Cornell University Library BX 5995.G85S87 Memoir of the life of the Rt. Rev. Alexa 3 1924 007 862 828 The original of tiiis book is in tine Cornell University Library. There are no known copyright restrictions in the United States on the use of the text. http://www.archive.org/details/cu31924007862828 ■* "■ %S;^ i^- Q£,.:^■u^^.^,MM^,,.^'^■^- Published by otavely audM'^ CaiJa. MEMOIR. MEMOIR Of THE LIEE OF THE RT. REV. ALEXANDER VIETS aRISWOLD, D. D. BISHOP OF THE PROTESTANT EPISCOPAL CHURCH EASTERN DIOCESE. BY JOHN S. STONE, D. D. RECTOB or CHRIST CHURCH, BKOOKLTN, N. Y. WITH AN APPENDIX. TO WHICH ABE ADDED A SERMON, CHARGE, AND PASTORAL LETTER OF THE LATE BISHOP. PHILADELPHIA: \ STAVELY AND McCALLA, No. 12 Pear street. —* 1844. EifTEEED according to the Act of Congress, in the year 1844, by STAVELY & McCALLA, In the Clerk'a Office of the District Court of the Eastern District of Pennsylvania. PREFACE. This word may be defined ; that part of a book, which is always written last ; though, if read at all, it is usually read first. In olden times, it used to make no inconside- rable portion of the work, to which it belonged ; and was sometimes no contemptible volume by itself. In attempt- ing, however, a preface to the present work, the writer finds that he has little to add for the edification of his reader. All that he had to say has been already said. The best essay on the character and life of Bishop Griswold will be found in his own recorded words and actions. These have been given with as much justice to the Bishop himself and with as little oflTence to others, as was possible. The memoir will be found valuable, chiefly as a record of cha- racter, and of the dealings of God's grace and providence ; though it is hoped that, as a small contribution to our eccle- siastical history, the book will be found not altogether value- less. Whatever its value, in this respect, may be, how- ever, there need be little hesitation in saying, that the character of the holy man, whose life is now sent forth, and the dealings of God in the formation of that character, de- serve to be had in remembrance : they cannot too deeply, too widely, or too enduringly impress themselves on the living Church of Christ. To those, who have kindly assisted the following work, by the contribution of original letters from the Bishop, and of other valuable documents, the writer begs, in this way, VIII PREFACE. to express his unfeigned thanks. Many invaluable letters from the same pen have, indeed, been either lost, or with- held ; still, enough have been furnished to shew the value of the rest, and to lay the religious public under deep obliga- tion to those, who so generously responded to the call for such contributions. And now, nothing remains but to commit to God's favor and blessing the pages, which have been penned ; and to say that, if they do the reader as much good as they have the writer, he may well be satisfied with his work, and devoutly thank God that he has not labored in vain. CONTENTS PilEPACE, The Bishop's ancestry, parentage and birth, His childhood and youth, From his marriage to his ordination as Presbyter, From his ordination to the close of his ministry in Con- necticut, - - . - From his settlement in Bristol to his consecration as Bishop, Account of the organization of the Eastern Diocese and of the election and consecration of Bishop Griswold, Early events in his Episcopate, Brief notices of the Eastern Diocese, and of the life of its Bishop as therewith connected. Call to St. Peter's, Salcm, in 1813 ; Influence of the war on the state of the Church ; Burning of Portsmouth, N. H. Origin of St. James', Greenfield ; Letter to a Lay-reader, on Canon 19th, of 1808 ; St. Mary's, Newton ; Letters to the Rev. T. Strong; Call to Cambridge in 1816; The Bishop's Charge of 1814 noticed in England; Correspon- dence with the Rev. J. Pratt, Secretary of the Church Missionary Society in England ; Prosperity of the Church in 1816. The Bishop invited to perform Episcopal duties in Connecticut after the death of Bishop Jarvis ; Scarcity of Prayer books and clergy ; Church in the valley of the Connecticut ; Gen. Theol. Sem. ; Letter to the Rev. P. Chase, Bishop-elect of Ohio ; Obstacles to the growth of the Church, 1818; Resolution against fashionable amuse- ments ; Letter to the Rev. A. L. Baury ; Origin of St. .Paul's, Boston, 1819 ; Church organized in the new State of Maine ; Motion for changing Biennial for Annual "Conventions ; Motives to Missionary labor ; Pastoral Let- ter for 1820 from the House of Bishops; "Gospel Advo- PAGE. 7 8 13 27 28 55 56 72 73- 99- 132- 169- 211 -98 -131 -16S -210 X. CONTENTS. cate" established ; Decayed Churches, and Letter to the Rev. Mr. Carlile ; views of the Bishop's character, firm, yet yielding; Interesting Letter, on his tour in 1821; views of character; Last Biennial Convention, 1822; Division of the Diocese first proposed in 1822 ; Notices of the Annual Address for 1821 ; Special General Conven- tion of 1821 ; System of Sunday School Instruction pro- posed ; First notice of Prayer-meetings ; Correspondence with Bishop Hobart, &c., on the case of Dr. Ducachet; Case of the Rev. Mr. Bristed ; Difficulties in St. Paul's, Boston, and case of Dr. Jarvis ; Episcopal prayer-meet- ings; Essays on the proposed alterations of the Liturgy; Character of the Bishop's Annual Addresses; The Rev. A. Potter succeeds to St. Paul's, Boston ; Domestic afflictions ; Clerical Association suggested; Proposed Theological Seminary; Church principles, and responsibilities; In- teresting extracts ; Growth of the Church in Boston, and rise of Grace Church parish; The Bishop's removal from Bristol to Salem; Death of the Rev. Geo. Griswold; Volume of Sermons, published ; Scarcity of clergy ; Peril on Narraganset Bay ; The Bishop's punctuality ; Anec- dotes illustrative; Massachusetts movements in 1831; Correspondence with the Rev. Mr. Bristed, on exchange of pulpits, &c. ; Opening movements in 1832 ; Vermont becomes an independent Diocese ; Parting letter to Bishop Griswold ; Massachusetts movements in 1832 ; Aimual Address for 1832 ; Can a Bishop resign his Jurisdiction 7 Origin of the Rhode Island and Massachusetts Convoca- tions ; Organization ; Notice of Convocation ; Oratorios in Churches ; Letter to E. A. N. ; The Bishop retires firom pastoral duty and settles in Boston; Diocesan Theological Seminary again urged; History of the eflTorts to organize and endow the Seminary ; Death of Bishop White leaves Bishop Griswold Senior and Presiding Bishop ; Letter to Bishop B. T. Onderdonk ; Dissolution of the Diocese again proposed, and rejected ; State of the Church, in Boston in 1836 ; Dangerous illness in 1837 ; Effort to elect an Assist- ant in 1837-8 ; Thoughts on the proposed election ; Views of the Diocese; Pastoral Letter for 1838 from the House of Bishops ; Attempt to make the Conventions of the East- CONTENTS. XI. FAGI. em Diocese triennial, iasiead'oi annual; Annual Address for 1839 ; Letter to the Rev. G. S. Coit ; Farewell Mission- ary meeting at St. Bartholomew's, New York, and Letter of Instructions to the Missionaries ; Foreign Correspond- ence, on intercommunion of Churches ; Pastoral Letter for 1841 from the House of Bishops ; Critique on Church Edi- fices ; The Bishop's letter of commendation to the Rev. J. C. Richmond; Reply to strictures on the letter in the New York Churchman ; Unjust charge against the Bishop re- futed ; Mar Yohanna ; Renewed Critique on Church Edi- fices ; Conventions of Massachusetts and the Eastern Dio- cese in 1842; Election of Dr. Eastburn as Assistant Bishop; Importance of this election; Consecration of Bishop Johns; Consecration of Bishop Eastburn; State of Eastern Diocese ; Bishop Griswold still labors ; Essays on the Reformation ; The Bishop's Protestantism ; Closing View of the Eastern Diocese, 211 459 Extracts, &c., fi-om private journals and from private letters during the Episcopate of Bishop Griswold, 460 508 Parochial Life of Bishop Griswold after the year 1812, 509 527 Domestic life and character of Bishop Griswold, - - 528 554 Appendix, - - - 555 578 Sermon, . - - .... 579 591 Pastoral Letter, - - 594 601 Charge, - - 602 620 MEMOIR, &c. THE bishop's ancestry, parentage and birth. To keep alive after death, the memory and influence of a great man, is not necessarily the most beneficent office of the biographer. Nor is this office always found in the work of transmitting to posterity the character and actions of even a good man. It is only when, to the qualities, which mark the good, is added somewhat of the attributes, which con- stitute the great, man also, gone to his dwelUng among those dead who are yet alive, that biography has before it its rich- est field, and finds within its reach treasures, with which it may most largely bless mankind. That the subject of the following memoir was pre-emi- nently a good man, vast multitudes of the dead, and perhaps vaster multitudes of the living have long and weU known. That he was also, in important respects, a truly great man, great, not only in his goodness, but also independently of it, many, both of the dead and of the living, have already felt, and many more, it is believed, of those who survive him will feel, if the attempt now made to transmit his memory to posterity, should succeed in doing simple justice to its sub- ject. To the members of the Protestant Episcopal Church in these United States, the life of Bishop Griswold can hardly prove otherwise than a matter of peculiar interest. Born many years anterior to the date of our Ecclesiastical origin, at a time, when, under our Colonial existence, the elements B 14 MEMOIR OF THE of our present organization and growth lay but in their em- bryo forms, his life measures the whole c&urse of our Church History, and runs back beyond the opening of that History into those days of simple manners and habits, of pure faith and practice, out of which, as from a fresh and copious foun- tain, have flowed the now swelling streams both of our national and of our Ecclesiastical being. Originating in such an age as that which has been named, and living through such a period, as that which has succeeded. Bishop Griswold for near half a century filled, in its various grades, the ministry of our Church ; for more than thirty years held Episcopal supervision over one of the largest of its integral portions ; and, in all the stations, which he occupied, acted his part with singular wisdom and fidelity, and has left be- hind him an enduring monument both of rare abilities and of uncommon excellence. This, however, is not the place for his eulogy. Let that be found chiefly in a simple record of what he was and of what he did. Something of this record we have, as written by himself; and the insight thus fiirnished into his own character and history will greatly facilitate the labors of him, who has un- dertaken to make the record fuller and more complete. His auto-biography reaches from the period of his birth to that of his consecration ; and, had not his modesty led him into far too great brevity, it should be here given entire, as the best possible history of that portion of his life. Brief as it is, however, it will enrich and give its chief value to the some- what fuUer narrativeof that portion, which will be attempted. I know not that I can better introduce the whole story of his life than in the words, with which this precious fragment opens. They are characteristic of the man, and will put into our hands a light which we shall do well to carry with us as we trace his opening way from infancy to age. He says: "When one so great and so wise as Solomon, on reviewing the scenes of his past life, has pronounced upon them, ' vanity of vanities ;' what can there be, worth recording, among the things, which occupy the hours of LIFE OF BISHOP GRISWOLD. 15 ordinary men? When one writes memoirs of himself, it is natural to suppose that he is actuated by vanity, contempti- ble as the trifles which he relates. Pliny judges those to be happy, who do things worthy to be written, or write things worthy to be read. To neither of these merits does the pre- sent writer make any claim. And yet, knowledge of man- kind is useful ; and not only the wisdom of the wise, but also the errors of the simple, may do good from the record, in which they lie. In the life of almost every man, however low or humble his state, however obscure or private his station, are things, which, could they be known, would be useful, and, were they well told, would be entertaining, to the living. And when one has httle to say of himself, which is not rather to his shame than to his praise, vain-glory is less likely to be his motive : and although, in the lives of most men, there are few things generally interesting, yet there are few, if there be any, so obscure, that their biogra- phy would be uninteresting to every survivor. The child must be gratified in having on record the chief incidents of a parent's life. Friends, too, and acquaintance must be pleased with a memorial of transactions, in which themselves, or their progenitors have been concerned. Such notices are of use, and should be encouraged for the sake of preserving a knowledge of family connexions find genealogies. And who knows of what use they may be in the annals, or even history of any country.'' "It may, indeed, be profitable to write some account of one's own life even if it serve no other purpose than to re- mind or convince us of our unworthiness, and of how little profit to ourselves and to the world that life has been. There are probably few, who would not be humbled by an impartial review of what they have been, of what they have done, and of what they have left undone. In truth, how- ever, the 'longing after immortality,' the desire to be re- membered after death, so natural to us all, should be cherished, were it but for the effect it has in stimulating us to do what is worthy to be remembered and to be followed. It is said to have been the practice of the ancient Egyptians, 16 MEMOIR OF THE when one died, to institute a solemn trial of his character, and to pronounce upon it such sentence as in his life he had merited. To such a trial in pubhc estimation is every character subject; and the looking forward to it is, to every well ordered mind, a strong incentive to good and worthy actions. " Some written account of a clergyman's life should be pre- served, that the history of the Church may not be lost." Beginning to write with such views of himself, it is not likely that Bishop Griswold, had he written a fall auto-bio- graphy not only of the first forty-five, but also of the whole seventy-seven years of his life, would have given many proofs of having written under the influence of " vain glory." His own ripened modesty would not allow him to rank him- self on the catalogue of Plinj's happy ones, although pos- terity, more just to his virtues and to- his deeds, will be apt to think it his proper place ; having both done what is wor- thy of being written, and written what is worthy of being read. His deeds, it is true, have not filled a noisy world with the clamor of his praise ; nor have his writings ever associated him with the popular idols of the day. Still, his deeds have been such that his " praise has long been in all the Churches ;" and his writings will at least be worthy of remembrance, when many, which for their day caught the popular breeze, shall have been forgotten. Had he written minutely of himself in his auto-biography, he might indeed have been compelled to record many things, which in the judgment of posterity would have redounded "to his praise;" but he could not have recorded many things " to his shame," unless by revealing what the world never saw, those sins of nature, and of thought, over which every man has to weep when he approaches the Mercy Seat, and which make Christ to every believer so exceedingly pre- cious. In short, a trial, as severely just as that instituted of old by the Egyptians, has already been held over his character and actions ; and the sentence, which has been pronounced, is only what in his life he had merited ; a place among the LIFE OF BISHOP GRISWOLD. 17 great, especially among the greatly good, men of our Church, and of our age. "I was bom," he says, "April 22d, 1766, in Simsbury, county of Hartford, and State of Connecticut ; and was named Alexander Viets, after my mother's grandfather, who was a physician from Germany. My parents, on both sides, were respectable and considered wealthy in a town, where few, if any, were possessed of larger estates. My father, Ehsha Griswold, was from the Windsor branch of a numerous fami- ly, the descendants of Matthew Griswold, who came from England in the year . My mother, Eunice, was the daughter of John and Lois Viets." In this short paragraph is comprised the whole account, which the Bishop gives of his ancestry. It may not be un- interesting therefore, to pause a moment, in the course of the narrative, for the purpose of giving the few additional particu- lars, which I have been able to glean. The Bishop's paternal ancestor, Matthew Griswold, who came over from England, was possibly one of the company, who left the counties of Devonshire, Dorsetshire, and Somer- setshire, and arrived at Nantasket on the coast of Massachu- setts, the 30th day of May, 1630. Among the principal men of that company were "the Rev. Mr. John Wareham, a celebrated minister in Exeter, the capital of the county of Devon: Mr. Henry Wolcott, Mr. Ludlow, Mr. Rosseter, and others of Mr. Wareham's congregation, who first settled the town of Windsor." This Windsor was the first settle- ment ever made by the whites within the State of Connecti- cut; and this "Rev. Mr. John Wareham" was the first pastor of its Church and congregation, the seeds of which he brought over with him from Exeter; Mr. Wareham settled first as pastor of a congregation in Dorchester, near Boston, where he remained for six years from the period of his arri- val in 1630. In 1633, Mr. Wm. Hohnes sailed fi:om Ply- mouth in Massachusetts Bay, with the frame and materials for a single house, and landing in Connecticut river just be- low the mouth of the Farmington, set up and covered his materials " with the utmost despatch," and thus erected " the 18 MEMOIR OF THE first house in Connecticut." In 1635, "a number of Mr. Wareham's people," " about sixty men, women and children, with their horses, cattle- and swine, commenced their journey from Massachusetts through the wilderness to Connecticut river ;" and, after suffering great hardships, and being long on the way, "arrived safely at' the places of thejr respective destination." And in 1640, after Mr. Wareham had be- come settled as first pastor of the congregation in Windsor, the town records shew a list of the names of its early settlers ; among which appear those of "Mr. Henry Wolcott, Roger Ludlow, Esq., and Bray Rosseter;" doubtless the same be- fore mentioned as having accompanied Mr. Wareham from Exeter to Nantasket in 1630. On the same list of Windsor names in 1640 appear those of Edward Griswold, Humphrey Pinney, and Thomas Holcomb, who probably belonged to the same company, and were the ancestors of the Griswold, Pinney. and Holcomb families, who afterwards removed from Windsor to Simsbury, and whose descendants are still living in that and the adjacent toWns. The Edward Griswold, whose name appears on the town records of Windsor, in 1640, may have been a sow of the Bishop's ancestor from England, Matthew Griswold ; and if so, it becomes even pro- bable that this ancestor was one of the company, whe came over from Exeter with Mr. Wareham in 1630. But, whether this were so or not, it is sufficiently apparent that this ancestor was one of the first settlers of that ancient town, of whose very first inhabitants it is remarked; "This^was considered an honorable company."* The first of the Griswold family, that removed from Wind- sor to Simsbury, appears to have been the Bishop's grand- father, "^Squire Samuel Griswold," as he is now respectfully termed in the neighborhood of his former residence. He purchased and built upon a beautiful farm lying within the principal bend of the Farmington river, in the town of Sims- bury. This stream, after rising among the mountains in the southwest part of the State of Massachusetts, and running * Barber's Hist. Col. for Connecticut, p. 124. LIFE OF BISHOP GRISWOLD. 19 southeasterly towards the centre of Connecticut, enters a beautiful valley at a point near the town of Fannington; which town gives its name both to the valley and the river, which flows through it. At Fannington, the river makes a sudden turn to the North; and after running for several miles, along the western base of the Talcot mountains, through lovely meadows and fields, with its banks ever and anon graced with numerous lofiy and spreading elms, it sweeps eastwardly and southwardly in a graceful curve round a fine point of land, and breaking suddenly through the mountains by a gorge, which cleaves them to their base, pursues its way across the plains of the Connecticut, into which it empties at the town of Windsor. The point of land just named, around which the Fannington sweeps into its mountain gorge, embracing a tract of 500 acres, washed on all sides, but its southern, by a most lovely stream, and vary- ing in its surface from the rich meadow to the mountain wood- land, constituted the estate of " 'Squire Samuel Griswold ;" and his house, built on a beautiful swell of ground, looked down upon the romantic scenery of the river just where it plunges into its wild mountain pass. In this house, the Bishop was born; and before the place of his birth was seized by that modern spoiler of the beauties of nature, a manufacturing village, it must have been one of uncommon loveliness. Features of this loveliness, indestructible by the hand of man, still remain ; and the whole surrounding scene is one, in which the lover of nature would delight to linger. Here, for more than a quarter of a century, and in sweet re- tirement from a noisy and an artificial world, were spent the childhood, the youth, and the ripening manhood of him, the stream of whose beautiful and beneficent life we are begin- ning to trace. His father, Elisha Griswold, whether an only son or not, seems to have come into possession of the paternal estate, with whom it remained unbroken till his death, and its con- sequent apportionment among his various heirs. He was a man of quiet good sense,, and remarkably home-keeping habits. His numerous household, however, of sons and 20 MEMOm OF THE daughters, were a family of various talent, especially mechani- cal and Eterary. None of his sons indeed were ever ap- prenticed to a trade ; although Roger and EUsha, two of the Bishop's brothers, were intuitively ingenious mechanics, and from time to time turned their attention to various branches of the mechanic arts. Their ingenuity was, in fact, too ver- satile; and they never prospered. With successive and, for the times, splendid schemes in hand, they ran the race of too many other of the inventive geniuses of New England, and lived poor, because, in the homely phrase, " they had too many irons in the fire." The story, current in various places and under various forms, of the Bishop's having been brought up a shoemaker, or a blacksmith, is a groundless tale ; although, had such been the factj he was, like Roger Sherman, one of the last men to be ashamed of any honest and therefore honorable calling. His early vocation was agricultural, though all his tastes were, fi:om earliest child- hood, distinctly and strongly literary. In these tastes, his brother Ezra, who early settled at Worthing"ton in Ohio, where he became zealously instrumental in the first organi- zation of our Church, in that Diocese, and in the election of its first Bishop, largely participated ; as did also one of his sisters, who married into the Pinney family in Simsbury, where she still resides, and is said to be a woman of uncom- monly extensive reading. His brother, Samuel, was edu- cated at Yale College, , and became for a time a very popu- lar and able minister of our Church; although it is now many years since he ceased to exercise the functions of his ministry. He is still living in Western New York. His sister, Deborah, who was married to a Mr. Baker, settled and yet lives in the town of Lanesborough in Massachusetts ; while his sister, Sylvia, became the wife of a Rev. Mr. Jones, a clergyman of the Episcopal Church, as whose re- spected widow she now resides in the vicinity of her native place. From this notice of the family as descended by the _/aiA€»-'s side, it is proper to look a moment at its ancestry by the moth£r''s. LIFE OF BISHOP GRISWOLD. 21 About the year 1634, the Dutch, under patronage of Van Twiller, Governor of Fort Amsterdam, now New York, at- tempted to possess themselves of lands on the Connecticut river. For this purpose, they seized upon and fortified " Dutch Point," now Hartford, and endeavored to frustrate the settle- ment of Mr. Holmes, and his companions at Windsoipfrom the Plymouth Colony in Massachusetts. By an order from the* British Parliament, however, their design was defeated ; their possessions at Dutch Point confiscated, and the party obliged to return to Fort Amsterdam. A century later, Alexander Viets, an eminent and wealthy Dutch physician of New York, who had come over from Europe, and was settled among the descendants of those of his countrymen, who made the attempt at Dutch Point, having learned the existence of Copper mines in Simsbuiy, disposed of his property in New York, and purchased the ter- ritory, on which those mines lay. His speculation was un- successful, and resulted in the loss of all his property. He resumed the practice of medicine in Simsbury, though with nothing of his former pecuniary success. After the European custom, his city patients used to pay cash in hand for every visit. His country patients thought it well enough to pay when dunned. But, for dunning, he had neither heart nor habits; and so lived and died poor. So poor did he be- come, that when his son, John, asked the daughter of a re- spectable neighbour in marriage, he was opposed by her parents on the ground of his being utterly unportioned. The marriage, nevertheless, took place ; and John Viets, with more talent for business than his father, became the restorer of the fallen fortunes of the family. He recovered the terri- tory about the mines, and, at his death left to each of several sons a valuable farm. These mines lie on the western ac- clivity of the Talcot mountains, two or three miles north of the Griswold estate, and command noble views over the Farmington Valley and the hills, which rise beyond it, in the west. John Viets originally lived on the northwest de- scent firom the mines to the valley ; where the old cellar of his house is still visible. Subsequently, however, he removed 22 MEMOIR OF THE and built the house, which is still standing near the mouth of the mines, and which is now occupied by the aged widow of his son, Luke Viets. This house, perched on a high and sightly step of the mountain, was the birth-place of the Bishop's mother, and of his uncle Roger Viets, of whom I shall say more hereafter. Several of the surrounding farms are stiU in possession of the family, and constitute a neighbor- hood of Vietses. Dr. Alexander Viets, then, was, by the mother's side, the great-grandfather of Bishop Griswold ; and John Viets, his grandfather. This John Viets, as we have seen, was a man of superior abilities, which seem to have been inherited by his daughter Eunice, the Bishop's mother; and her marriage with Elisha Griswold, his father, brought together two of the most considerable families and estates in the town. Having thus traced the Bishop's natural parentage, it may be well, before entering on the incidents of his childhood, to glance at the circumstances, wliich lie as a fountain head, under God, to his religious character. Dr. Alexander Viets appears to have carried with him from New York to' Simsbuiy a strong attachment to the Pres- byterian Church. Accordingly, we find his son John a sturdy adherent to the doctrines and institutions of that de- nomination. This zealous Presbyterian, finding his son Roger, from early childhood, a boy of high promise, and re- markably fond of books, resolved to educate him for a Pres- byterian minister. Accordingly, at the early age of thirteen he sent him to Yale College. One Sunday, while a student there, he expressed a strong desire to attend the English Church, as the Episcopal was then designated. With much difficulty he obtained permission from the President, for one Simday. He went ; and for the first time in his life, wit- nessed, the services of our Church. He was interested, he was impressed : so much so, that he sought and found oc- casions for repeating his attendance ; studying, meanwhile, various works on the subject of Episcopacy, which he dis- covered in the College Library. In the result, he came out an Episcopalian, and-wrote to his father for permission to LIFE OF BISHOP GRISWOLD. 