formed 25th of February, 1728, and of
which he was Chairman, the active and persevering zeal of his
benevolence found a truly suitable employment, by visiting, with
his colleagues of that generous body, the dark and pestilential
dungeons of the prisons which at that time dishonoured the metropolis;
detecting the most enormous oppressions,
obtaining exemplary punishment on those who had been guilty of
such outrage against humanity and justice, and redressing multitudes
from extreme misery to light and freedom. Of these, about eleven
hundred, rendered, by long confinement for debt, strangers and
helpless in the country of their birth, and desirous of seeking
an asylum in the wilds of America, were by him conducted thither
in 1732. He willingly encountered, in their behalf, a variety
of fatigue and danger; and thus became the founder of the colony
of Georgia; a colony which afterwards set the noble example of
prohibiting the importation of slaves. This new establishment
he strenuously and successfully defended against a powerful attack
of the Spaniards. In the year in which he quitted England to found
this settlement, he nobly strove to secure our true national defence
by sea and land,---a free navy, without impressing,--a constitutional
militia. But his social affections were more enlarged than even
the term patriotism can express: he was the friend of the oppressed
Negro; no part of the globe was too remote, no interest too unconnected,
or too much opposed to his own, to prevent the immediate succour
of suffering humanity. For such qualities he received, from the
ever-memorable John Duke of Argyle, a full testimony, in the British
Senate, to his military character, his natural generosity, his
contempt of danger, and regard for the public. A similar encomium
is perpetuated in a foreign language ;* and, by one of our most
celebrated poets, his remembrance is transmitted to posterity
in lines justly expressive of the purity, the ardour, and the
extent of his benevolence. He lived till the 1st of July, 1785;
a venerable instance of what a duration a life of temperance and
virtuous labour is capable of being protracted. His widow, Elizabeth,
daughter of Sir Nathan Wright, of Cranham Hall, Bart., and only
sister of Sir Samuel Wright, of the same place, surviving, with
regret, but with due submission to divine Providence, an affectionate
husband, after an union of more than forty years, hath inscribed
to his memory these faint traces of his excellent character.
Religion watches o'er his urn,
And all the Virtues bending mourn:
Humanity, with languid eye,
Melting for others' misery;
Prudence, whose hands a measure hold,
And Temperance, with a chain of gold
Fidelity's triumphant vest,
And Fortitude, in armour dress'd;
Wisdom's grey locks, and Freedom, join
The moral train to bless his shrine;
And pensive all, around his ashes holy,
Their last sad honours pay in order melancholy.'" +
[* Referring to the encomium of the Abbe Raynal, in his Histoire
Philosophique et Politique. + These verses are said to have been
written by an old friend of the General,--the Rev. Moses Browne.]
Such was the man who drew the Wesleys from an ascetic and retired
state of life, in which they intended to spend their days, into
a course of active service for the good of mankind, and whose
name is therefore associated with theirs in the imperishable records
of the church.
IV.
FEW brief observations concerning the contents of the ensuing
volumes must suffice, considering the unexpected length to which
this introduction has been extended.
The Journal of Mr. Charles Wesley, which is placed the first
in order, contains an artless but spirited account of his labours
and sufferings in Georgia, accompanied by many interesting notices
respecting the colony; his return to England, as the bearer of
dispatches from the Governor, with a description of some singular
characters that came under his observation during the voyage;
the manner in which he was led to a practical reception of the
doctrine of present salvation from sin by faith in the Lord Jesus.
From this time, it will be found that his character was entirely
changed. He was no longer the anxious, perplexed, and disappointed
inquirer after peace and holiness; wishing to die, because, while
he earnestly sought these blessings, he found them not; supposing
that a joyous certainty of acceptance with God, and of conformity
to His will, is unattainable in this life. Instead of singing,
in a tone of pensiveness and despair, as he had formerly done,
"Doubtful and insecure of bliss,
Since Death alone confirms me His,"
he now possessed the inward and abiding witness of his personal
adoption, and exclaimed, with holy thankfulness,
"No condemnation now I dread,
Jesus, and all in Him, is mine !
Alive in Him, my living Head,
And clothed in righteousness divine,
Bold I approach the' eternal throne,
And claim the crown through Christ my own."
Instead of being "carnal, and sold under sin," he felt that,
"to be spiritually minded is life and peace." This great salvation
from the guilt, the misery, and the power of sin, the faith by
which it is obtained, the penitence by which it is preceded, and
the practical holiness which is invariably consequent upon it,
formed the chief subjects of his effective ministry, which ended
only with his life.
His laborious zeal and his success, as an Itinerant Evangelist,
which may be gathered from the subsequent parts of his Journal,
have seldom been equalled, and perhaps in no instance surpassed,
at least since the apostolic times. They place him on a level
with his honoured brother, and their common friend Mr. Whitefield.
In London, Bristol, Bath, Birmingham, Nottingham, Sheffield, Leeds,
Manchester, Newcastle, Wales,--among the miners of Cornwall, Kingswood,
Staffordshlre, Yorkshire, and the north,-- among the Romani |