23 become a clergyman of the English Church. Highly indig- nant at this proposal, and at the proof which it fiimished that his favorite son had forsaken the faith of his fathers, he in- stantly answered the letter, and threatened that, unless the idea were utterly abandoned, he would forever disown him. The son remonstrated, sent Episcopal books for his father's perusal, and finally had the happiness of seeing both his father and all the other members of the family sincere and zealous conformists to that very Church, which had at first inspired, them with such horror, and into the ministry of which it was his now gratified wish to enter. After finishing his studies at Yale, Roger Viets sailed for England, whence, in due time, he returned in Priest's orders, and took charge of the Episcopal parish in Simsbury. So scanty, however, was the salary, which he received firom the Society in England, that he was obliged to associate, with his duties as pastor, those of a farmer in the summer, and those of a teacher in the winter ; in which last capacity he became Tutor to many of the children in his neighbourhood ; and, among the rest, to his nephew, young Griswold. To this man, the Rev. Roger Viets, who will often appear in the course of the ensuing memoir, was Bishop Griswold more indebted than to any other person, his mother perhaps excepted, for his early religious impressions, and for his early literary culture. Mr. Viets was instrumental in training several, besides his nephew, for the ministry of our Church. But, had his influence in this respect been limited to the early training of one such mind as that of Griswold, how justly might we exclaim : what a stream of healthiul influences to our Zion has flowed firom the fountain-mind of that one little boy of thirteen in Yale College! The parish Church in Simsbury, of which Mr. Viets be- came the minister, is situated about two miles to the southeast fi-om the Griswold estate, below the gorge, through which the Fafmington river passes the Talcot mountains, and on their eastern declivity overlooking the valley of the Connec- ticut towards Windsor and Hartford. Here, in a sheltered and fertile bosom of the hills, the ancifent Episcopalians of 24 MEMOIR OF THE Simsbury met for their weekly worship; and here young Griswold spent his early Sabbaths, in learning the ways of God in his sanctuary. The origin ' of St. Andrew's Church, Scotl^d, (as the neighborhood, in which it is situated, is called, from the fact that its early settlers were Scotchmen,) is connected with the history of the Simsbuiy mines. After the failure of Alexan- der Viets in his mining speculation, a company from Boston undertook, about the year 1740, to work the mines. The agent of this company, Mr. James Crozier, was a zealous Episco- palian, and through his influence tJie operatives at the mines and many of the neighbors became attached to the Church. With these materials for a congregation, Mr. Crozier under- took to furnish them with a church. To this end, he inter- ested several gentlemen of wealth in Boston, and in New- port, R. I., in his object; and succeeded in obtcdning frmds both for the building of a church edifice, and for the pur- chase of a glebe. The original subscription paper, on which these funds were pledged, is now in the hands of Ariel Mitchelson, the Bishop's brother-in-law. The first Rector of this Church was a Rev. Mr. Gibbs from Boston. But, as he became slightly deranged for several of the last years of his life, Mr. Viets succeeded him before his death, and remained Rector till the period of the revolutionary war.* * In 1774, the number of Episcopalians in Simsbury was greater than that in any other town of Connecticut, with two exceptions, Newtown and New Hayen; the number in Newtown being 1084; that "in New Haven, 942 ; and that in Simsbury, 914. The other towns, which came nearest to Simsbury, were Norwalk, 799; Derby, 725; Stamford, 710 ; and Walling, ford, 626. This early growth of the Church in Simsbury is mainly attri- buted to the influence of Mr. James Crozier. I found these statistics with others in a report, made by the Rev. Elizur Goodrich, Congregational minister in Durham, Ct., Sep. 5, 1774; and con-, tained in the "minutes of the Convention of delegates from the Synod of New York and Philadelphia, and from the Associations of Connecticut, held annually from 1766 to 1775 inclusive;" a somewhat curious docu- ment, by the way; which, if I mistake not, contains evidence that the ob- ject of the aforesaid Synod and Associations in thus toilftilly and accurate- ly numbering otir Episcopal tribes in their day, was to shew the ground of their apprehension, that the growth of the Church was hostile to the spirit LIFE OF BISHOP GRISWOLD. 25 The Church has since been rebuilt a few rods from its origi- nal site ; and thus separated from its ancient grave-yard. In this resting place of the dead, stands the monument of Mr. Gibbs, which, while the old Church remained, occupied a place in the chancel. Long rows of tombstones also, and tall monuments mark the family burial places of the Gris- wolds, the Pinneys, the Holcombs, the Mitchelsons, and others of former days, who, as the highly respectable charac- ter of these their memorials in death abundantly testify, were all families, of note and consideration. As a country church-yard, it is in a good state of preservation, and has a peculiar interest from the fact of its having been, almost ex- clusively, the burial place of the families of an Episcopal parish. But, to leate this sketch, and return to the family, which gives it to us its principal interest ; the most particular no- tices, which in his auto-biography, the Bishop gives of his parents, are the following : " Respect for a parent worthy of being remembered may be accepted as some apology for recording a transaction of his youthful life, now perhaps unknown to every individual, myself excepted. The story of General Putnam and the Wolf has often been published and many times related. What follows was, in my judgment, not less hazardous, wonderful and daring. It was an exploit much talked of for years by those, who are now dead and gone, but was never committed to writing. " Some beast of prey, supposed to be a Catamount, had de- stroyed many sheep. According to the custom of those days, my father set a large steel-trap to take him. The next morning, when he repaired to the spot, the trap was gone, evidently dragged away by the animal, which had been taken. He followed the track till he entered a wood on the of our American liberties both in Church and in State, and favorable to the ultimate establishment here of a monarchical government, with a legally associated hierarchy. This eflFort at numbering was systematical, ly and extensively made ; and seems to have had some influence if not in expediting, at least in aggravating, the war of the Revolution. C .26 MEMOIR OF THE side of the mountain. After a search for some time he dis- covered under a large rock a den, which, from foot-prints and other signs at its mouth, was evidently the abode of some large and savage beast. Though alone, he was yet without fear. The den, as it was afterwards found, was in- habited by a she-bear with six cubs. The entr?ince was yarrow, and descended but Uttle from a horizontal direction. He had no weapon but a walking-stick ; and yet with this alone in his hand, he with some difficulty crawled into the den, and soon discovered that the object of his search was within. With a view to ascertain whether his trap was there, he thrust his staff against the animal, by whose fierce growl, and the glare of her eyes, he discovered that it was a bear. " He retired from the den ; but the bear, preferring, it seems, to guard her young, did notfollow him. He immediately notified some of his neighbors, with whom and a large hunt- ing dog he repaired again to the cave. The dog would not enter. My father therefore again crawled in ; and when, as he supposed, sufficiently near the bear, fired his gun and re- treated. The dog, as though ashamed of his former coward- ice, now rushed in, and seizing the bear by the head, drew her out. At first, they feared to fire, lest, instead of the bear, they should kill the dog. But, no sooner was she fairly out of the den, than with her paw she struck the dog a blow, which sent him many feet down the steep descent of the hill, and then, ran off. They fired as she fled ; but for that time she escaped. They secured, however, the six cubs ; one of which had been killed by the discharge of the gun in the den." The mountain, mentioned in this account, is that part of the Talcot range, upon which the Griswold estate abutted to the south, and around which the Farmington sweeps through its gorge towards the Connecticut. The surviving members of the family in that neighborhood have a tradition that the bear, though she escaped at first, yet was afterwards taken, and proved to be one of uncommon size. The inci- dent is interesting as evincing the bravery of the Bishop's immediate ancestor, and the still simple and primitive LIFE OF BISHOP GRISWOLD. 27 character of the neighborhood and its inhabitants at the time when it happened. Of his mother, the Bishop writes thus : "My case so far resembled that of Timothy that my mother's name was Eunice and my grandmother's, Lois; and that, from both of them I received much early religious instruction. By their teaching, ' from a child I have known the Holy Scriptures, which were able (had I rightly used the knowledge) to make me wise unto salvation.' To the care of my mother, especial- ly, instilling into my tender mind sentiments of piety, with the knowledge of Christ and the duty of prayer, I was much indebted. Through life, I have sinned much, and in every thing have come short of what should have been my im- provement from such- advantages; yet, through the Lord's merciful goodness, the fear of God, the love of his name and a faith in Christ have never been wholly lost." A noble record, this, to be added to the many, which have been already made, of the value of a mother's early in- fluence over the religious character of her children. But, I have paused long enough, perhaps too long, amidst the circumstances, which mark the natural and the religious parentage of the subject of the present memoir. And yet, when we are about to trace the course of a pleasant and fer- tilizing stream, something may doubtless be pardoned to the fondness, that lingers awhile amidst the simple or the strik- ing scenery, in which it takes its rise. 28 MEMOIR OF THE THE bishop's childhood AND YOUTH. . In entering now upon the progress of that life, which it is the design of these pages to trace, although the materials for this part of my work are not abundant in amount, yet they are rich in kind ; and by putting together what the Bishop has recorded of this period, and what I have been able to collect from those branches of his family, who surrive in the neighborhood of his birth, we shall obtain a tolerably clear idea of this' early portion, of his life. We may not be able to trace the stream through every point in its course ; but we shall get sufficiently frequent views of it to mark its general direction, and to exhibit its general character. From early infancy, he was remarkable for quick intelli- gence, an amiable disposition, and a ready apprehension of religious truth. Schools were not then, as now, to be found in the neighborhood of every Connecticut man's door. But his mother, a woman of remarkable intelligence, abundantly supplied their place, and was herself the early' and the effi- cient tutoress of her own children. One of her grand- daughters, Mrs. Bright of Northampton, Mass., who spent the greater part of her childhood and early youth with her grandmother, and who, while her aged relative was in feeble health, occupied much of her time in reading to her the Bible and other religious books, remarks: "When tired of reading, the book was laid aside, and she would frequently relate to me anecdotes of the Bishop's childhood, which to me were always interesting. I have often heard her say, that Alexander could read fluently at three years of age • which, at that time, was very remarkable, as few children then learned to read before seven or eight. "At a very early age, he distinguished himself above the other children by his love and clear comprehension of the Holy Scriptures. His mother was in the habit of mstructing HEIE OF BISHOP GRISWOLD. 29 ' her children every Sunday evening in the Church Catechism; in which exercise he was remarkable for the readiness of his rephes, when questioned as to the meaning of any of its parts. "As an instance of this ; when they were, one evening, re- peating that part of the catechism, following the question ; ' What desirest thou of God in this prayer ?' in reply to which the Old English Prayer-book, then in use, answers among other things ; ' that he will keep us from all sin and wicked- ness and from our ghostly enemy ;' his mother asked, what was meantby 'g'Aos%enemy ?' The older children, whose minds, as was common in those days, were filled with stories of ghosts and apparitions, misled by the word ghostly, could think of no particular ghost, as their enemy, considering the whole kingdom of ghosts a-s inimical to all mortals. They were therefore unable to answer the question. But as soon as it was put to little Alej^^nder, he immediately replied ; ' Satan f to the no small astonishment of the rest, who wondered how he could possibly have known that. " His mother, whom, inperson, he strongly resembled, was a woman of uncommon energy, dignity and decision of character. Though a fopd mother and grandmother, she • was yet a strict disciplinarian. Well do I remember," says Mrs. B. " the deep awe and veneration, which filled our minds, whenever she entered the room, where we were. All noisy play instantly ceased, and we Ustened in most re- spectful silence to every word that fell from her lips : while any word, or evenlookof disapprobation, which we chanced to receive, sank deep into our hearts, and was remembered for years : for well knew we that it was not given without cause. "Next to the religious education of her children, she con- sidered early habits of persevering industry, as of the greatest importance. All her children were accordingly kept con- stantly employed at an age, when most children are con- sidered too young to be capable of any employment. As early as five, they assisted in various little labors of the farm, c* 30 MEMOIR OF THE such as gathering fruits and nuts, riding horse at ploughing, and other similar engagements. "I remember, when myself a very young child, accompa- nying my mother on a visit to her, and the Bishop's grand- mother, (Mrs. Lais Viets) then very aged. In her conversa- tion at the time, she cautioned my mother against too great rigidness in the management of her children. 'Eunice,'' she remarked, 'was too severe in her family discipline. There was Alexander, as good and amiable a boy as ever lived; and yet, how severe she was with him! whipping him for the most trifling transgression, and keeping him every moment, when not otherwise employed, knitting, knitting, knitting !' " I have since inquired of my mother, what this knitting was ? She told me, that, when they were very young, during those hours, when they could not be otherwise employed, they were kept knitting bone-lace, a kind of netting composed of a great variety of stitches, and then very much in use. The Bishop and my mother, who was next him in age, be- gan knitting this lace when they were not more than five years old; and many were the gloves, caps, capes, and aprons thus manufactured by their tiny fingers. " To the great joy, however, of the httle knitters, bone-lace soon went out of fashion ; and Alexander was employed in occupations more congenial with his tastes. Netting was never a favorite employment with him ; and those ' trans- gressions,' for which, as his indulgent grandmother thought, he was so severely punished, were occasional neglects of the bone-lace for pursuits of a more active, or a more elevated nature. In boyhood he was ever fond of hunting, swim- ming, and other athletic sports : but, such was his special fondness for reading, that he would frequently, at a very early age, leave the other children engaged in their sports, while he stole away to enjoy the pleasure of some faforite book. Even then, he would often pass a great part of the night in reading, while the rest of the family were asleep." Many of the foregoing remarks and incidents, which I LIFE OF BISHOP GRISWOLD. 31 have, in substance, from the pen of the Bishop's relative, and which come thus directly from his own mother and froin the sister nearest his own age, are, in my view, highly impor- tant. Whether the mothers of our day will take sides with the Bishop's mother, or with his grandmother, in the ques- tion of discipline, may be a matter of doubt. Or rather, it is to be feared, that, so far as the discipline of their children is concerned, the mothers of our day become, in spirit, grsind- mothers too early, by falling into that system of easy indul- gence to their offspring, for which our age is too much dis- tinguished ; though, in the second motherhood of grand dames, it has ever been regarded as a somewhat pardonable weakness. But, let this question be decided as it may, no one can deny the importance of the principle involved in the efforts of the Bishop's mother to form in her children the early habit of industry as a matter of duty. Too much time is often allowed to children for toys and idle sports ; and too little is devoted to the work- of forming in them early, useftil and abiding habits of industry. " It was interesting to me," says the Bishop's sensible relative, in connexion with her account of this nlatter, " to learn that the habits of unwearied and persevering industry, which so distinguished my uncle throughout his whole after life, had so early, though so hum- ble an origin." The profits, which accrue from the labors of children's hands, are a consideration of no moment to many parents : but, the habit, which is thus formed in the course of children's lives, of being always engaged in some- thing useful as a matter of duty, is to all parents, of incom- parably greater value than the most splendid fortunes, which they can possibly amass for their heirs. Nothing, in the shape of suitable employment for children's hands, can be too "humble," though their parents wear titles, when it be- comes the fountain-head of future valuable principle, noble character and lofty attainment. The boy who knit " bone- lace" at five years of age, because his mother taught him that it was a duty to be always doing something, useftil in moments, which must otherwise run to waste, or perhaps be filled with mischief, was a worthy predecessor to the Bishop, 32 MEMOIR OF THE who afterwards, with unmatched industry, bore, for more than thirty years, " the care of all the churches" scattered over a diocese wide enough for a kingdom. What little, in his auto-biography, the -Bishop says of this early period of his life, corresponds well with the account, which has thus been given. It is contained in the following paragraphs: " I recollect nothing in my childhood and youth more re- markable than the rapidity, with which I learned the lessons given me. When about four or five years old, I remember being often required to read before strangers, who, at that day, viewed my forwardness as a great wonderment. In about three days after the Greek grammar was first put into my hands, I had, without, any other teaching, written in Greek characters, the first chapter in John's Gospel, inter- lined with a literal and verbal translation into Latin. The facility with which I obtained a knowledge of the Greek language much surprised my teacher. " They, who are now young, cannot easily imagine how scanty were then the facilities for obtaining knowledge, com- pared with the advantages of the presient age. And yet, there was then, perhaps, as great a proportion of learned men as there is now. The labor of overcoming difficulties stimulates, and indeed strengthens, the mind. Literature and reading are far more general now than then ; especially with children and females, who, by the wonderful inventions of labor-saving machinery, are in a great degree relieved from mere manual labor. But, the reading of the present age is comparatively of a lighter sort ; and if more exten- sive, is also more superficial. My want of means and op- portunities for a more enlarged acquisition of knowledge has, through life, been a source of regret ; though this per- haps arises from pride, or self-will : for I have had much reason for believing that an overruling Providence has con- trolled the events of my life. In a remarkable manner has an unseen hand finistrated my own plans, designs and favorite pursuits, leading me, by a way which I had not fore- seen, to a course of life, less, it may be, to my honor in this LIFE OF BISHOP GRISWOLD. 33 world, yet more to my usefulness ; and more, as I humbly hope, to the securing of ' glory, honor and immortality' in a world far better than this. My love of general literature in early life was, I fear, a fault, as it diverted my attention from things more necessary and more profitable. When a child, I preferred a book to any sports, or play ; and, after laboring hard through the day, study was more agreeable than sleep, through the greater part of the night. Had my circumstances been such as to indulge this propensity, I might, it is not unlikely, have obtained some celebrity ; but my life would probably have been still less useM to the world than it has been. For, how many learned men are there, whose learning is of little use except that of self-grati- fication. Indeed, in many cases, the learning of men renders them less useful to society than others, whose attainments are yet far more limited. Hours, unnumbered, are devoted to reading for mere pleasure, which might be occupied in labors far more useful to mankind." Perhaps not once in an age, if ever, are we presented with an instance of earlier, and more indomitable love of learning than that, which was exhibited in the childish subject of these pages. This love seemed an inborn passion, which no difficulties could restrain; — a connatural flame, which no waters of adverse circumstances could quench. In after hfe, he was remarkable for his habit of silence, even at times when he might have been expected to engage in conversa- tion. The secret of this seems to have been, and such is the impression of the eldest survivors of the family, with whom I have had the pleasure of conversation, that his early pcission for books, fanned by his mother's influence both in her oc- casional teachings and in her daily conversation, led him into the habit of spending those moments in reading, which his companions consumed in the noisy frolicks of their sports. He was, even in childhood,- too entirely absorbed in the in- ward workings of his own mind, and in feeding his insatia- ble appetite for knowledge, ever to acquire the art of play- ing with words at small- talk. The master passion of his childhood, as of his riper years, made him a devotee to 34 MEMOIR OF THE books, and his devotion to books made him taciturn. It was as natural for him, when not at work, to have a book in his hand, as it was for other boys to break away from their work to their play. The very difficulties, which he had to encounter in gratifying his fondness for reading, doubtless helped to confirm through life this early habit of silence while others were engaged in conversation. This habit did not proceed, as we shall hereafter see, firom any inability to muster words, wherewith to furnish ready-made and hand- some clothing for his thoughts. In short, my inquiries amidst the scenes of his childish days, have satisfied me that, while he was a bright and beautiful boy of exceedingly quick parts, of sweetly amiable tempers, and of merely cultivated habits of taciturnity, he could then, as well as in subsequent life, whenever he -chose to do so, talk like a book, and let his words flow like " the running brook ;" and was early re- markable for the power of saying pithy and striking, and even sharp and witty things. It has been observed that his early passion for books met with many discouragements and obstacles to its gratification. It ought to be remarked that it had also some rather unusual stimulants, and helps to its gratification. K he lacked many of the advantages enjoyed by children at the present day, it must be confessed that he enjoyed others, of which boys in general know nothing. There are but few women, of any age, who have such a power of inspiring and fostering the love, and of communicating and fixing the rudiments, of learning, as that which was possessed by the mother of Bishop Griswold : nor are there ma^y boys, who find such a skilful and indefatigable teacher as he early found in his uncle, " the Rev. Roger Viets." The period, during which he continued under his mother's more special training, extended to the close of his tenth year ; covering thus the most importairt ten years, so far as the for- mation of character is concerned, in the life of every man. During even this period, however, he enjoyed something of the advantages of his uncle's care. "There was^" says the auto-biography, "one circum- LIFE OF BISHOP GEISWOLD. 35 stance of my life, which I would ever think and speak of with thankfulness to God. About the time of my birth, the Rev. Roger Viets, my mother's brother, returned from Eng- land in Priest's orders, and took charge of the parish in which I lived. For several years, he was an inmate in my father's family, and for most of the time, tiU my twentieth year, I lived with him. He was an excellent scholar, with a rare talent for communicating knowledge to others." [The eldest of the family connexions, now residing in the peirish, say however that this talent exhibited itself specially in (he case of those who, like his nephew, had a fondness for learn- ing. J " From my childhood, he had a strong partiality for me, and was at great pains to instruct me in every thing, which he supposed might be useful to me through life ; es- pecially in classical knowledge. Even when laboring in the field, (for in those dayS, country clergymen thought it no disgrace, or departure from duty, to labor, as did St. Paul, for their own temporal support,) when laboring in the field together, as we did for hundreds of days, he would still con- tinue his instructions.".: And, as the Bishop has often told his worthy companion, who now survives him in her widow- hood, many are the Latin lessons, which he has studied by taking his book from his pocket, and pdring over its con- tents, while "riding horse" for his ploughman uncle. I have remarked that, till he was ten years old, he re- mained under his mother's care. Circumstances like the following, which is preserved among the family connexions in Simsbury, as an anecdote of his boyhood, may have in- fluenced his parents to consent to a change of residence, which took place at this period. One day, his father sent him to the field with team and harrow. Some hours afterwards, upon following him thither, he found the team resting by the fence, and young " Alpc," as the lad was familiarly called, prone on the grass beneath the shade, and profoundly absorbed in his book. Of course he received a reprimand, notwithstanding the interposition of his mother's plea ; "pray, let the boy read, he is so fond 36 MEMOIR OF THK of his books." " Let him read," said his father", " when he has nothing else to do : but when I send him to work, let him work." i?he circumstances, which attended his change of resi- dence, are thus given by his niece, Mrs. Bright, as received from her mother, and as confirmatory of the substance of the last extract from the auto-biography. "His mild and amiable disposition, together with'his un- common quickness in learning, had made him from infancy a favorite with his uncle. He ever considered his nephew as a child of remarkable promise ; and becoming deeply in- terested in the education of his favorite, he at length re- quested the parents to allow Alexander to come and live with him, as he would then have more time cm.d better op- portunities for directing his. studies. They, consented ; and for a considerable period he resided in his uncle's family, and assisted him in the cultivation of his farm ;" [the parish glebe.] " He spent the most of every day in the field ; but, while thus employed, he was ofl:en receiving instruction from his uncle ; and exceedingly small was the portion of his time allotted exclusively to study." This last remark, it is presumed, applies only to the sum- mer season ; since, in winter, Mr. Viets, as we have seen, exchanged his agricultural occupation for that of instructor of a sort of parish school, which young Alexander doubtless attended with the other children of the neighborhood. And this school, it should be remembered, was the first .that he had ever attended any where, except under the parental roof. There, indeed, the children of the family, when very young, used, with some others in ]the neighborhood, to be gathered and instructed by a femak teacher in a sort of household-school. But, other school than this, and that which he found in his mother's teachings, Alexander never attended till he went to live with his uncle. While thus under the special charge of Mr. Viets, iiis profiting was manifest to all. His progress in the Latin and Greek languages was remarkable ; while, in Mathematics he LIFE OF BISHOP GRISWOLD. 37 SO highly distinguished himself that there was no boy in aU Simsbury, who was his superior, and but one, who was con- sidered his equal. Mr. Viets, as a fine scholar, had indulged his taste in col- lecting one of the largest and best selected libraries, then known in those parts. He was also keeper of the parish library, a collection of considerable value, which seems to have been made when the parish was first organized and endowed by the zeal and liberality of Mr. Crozier and the gentlemen of Boston and Newport. Of both these Hbraries, young Alexander had the unrestricted use, so long as his uncle remained in the .States ; and among their rich contents gratified his love of reading, whenever he had. a moment's leisure from either labor or the studies of the school. The parish library still remains, though much diminished by use and losses ; while that of his uncle has been scattered ; the best of his bqoks being taken with him on his removal to Nova Scotia ; and the remainder sold. What the earliest tastes of young Griswold were, so far as his love of books sought favorite indulgence, may be seen from the following; which I take,' in substance, from the account of his niece ; tantamount, as we have seen, to the testimony of his mother and sister. "Works of imagination seem to have been his favorite reading at that age. He was extremely fond of plays, par- ticularly those of Shakspeare. The acting of plays was then an occasional chosen amusement with the children of the neighborhood ; and, at the early age of seven, Alexander per- formed the part of page in ' Fair Rosamond,' to the great admiration of all the spectators. When older, he still re- tained a fondness for these juvenile exhibitions ; and, at the age of fifteen, acted the part of Zanga, in Dr. Young's Re- venge. His performance was so striking as to call forth bursts of applause from his audience, which consisted of the greater part of the inhabitants of Simsbury. Many years since that time, I have heard the aged people of the neighbor- hood speak of that performance as surpassing apy thing of the kind, which they had ever witnessed ; especially in ' the 38 MEMOIR OF. THE death scene,' as they called it. ' No actor m the American company,' (the name of a dramatic corps at that time per- forming in Hartford,) said they, ' could compare with him.' " This, to such as have known Bishop Griswold only as a Bishop, will he a new, and dciubtless an unexpected aspect of his early character, tastes and capabilities. That the boy, who afterwards grew up into the pecuUarly grave, chastened and holy man of God, should have had such an early fond- ness for the drama, and have been able to electrify even a country audience by the force of his acting, has been even to the present-writer a matter of surprise ; although I have long been aware of the deep love of poetry and of the deep and true power of sentiment, which lay concealed, even till old age, among the rudiments of his rich nature, and which were kept hidden there by the restraints of high and holy principle. Nevertheless, we shall err, if we suppose that the trait in his character, now ia view, was ever allowed to exert much influence over the main course of his pursuits, or to inter- fere injuriously with the serious and religious purposes and convictions of his early days. For it is of this very period of his life, between seven and fifteen, that he speaks in the following interesting paragraphs of the auto-biography. " I have had, from a child, a belief and trust in God's overruhng providence, which orders every thing for the best, and makes ' all things work together for good to them that love Him.' Of this belief and trust I am far from boasting : for in truth, and with shame I acknowledge that I have, in many things erred and strayed from his righteous ways : yea ; a thousand times have I wondered that blessings unnumbered should be continued to a creature so ungrateful and so un- worthy. It Was through His blessing that I was enabled to gain knowledge, in almost any branch which I pursued, with more than ordinary rapidity : and, while I, (vainly perhaps) felt a confidence that when, as for some years I expected, J should become a student at Yale College, none would go be- fore me, it jvas He, who designed for me what I now believe to be better things." LIFE OF BISHOP GRISWOLD. 39 Again : " I had an early experience of the comforts of re- ligious hope : how well founded it is not necessary now to inquire. At the age of about ten years," (probably just be- fore he went to live with his uncle Viets,) " I was reduced by distressing sickness to the verge of the grave, and for several hours was supposed to be dying. Never can I for- get with what lively hope and jOy unspeakable, amidst great bodily sufferings, I looked forward to the blessedness of the heavenly state. Should it please the Lord at the time, now near at hand, when I shall be at the point to die, to vouch- safe me the like peace and joy in believing, how could I worthily magnify his name ! Had I then died, it would not probably, by any one now living, be remembered or known that such a person ever existed. So soon are we forgotten here ! But ' the righteous shall be had in everlasting remem- brance.' Whether it had been better for me to have died then, God only knows. He had, it seems, a work for me to do. While parental affection, with distressing anxiety, was watching for the last breath, an ulcer broke within ; and from that time I gradually recovered. Several times since, has my life been very providentially preserved ; and in two instances especially, seemingly almost by miracle, have I been rescued from death. A life so preserved should have been more faithfully devoted to Him who gave it." Who can read these simple and unaffected records, (made in his latest years) of his earliest life, without feeling that, in the little boy, whose history they help to sketch, the world was then unconsciously looking upon a being who was to become, if one of its most unobtrusive, yet also one of its richest blessings ; a character, which from the first, God was preparing for uncommon usefulness, — and even for uncom- mon honor ! His early expectation of entering Yale College was frus- trated by events hereafter to be mentioned. But, in explana- tion of his remark ; that, in that disappointment, God de- signed for him " better things ;" I insert here a paragraph, which I find among some loose slips of paper, left in con- 40 MEMOIR OF THE nexion with the auto-biography, and evidently designed for its pages, had he lived to finish the invaluable fragment : " Respecting my proposed passage through a College course, I was the more contented without it, from having been frequently assured by several graduates of Yale, that my attainments were superior to those of the majority, who obtain diplomas. Indeed, the deficiencies, which I could not but perceive in many of them, caused me then to doubt whether such public education was much to be preferred to one more private." Had he entered that institution it is not to be supposed that he would have proceeded thence "a graduated dunce:" on the contrary, it may well be beKeved, that he would have fully realized the dream, which, in his fond, boyish ambi- tion, he cherished, of finding none, "who could go before him." Still, considering the imperfect state of our institu- tions in that mid-revolutionary infancy of our literature and science, the doubt may perhaps be considered well founded, whether his advantages' in College would have been so far superior, as some are in the habit of thinking, to those which he enjoyed under the special tutorship of his devoted and accomplished relative, and amidst the rich treasures of his choice and carefdlly selected hbrary. But, the last extract from the auto-biography is chiefly valuable for the view, which it gives of young Griswold's early religious character. It is indeed true that, when speak- ing of the comforts of religious hope, which he then enjoyed, he adds : " How well founded, it is not necessary now to inquire ;" it is also possible that he intended to be under- stood as thereby intimating his own mature doubt whether, at that time, he had any very clear views of the ground, on which a true Christian hope must be based ; and it is more- over probable that we shall, in the further progress of the memoir, see reason for believing that, at a much later period of his life, his views of what constitutes personal religion underwent, if not a radical change, at least a very important enlargement ; making him in his preaching and ministerial LIFE OF BISHOP GEISWOLD. 41 influence what otherwise he never could have become. Still, it cannot but be seen that, even at that early period, God was dealing with him as with " a chosen vessel unto himself," and lapng the foundations of a future character of uncommon ripeness and excellence in every Christian grace. Of the sickness, to which he aUudes, and in which he tasted so early of heavenly things, I received the following account during my visit to the place of his nativity. One summer, in harvest time, when Alexander was be- tween ten and eleven years of age, as he was at work in harvesting a field of rye, and, boy-like, was pla)dng with a head of the bearded grain in his mouth, one of the elder harvesters was entertaining the company with a specimen of those numberless humorous stories, with which New Eng- land laborers are so familiar, but which never sound well save from their own mouths. Its effect, as usual in such cases, was to throw them all into a roar of laughter ; and Alexander, in particular, was so convulsed with the par- oxysm, that he unconsciously drew into his lungs the barbed play-thing, with which his mouth was amusing itself. He was immediately seized with a violent cough, followed by all the symptoms of a rapid consumption. At last, scarcely a ray of hope for his recovery remained ; and what added to the affecting character of his trial was the fact, that his mother was every hour expecting to give birth to another child, while his father was lying sick at his side, of a fever, caught by swimming his horse across the river after a freshet, and was not likely to recover. In this extremity of domestic anxiety and distress, the loved boy apparently at the veiy "point to die," — his physician announced that but one thing, so far as human means were concerned, could save his life ; that this one thing was an emetic ; and that even this, so weak had he become, might instantly kill ! His mother de- cided that it should be administered ; and having seen the perilously kind office done, she took leave at once of both husband and son, prepared never to see either of them again in this world : for she felt that her own hour of trial was upon her, and there was no probabiUty that either of those, 42 MEMOIR OF THE to whom she bade "farewell," would survive till the period, when, if her own life was spared, she would again be able to leave her room. Scarcely, how'ever, had she quit the apartment of the inva,lids, when Alexander, suffering, under the sickening effects of the emetic, and supposing that ,his time to die was indeed come, called earnestly for his mother again at his bed-side. She returned. Vomiting immediately ensued; and the effort which it required broke an ulcer in his lungs, the discharge of which brought up the fretting cause of all his danger. " Now, dear mother," said the fond sufferer, "I shall get well. I feel relieved," (putting his hand on his heaving bosom,) " of this dreadiul distress !" Suffice it to say: J so it proved. From that hour, both Alexander and his father began to amend ; and, ere morning, his new-born sister Deborah augmented still further the hap- piness of the once more rejoicing family. The head of lye, when thrown from his lungs, had at its lower end a siUcious formation, of the size and shape of a pea ; and was, with its irritating beards, at least two inches in length. His mother, for years, preserved it in a vial ; and his surviving sisters in Simsbury remember well to have seen it as an object of special care, and a memento of peril providentially escaped. Previously to this incident, he had enjoyed a remarkably vigorous and robust constitution ; but, for some time after, he wore the appearance of a consumptive child. Gradually, however, the cough and all its attendant symptoms of emacia- tion, paleness and languor, yielded, and he eventually re- covered, so far as his bodily frame in general was concerned, aU the hardiness and uncommon vigor, to which it had at first been heir, and for which it continued even tiJl death so remarkable. And yet, it is not probable that his lungs and organs .of speech ever recovered their full natural tone and strength. Hence, probably, that weakness of voice, of which the Bishop in a subsequent part of Ms auto-biography speaks, and which others have so often remarked. Hence, possibly, the later difficulties with the organs of speech, to which he was subject. And hence, finally, it may have been, that his native passion for reading and study was the more readily LIFE &F BISHOP GRISWOU). 43 indulged by his parents, till it took the lead in shaping for him the course and destiny of his future life : for, from this time it was that, till his twentieth year, he became the special pupil as well as favorite of his uncle Viets. At the period, of which I have now been speaking, the opening of the' eleventh year of young Griswold's life, our revolutionary war had already broken out; and the day, which sealed before heaven and earth our destiny as a new and mighty nation, the 4th of July 1776, doubtless lay close beside that on which happened the harvest-incident just re- corded. What a change upon every thing, save the rivers and the plains, " the everlasting hills" and the overbending skies, of this land, has been wrought by the issues of that our national birth-struggle ! It was a change, which passed not only over our government and laws, our commerce and arts, our hterature and science, our institutions of religion, and our state of society, — but also over man himself. Whether this great change, affecting thus deeply every thing human fn the midst of us, was for the better or for the worse, is perhaps a question, the answer to which lies yet, at least in part, among the unborn secrets of the future. Looking, however, at what has already been developed, and especially at the truth, that aU great events constitute an essential part of the general purposes for good of Him who is Ruler of worlds, — we can hardly doubt that what is to " work together for good" to his people, is also to work out a lofty destiny to our nation, and lasting benefits to the world. But, leaving this point to the future commentaries of time, it cannot be otherwise than interesting to us to trace the change, which the war of the revolution wrought in shaping, for us and for the Church of Christ, the life and destiny in this world of the subject of the present memoir. Before entering, however, upon this part of our work, and to prevent interruption, after having once begun, it may be well to record here an affecting incident of a more private character, which occurred during the war, though in no way connected with its progress. The cold winter of 1779-80 is still fresh in the memories 44 MEMOIR OF THE of many, and will never be forgotten till our history ceases to be read. At this time young Griswold was scarce fourteen years old. And yet, on the morning of what proved to be the famous ^'^ cold Friday^'' of that coldest of winters, he started from his uncle Viets' house for Hartford, with a load of wood on an ox-sled for the purpose of purchasing, as it was then custgmary to do in that way of barter, some little comforts for the season. Some of the survivors in the family have a tradition that this " cold Friday," occurred in the month of December, just before Christmas day; and that the object of this visit to Hartford was, the purchase of those trifling luxuries, in the simple enjoyment of which it was then customary to indulge as often as the Christmas festival returned. But, whether this tradition be correct as to the date and object of the expedition, I have not at hand the means of determining. It is enough that the winter and day of the week are ascertained. On the morning then of the cold Friday of that coldest of winters, this lad of scarce fourteen started from the parsonage of his uncle, with a slow-moving ox-team, for the town of Hartford, lying at the distance of ten miles from his point of departure. It was extremely cold when he left home ; but during the day, the cold continued to increase in intensity. The snow had fallen deep and driftingly ; and as the day wore off, every thing assumed the finished aspect of profound, horrid winter. Mean while his mother, aware of his visit, was filled with distressing fears for his safety, and repeatedly through the day expressed her apprehensions that he would freeze to death on his return across the then lonely plains, which stretched for six or eight miles, with scarcely a human habitation, between the eastern base of the hills, and the approaches to Hartford. Night drew on, but without tidings of his return ; and, as its cold shadows fell increasingly on the dreary wastes around, her anxiety deepened into distress : for, by this time the weather had become severe beyond any thing in the memory of the oldest inhabitants of the town. Time after time had she sent a messenger to his uncle's for tidings, beseeching him not to leave her a moment in sus- LIFE OF BISHOP GRISWOLD. 45 pense in case of his safe arrival. At length, deep darkness reigned; yet he came not. Seven, eight o'clock passed; but still, no tidings from the lad. All domestic occupation now stood still, and one feeling of distressing alarm seized and painfully united the whole household of hearts. The only movement witnessed was the frequent and instinctive gliding of some one to the door, to Usten in strained eager- ness for the sound of some approaching footstep. For one long, long hour, however, no such sound caught the ear of the Usteners. At last, nine o'clock came, and with it, his imcle ; yet he came pale, and almost speechless from agita- tion. It was some minutes before he could summon com- posure enough to teU them that the team had come home, but — without Alexander ! The feelings of the family at this announcement may be imagined, but not described. " Oh! never can I forget the horrors of that night, and the agony of his mother !" were the words of his still surviving sister, by whom the substance of this account was given ; " And never, even after the lapse of so many years, have I heard any member of the family speak without tears of the events, with which that night was filled ;" is the remark of his neice, through whom the account was communicated. One moment was given to agony. The next was filled with action. His father and uncle instantly set out in search of him, determined, in their anxiety for the loved and (too likely) lost-one, to brave the fiercest terrors that could rage round the dark, cold heart of even such a winter's night. As they issued forth through the neighborhood, soimding their alarm as they went, between forty and fifty stout hearts like theirs, of men and boys, answered the call by joining in their search. Many of them carried lanterns, and all wore watchful eyes. As the snow was deep and much drifted, the fear was that he had missed the track amidst the dark- ness, and perhaps lay benumbed at a distance firom the road. In all directions, therefore, they scoured the plain in their toilful and distressing search ; but, of its object they could neither see nor hear a sign or a sound. As they approached Hartford, they inquired at every house, but still without any 46 MEMOIR OF THE tidings from him whom they sought. At length, however, at a tayern about a mile from town,, they learned that, just before dark, he had stopped' there to warm,- and had com- plained of suffering extremely from the cold. Their worst forebodijngs seemed now confirmed ; and they returned across the plain, renewing their search with a feel- ing of almost certainty that he must have perished. " On they fared" over the dark and dreary trfict, with a search, like the former, utterly fruitless : till, at length, one of the party recollected a small house, which stood at some distance from the road, towards the northwestern edge of the plain, or that nearest home, and which, in their downward progress, they had forgotten to visit. Thither they instantly repaired, and there, to their joy, they found him, stiU living! He had arrived at about eight in the evening ; but so penetrated with the cold, that, upon approaching the fire, he fell senseless to the floor ; and, for some time, the only occupants of the house, a very old man and his wife, supposed him dead. After a while, however, by the use of such means as were at their eommahd, and ofsuch skill as they possessed^ they succeeded in restoring him to consciousness. But it was impossible for him to proceed any farther that night ; aijd as the aged people had no one, by whom they could send tidings to his friends, they with their now recovered guest, had retired to bed, and were quietly sleeping, when the party in search of him arrived. For a long time, .however, he suffered the effects of the severity of that dreadful night ; and " the cold Friday" lived vividly in his remembrance till his dying day. This, doubtless, is one of the two special instances, which the Bishop mentions, of his having been, as if by almost a miracle, rescued from death ! With the other we shall meet as we pass on through his coming history. From this incident in 1779-80 let us now return to the period of the breaking out of the war, and trace, as far as we may, the influence of that event over the life and fortunes of young Griswold. "The time has come, when we may speak calmly, and without fear of reproach, of those, who, in that day of various trial, stood aloof from the conflict, and com- LIFE OF BISHOP GRISWOLD. 47 posedly met the bitter, burning scorn of the mass, whose feelings, glowing like a furnace amidst the intense heat of the struggle, could not brook the presence of men without sympathy in the ardors of their enthusiasm. Though some, who then wore the stigma of Toryism, doubtless deserved the severities meted out to them, yet many, who bore the mark, were men of lofty principle and acted in obedience to the high behests of an ineorruptibly religious conscience. Whether they were right or wrong in the view, which they took of the princi- ple involved in the doctrine of revolution, is not here the question. They believed they were right ; and in obedience to their belief, multitudes of them chose neutrality with persecu- tion, in preference to a violation of an honest conscience with the popularity which such a sacrifice might have won them. That was, on all sides, a day of stem principle to an extent, which we of the present age are scarce capable of appreciat- ing ; and the remark was quite as true of the suffering men here designated as of those, by whom their sufferings were inflicted. That they suffered in the stand, which they took, was perhaps unavoidable. Even the noble spirit, which fired the breasts of our revolutionary fathers, it may be, could not be expected to do full justice to those, whose attitude was aloof from the stem strife of the day. And yet, it had been a sweeter thought in after times, had they allowed such to stand unmolested so far as they stood not in the act of re- sistance to the general movement. To the Episcopalians of that time, and especially to most of their clergy, the foregoing remarks have an application, the trath and value of which it were high injustice to deny them. Among such were Roger Viets and the father of Bishop Griswold ; who, through the seven years of our labor for In- dependence, planted themselves on the ground of what they believed to be duty to God and their king, and stood out in strict, though not unsuffering neutrality, till fbe return of peace. Of the position occupied by them and by others like them, the auto-biography fakes the following notice. "At that time, the Episcopal clergy of Connecticut," (and it might have been added, of other parts of the country,) 48 MEMOIR OF THE " received their pecuniary support chiefly from the Society in England for the propagation of the Gospel in foreign parts. From this consideration, but especially from that higher one, involved in their oath to the British Govenmient, they had very conscientious scruples, how soon and how far they might lawfully, or according to the doctrines of Christ, unite in the struggle of the States for Independence. Most of them endeavored to remain neutral; resolved to take no active part in the contest, and so, to await the event. This, of course, caused them to be suspected of favoring the Eng- lish, and of being unfriendly to the cause of liberty. They were closely watched, and some of them suffered what they considered as persecution." As an instance of the manner, in which not only the clergy, but others of the Church were thus " wcfcAerf," I may here insert the account given me, on my visit to Simsbury, of the proceedings against Bishop Griswold's father. For a time, this worthy man was arraigned almost daily before the Committee of Vigilance, and straightly questioned, as to the most common actions of his life. But such was his great and exemplary prudence that nothing was ever found against him. The committee therefore contented themselves with forbidding him to go beyond the limits of his own farm. This, however, as his farm was something of a little territory, and gave him space for exercise ; but particularly, as he was proverbially a home-keeping man, and seldom left his farm, save of a Sunday for Church, was practically no great hard- ship. Indeed, leaving the principle, involved, out of view, it was no hardship at all, except that, for a season, it abridged his religious privileges. Mr. Viets, however, being a public man, and more closely associated, in public opinion, with the interests of the royal cause, was not only more closely watched, but also more rigorously treated. Of his case, the auto-biography thus speaks. " My uncle was naturally of a very kind and charitable disposition ; and to the suffering was ever' ready to extend relief It happened that, at midnight, (in what year of the LIFE OF BISHOP GRISWOLD. 49 war, I forget,) some men, who, as it qfl^nBcCrds appeared, Were endeayoring to elude pursuit, called at his house and asked for charitable aid. Lodging, he dared not give them. Food he could not refuse. Of this charitable deed, some circumstances led the authorities into a suspicion ; and being accused of it, he would not ^eny what he had done, though no sufficient evidence of the fact appeared, or could be brought against him. For that act of benevolence, which, as he believed, .the law of God required, he was condemned to be imprisoned, and was many months confined in jail at Hartford. "In what cases it is justifiable for the people, who live under a lawful government, to rise, contrary to law, in op- position to the tyrannical, or oppressive conduct of rulers ; this is often a very difficult question, and one, for the decision of which no general rule can be given. It is not strange that men should disagree in their judgment, and in their con- duct, respecting a point so debatable. Such is the fault of our common nature, that, in such case, they are more likely to be influenced by self-interest, or self-will, than by princi- ples of right and of religion, or by the love of the public good," The first trace of the influence of the war over, the events in the life of young Griswold, appears in the following para- graph of the auto-biography. " Though it was my expectation in childhood and youth, to go through a regular course of collegiate studies, yet such was the pressure of the times, and so much was my father, with his large family of eight children, straightened by the taxes and fines imposed on him, that it was by my uncle thought best that I should be prepared for the Senior class, and so, merely to oW:ain a degree, spend but one year in College. Even this purpose however was, by subsequent events, frustrated." What these subsequent events were we shall soon see, and how they still further influenced the events of his life. The termination of the war was at hand ; and the great question was to be decided ; what would become of those clergy of £ 50 MEMOIR OF THE the English Church, who had not favored the revolution, and whose principles and tastes were not such as to relish its re- sult. The decision of this question bore directly on the case of Mr. Viets ; and the step, by. which he decided it, led to the early marriage and almost to the self-expatriation of his nephew, from the land of his birth. " After the conclusion of the peace," (continues the auto- biography,) " when the British Government had acknowl- edged the Independence of these United States', the Varies, ■which our clergy had rec(?ived from England, were discon- tinued ; and as they had depended chiefly on that missionary aid for the support of their families, they were now suddenly left almost destitute. Their parishioners, indeed, soon btegan to make provision for their relief ; but it was not adequate to the sustaining of even their accustomed humble style of living. Under these circumstances, in compassion of their wants, and in consideration of their fidelity, the Propagation Society offered to continue, and even to increase their stipends on condition of their removing into the British dominions, where parishes were assigned theni. My uncle, after several months of deliberation, consented, as did several others, to make the change. His great partiality for me made him veiy unwilling to leave me behind ; and he accordingly urged me much, and most kindly, to accompany him. Such a change on my part, requiring me to leave my native land for a foreign province, and to abandon the pleasant and' fertile Valleys of Connecticut for a new settlement in so cold and unpromising a country as Nova Scotia, was, to me, dis- agreeable, and seemed also unwise. Still, such was my ^eat regard for my uncle, that I finally consented to ac- company him, and to share his fortunes, as I had shared his favor. But, here a difficulty arose. I was, even at that early age, engaged in affection to the daughter of one of my neighbors, whose name was Elizabeth Mitchelson. Separa- tion was to us both a painful thought. Yet we were too young to be married : as I was but little past nineteen, and she more than two years younger than myself, Neverthe- less, it was finally agreed tiiat I should wholly relinguish my I LIFE OF BISHOP GRISWOLD. 51 purpose of entering College, that we should be married, and that both should accompany my uncle's family to Digby, the place of his expected settlement in Nova Scotia. . Our marriage accordingly took place the latter part of the year ITSS!" Well might he say in subsequent life ; " In a remarkable manner has an unseen hand frustrated my own plans and designs." This very marriage, which was intended to in- sure, proved the occasion of preventing, his contemplated removal from the States. His account continues : " In 1786, my uncle visited and passed the summer in his new parish ; returning in the autumn to Connecticut. While he was absent, I lived in his family and had charge of his temporal affairs. The next year, he removed to Nova Scotia with his family, and one of my sisters, then quite young, accompanied them. But, in the mean time, my wife's parents had made inquiries respecting Digby and its climate ; the result of which was such unfavourable views of the country that they were unwilling their daughter should go thither. Their opposition was so serious that I finally yielded to their feelings and remained behind. "Thus, a second time, was frustrated my plan of hfe. My early marriage, however imprudent in itself it may seem, was undoubtedly, in the hand of Providence, the occasion of preventing my settlement in a foreign and unpleasant land. What, in the event of my purposed removal, would have been my life and fortune, and whether I should have been more or less useful in the world, God only knows. I view the circumstance just recorded as a happy event, and desire to be duly thankful that my removal was prevented. "In justice to my uncle's memory, I may here speak of his deep obligation, (often and feelingly expressed,) to the kind hospitality of Dr. (afterwards Bishop) Parker, of Trinity Church, Boston, and his amiable lady, as he several times passed through that city in going to Digby and returning. In 1789, I accompanied my uncle as far ~ as Boston on his third passage to Digby. We spent one Sunday in Boston. In the morning, we attended Christ Church, where the Rey, 52 MEMOIR OF THE Tillotson Bronson was then officiating instead, (if I mistake not,)pf the Rev. Mr. Montague, who was absent on a visit, to England. We dined at Dr. Parker's, where I was first in- troduced to him and Mrs. Parker, a very beautiful lady. In the afternoon we were at Trinity Church, and heard the Doctor preach." In the incidents, which have just been narrated, terminat- ed the more immediate influence of the war iipon the events of Mr. Griswold's lif§. That influence resulted in defeating his plan in favor of the customary residence in College, and in precipitating him into an early marriage, which, however much he might then have desired to postpone it, proved as happy for himself as it did auspicious to our Church. The period of youth, now closed, was to him one of severe discipline amidst rugged toils both of body and of mind ; and, what is perhaps of more importance, this discip- line came amidst the daily influences of stern virtue and lofty principle in others, put continually to thie proof under the pressure and. the scrutiny of one of the most" thoroughly energizing conflicts, that have ever acted on the characters of either individuals or communities. Trained in such a school, Hs whole constitution both of body and of mind, be- came remarkably hardy, inured to labor and to sufTeiing, and capable of any effort and of any enduraiice, to which," in the vicissitudes of coming life", he might be called ; while, at the same time, his character became a rare combination of incor- ruptible honesty, inflexible integrity and immovable firmness, with the most unaffected modesty, the most inartificial sim- plicity, and the most unblemished purity. Some, indeed, have supposed that there was in his nature a yielding amia- bleness incompatible with firmness and decision. But such did not know him. He was, it is true, most amiable in his disposition, and, within certain limits,- and on questions of mere expediency or personal convenience, yielding perhaps even to a fault. But, on questions of principle, conscience, duty, no man was ever more decided or more firm than he. On any such question, whoever attempted to influence, to move, to change him, found in him a Dentatus, wifli his back LIFE OF BISHOP GKISWOLD. 53 against the rock of his own convictions, incapable of retreat, and ready to sell his life dearly in defence of truth and right. Of his attainments in knowledge during the first nineteen years of his life, it is difficult to speak with precision. Those years, as we have seen, were not spent, like the correspond- ing years of many others, in the public walks of learning, in the contests of the schools, and in association with hving men famous in the world of letters ; scenes, where genius, scholarship and taste win their triumphs, wreath them- selves in the laurels of fame, and gain for their academic escutcheons an early emblazonry. On the contrary, they were y^ars spent in most simple retirement, in laborious oc- cupation, and in little more than midnight devotions at the shrine of knowledge 5 in measuring himself, intellectually, with himself alone ; or, in making a ploughman's field the only palaestra of his scholarship, and the ploughman himself his sole intellectual wrestler^ And yet, we cannot but think highly of his attainments even at that period, if we reflect, that, while laboring in agricultural pursuits with others of his age and family, and for as many hours as they, he had, at the time of his unexpectedly early marriage, qualified himself for entering the Senior class of Yale College, and, in addition to all this, read almost every volume in the valuable hbrary of his uncle Viets ! What results in scholarship would not such a mind, with such indomitable habits of industry, have achieved, had his whole time been devoted to the gratifica- tion of his one insatiable desire ! I have somewhere read the remark that there was seldom, if ever, a great man, who did not attempt, at some period or other of his life, to y/m.i& poetry. The attempt does not, in- deed, prove greatness ; nor does greatness always insure suc- cess in the attempt. Still, the remark is probably in a good measure conformable to fact. Mr. Griswold, at the age, of which I have been speaking, was not great because he at- tempted to write poetry ; nor were his attempts at this species of composition the best proofs of his power. And yet, like most other minds, capable of entering into the true spirit of poetry, he was in youth fond of amusing himself in this way. 64 MEMOIR OF THE He had an early and ready ■wit, which he used frequently to express in poetry of. a playfully satiric cast ; — and many, of both sexes, were the companions of his boyhood, who felt the power of his humorous pen ; though I believe he never either made an enemy, or lost a friend by the exercise of that power. All his early poetical compositions have long since been destroyed, or preserved in those memories only, from which he could not erase them. Even to old age, how- ever, his talent for poetical satire was never lost, albeit he never gave it exercise, save in an occasional impromptu; uttered in his most withdrawn moments, when there was but one trusty ear on earth to listen. In poetry,'his pen seems never to have been used after his entrance into the ministry, except in short, serious strains, chiefly lyrical, or devotional. Of these, but few specimens have been preserved ; exhibit- ing, however, a tenderness of sentiment, a liveliness of fancy, and a fervor of holiness, which^rresistibly excite the wish, that he had attempted, as I think he was unquestionably able, to contribute somewhat to our present store of those songs for the Sanctuary, which never die. Of his religious character, at this period, it wiU not be necessary to speak at large. It will be sufficient to say, that, in its elements, it was distinctly formed and deeply fixed ; and that, although it waited those fuller developments, which it was to receive from God's special dealings with him, yet there could be no mistaking the main direction, which it had assumed. His bias towards the ministry was early ; all his studies, as he advanced in life, were more and more exclu- sively drawn that way ; and although, as we shall see, there was a period during which all immediate views to the min- istry were abandoned, yet even then his reading was such as to increase his stock of qualifications for the sacred office. It is the less necessary to dwell here on the peculiarities of his religious character, inasmuch as these will be constantly presenting themselves in the course of the memoir, and wiU appear as a continually unfolding point to the eye of careful attention. Hitherto, we have seen himonly as an object of peculiarly LIFE OF BISHOP GRISWOLD. 55 tender affection, ever watchiul care, and -well applied private instruction, from the natural friends and guardians of his youth, especially from his kind and devoted uncle. Hereafter, we are to see him cast alone, as it were, on the world, with naught but Providence for his guide, and his own energies as his stimulus; left, at a very early age, in the care of a growing family, — to buffet the stormy waves of life, and to struggle, both for subsistence and for usefulness, against difficulties such as rarely beset youthful enterprise. Many, and disastrous, no doubt, were the changes wrought in the temporal fortunes and destinies of those, who were just step- ping upon the stage of action, as the war of our revolution closed. Few, it is believed, were better fitted, whether by native constitution, or by early discipline, to meet those changes manfully, and to struggle through them safely, than the Subject of the present narrative. 56 MEMOIR OF THE TEOM THE bishop's MARRIAGE TO HIS ORDINATION AS rEESBYTER. Of this portion of Mr. Griswold's life, I have been able to obtain few notices, other than those, which he has himself left in the auto-biography. These, therefore, with such facts, or reflections, as they 'may suggest, and the very scanty additional gleanings, which I have made in walking over the field of eflbrt, which he then tilled and harvested and left, — are all that will detain us from the later and more pub- lic scenes, in which he appeared and acted. His account of this period thus opens : " After my uncle's final removal in 1787, 1 was for some time, undecided what course to follow. Some years pre- vious, I had considered myself as designed for the Christian ministry. But, now, having no longer his aid Eind his library, I relinquished, for several years, the thought of applying for holy orders; and for some time deliberated with myself, and consulted with my fi:iends, on the question ; what course of life I should pursue. They recommended the study of the law. I remember, that, when a lad, my compcinions used familiarly to call me, ' the lawyer ;' fi:om a habit, which I then had, of arguing and disputing on various questions and subjects. With the recommendation of my fiiends, therefore, I so far complied as to read law, some part of my time, for two or three years ; not, however, with the design of apply- ing for admission to the bar ; but partly firom a liking to the study, and chiefly with a view of qualifyiag myself for any business of a pubUc nature, to which I might, not improba- bly, be called. To such, indeed, I soon began to be called ; and even had some flattering prospects of rising in public estimation." One of the circumstances, I was told, which influenced his mind at this time, grew out of a law-suit, in which the LIFE OF BISHOP GRISWOLD. 57 Griswold family happened then to be engaged with some other party. The lawyer employed by the family was, Mr. Gideon* Granger, at that time residing in the neighboring town of Suffield, and very eminent in his profession ; but afterwards of Canandaigua in the State of New York, and Post Master General of the United States. With this dis- tinguished gentleman the law-suit in question brought Mr. Griswold into intimate acquaintance ; the result of which was that he conceived a very exalted opinion of him and even a warm regard for him. This opinion and regard were reci- procated.. In the management and progress of the suit, that brought them together, an opening towards the legal pro- fession, under very favorable auspices, seemed to present itself J and it had much influence with the family, in the ad- vice, which they gave, and doubtless with Mr. Griswold hiinself in the studies, on which he now entered. Meanwhile, some of the former pupils of his uncle Viets, among whom Mr. Griswold was one, instituted a kind of debating club, which used to meet in the evening, and most- ly at his own house. This club, or society, became a place of practical exercise to several young men, who were looking towards the bar ; — and here, reading law in the mean time, Mr. Griswold acquired no little legal knowledge and skill, and even saw fairly opened before him, had he chosen to pursue it, the road to legal distinction. Distinguished in the law, in the highest and best sense, he undoubtedly might have become : for few minds have powers, better adapted whether to the study -of legal science, or td the practice of the legal art, than his own. The chief, indeed the only peculiarities, which kept him, so long from popular notice and from immediate influence in the Church, (his native modesty and his acquired taciturnity,) would at least have so far yielded, under the keener excitements, the closer at- trition, and the greater freedom of the courts, as to have left no barriers in his way to any legal eminence, on which he might have fixed his eye ; while his ready wit, his play- ful fancy, his power at pungent satire and rebuke, his un- commonly quick and keen perceptions, and his unquestiona- 58 MEMOIK OF THE bly profound and accurate judgment, (qualities, several of which, as a minister of Christ, he kept so effectually under the stern and, holy restraints of a religious conscience, that but few were even aware of their existence in his character,) would naturally have come out into distinct and full activity, and insured success to his highest aspirations. But, God designed better things than these for his Church ; and we may add, even higher things than these for his servant. Mr. Griswold's study of the law, as we have seen, was not, from .the first, intended as a preparation for its actual practice ; and though he unexpectedly found the way to that practice opening very invitingly before him and soliciting his entrance, yet his mind had other things in view, and for a season he remained undecided in what pursuit he should permanently engage. He had admirable talents for busi- ness, and habits, which fitted him admirably for, the acquisi- tion of extensive wealth : and to this his thoughts seem at first to have turned, not from any inordinate love of money, but from a high and honorable desire for usefulness. "Observing," he says, "with what eagerness almost all were in pursuit of wealth, how much influence the rich had in society, and indeed how much, if rightly used, riches might add to the comfort and happiness of life, and to the means of doing good, I had some serious thoughts of devo- ting my efforts to the acquisition of wealth ; not doubting that, with my habits' of economy and patient industry, I should probably succeed. These thoughts, however, held my mind but for a short period. For I had, even thus early, conceived an indifference to wealth beyond what either re- ligion, or true philosophy requires. "Wealth is certainly a great blessing, in so far as it gives us the means of doing much good both for ourselves and for others. To despise it, is to despise, or be indifferent to, the good which it might be the means of doing. A Christian is in duty bound to be in- dustrious, and frugal ; and should endeavor to acquire more than he needs, if for no other purpose, ' that he may have to give to him that needeth.' "The cultivation of literature was, in truth, what I most LIFE OF BISHOP GRISWOLD. 59 desired. But, to the indulgence of this early and strong passion of my mind, the wants of an increasing family, for the time, presented an insurmountable obstacle, and con- strained me, for a few years, to devote a large part of my time to the cultivation of a small farm, which then and for many years afterwards belonged to me. "During these years of indicision, however, reading was not neglected ; nor was I uninterested, or wholly unoccupied, in, the affairs of religion and the Church. I became a com- municant at the age of twenty, and was confirmed, with many others, on occasion of Bishop Seabury's first visit to our parish. In the affairs of this parish, I was much con- sulted, and not a little engaged. My knowledge of music, and practice of Psalmody, as there were then very few organs in the country, made me of use both in teaching and in leading the choir. When the parish was vacant, and when its minister was absent, I assisted in the other services, and finally, being urged to speak on other occasions, my friends began to think that the weakness of my voice was not a good reason for relinquishing my early purpose of taking orders." Before noticing the influence of this suggestion on his mind and course of life, I must recall for observation his passing remark, that, during his years of indicision on the great question before him, " reading was not neglected." His brief sketch of this period gives us but a faint idea of either the difficulties, with which he was obliged to contend, or the spirit, in which he met and mastered them. His read- ing at this period, had an undoubted reference to the Church and the ministry, although he had not yet determined to de- vote himself to the service of the former in the work of the latter. But what this reading cost him, few have ever known. " The events of his life," says his son-in-law. Dr. Tyng, " had been a discipline in very narrow circumstances, and the influence of this, he carried through the whole of his succeeding years. His early marriage and his condition as a working farmer, rendered his education a series of difllicul- 60 MEMOIR OF THE ties. He has told us that when he was attempting to prepare himself for the ministry, he was obliged to labor all the day on his farm ; and, not being able to afford himself adequate lights, he was in the habit of stretching himself on the hearth, with his books before him, and by the light of pine knots, as they blazed in the chimney comer, pursuing his studies for hours after his wife and children were asleep !" Where can a more remarkable instance of self-devotion and unconquerable perseverance in the pursuit of knowledge be found? ' Nor must it be supposed that his reading was without aim or order, gathering together a literary chaos, — " rudis, indigestaque moles ;" the food of an indiscriminate appetite, that devoured every thing with equal greediness, and digested nothing for the nourishment of mental life and health. He knew what he read, and why he read it, and what was the best way to make his reading useful. To a naturally ready and retentive memory, which seldom lost what it really grasped, he added, as his indices and com- mon-places shew, those customary aids, which enabled him to arrange his best stores into such order, as to have them always at command. From Drexelius, he early adopted the following '.' directions for noting" as he read. " 1. Begin the work early in life. 2. Do it continually. Read no book, quin excerpas, without making extracts. 3. Often read over what you have written. 4. Always keep in view the end of your own studies." As to the utility of sucji a systeni, he extracted from the same author the following remarks : 1. " Pliny Secundus, while his nephew was walking out to take the air, used this memorable expression ; ' Poteras has horas non perdere. O temporis parsimoniam, quam ignota es et rara ! Omnium rerum jactura reparabilis, preterquam temporis.' ' Thou mayest save these hours from waste. O parsimony of time ! how unknown and reire art thou ! The loss of all things is reparable save that of Time!',' Drexelius insists that nothing great ever was, or ever will be done without industidous notation. He would not part with his LIFE OF BISHOP GRISWOLD. 61 awn notes for any thing short of heaven itself. When a sub- ject was proposed, he could tell all the authors, who had written upon it. 2. "A man may subsist on his own stock, incase of sick- ness, or any hindrance, as when he must write, and cannot read. 3. " There is but httle difficulty in building when all the materials are. at hand. 4. " "Take what you want from the book which you read, and you never need open it again. Your own papers are the best library. 5. " No index to an author is so good as your own, taken on reading the context. 6. " There is no more benefit in reading, than there is in eating, too much. We derive good from that only which is digested." Among other notes as to the best method of reading, which Drexelius recommends, he made the following. > " We ought to read, 1. Every author, who is best in his kind ; 2. Such as best suit with our own genius ; and 3. the ancients generally in preference to the modems. " ' Ordo anima memoriae.' Order is the soul of memory." Adopting such rules for reading, as he evidently did, early in life, and with such a natural memory as that, which he possessed, he could not but have a well-regulated, as well as a richly stored mind ; and we are prepared for the state- ment, which Dr. Tyng adds to that already given from his pen. " His early ardor for informa^tion followed him to the very close of life. He was always a hard student, and one of the most perfect and varied scholars, with whom I have ever been acquainted. His pecuUar diffidence and silence rendered it difficult to draw from him his stores of learning ; but I could never consult him on any questiou-, in any branch of study, without finding him perfectly acquainted with it. In languages and in history, as well as in the abstract sciences and in theology, he was ftiUy prepared for every occasion.'* What the Bishop says, in the extract last made from the 62 MEMOIR OF THE auto-biography, on the subject of his becoming a communi- cant at the age of twenty, and of his being confirmed during the first visit of Bishop Seabury to the parish in Simsbury, is indeed a brief account of those important events of his hfe ; and it would have added greatly to the interest of this part of the memoir, if he had been much more iuU in his narration of those events. But, it must be remembered that, if we except the precious tokens and, foretastes, which were sent him firom heaven during his dangerous illness at ten years of age, there was evidently nothing remarkable in the early developments of his religious character. Its foun- dations were laid ; its principles were fixed ; its elements were gathered ; and foretokenings of its future growth and ripeness shewe'd themselves. But, at the age, of yhich I am now speaking, there was nothing of a very special, or strong- ly marked character in either his feelings themselves, or the events of -his life as influenced by'them. It should also be remembered, that, at the age, when he wrote his auto-biogi'a- phy, as well as throughout his life. Bishop Griswold was not accustomed to speak largely of himself; and that, when he did make himself the subject of either conversation or Avrit- ing, there was ever the deepest humility in his. tone of re- mark, a disposition to place himself among the lowly, rather than to urge himself up to notoriety among the great, of this world. His haUt was to leave his character to be judged by his actions; and his tree to be loiown by jts firuits. To return now to the question, which had begun again to occupy his thoughts, and to be urged' again on his considera- tion by his friends,, whether he should at length decide upon entering the ministry ? he says : " To this I was much urged, especially by the Rev. Mr. Todd, who had succeeded ipy uncle in the Simsbury paiish. By very serious conversations, he at length convinced me that the clerical profession was that, which the leadings of God's Providence evidently held forth to my view ; assuring me, at the same time, that, in this profession, there could be no doubt of my success. " Some years previous, as is known, I had considered my- LIFE OF BISHOP GRISWOLD. 63 self as designed for the Christian ministry. My advantages, as preparatory to the work, were even then considerable. From being so much with' an Episcopal clergyman; travel- ling with my uncle" in his visits to his clerical brethren, to whom he ever had a pleasure in introducing me ; and favored with his library, which for a private one in those times was thought to be very large, and almost the whole of which I read ;* I had become early and well acquainted with Church affairs, especially with the Churches and clergy then exist- ing in Connecticut, As this knowledge commenced in childhood, at my present age, seventy-four, I might perhaps truly say that no one, now living, has been longer or better acquainted with the Protestant Episcopal Church in New England" (might fie not have added, in the United States ?) " than I." • " The weakness of my voice had indeed led me early to suppose that I could never, as a public speaker, be of much use in the Church : yet I had hoped that, through divine grace, I might, in the other exercises of the ministry, be the instrument of some good, I ilsed to think, too, that the ministerial profession would be the means of keeping me steadfast in the Christian faith : and with shame I must now add, that the thought of its giving me more leisure for in- dulging my ardejjt love of reading had, at that time, too much influence 9n my mind. Reading, for the pleasure of reading, with no particular view' to qualification for the bet- ter perforinance of the duties .of our profession is, to say the least, quite as inconsistent with the clerical office as laboring with our hands for the bread of life. By the latter, as was the case with St. Paul, we help to support ourselves and others ; and, (what is too little considered) render ourselves * The words here italicised, are in the auto-biography erased, evidently at the suggestion of an afterthought started by the Bishop's modesty. But they are distinctly traceable under the erasure ; and I have ventured to move the line, with which he erased them, a little lower down, as, on the whole, its more proper plate ; as no longer capable there of inflicting pain on his modest feelings ; and as doing him a piece of posthumous justice, which, while living, he seemed so unambitious of doing to himself. 64 MEMOIR OF THE less burthensome to those among whom we minister. This is worthy of special consi'deration in New Englaad, where the divisioii of Christians into so many sects, societies and denominations, renders the support of a minister for. each a heavy burthen upon the people. " We know well, that, as St. Paul says, ' The Lord has ordained that thgy who preach the Gospel should live of the Gospel ;' and many Christians, no doubt, neglect their duty, by giving so little for its support. Moreover, we dare not say, it is God's will- that there should be such divisions among Christians as to compel us thus to 'heap to ourselves teachers.' Nevertheless, it is remarkable that St. Paul, im- mediately after, the words just cited from 1 Cor. ix. shews that, for himself, he had not claimed a mEiinten,ance from the people ; and he speaks of it as what, in his exercise of the ministry, was most deserving of reward, or praise, that, when he preached the GospM, he had made it without charge to his hearers. To the elders of Ephesus, , he declares. Acts XX. ' Ye yourselves know that these hands have ministered unto my necessities, and to them that were with me. I have shewed you all things, how that, so laboring, ye ought to support the weak, and to remember the words of the Lord Jesus, how he said ; It is more blessed to give than to re- ceive.' Whether I am right or wrong, I have ever admired this trait in "St. Paul's character; and ever since I have been a minister of Christ, have thought it my duty, in some de- gree, to follow his example. .This, I have so far done, that, while I have thankfully received what has been freely given, as he also did, I have never complained that it was too little. Though insufficient for my support, I have preferred labor- ing with my own hands, and other means of living, rather than that any thing should be added to the people's burthen. How much a more general conformity to the Apostle's views and practice, and a less practical conformity to the fashions of the world, by the ministers of Christ, would tend to the increase of true rehgion, they have different opinions. But, to return from this digression ; — "At the time, when Mr. Todi urged my entrance into the LIFE OF BISHOP GEISWOLD. 65 ministry, I had begun to have pleasing expectations of what is called rising in the world ; and my hopes of temporal honors began to occupy my thoughts to such a degree that, with shame I must confess, the relinquishment of them re- quired a painful struggle. But, the Lord was pleased in his own good time to bring me to a better mind ; and I yielded with diffidence and fear to what was by many believed to be my duty." Coming from such a man, these last sentences evidently imbody the substance of what might have been a rich chapter in the book of true Christian experience. But, unfortunate- ly for us, tlje details, of that chapter have been left unwritten ; and the only hand, that could have given them with truth, is now cold and still. Into the depths of that struggle with natural ambition, we may never look. Into the wrestlings of the diAane Spirit with that ardent lover of learning and of literary fame, we may never penetrate. Into all the feelings, which accompanied the bowing of that diffident and trembhng heart before the high behests of duty, we may never enter. What knowledge of the weakness of nature, and of the strength of sin, of the power of grace, and of the blessedness of giving up all for Christ, was then and there acquired, we may never know. Over all these things has been left a veil, through which we may, indeed, see something of the attitude and ac- tion of the man, and of that divine agent who waS dealing with him, but which doubtless covers much that other auto- biographers would have revealed, and much that their readers would have been glad to learn. "This," the manuscript proceeds, referring to the conffict just mentioned, and to its result in. following the call of duty; " This was in the spring of 1794 : and I was advised, with no, other preparation than I then had, to offer myself to the Convention as a candidate for orders. This Convention met early in June. I was received, and soon after commenced officiating in a small parish about tAvelve miles distant from my residence. " Our present mode of receiving candidates had not then been adopted. In Connecticut, as soon as they were re- 66 MEMOIR OF THte ceived, they were permitted to deliver their own composi- tions: a permission^, which was thought to be necessary in order to their obtaining parishes ; "for "candidates were not then ordained Deacons, till after they had been called to some particular charge, or cure. The first morning of my officia- ting as candidate, I read a' printed sermon: but ever after that, I preached my own." ' From this record, it appears that, at that time, a candidate for orders held a position similar to that of an ordained Dea- con at the present day.. He was, in fact, a licensed, though unordained preacher ; and as such could receive, what can- didates now can not, an official call, or election, to be the stated minister of a parish. It followed, as a matter 6f course, not only that he must be allowed to deliver his own sermons, but also that -he must have, on presenting himself for admis- sion as candidate, qualifications, lit&rary, scientific and theo- logical, as well as moral and religious, correspondent with- thdse now required in persons who are to be ordained Dea- cons. The Candidate of that day was practically the Deacon of the present ; and our system, on this point, was a virtual blending, at least in Connecticut, of the Congregational with the Episcopal; the candidate of the latter being equivalent to the licensed preacher of the former. I make these remarks not only to shew what must have been the amount of Mr. Griswold's reading, literary, scientific and theological, at the time of his admission as a candidate for orders ; but also to bring into prominence a feature in our early system, which must be kept in memory, if we would do justice to some candidates for orders in our Church, in various parts of New England, and at a much later day, than that, of which I have been speaking. The habit of regarding candidates for orders as a sort of licensed preachers continued, in practice, to influence our parishes, especially in the interior of New England, long after the change, which was subsequently in- troduced into our theory on this point, by the inception and growth of our present code of canon law. Even down to the time when Dr. Stroiig, the present Rector of St. James's, Greenfield, and Dr. Henshaw, the present Bishop of Rhode LIFE OF BISHOP GRISWOLD. 67 Island, were admitted candidates for orders, the influence of the old system was still alive. The scarcity of clergymen brought candidates into early notice and requisition as lay- readers ; these lay-readers were stiU sought with a view to settlement as future ordained ministers ; — and it often hap- pened that parishes were unwilling to receive them, as lay- readers, unles^ they would consent to preach their own ser- mons. Their object being to make choice of a man to be '-' set over them in the Lord," they wished to test not only his ability to read th6 sermons of others, but also his ability to write sermons for himself. Traces of this feeling, kept alive by this cause, are discoverable even so late as the time, when Mr. Ducachet, the present Rector of St. Stephen's, Philadelphia, was admitted a candidate for orders, in the Eastern Diocese. Occasional instances, (which were then censured as a violation of the canon,) of candidates reading their own sermons when officiating as admitted lay-readers, arose, I am satisfied, not from a censurable vanity in the display of their own powers, but from the strength of that urgency, with which they still found themselves pressed to furnish satisfactory proof to the parishes, in which they were officiating, that, so far as learning and talents were concerned, they might be advantageously engaged with a view tft per- manent settlement. The circumstances thus detailed, shew how long the lex non scripta will live, with its causes, in practice, even after it has been repealed by the lex scripta in theory; how long custom may survive under the written law, by which it is sought to be abrogated ; how slow must ordinarily be the process of urging, up the stream of popula- tion to its sources in the country, those radical changes in the customs and institutions of a people, which are so easily conceived. and placed on record, and which, with compara- tive ease, may be reduced to practice in cities and larger towns; and therefore, how much patience, and candor and consideration may be required in pressing such changes into universal observance, and in judging of the motives and ac- tions of those, against whose habits and apparent present interests these changes are pressed. 68 MEMOIR OF THE After recording his admission as a candidate for orders, and his fiorst engagement in what were in fact the duties of his early ministry, the Bishop in his auto-biography thus proceeds: "In the course of a very few months, I was invited to officiate in three different . stations. The first was iii the county of Litchfield, embracing the care of three parishes, in the three towns of Plymouth, Harwinton and Litchfield;" (that part of the town now called Northfield, •,\ " the second was in the county of New Haven, and town of Waterbury : and the third was in the county of raii'field,^ and town of Reading. After officiating a fe\v Sundays at each of these stations, I was invited by the three parishes, severally, to become their muiister ; and, g,s I was told, the invitation was, in each case, unanimous, there being not a dissenting voice in any one of them. This, at the time, seemed to me wonderful; and perhaps some even now will consider it scarce credible. But, it should be remembered that clergy of our communion were then scarce, and the people conse- quently glad to obtain almost any decent minister of Christ to labor among them. " Waterbury was at that time one of the best parishes in the Sfete. The people there were very urgent that I should accept their call, and promised that they would, in case of my acceptance, immediately commence the building of a new church. Their pecuniary offer, too, was the best ; and, had I accepted it, I should probably, if living, have remained there to this time. " Reading also was deemed, by all my friends, preferable to the station in Litchfield county ; and yet, I accepted this last, partly because it was nearer the place, where my family still resided, and where I had some property, which required my care ; and partly because I could, with greater propriety, resign that station, should circumstances ever render my re- moval expedient; The three parishes, embraced within this station, formed nearly an equilateral triangle ;, each being about eight miles distant from the others. The countty be- tween them was very hilly ; and the roads, especially in the LIFE OF BISHOP GRISWOLD. 69 winter and spring, very bad. The duties, too,, were very laborious. Visiting the people, attending ftinerals, and preaching lectures/' (by which was understood in the coun- try, preaching sermons on week-days in private houses,) "besides my Sunday services, kept me a very considerable part of my time on horseback. Carriages, in that re^on were then scarce thou^t of; and even the small wagon, since so common in New England, liad not then come into use." Such was the field, selected by Mr. Griswold as the place of his first settlement in the work of the ministry ; and such were the reasons why he chose it in preference to others, in all respects more inviting, so far as his worldly prospects were concerned. His case could not be said to be exactly parallel yith that of an English clergyman, who, in choosing between two livings, offered him by his patron, took his servant's ad- vice and selected that, in which " there was least money and most devil ;^' for the Bishop subsequently testifies that the people of these parishes " were mostly religious and all com- paratively fee feom vice :'\ apfi( yet, in the choice, which he wa^ called to make, he decidedr dificrentiy from ■A'Kat. of the Episcopal Church Gould^Butler. ) in Harwinton." -^This contract, as its date will shew, was made several months before Mr. Griswold's visit to Bristol ; and is de- monstrative of the truth, that, when he made that visit, he was not seeking change, but felt himself under the obhga- tions of a written bond to remain in Harwinton so long as God should give him strength for the duties of his ministry there. The instrument is also interesting as shewing the change, which has since been silently taking place in the relative positions of Clergy and Laity in our Church. It would hardly be. deemed necessary, or even in place, rww, for a clergyman to stipulate, in a contract with his parish, for " liberty to attend Conventions and Convocations of the clergy, and to obey the directions of hi^ Bishop." It is be- ginning to be rather necessary for the laity to see to it, in their contriicts with the clergy, that the latter do not spend too much of their time in Conventions, and that the authority of their Bishops over them do not become virtually despotic. But, although Mr. Griswold was thus under contract with the parish at Harwinton, and though he twice refiised the call of the parish in Bristol, yet it seems his expectations of remaining for some fene longer in the place of his early set- tlement were soon again to be disturbed. Referring to his 94 MEMOIR OF THE last refusal of the invitation, wKich he had received, be says : ■ "I then supposed that I should hear no more from BristoL But, about the middle of the following winter, to my surprise one of their most .respectable parifhibners, Mr. William Pearse, a Warden of the Church, appeared at my house with still more pressing soUcitations that I would take the charge of that destitute parish ; urging many reasons why it was my duty to consent to the change. This affected me very seriously, and there seemed to be in it a call of Di- vine Providence." To leave a people, who had been so uniformly kind to me, and all of whom, without exceptions, / had reason to believe, would be grieved at my leaving them, excited in my mind a painful struggle, which they only who have been called to the like trial, can realize. It is suffi- cient to say, that, with fear and trembling, I gave my con- sent ; aiid, in May 1804, one year after my first visit there, I was in Bristol with my family. Bishop Jarvis had given his consent that I should spend a few years there, though at the same time expressing a wish that I should, after that, return to his diocese. " The Rev. Joshua Usher, who had formerly been the minister of the parish in Bristol, was then living, though imable to officiate, and had, three or four years before, re- signed his rectorship. The Rev. Mr. Clarke had for two or three years been my immediate predecessor. He had re- moved fr6m Bristol to Long Island, where, not long after, he died." . The words which I have italicised in this last extract refer, I apprehend, to the ground of dissatisfaction, which Mr. Griswold supposed his removal would give ; a ground, ex- isting in the written contracts, into which he had so recently entered, to remain with his people in Litchfield county "so long as God should give him strength to perform the duties of that charge. ^ Indeed, when I visited the scene of his earliest labors, I found in the minds of some a faint memory of the fact, that, when he first proposed to remove to Bris- tol, some of his parishioners were, for a time, dissatisfied LIFE OF BISHOP GRISWOLD. 95 on that ground. They thought the contract bound him to remain with them for life. - But their dissatisfaction was of short continuance. For, when they came to understand the reasons for his removal, though all mourned, yet none cen- sured, the step. Indeed, there was among his people a uni- versal acknowledgmenfthat he ought to go. The last clause in the contract was evidently designed to provide for those possible contingencies/which no one could foresee, but which might render a dissolution of the pastoral connexion justifiable, at the instance of either party. This clause, however, was not, in itself, the reason why his pa- rishioners consented to his removal. That reason was found in the circumstances, which rendered his removal proper. In speaking for the first time of the invitation to Bristol, it will be remembered that Mr. Griswold assigned as a rea- son for declining it, that neither duty nor interest bound him to comply with the request. Upon reading such a remark, the question would naturally arise in some minds ; was Mr. Griswold ever a man, who could be influenced to so serious a step, as that of a removal firom one parish to smother, by any , cgnsideration of interest ? To such a question, my answer would be a decided negative. Considerations of interest never weighed on his mind, unless when they came in such a shape as to be identical with considerations of duty. His whole life was a demonstration of this truth. What his whole reason for removal was, is a secret locked with him in the slumbers of the grave. Apart of it, how- ever, and that part, which no doubt satisfied his people of the propriety of his removal, I was able to recover with a satisfying degree of certainty. After having become responsible, as we have seen, for one third part of the jESOO, which were paid for the glebe and parsonage in Harwinton, and probably after the period of his first visit to Bristol, his brother Roger, who has al- ready been mentioned as a man of much mechanical inge- nuity, had conceived a fine scheme for improving the pater- nal estate at Simsbury, by the building, at the hend of the Farmington River, of what he termed " The Rainbow MUls." 96 MEMOIR OF THE Mr. Griswold advised against the scheme ; but his brother was sanguine, and he finally consented to the improvement. The dam was constructed ; the miUs were built ; and opera- tions -were commenced. But, a great freshet on the river occurred soon after, which did much damage to the works, swept away the embankment, carried ofiF a large quantity of kiln-dried grain, and thus put Mr. Griswold to serious loss. The paternal estate not having been divided among the heirs, the improvement, which was attempted, seems to have been a family enterprise. The embarrassments, therefore, growing out of his brother's operations, added to the obliga- tions, which he had incurred in the purchase of the Har- winton glebe, made it difficult, if not impossible, to meet his engagements, and yet continue to support his family on the small salary of $300, which he received from his Litch- field parishes ; while the idea of living in debt was one from which his whole nature shrank as by the force of an irresis- tible instinct. To live on $300 a year, and provide for the education of a growing femily by turning fisherman at night, day-laborer in sumnier, and district schoolmaster in winter, — this he could easily do, with the feeling that he was thereby keeping himself free from debt. But, to do all this, and yet feel that the burthens of debt were on him, this, every one, who has known him well, is at once prepared to say, was what he never could endure. It appears evidently to have been under these circum- stances that he felt it to be his duty to accept the thrice prof- fered call to Bristol. These circumstances, we may weU be- lieve, made the third repetition of that call, at a time when he supposed he had dismissed the subject forever, a matter of such " surprise" to him, that he even saw in it the lead- ings of a "Divine Providence." The " painftjl conflict," which arose in his mind while deciding the question of his removal, was doubtless aggravated by the fear lest his be- loved parishioners should think him regardless of the obliga- tions of his written contract. This fear, however, was dis- sipated before he actually left them. By a " vote" of the parish, placed on record, he was " released" &om his con- LIFE OF BISHOP GRISWOLD. 97 tract; — the glebe-engagement -was also taken ofi'from his hands, and the property afterwards re-sold by the parish ; — and he left his'people amidst expressions of their unfeigned regrets, and of their undissembled affection. These expres- sions, though they allayed the '■'■fear and trembling ",vn\h which he finally consented to accept the call from Bristol, yet, doubtless increased, in one sense, the touching power of the affliction, which he felt in separating from those, to whom he had given his first ministerial labors and his first pastoral love. It may perhaps, add to .the interest of the foregoing state- ment, to remark, that, at the time of his departure fi'om Har- winton, that parish owed him about $150 ; equal to one and a half year's salary from that part of his charge. In consequence of the loose and unsettled state, in which country parishes too often allow their accounts to lie, his parishioners appear not to have been aware of their indebtedness ; and he left them without even reminding them of it. ■ Nor is it probable that he ever intended to bring it to their memory. I have a letter before me from a member of the parish, dated in 1812, eight years after his removal, which shews that their indebtedness to him had but just then been discovered by themselves, in consequence of the appointment of a com- mittee to investigate the state of their pecuniary affairs. Even this committee could discover only the fact of their indebt- edness. For its amount, one of its number wrote to him ; and the letter which he wrote, is the one, now in my hjmd. It is only necessary to add that the amount, when ascertain- ed, was paid ; and that the fact of its payment, in connexion with the manner, in which it was discovered, testifies as strongly to the honesty and faithful affection of his Harwin- ton people, as it does to his own characteristic adherence to the principle, which, on this subject, he had adopted, of always leaving his pecuniary support a matter entirely volun- tary with his parishioners. I have thus given all that I have been able, with any tolerably satisfying certainty, to recover, of the history of the first ten years of Bishop Griswold's ministry ; and, consider- 98 MEMOIR OF THE ing the length of time, which has elapsed since he left those quietly retired scenes, and the fact that he has left next to no record of them himself, it will probably be admitted that the amount recovered is both as great and as irdportant, as could have been expected. Though lying without connexion, in detached incidents and anecdotes, it yet illustrates turns and characters ; and it presents us with a man, who, though his early religious views were not so fully developed as they afterwards became, was yet, in principle and spirit of a lofty make ; capable of doing and of suffering much for his M&st6r ; smd actually instrumental of great good in his service. His removal was, to all his parishes, a heavy loss ; a loss, which, by that in Harwinton, was felt in its subsequent temporary extinction. For many years, it ceased to exist. The Church edifice itself was demolished, and no trace of the parish remained, save in the families, which survived, with an undying attachment to the Church of their affections. Thek fidelity, however, has, within the last few years, been rewarded by the revival of the parish ; though wi^ a change of name from that of " jSf. Marie's" to that o{ " Christ Church." A new Church edifice has been built, and an in- teresting congregation gathered ; among the members of which, not the least interesting, are to be found several of the families, who once listened admiringly to the teachings, and joined adoringly in the devotions of that " Spirit-taught man of prayer ," whose departure from among them they so deeply, though so submissively mourned. LIFE OF BISHOP GRISWOLD. 99 PROM THE bishop's SETTLEMENT IN BRISTOL TO HIS CONSECRATION. When, at midwinter of 1804, Wm. Pearse of Bristol, visited Mr. Griswold in Harwinton, he spent some little time rtn inquiries among the parishioners, for the purpose of leam- in^fcom their free remarks, the true character of their min- ister The result was, that, though they soon began to sus- pect fc object, they yet gave their testimony with one voice, thel gjfct ance of which was Allen Cook's sententious judg- m^^Hf He was an uncommonly perfect man : you could find'^Bault'with him, no way." His acceptance of the invitation having been obtained, as soon as the weather became settled in the spring, prepara- tions were made for his removal. Mr. John D'Wolf, for the sake of distinction from others, — called, " Northwest John," from a voyage, which he had made round the north- west coast of the Continent, fitted out one of his coasting vessels, with which,, passing down Narraganset Bay, he pro- ceeded by Long Island Sound and Connecticut River to Hartford, the nearest point of approach to Harwinton. Thence, with hired teams, he advanced, upwards of twenty miles over the hills and vallies of Connecticut, to the point of his destination. But, what was his surprise at finding the object of his expedition an ecclesiastical Cincinnatus at his plough ; a farmer jin the field, under a broad brimmed hat, and in patched short-clothes, coarse stockings and heavy shoes! This was the last day of Mr. Griswold's agricultaral life. His field dress was soon doffed, and in exchange, his cleri- cal habit assumed ; equally at home in either, and to each an equal ornament ; his person ever lofty, erect and digni- fied ; his dark eye beaming with cheerfulness and intelli- gence ; and his whole demeanor characteristic of a sober, serious man of God. The expedition closed happily ; and -100 MEMOIR OF THE ere summer had set in, Mr. Griswold and his family were quietly settled in his new parish. In one sense, it is true, this removal could not be con- sidered as any advance on the road to distinction. He went from the charge of three parishes, with fiill congregations and 220 communicants, to one parish of 25 famihes, and about 20 communicants ; and, though he passed from the secluded hills and vales of Litchfield county to the commer- cial shores of the beautiful Narraganset, yet the town, in which he settled, had perhaps more intercourse with West Indies than with the great world at home ; and he tfl fore remained as much unknown to our Church at la he was during his sheltered retirement in Connecticu| yet, in another sense, it was a direct move along the notoriety. It brought him towards the distinction, ^ did not seek. Events have shewn that the hand was in it as clearly as in any other movement of his life.;,^ What he did seek in the change, he found ; reUef from the pecuniary embarrassments, which were worse to him than daily toil and drudgery ; and an opening for direct and ex- tensive usefulness in a place, where, little having yet been done for the Church, so much the more remained to be done. For more than a quarter of a century, Bristol became his chosen and his dearest home ; the place where his Christian* and ministerial character ripened into full development ; the field of his best and most successful labors in the vineyard of his Master ; and, it may be added, as what bound him to it with increased tenderness of affection, and scene of his most painfully disciplinary afflictions, and the burial-place of al- most the whole of a large family ! The parish, though small, was yet endowed with an in- come of |600 per annum ; besides a trust fimd for the sup- port of a Charity School. The annual income of the parish constituted the only salary of its Rector. Although inade- quate to the support of a family in a place where the expenses of living were necessarily large, yet the parish made no voluntary addition to it ; and Mr. Griswold was therefore LIFE OF BISHOP GEISWOLD. 101 obliged to add to the duties of his rectorship those of a select school. This operation of the endowraent of the parish presents a fact, which may be added to several others within jny know- ledge, illustrative of the truth, that, though such endowments may sometimes preserve a parish from extinction amidst the unsettling of change and revolution, yet on the whole, they minister no^ to the true strength and growth of the Church. Such endowments belong not to our voluntary system; and if they are small, they either entail on the parish a minis- ter as cheap as his salary, or, if he be worth his support, drive him to an exhausting use of private means, or to the drudgery of double labor for the comfort of his family. There is, in poor human nature, as it grasps the purse, an instinctively contractile power, which can never be relaxed but by the steadily applied force of generous or of gracious habit. When the hand is never opened to give, the heart grows too hard to feel; or the lightest demands of benevo- lence become a burthen too heavy to be borne. But haint makes giving not only easy,, but deligUfal, and -meets all the demands of benevolence without entrenching on the means of doing justice to djlier^Jid of se(5uring comfort to ourselves. ^^HK' At the present point in the^B of BiShop Gripwold, his auto-biography again comes in as a more frequent guide ; though its riches consist more in the views, which it fur- nishes of his own mind,- feelings, and gi-owth of character, than in any minute details of the events, with which his life was filled. It gives the man of God and the minister of Christ in growing relief; while it furnishes only here and there a reference to a few of the more prominent incidents, through which he passed. I present here his first notice of the parish in Bristol. " I found in this place a parish of about twenty-five fami- lies decidedly attached to the Church, and about the same number of communicants. Some others had occasionally attended worship there. The congregation, however, so rapidly increased, that, in a few years, the Church was not 102 MEMOIR OF THE large enough for tkeir accommodation. Twenty-four feet were added to the length of the house : and the new pews sold readily, and at such prices that the parish gained several hundred dollars to its fund, beyond the cost of the addi- tion." The prosperity of the parish indicated in this note continu- ed, without interruption, during his rectorship, though it was more marked at some periods than at others. On this sub- ject, however, he says but little in the sketch of .his own life. He recurs to it, once or twice, at a subsequent date, as we shall see ; but, for the present, his mind seems incUned to indulge in retrospect, and in general views. He evidently regards his entrance on the duties of this parish as a sort of central point in his Hfe, upon which the influences of the past converge, and irom which influences into the future radi^e : and therefore, with a mere notice of his settlement here and its more immediate results, he takes his stand on this as a point of observation ; throws his view behind him, around him, and before ; glances occasionally at incidents, but dwells mostly on the feelings, -motives and principles, by which he had been governed ; and thus, in his . own modest way, shews himself -^thout ai ming a t self-display, and hdds up a model of character befdM^^clergy without any assump- tion of mere officiar supeiS^. With these preparatory remarks, let us now foUow, for a while, his own words, and walk by the light, which he sheds around himself. " Soon after engaging in the duties of the pastoral care, I found that my hopes of leisure for much reading were not to be reahzed without a neglect of the very duties to which I was pledged. It was with too much regret, and' with too little resignation and trust in God, that I was, by a simple sense of duty, constrained to relinquish some studies, in which I had very much dehghted ; especially, Music and Mathematics, Natural Philosophy and Chemistry. "Dr. Johnson mentions it as a sad reflection, that he knew almost as much at eighteen, as he did at fifiy-four. ■ In the later years of my life, my mind has been not a little LIFE OF BISHOP GEISWOLD. 103 saddened by a like reflection. So very much of my time has been occupied in preparing sermons, in great numbers, for the pulpit, and in the many other duties of the clerical office, that, since my first ordination, I have scarcely been able to acquire literary, especially classical knowledge so fast as I have forgotten it. Experience and observation have been my best human teachers. By them I have learned to cor- rect early prejudices and . errors, and have acquired know- ledge of much use in my ministry. " When young, my natural pride and ambition, not sub- dued as they should' have been, withstood my choosing the clerical profession. It appeared to me a rehnquishment of all hopes of distinction in this present life. I did not then duly consider that, in my baptism and confirmation, I had already, in profession, renounced the world. And yet, even from a child, I had a deeper sense than perhaps is common, of propriety or consistency of conduct, and often wondered much that many professing Christians, and especially clergy- men, should be so conformed to the wisdom and customs^ ' the pomps and vanities, of the world.' When I began tot attend Conventions and Convocations of the clergy, I wasC^ much disappointed in hearing and seeing so little of what might be truly called religioMfcThe chief use, which I made of the observatit)n, was that o^pnotive to self-examination. I have ever been too sensible of my own defects to feel qualified for casting the stone at others." This is so appropriate a place for an illustrative anecddte, that I must in|errupt the Bishop a moment while I record it. Though it relays to a subsequent period of his life, yet, as the order of events is not very strictly observed in the frag- ment, from which I have been copying, the anecdote may as well be inserted here as in its proper chronological con- nexion. One of the Bishop's Rhode Island friends had been much troubled in mind at the fact that certain- persons in the parish to which he belonged, though wholly devoted to a fashion- able Ufe, were still stated communicants in the Church. Having, therefore, an opportunity one day, he laid the case 104 MEMOIR OF THE before the Bishop. " Bishop Griswold," he asked, " does it not pain you to see such persons at the sacrament, while pursuing a course so wholly inconsistent with their Christian profession ?" " Mr. ■ ," repUed^ the Bishop, '-' at that holy ordinance, I am so overwhelmed with a sense of my own unworthiness, that I have then neither time nor desire to scan the unworthiness of others." Such a remark from such a man will not of course be re- garded, as an expression of indifference to the fearful incon- sistency, brought to his notice. Upon such inconsistency he looked with as keen a pain and as holy a frown as the strict- est Christian could desire. But his remark is an index to the habits of his own mind ; and was doubtless one of his ways of teaching others the great evangelical duty of look- ing with a severer judgment on one's self than on others ; the important truth that they are least qualified to act as judges, who are naturally most censorious in their judg- ments. „ After expressing, as above, his sensibility to his own de- fects, he thus proceeds : " I may say, however, that, from the time of my becoming a communicant, and still more from the time of my ordina- tion, I determined, by DiviriT^ace, that I would walk con- sistently with my professi^Pf and that my conduct should bring no reproach upon religion. But, — though this resolu- tion was not without prayer, and was accompanied with some sense of my own frailty, yet there was in it too much of self-confidence. I had not then so fully learned what ex- perience, under God, has' since taught, the necessity of Di- vine grace, and that, without Christ, we can do nothing. " When, therefore, I had, as it were, compelled myself to yield to what seemed the Lord's will respecting me, by de- voting myself to his service in the work of the ministry, I determined to sacrifice the ambitious views of a proud heart ; to reUnquish aU hopes of riches and honors in this present life ; and to make it my chief object to do good, and be useful in the world. And it is hoped that I am not guilty of a ' vain confidence of boasting,' in saying that I determined. LIFE OF BISHOP GRISWOLD. 105 as God should give me grace, to seek, ' by patient contin- uance in well-doing, glory and honor and immortality' in an- other and better world th^ this. I reflected much how transitory, if attained, is all worldly renown ; and how truly it may be said, in the words of the poet, to be • ' The same, — if Tally's, or my own.' In this, certainly, I can x^aim no credit to myself; — for ' necessity was laid upon me.' 'My duty to God and his Church, and the wants of a large and increasing family, with a salary inadequate to their support, required my whole care, and my utmost exertions. In my early mamage, and in other events, the overruling Providence of God hedged up my way. My -whole time being engrossed- by my parishes and by my family, I had none left for the indulgence of my natural love and ambition of literary and worldly fame. I was driven, as it were, by shipwreck upon Immanuel's ground. During a period of about thirty years from my re- moyal to Bristol, I was but in one instance, so far able to forego the calls of duty as to make even a short journey of a day or two for rest and relaxation." From these remarks it must not be inferred that, during this long period Mr. Griswold was a stranger to study, or that he spent no time in reading? What he was driven to abandon, in this respect, was his favorite indulgence in those studies, by which he had at first hoped to raise himself to the proud eminence of the scholar's fame ; general Literature and Science, " especially Music and Mathematics, Natural Philosophy and Chemistry." From these, in obedience to his ordination vow, as well as to the stern behests of Pro- vidence, he forced off his thoughts, and " drew all his cares and studies another way ;" towards the Bible and those au- thors by whom the Bible is best illustrated. In these, he became deeply learned ; — few Divines, hi our country, it is believed, have been more so. Nor, yet, must it be inferred that his abandonment of his originally favorite studies was so entire that he never again looked into them. He never again made them objects of 106 MEMOIK OF THE oultiyation, or allowed them to interfere for a moment witli his duties in other directions. And yet, there is some evi- dence that eyen so late as after the period of tis consecra- tion, he used, occasionally to amuse himself after his old fashion, if in no other way, yet by stealing some of his min- utes from sleep. Mrs. T., one of his Salem parishioners, in whose family he felt himself much at home, relates an inci- dent as of no infrequent occurrence. Calling one evening, in a familiar way, he became ab- sorbed in a book, which interested him. At length, ob- serving that the family were evidently waiting for him to lay down his book that they might retire, he begged them not to sit up on hip account ; that he was much interested in what he was reading ; and that, as he had but little time for such enjoyment, he should like, if they had no' objections, to finish the book before he went home. They retired, ac- cordingly, and he remained reading a great part of the night. The story of the Bishop's buying and reading La Place's Mechanique Celeste, I have every reason to believe, is strictly true. Notwithstanding the remark of one of the reviews, that there were but few men in England, who read La Place's book, Messrs. Wells and Lilly, at that time well known booksellers in Boston, had imported a copy of the work. For a time it laid on their counter with no other notice, save that now and then a customer would take it up, look at it, and lay it down. One day, however, a venerable, white headed man came in, and happening to take up the work, appeared to become absorbed in its contents. At length, he asked the price of it, and, as the incident was related to me, bought it and quietly walked away. Mr. Wells, feeling a great curiosity to learn the name of the stranger, requested his clerk to follow him, and if possible ascertain who he was. His clerk did so, and soon saw him enter the house of Shubael Bell, Esq., then one of our distinguished laymen of Boston, residing in School street. On inquiring at the door, he learned that the person, whom he had followed, LIFE OF BISHOP GKISWOLD. 107 was none other than Bishop Griswold. Some time after- wards, Judge M. of Boston, an intimate friend of the Bi- shop, asked him "whether the account were true, and whether he read La Place ?" — " Yes" replied the Bishop, "I have sometimes amused myself that way: but of late, finding Mathematics in danger of interfering with my other duties, I have laid them aside." This latter part of the accpunt I had from Judge M. himself. But, to proceed with the auto»biography ; after alluding to one instance, in which be was enabled -to break away from his home-cares and duties, so far as to make a journey for rest and relaxation, he adds : "That one instance was attended with circumstances deeply impressed on my memory. In 1809, when travelling by stages was rare, in comparison with what we have since known, I went in a chaise with my wife to visit my relations in Connecticut, and my brother in Great Barrington (Massa- chusetts). The wfeather being very warm, and, as it hap- pened, my journey very fatiguing, I was, at my brother's, suddenly taken sick. Being exceedingly desirous, if possi- ble, to reach home, I commenced my return, when no one thought me in a fit state to leave my bed. After travelling ten or fifteen miles, and feeling myself growing more ill, I desired to stop and pass the night in Norfolk, Litchfield county. But, the innkeeper, supposing my illness to be some contagious fever, and fearing danger from the conta- gion, was unwilling to entertain me. It is remarkable, that, about three months afterwards I • heard of his decease. So uncertain is human life ! " With much difficulty and in great distress, I continued six or eight miles further, where I passed the night and had a physicjan with me. The next day, with still greater diffi- culty I reached my mother's dwelling in Simsbury ; and by the time I reached it, the probability was that my life would soon be terminated. Two of the best physicians in those parts, who were about my own age, and in the full vigor of health, daily attended me, but could see no hope of my re- covery. When, for a week or two, it seemed to all that 108 MEMOia OF THE every day must be my last, the 17th and 18th verses of the 118th Psalm were almost continually, and in a remarkable manner, occurring to my mind': 'I shall not *die, but live .and declare the works of the Lord. The Lord hath chas- tened me sore ; but He hath not given me over unto death.' It was His gracious will that I should jecover ; and never since have I read that Psalm without being affected by the remembrance of the scene, in which it came so signaHy to my support. " That sickness and my recovery from it made, I have reason to believe, a good and lasting impression on my mirid. It was the more affecting from the remarkable cir- cumstance, that the two physicians, who attended me, and who were my friends and old acquaintance, both died a very few months after my illness. From that time, I rejoic- ed the more that the way of godlmess had,' as it seemed, been my refuge ; that disappointments and providential events had led me to devote myself to God in the ministry of the Gospel. Often since have I trembled at what might have been my career and my end, had the Lord let me alone, or had Re ordered all things according to my mind ; and of- ten have I thought of the remark of one, who, seeing a con- demned criminal led to execution, exclaimed ; ' but for the grace of God, I had been in his place !' We are too forget- fiil who it is that makes us to differ from others. Notwith- standing His providential care of me, which, in many instan- ces not recorded in this sketch, has been very remarkable, and at times very affecting, I must with penitence and shame acknowledge how little I have profited by His goodness, how continually I have neglected duty, and how often I have erred from His righteous ways." It will be remembered", that, when sketching his child- hood, .and recording the almost fatal illness, through which he passed when ten years of age, he alludes to two other special instances, in which, as if by almost a miracle, he had beten rescued from death. One of these two instances, we have seen reason to believe, was his preservation on "the cold Friday" of. 1779-80. The other, we may perhaps LIFE OF BISHOP GRISWOLD, 109 reasonably conclude, was his deliverance firom the peril encountered on the journey, of which he has just given an account ; — although it is possible that the reason, why he singled this from the " many other instances not re- corded in this sketch," is to be found, — not in its being more remarkable than others, but — in its more special connexion with the history of his religious feelings and character. Throughout his subsequent life, his travels in the midst of serious illness were many times repeated ; nor were there wanting other instances of peril from which he was pro- videntially rescued. But that just recorded, besides being very signal, was evidently associated in his mind with an important movement in his divine life, — with a more cordial acquiescence in the appointments of God, and with an in- crease of light in his views of the great doctrines of grace. And it is to my mind a pleasing circumstance that, through grfeat suffering, and some seeming unkindness, he was led to urge his way onwards till he reached his birth-place ; that he there laid himself down apparently to die under the very roof, and probably in the very room, where, at ten years of age, he considered himself as having already entered the dark valley of the shadow of death ; and that, from the identical place, where heaven was first opened on his long* ing view, he went forth to cast the blessings of his now in- creased light along tlie path of his still prolonged joumey- ings upon earth. Having, in the last two extracts from the auto-biography, glanced at the history of his mind in its natural passion for reading and general study, and at the history of his rehgious feelings and character ufider the providential discipline of God, he proceeds with a series of remarks on the practical habits of his life, which I cannot too earnestly commend to the consideration of his readers, especially of those, who are engagedj like him, in the work of the ministry. " In regard to my pecuniary affairs, though from the first my salary was inadequate to the expenses of my family, yet I made it a rule thankfiiUy to receive what was allowed or given me, and, as already remarked, never to ask for more. 110 MEMOIR OF THE or to complain that I had too little. In Connecticut, I added to my means of living by cultivating a few acres of land, and by preparing some young men for coUege ; and, in ^Bris- tol, till my election to the Episcopate, I Tiad the charge of a large school. " Another rule, which I adopted, was, — always to live vnthin my means-; — never to be in debt ; — to owe no man any thing but love ; and ever to be prepared, when called upon, to pay my just dues. Never, I believe, have I for the same dues been called upoji twice. " Those of the laily, who are much engaged in worldly business, may not always find it convenient" (yet, ought not even they to make it always, their duty ?) " to do. this ; but I have St. Paul's authority for recommending it to my clerical brethren. Their being in debt is attended with some serious evils. .They' had better, like the Apostle, labor with their hands, or become instructors of youth, than anti-,- cipate their resources, or owe that which they cannot pay. In many cases, some bodily labor would improve their health, prolong their Uves, and increase their usefulness. In mere literary pursuits, we are in much danger of regarding our pleasure, or our fame, beyond what is compatible with our solemn dedication of ourselves to the service of God and religion, and with^ our engagement to ' draw all our cares and studies this way.' What may be called Christian vir- tue is — an imitation of Chnst; — a desire to do good; a readiness gladly to sacrifice, in a reasonable degree, and so far as the word of God requires, our wealth, and pleasure, and ease, and whatever we delight in, to honor God and to promote the true welfare and happiness of our fellow men. " It seems not to be duly considered by Christians generally, that the foundation of benevolence, the ground-work of well-doing, — is— io do no harm ; to avoid every thing inju- rious, unjust, or wrong. There are those, and their numbers not few, who are very active in doing good, but who yet consider little what evils may result fi:om some part of their conduct. Men may be much celebrated for their acts of charity, or benevolence, or public benefits, while in other LIFE OF BISHOP GHISWOLD. Ill things, less noticed and less thought of, they inflict evils, which balance, and more than balance, their boasted good. It had been better for the world if many, whose names stand high on the list of fame, had never lived. To be truly good, requires no small share of humility. ' Love worketh no ill.' That . charity, without which we are nothing that is gooid, 'sufiereth long and is kind ; envieth not; seeketh not her own ; is not easily provoked ; thinketh no evil ; rejoiceth not in iniquity, but rejoiteeth in the truth ; beareth all things and endureth all things.' Our blessed Saviour said ; ' If I honor myself niy honor is nothing.' What, then, is the 'worldly honor, which we seekj but our shame ?' " Who, with such propriety and consistency as its author, could have written this last and , important extract ? With what force does he teach by it those whom he has left in the world ; men of business in general, but especially men engaged in the ministry of the Gospel ! Bishop Griswold, it is confidently believed, was a man, who never adopted a rule of life, which he did not faithfully observe. Let him, then, from his grave, preach powerfully the rules by which he lived ; especially those of always living within one's means, and of never allowing one's self to be called on twice for the payment of a just due. The question is, — whether o?je man, by a little of the salutary discipline of self-denial and self-humbling, by putting himself to a little pain and toil and suffering, shall always live within his means, pay his just debts promptly, and thus keep all others from suffering on his account, and render them as far as pos- sible comfortable and happy ; — or whether this one man, by yielding to carelessness, or vanity, or pride, or self-pamper- ing, shall spend faster than he earns, draw in advance on the resources, forbearance, and comforts of others, and thus, in the end, entail inconvenience and loss and even sufferings on multitudes around him; — perhaps — on the poor and needy, whose services he has enjoyed without ever ^ving them back the means to buy bread .-' This living in advance and upon others is a deep sin in any man ; but 112 MEMOIR OF THE deepest of all " in man that ministers." Yet how often is it committed uhder the influence of false views of what con- stitutes credit and respectability among men ! Alas f to what credit or respectability can any one be entitled, who is known to draw his means of ease, costly dress and sump- tuous living frpm the unpaid toils, or the unrequited sacri- fices of others ! And if such an one be a minister of Christ, how can the respectable appearance, which he- main- tains, atone for the injuries^ which he inflicts on the cause of his Master, or for the reproach, which he brings on his own Christian character? Besides, what minister of Christ degrades himself, or loses the respect of others, by those self-denials, and self-humblings; which enable him, though it be for a time in coarse attire and in unnoticed seclusion, to live within his means, to render to all their dues, and to owe nothing but love? Is St. Paul less honored because he was a tent-maker, aaid thereby ministered to his own neces- sities, and to the necessities of those, who were with him ? Or is even Bishop Griswold less respected because he toUed at day's- work, rather than run in debt ; or because he al- ways lived in lowly style, that he might have somewhat to give to others, besides providing comfortably for his own household? , After thus noticing some of the rules, which the subject oJL our memoir prescribed to himself for the government of his life, I may, with sufficient propriety, make this the place for recording a few others, which I find among his private papers, fliough not on the pages of his auto-biography. All, who were well acquainted with him, will see at once, from what follows, as well as from what has already been given, that, with him, rules were a sort of living thing ; or that, having adopted them, his life became but their embodied spirit. The following are found under the head of " RESOLUTIONS ADOPTED IN EARLY LIFE," OB " Maxims and rules, which J have adopted and endeavored to practice." '^ 1. Never to ask another to do for me what I can as well do for myself. LIFE OF BISHOP GRISWOLD. 113 . " 2. When censured, or accused, to correct^ not justify, my error. " 3. From a child, in reading any thing applicable to the improvement of the mind, or to the conduct df life, to con- sider first and chiefly how it may be appUed to myself. "4. In all clashing claims, where rights are equal, and one must yield, to do it myself. " 5. To have a trust that, in all the events and exigencies of life, if I strictly do my duty, and walk according to the Christian rule, however I may seem to suffer, what is really best for me the Lord will ^ve." Upon the first of these rules. Bishop Griswold acted, to the last day of his life, more literally than any other man, within my knowledge ; so literally that he would not allow a domestic, in his presence, to carry a pail of water to his sleeping apartment, or an armfull of wood into his study. He would often interrupt them as they were ascending the stairs, take their burthens from them, and carry them up himself. And as he ordinarily kept no man-servant, he stu- died, by every means in his power, to lighten the drudgery of the female members of his household. A gentleman, who was for a time a boarder in his family, was accustomed, on retiring td rest, to set his boots in the passage, outside the door of his room. Of course he always found them, the next morning, nicely brushed and ready for use. After a while, however, he accidentally discovered, to his utter astonishment, that he had, all along, been indebted for his clean boots to the Bishop ! It is needless to add that he in- stantly put a stop to this mode of being so honorably served. I should not record private details like these in so grave a work as the life of a Bishop, were it not that, in the present case, they were actual developments of high, generous feel- ing and principle. They were not whims ; nor were they habits cleaving to one, incapable of rising above early modes of life. A little mind, raised by accident from ob- scurity, may make itself ridiculous by pretending to utter ignorance of humble toil ; — but a noble mind, which has risen by its own force, has feelings for the children of drudg- 114 MEMOIR OF THE ing poverty, into which none but itself can enter ; and will often long, even when it is not in its power, and with a yearning of sympathy which even itself cannot express, to lighten the burthens, which others are bearing in its service. This feeling, without doubt, prompted the following senti- ments, which I find among the Bishop's private papers. " I have always," he remarks, " had great respect for those who labor, bearing the heaviest burthens of life, pro- viding us with food and raiment, and with almost every thing, that preserves life,' and renders it comfortable. None, better than they, deserve the comforts, to which they so largely contribute." Again, he remarks in another place ; — " What do not those, in the more easy circumstances of life, owe to the laboring classes ; especially, masters to their servants ! The latter ' are bom with fortune's yohx upon their necks.' At best it is a painful burthen, which they, for whose benefit it is borne, should not increase but lighten." Who can doubt that, when he wrote the rule, "Never to ask another to do for me what I can as well do for myself ;" and whenever he acted in obedience to his rule in light- ning the burthens of those who served him ; he was but im- bodying, not only into a maxim, but also into zpriruAple, the generous sympathies of a truly noble nature ? Upon the second of the rules, above recorded, he com- ments thus : " I have observed that a hasty, inconsiderate self-justification and resentment of censure or reproof, is a very general and a very injurious propensity of our nature." The following incident will illustrate the manner, in which he applied this rule to practice. It was communicated ver- bally by the late Rev. Matthias Munroe, who was a native of Bristol, and for many years enjoyed the Bishop's pastoral supervision. During his residence in Bristol, a Baptist minister, with more of zeal than of discretion, became impressed with the conviction that the Bishop was a mere formalist in religion, and that it was his duty to go and warn him of his danger, and exhort him to " flee from the wrath to come." Accord- I.IFE OF BISHOP GKISWOLD. 115 ingly, he called upon the Bishop; very solemnly made known his errand, and forthwith entered on his harangue. The Bishop listened in silence, till his' self-constituted in- structor had closed a severely denunciatory exhortation; and then, in substance, rephed as follows : — " My dear friend, I do not wonder that they, who witness the inconsis- tency of my. daily walk, and see how poorly I adorn the doctrine of God my Saviour, should think that I have no religion. I often fear for myself that such is the case ; and feel very grateful to you for giving me this warning." The reply was made with such an evidently unaffected humility, and with such a depth of feeling and sincerity, that if an audible voice from heaven had attested the genuineness of his Christian character, it could not more effectually have silenced his kindly intending, but misjudging censor, or more completely have disabused him of his false impression. He immediately acknowledged his error, begged the Bishop's pardon, and ever afterwards looked upon him as one of the distinguished lights of the Christian world. Upon the third of the foregoing rules, his Ufe was a com- ment which needs no addition, other than the remark that for ^elf-culture, self-discipline and self-control, (imderstand- ing by these terms a distinct and pious reference to the grace of God as his sufficiency,) his age probably furnished not his superior : While it is enough to say of the fourth, that, though he reduced it literally to practice, yet, when clashing claims were uneqical, and when the superior right lay clearly on his side, especially if he felt bound to assert this right as a matter of conscience, there was not a man living more in- flexible in his adherence to the line of duty than himsel£ Though he could cheerfully sacrifice himself in obedience to his maxim, and even when his own clear rights were mat- ters of little moment, yet on all points, which involved im- portant interests, and touched the ground of conscience, he was perfectly immovable. The ^^h rule is an upward index to a lofty Christian character. It points to his habitual and high repose in God ; 116 MEMOIR OF THE and in his life-long experience he found that, ultimately, it never disappointed his trast. But, it is time to proceed with our extracts from llie auto- biography. It will next lead us to look abroad from its author upon the condition of the Church in his day. " They who are now young cannot easily appreciate the change, which, within the last thirty years, has been silently wrought among the clergy of our Church in their religious views, and in their style of preaching. This remark is true so far certainly as my own knowledge has extended. What is now generally required as faithful preaching of the Gospel, would dien have given offence to very many of our most staunch Episcopalians ; while, the style of preaching, then most in vogue among us, would now be generally regarded as very defective. The deep-rooted and violent opposition to Episcopacy, which was then cherished in Connecticut, was not, by Episcopalians themselves, borne with that meek- ness and charity and pious trust in God, which, as we are now more sensible, becometh the disciples of Christ. A spirit of sectarianism and of controversy was prevalent among all denominations ; and, as usually happens in such cases, all could more easily see the faults of others than their own. Before the revolutionary war, and during that contest, the Congregationalists, — who then considered themselves as 'the standing order,' (in their sense, the established religion of the State,) to whom the ground of right belonged, — were of course opposed to the introduction within their borders of any other denomination; and to that of the Episcopal Church most of all. The thought of a Bishop's being brought into the State, they contemplated with great abhorrence. Indeed, this abhorrence, this strong opposition to Episcopacy of the Dissenters, as they were then called, and the consequent fciar of offending them, furnished one of the chief reasons why the British Government, so long as we continued subject to them, would not permit us to have Bishops in these their Colonies. " As a sample of the dread of Bishops, which, among the LIFE OF BISHOP GRISWOLD. 117 common people, then prevailed ; one of my neighbors, who was bom about 1745, told me that, when a child, he was taught that, if Bishops should come into this country, they would take from the people a tenih of every thing; children not excepted : and, as he happened to be the tenth child of his parents, it was then, he said, his ardent desire that he might immediately die, in case a Bishop were permitted to set his foot on our shores!" This dread of Bishops was not confined to Connecticut; nor, at least in some other places, to the common people. Mr. J. M., a venerable man, still living in vigorous old age^ and formerly a merchant of Boston,. once related to me an anecdote still more striking than that just recorded ; so strik- ing that I believe I have scarcely forgotten a word of it. When I was an Apprentice (said Mr. M.) to old master Eliot, who was at that time an eminent merchant of Boston, and belonged to the highly respectable family of that name in the city, I entered the breakfast room one cold winter morning, where, though the hour was early, I found one of my fellow apprentices engaged in reading the newspaper. He was a very intelligent and pious young man, and a mem- ber of the Rev. Mr. Eliot's Church. I saw he was much interested in what he was reading, for his countenance indi- cated the workings of intense feeling. In a few moments, he dropped the paper, and turning to me, with startling emphasis exclaimed; " then, M , I am a dead man !" In amaze- ment,, I begged an explanation of his meaning. "Read that article," said he, handing me the paper, which he had drop- ped. I took it, and, from an English extract, read, what, afterwards indeed, proved to be a premature, or rather un- founded announcement, to the following effect ; (I have for- gotten said he, both dates and names,) " On day of the month, will sail from this port in his majesty's ship, , the Rev. Dr. , who is expected to go out as fiirst Bishop of New England." "Why, my friend," I replied, " I see in this no reason for your exclamation." " JVb reasonV^ he rejoined^ with the same startling emphasis: " Jfo reason'? Why, I tell you M , if this announcement prove true. 118 ■ MEMOIR OF THE the moment Dr. sets his foot on Long Wharf, Boston, as Bishop of New England, I mil shoot him ! And the next moment, I will surrender myself into th& hands of justice with the certainty of being hanged ! I feel that, by such a deed, I should be doing God service." The auto-biography proceeds : " It was this violent and extreme abhorrence of tbe Church of England, and this desire to suppress it, which the rather induced the ministers of the Congregational Churches to engage so warmly in our revolutionary contest ; and to preach war instead of peace. In their sermons and prayers, and by all possible means, they roused the people to arms, and to hatred of the British.* In the year 1776, when I was ten years of age, one of my father's hired men, who was a Congregationalist, asked me to accompany him to one of their ordinations. I went : and though so young was yet shocked at the bitter imprecations of their ministers against the English. They prayed that their enemies' ships might all be dashed against the rocks, and their crews be sunk to the bottom of the Ocean ! &c. &c. How different did it all seem to me from those prayers of the Chufch, to which I had been accustomed ; and from what I had been taught of the Christian duty of beseeching God to forgive our enemies, not destroy them! And how blind is the wisdom of man to the ways of God ! How little did they foresee that their effort to eradicate the Church from this country, though for a while they seemed to succeed, were, in the ordering of God's Providence, opening the way for its establishment and rapid increase !" The object of the auto-biography in this extract is, not to revive the influence of unpleasant recollections ; thanks be to God, the day of their influence, it may be hoped, is for- ever past : but to exhibit one of the sources of that style of preaching in former days^ among the clergy of the Episcopal Church, which, as he had remarked, has now been so gener- ally changed for a better. Hence he goes on to observe : ^' The clergy of the Episcopal Church are men of like * See Note to p. 24. LIFE OF BISHOP GElSWOLD. 119 passions "with others. It is not strange that those times, 'which tried men's souls,' should have shewn that we all come short of perfection. I carried with me to Bristol too much of the prejudice and -bigotry, which I had imbibed in Connecticut. There was still remaining among Episcopali- ans not a little of that proud contempt, of the Puritans, and of what was termed fanaticism, which belonged to the so called ' Old School,' whose origin may be said to date in the reign of the Second Charles of England. Adopting the practice of my brethren, whom I thought wiser than myself, my preaching had been far too much on sectarian distinctions, and topics of controversy, especially against high Calvinism and schismatics ; and quite too frequently in defence of the distinctive principles of the Protestant Episcopal Church, to the too great neglect of the essential doctrines of Christ, and of the necessary duties of Christians. This manner of preach- ing among our clergy very much strengthened the belief among other denominations that Churchmen, as we were then called, were but formedists and bigots ; regarding the Church more than religion, and the Prayer-book more than the Bible ; departing from their own Articles and Homilies, and destitute of true piety and renovation of heart. And much mortified, grieved and humbled have I formerly been, that these things should be so much said, and I so Httle able to refute them. ' Pudet hffic opprobria nobis, .Et dici potuissc, et not potuisse refelli.' To God's praise, not ours, be it said, that at the present time a far better state of things among us prevails. "And not only are things in a better state now; but even then, this bigotry and sectarian spirit were, I have reason to believe, more prevalent in Connecticut than in other portions of our Church. This was owing, no doubt, to their pecuUar circumstances and trials, as well as to the character of a State formerly so noted for controversy and litigation. Certainly in Rhode Island I found a materially different condition of things. Those of my sermons, which, in Connecticut, had 120 MEMOIR OF THE appeared to be most acceptable and were most applauded, gave offence in Bristol, Providence and Newport; arid I soon found that, by continuing the controversial style of preach- ing, some of the most pious of her members would be driven from the Church. This was particularly true of those called Methodists. They had recently formed a Society an Bristol, consisting of a few respectable people, who had been com- municants in the Congregational Church. On my arrival in Bristol, they had a minister who preached for them one half of the time ; and as I was informed, (too late indeed) they at once passed a resolution in their meeting, that they would, for the other half, attend niy ministry. It has since been my belief, that had I, in my teaching at that time, followed the example of St. Paul, (1 Cor. ii. 2 ; ix. 19 — 22.) they would have united with the Episcopal Church. . But, the Lord reigns ; and perhaps He ordered it for the best. The Epis- copal Church was soon filled ; and the Methodists soon had a large Society there, and have been instrumental of much good." This extract is valuable as furnishing unequivocal ptoof of an important change in the views, as well as in the course, which had been adopted by Mr. Griswold, upon his entrance into the ministry. There is, indeed, no reason for supposing that he ever caught the controversial mania in its fiill viru- lence. From the very first, he evidently belonged to the more serious and spiritual class of the clergy of our Church, and had a standard botii of religious feeling and of religious action altogether higher than that, which had been set up around him. Still, the idea, which I have, from time to time, intimated, that his views were not, at first, clearly and fully developed, and that events in the providence of God subsequently \vrought a marked change in his character both as a Christian, and as a minister of Christ, is abundantly sustained. When he wrote the last extract, at the age of seventy-four, he was far fi-om being, religiously, the same man as when he kept the Methodists from uniting under his ministry by a style of preaching, which has, no doubt, in numberless other instances, been the means of shutting out LIFE OF BISHOP GRISWOLD. 121 from our Church her best materials for growth, and even of expelling from her veins some of her own best hfe-blood. Experience has, I apprehend, demonstrated that the best way of extending the institutions of our Episcopacy is not found in asserting for them exclusive claims ; in the dogina, " No Bishop, no Church ;" or in a course, which shews that there is more heart, more zeal, and more ability in preaching^ Church government and Church polity, than in preaiihing Jesus Christ, and him crucified. Our exclusive claims are abundantly fraught with excluding energies ; and well would it be for us if, when those claims have "been pressed to the extreme point of shutting out from our communion much of the best religious portion of the community, instead of re- proaching them for having cut themselves off from the Church Catholic and her covenant, we all had the heart of Bishop Griswold, to say: "the Lord reigns ; and perhaps He has ordered it for the best." With such a spirit, as the fruitof our sad experience, we should at least have the best prospect of being able thankfully- to add ; "The Episcopal Church will soon be filled, though the Methodists also have a large Society, and are happily instrumental of much good." In what respect the change, to which I have adverted, in Mr. Griswold's views and practice, first began to manifest itself, and to contribute to the result of filling the Episcopal Church under his ministry, may perhaps be gathered from the next extract to be made from his auto-biography. " So far as I know," he writes, " I was, of our .clergy in New England, the first to hold evening lectures. Though this is now a thing so common, yet it was then by many of our good people exceedingly disliked. Our Bishop in Con- necticut once observed in my hearing; 'night preaching and pulpit praying are two things, which I abhor.' But other denominations practised both ; and soon after my set- tlement in Bristol I found that many of my parishioners at- tended their meetings ; and it was, at first, from fear of the result of their straying away among those, who appeared to have more zeal, that I proposed to our Vestry, and with diffi- culty obtained their leave, to open my Church for a third 122 MEMOIR OF THE service on Sunday evenings. I have had reason to believe that this was the most fruitfiil part of my ministty, because more peopl© attended- at the third service, than at the other two, not a few of whom attended our service at no other time. I continued the practice of three services every Sun- day for thirty years ; so long indeed as I had .a parish parti- cularly under my pastoral care." A pretty good .proof is here furnished that he had done shutting the doors of the Church by turning the oft-heard key of her excluding claims ; and that, in opening them, he had also found the secret of drawing in those, who had be- fore been shut out; the simple, secret of shewing -that the Church can be quite as full gf.the Gospel of Christ crucified as she is of letters patent to successorship from the apos- tles, in the line of the ministry, which they organized. Of the amount of labor, which he thus added, we may form some estimate, by reflecting, that, during the thirty years which he mentions, he had charge either of a large school, which engrossed the usual day-time of each week, or of a large Diocese, which, within its vnde circuit, brought upon him " the care of all the Churches," even while not en- gaged in his visitations ; that he .burnt many hundreds of his early sermons, which he had found comparatively useless ; and that thus, amidst the multiplied and combined cares of family, school, parish and diocese, he was constantly driven to the writing of new sermons, sometimes while relieving his wife of the care of the children, sometimes by stealing hours from sleep, and sometimes, peradventure, by abstracting them from his meals; as when, in the solitary school-house at East Plymouth, he was sujnmoned from his preparation for Sunday to the rescue of the drowning boy. In reference to that portion of his life, which I have been reviewing, I ha*v;e but two more extracts from the auto-bio- graphy to give. The dangerous illness, into which he fell at his brother's, and on his way home, and of which he has given so afTectii^gly simple an account, happened, it will be remembered, in 1809 ; five years after his settlement at Bristol. It is in allusion to this that he says: LIFE OF BISHOP GRISWOLD. 123 " After the sickness above mentioned, my health was but slowly regained ; and I found that the labor of preaching three times each Sunday, besides occasional lectures in Lent, especially with the solp care of a large school, was what I should not be able long to endure. Under these circum- stances, I remembered the words of Bishop Jarvis, that after a few years' absence, he should expect me to return to his Diocese. I therefore visited Connecticut, and was very earnestly invited to take the rectorship of a Church in a situa- tion and on terms, which to me and mine were very pleas- ing. . I accepted the invitation, and had determined on the time when I would visit the place and make the necessary arrangements for removing my family. But I was diverted from my purpose by an occurrence to me totally unexpected, and in my view exceedingly providential." The parish to which he was thus invited, and the charge of which he thus accepted, was that of St. Michael's, in the beautiful and important town of Litchfield, about eightmiles from Harwinton, and the same distance from Northfield, in his former cure. Of tliis parish of St. Michael's the present writer was afterwards Rector. Some of my parishioners there had once been members of the Harwinton parish during Mr. Griswold's early ministry; and well do I re- member the terms of profound respect and of affectionate remembrance, in which they were wont to speak of their former beloved minister ; as well as the expressions of deep regret, which they, in common with the elder members of the Litchfield parish, used to express when speaking of their disappointed hopes of sitting once more under his ministry. Before looking at the "unexpected" and " providential oc- currence," which was the occasion of their disappointment, it wiU be proper to go back and look at some things in Rhode Island, at which the auto-biography has not yet glanced. The religious condition of the parish in Bristol, when Mr. Griswold became its Rector, was emphatically at low tide. Its number of communicants was very small ; while even this small number was not characterized by any very en- 124 MEMOIR OF THE lightened views of Christian truth, or of Christian character. Whenever they were met together for the purpose of talking abmd rehgion, they were in the habit of dismissing the ycnvng people from the room, as though they were not expected to take any interest in the subject. Of course, the mass of the population were sadly regardless of its claims. But, long before he left the place, a marked change in its religious character had teen produced, in which he was felt and ac- knowledged to have been largely instrumental. He was reverenced and beloved, as a man who exerted a deep, steady, healthful influence,' and who exerted that influence in sufch a way as to constrain respect and kindness even from those, who refused to follow his instructions. He was in one sense irresistible even to the wicked, in that his man- ners, though holy, were yet Idnd; and in that his reproofs, though faithful, were yet gentle. " Thfe notoriously sinful and profane quailed at his presencCj and were compelled to shew him their respect." Such is the written language of one, who has lived in his family and been long under his ministry ; and it is evidently a version of the remark, which I heard from several during my visit to Bristol, that the very drunkard in the street, if he happened to see Bishop Gris- wold coming, and so near that he could not retreat from sight, would at least steady himself against the nearest post, or wall of a house, and maintain all possible gravity and re- spectftilness until the holy man had passed out of view. In the year 1805, less than twelve months after his settle- ment in Bristol, he began to descend into that vale of tears, through which he was afterwards so long in passing,- and from which he never wholly emerged till it opened for his own en- trance into the dark valley of the shadow of death. By his first wife, he had a family of twelve beautiful and lovely children ; ten of whom faded and fell victims before his eyes to that pale and wan destroyer, i/ie Consumption ; tliough all of them, but one, lived in health and loveliness to be over twenty years of age. The one, that died first and earliest, was his daughter Harriet, in the twelfth year of her age. It was in her death that he began, with a trembling hand, to lift the cup of deep sor- LIFE OF BISHOP GRISWOLD. 125 rows to his unmunnuring Ups. On this suhject, however, I will not dwell at present. It will be better to- recur to it, when we can look Upon him as he stood in the vineyard of his Master, a tree loaded with the rich and ripe fruits of sancti- fied affliction. In the year 1806 he was prominently engaged," as a mem- ber of the Rhode Island Convention, in an attempt, which was then made to supply our Church in that State with the services of a Bishop. The progress and result of this attempt he thus records : "After the death of Bishop Parker, which happened Dec. 6, 1804, six months after my removal to Bristol, much anxiety was expressed by a few of our clergy in Rhode Island respecting the Episcopal supervison of our Churdies in that State. After much deliberation and some delay, the subject was considered in a Convention, which met in New- port, Nov. 12, 1806 ; when it was unanimously determined to invite Bishop Moore of New York to take those Churches under his Episcopal charge. It was judged that the age and infirmities of Bishop Jarvis would render it veiy incon- venient for him to visit Rhode Island. A Committee was app0.inted by the Convention, and myself by the Committee, to acquaint Bishop Moore of the election, and to express the earnest desire of those Churches that he would extend to them his Episcopal supervision." The auto-biography then gives an extract from the letter, which Mr. Griswold, as chairman of the Committee, ad- dressed to Bishop jyioore, in pursuance of their appointment. But, as I happen to have the original " rmigh draught" of that letter, I will give the whole ; though, doubtless, as it was finally sent to Bishop Moore, it was in a somewhat amended form. The extract above alluded to, .however, constitutes the body of the letter, and is of course given in its final shape. It differs so little from the corresponding part of the original in my possession, ets to make it probable that the whole is substantially correct. 126 MEMOIR OF THE ."Nov. ,1806." " Right Reverend and dear Sir, — The Convention of the Protestant Episcopal Church in Rhode Island convened through the blessing of God at Newport, on the 12th Nov. instant. The members were unusually punctual in their at- tendance, and all the parishes were duly represented. The want of a Bishop to preside over this Church was, as you will readily suppose, the-subject most interestingto the whole Convention; and after that mature deliberation, which its magnitude and importance required, it was unanimously agreed to proceed to an election. The result you will see in the copy of the vote inclosed ; which not less from inclina- tion than froin duty, we most respectfully submit to your charitable consideration. With much pleasure we assure you that the, greatest harmony prevailed during the whole business. In truth, there was but one mind on the subject in the whole Convention. " We whose names are underwritten were appointed a Committee to acquaint you with the election and to solicit your acceptance. This latter part of our duty -we now most sincerely perform : " Unwilling as we are to add to the burden of your duties, which are many and laborious, yet relying on your well known zeal for the religion of Christ, and the prosperity of his kingdom, and considering the wants of our few Churches in this State, we do most earnestly entreat you to take them under your Episcopal ^charge. The Churches in the state of New York, actuated by that charity, which seeketh not her own, will, we doubt not, consent that their brethren in Rhode Island should participate in the benefit of your Pastoral care. Our distance from your place of residence, considering the facility ofi communication, will not, we trust, be thought an objection.' At present, we cannot hope, in that respect, to form a connexion more convenient. Our parishes are few in number and so situated as to be easily visited. The unanimity and earnestness, with which all our people join in this request, present a pleasing prospect that, through the divine blessing, your consent to our request will be attended LIFE OF BISHOP GKISWOLD. 127 ■with very beneficial effects ; while, from your refiisal, serious evils may justly be feared. For, besides the little hope of equal harmony in another election, where can we look for aid ? In Massachusetts the Episcopate is vacant. The Dio- cese of Cormecticut is indeed supphed with a worthy Bishop ; but the infirm state of his health, and the tediousness of the road by land, leave us no hope for benefit by his labors. It is, Rt. Rev. Sir, to you alone, under God, that we can look with hope for that aid, which is likely to awaken the zeal and promote the union and prosperity of this Church. This aid, as well in behalf of ourselves as of the Churches which we represent, we most earnestly request you to vouchsafe us. Praying God to bless and long continue your pious labors, and useful ministry in His Church, We remain, Right Reverend and dear Sir, Most respectfully, your friends and brethren," Alexander V.Griswold, ) Committee. Theodore Dehon, ) " We had entertained the hope," says the auto-biography, " that he would accede to our request^ and were much dis- appointed, and not a little discouraged,' when his answer de- clining it, was received. His letter is probably among the records of the Convention in Rhode Island." A copy of this letter I have in m^y possession, from which it appears that the Rev. Theodore Dehon, afterwards Bishop in South Carolina, was one of the Committee, above named, of which Mr. Griswold was chairman. Of how many, or of what other members the Committee consisted it does not ap- pear. The letter was as follows : "New York, Deo. 29th, 1806." " Rev. and Dear Sir, — The vote of your Convention, ex- pressive of a desire to place the Church in Rhode Island under my superintendence, is a token of respect and confi- dence, which cannot be otherwise than very grateful to my mind. I am perfectly sensible that the prosperity of our 128 MEMOIR OF. THE Church greatly depends upon the regular performance of the duties, .which are peculiarly Episcopal. It is, therefore, with deep regret that I find myself under the absolute neces- sity of declining the honorable offer, which your Convention has been pleased to make. A similar application was lately made from South Carolina, with which it was not in my power to comply. So numerous and incessant are the duties already incumbent upon me, that I cannot consent to iijulti- ply my engagements ; as I should then continually live un- der the painful' consciousness of undertakirig a task, that could not be performed. Be pleased to make my sincere respects to the gentle- men of the Convention, and signify to them my determina- tion on this occasion. I remain. Rev. and Dear Sir, Your very affectionate friend and brother, Benjamin Moore." With the inception and failure of this measure began, con- tinued and ended the independent efforts of the Episcopal Church in Rhode Island to supply itself with the oversight of a Bishop ; and for nearly five years longer it, in common with our Churches in Massachusetts, Vermont and New Hampshire, remained in that feeble and uncertain condition, which must ever mark the infancy of our Church, while des- titute of Episcopal care and services. Meanwhile, the subject of our memoir continued to pur- sue his toilful and self-sacrificing way ; a way little diversi- fied with incidents, other than those presented in the daily and weekly round of duties in his school and in his parish, until the period of his projected return to Connecticut. His course of life was, in some respects, different from what it had been in his former parishes, especially in the interest and part, which he was called to take in the annual Conven- tions of Rhode Island ; — but it was equally laborious and more exhausting. Voluntarily assuming an extra amount of duty on the Lord's-day ; and contriving to support and edu- cate a growing family on an inadequate salary by adding the labors of a school to those of a parish ; he was necessarily LIFE OF BISHOP GRISWOLD. 129 much confined, and, beyond his parish aiid the Convention, but Httle ^nown. While, as we have seen, the multiplica- tion of his cares and his almost constant confinement to sedentary habits under intense application of mind, were secretly and slowly wearing down the strength of even his uncommonly vigorous constitution. His hours, indeed, could not well be more completely engrossed than they had been in Connecticut ; but it is plain that the manner, in which they were spent, was less favorable to firm health. The character of society around him, and the class of minds over which his influence was exerted, were consider- ably changed. There was in Bristol more of that artificial life which accompanies wealth and education, than there had been in Litchfield county. But, amidst it all he continued the same humble, laborious and world-renouncing man; while, the character of his own mind, rising with the exi- gences that tasked it, was found as adequate to the work of influencing and moulding the elements about him, as when he moved in the simplest circles of the most rural hfe. Al- though he never was a man, who arrested popular attention at once, and who, wherever he went, assumed forthwith the port ^of command, the attitude of a leader, yet he was a man, whose mind, in proportion as you came close to it, and pressed your demands on its powers, exhibited those powers in their richest variety, and in their true extent. He was a man, whose influence always grew with the contin- uance of his citizenship in any particular place. If he did not strike at once, he struck surely ; and what he gained in influence he never lost. The more nearly thinldng men in- spected him, the more highly they respected him. His hu- mility kept him voluntarily low ; but, if you attempted to handle him roughly, or to press him down, you must be much of a man indeed not to find him rising above you. He would willingly be the servant of all ; but if you at- tempted to ti'eat him as a servant, he was quite likely to prove your master. And yet, he never asserted and shewed his superiority by imitating rudeness and insolence, or by retaliating a wrong. On the contrary, both under favorable 130 MEMOIR OF THE and under unfarorable pressure, his superiority was seen in this ; that, when you came near him, with friendly intent, you found yourself in contact with great goodness and with decided strength ; while, if you apprqached with unfriendly purpose, you found him your superior for the yeiy reason that high powers, penetrated with real goedness, always shew to the bestadVantage when you treat them most rough- ly. If you i attempt to press such a man down, and then look for him below you, you are sure to find him above. The cheerM humility, the voluntary lowliness of Mr. Griswold was through life favorable to true growth and permanency of influence. If it kept him low and much out of sight, it kept him so much nearer the people, the great mass of Hfe and strength in every country. He did his work in the depths, not cm the surface of society. He was a diamond in the mine, ready to shine whenever brought out ; and cut, most provi- dentially and most fitly, for the occasion which was so soon to draw him forth to view. To this occasion he alludes in the last extract, which I have given firom his auto-biography. When he accepted the call to Litchfield, our Churches in the four States of Massachusetts, Rliode Island, New Hampshire and Vermont, were on the very eve of that Convention, which elected him Bishop of the Eastern Diocese. The preparatory mea- sures, which led to that Convention, had all been matured before he received the call to- Litchfield ; and in those mea- sures, so far as the concurrent action of the Rhode Island Convention was required, he had, as we shall see, borne his full share. And yet, so utterly without thought was he of becoming himself a candidate for the Bishopric about to be created, that he was on the very point of removal irom the limits of the Diocese, which was to be formed ; and was prevented frori carrying his purpose into eflfect by no- thing but an occurrence the most purely providential in its character. It is needless to «ay that, if he had not thus beeni withheld from returning to Connecticut, a man so utterly un- known as -he was to the Churches in Massachusetts and New Hampshire would never have been thought of for the office LIFE OF BISHOP GRISWOLD. 131 to be filled. In view of these circumstances we are ptepared to appreciate the perfect sincerity with which he penned the sentence, when, speaking of his expected remoTal to Litch- field, he say? : " I was diverted froin my purpose by an oc- currence, to me totally unexpected, and in my view exceed- ingly providential." The measures which led to the organization of the East- ern Diocese and its result deserve a separate and particular notice. It is enough to say here, that the Convention, in which the organization was perfected, assembled in the city of Boston, on the 29th day of May, ,1810 ; that Mr. Gris- wold was elected Bishop on the 31st of that month ; and that his consecration took place in the city of New York just one year fi:om the assembUng of the Convention, — i. e. ; on the 29th day of May, 1811, a few weeks after his en- trance on the 46th year of his age. 132 MEMOIR OF THE ACCOUNT OF THE ORGANIZATION OF THE EASTERN DIOCESE, AND OF THE ELECTION AND CONSECRATION OF BISHOP GRISWOLD. In proceeding, now, to detail the facts, which lie at the origin of the Eastern Diocese, and which led to the conse- cration of Bishop Griswold, the best preface, which I can give, will be found in the brief and simple narrative, which he has himself furnished in his auto-biography. Having recorded the failure of the effort in Rhode Island, to place those Churches underthe care of Bishop Moore, he proceeds ; " After that, nothing respecting this business was done till the proposal which was made for a union of the Eastern States in one Diocese. This was first mentioned to me by the Rev. Wm. Montague, whom for the first time I then saw. But, as I had already determined to return to Con- necticut, I thought it not proper that I should take any part in the business ; and I have often wondered since that I did not then feel more interest in it, and make more inquiry about what was done and doing respecting it. At that time, I was still relying too much on my own wisdom, and occu- pied with what seemed to me the best course for my future hfe. Notice was sent me of the proposed Convention of the four States, to be held in Boston for the purpose of electing a Bishop. But, considering that I should not belong to the new Diocese, I thought it was not my duty to take any part in the choice of its Bishop. And it so happened that my appointment to visit Litchfield and make preparations for my removal, was at the same time with the meeting of the pro- posed Convention. The Rev. Mr. Ward, then officiating in Newport, vrho was a native of Litchfield and wished to visit his friends there, had agreed to accompany me. But, a day or two before we were to commence our journey, he sent me word that he had been taken ill, and requested me to postpone it till the following week. I was not a little dis- appointed ; still, I consented to his request. LIFE OF. BISHOP GKISWOLD. 133 " While I was thinking of this disappointment, it sudden- ly occurred to me, that, as my school had been dismissed, and I was therefore not particularly engaged, it would be pleasant to attend the Convention and become acquainted with the clergy, who were then almost all strangers to me. On my way to Boston, my mind became suddenly and deep- ly impressed with the importance to the Church of the busi- ness, on which we were about to meet ; and most earnestly did I pray that the Lord would mercifully direct us in what we should do. In Boston, I called on the Rev. Mr. Bron- son, (the clerical delegate from Vermont,) who was a native of Connecticut, and with whom I was acquaiijted, and in- formed him that I had for some time been of the opinion that the Rev. Mr. Hobart of New York, could they obtain him, was, of all the clergy of my acquaintance, the best qualified to be their Bishop. It had not then occurred to me that he might be expecting an election in his own state. Mr. Bronson replied, that he had written to Mr. Hobart on the subject, and (if I remember aright) read me the answer, which he had received, declining to be a candidate for the office in the Eastern Diocese. " What the election was, is well known. To the gentle- men, who communicated to me the result, I repUed that I was ready then to give an answer ; and should not hesitate to decline the acceptance of an office for which I deemed myself unqualified. And if I ever, uttered a word of truth I uttered it then. One of the first thoughts that entered my mind, and that caused me no little anxiety, was, that the Lord, in displeasure, had suffered such an election. I was, however, earnestly requested to delay my answer, and to give the subject the most serious consideration : a request to which I assented. " The subject was, of course, very seriously considered. One of the first points, on which I came to a determination, was, that in case even one clergyman in any of the four States should be found opposed to my acceptance of the office, I would not accept. The Rev. Mr. Fisher of Salem, did not attend the Convention, and the Rev. Mr. Bowers of 134 MEMOIR OF THE Marblehead, voted, I was told, for another person. I visited these two brethren and frankly stated to them my views ; and they both expressed to me their wish that I would ac- cept. I then determined to consult Bishop Jarvis and those of the clergy of Connecticut with whom I was acquainted; and accordingly made a journey through that State for the purpose. Without seeming to doubt or hesitate, they all advised my acceptance. Some further measures which I took to satisfy my mindj and the resolutions, which I made on the occasion, need not be .mentioned. It is enough to add, that the election was in May ; and that, in the follow- ing September, not without diffidence and fears, I signified to the adjourned Convention my acceptance. Whether I did wisely, and was actuated by right views, the God of heaven knoweth.- May He compassionate my frailty and forgive my sins. ' . ' " My consecration took place in New York, in May, 1811." Thus far speaks the auto-biography in -its account of this very interesting portion of the life of Bishop Griswold. It concurs with other documents in my possession in shewing that if ever the "Nolo Episcopari" came with truth from the heart through the lips of any man, it was from Mr. Gris- wold on receiving the announcement of the Convention, which called him to the Episcopate, We must, now, how- ever, go back and trace the inception and progress of the movement, which resulted in his election. The effort, at which we have looked in Rhode Island in 1806, to place :the Church in that State under the care of Bi- shop Moore, had its origin in the causes, which led to the formation of the Eastern Diocese. These causes were two : 1. The peculiar need 'of a Bishop to watch over the infpicy of a Church Episcopally constituted ; 2. The weakness of our Church in the Eastern States, rendering each State' sepa- rately inadequate to the maintenance of a Bishop. 1. It results from the very genius of our institutions that even the infancy of our Church in any region should feel the need of a Bishop. I do not mean that presbyters alone LIFE OF BISHOP GEISWOLD. 135 caijnot faithfully preach the Gospel ; or, that If they alone faithfully preach it, the people will not hear, iDelieve and be saved. ' But I mecin, that there are general as well as local interests to be cared for in securing prosperity to a' spreading community of Christians. There are unity to be preserved ; union and harmony to be promoted ; and measures of broad and comprehensive utility to be conceived and exe- cuted. These things need government -a recognized au- thority, to which respect may be paid, and a spring of in- fluence, in which confidence may be reposed. In these things, and under our institutions, presbyters are not accus- tomed to act. The deeply rooted principle of parity among them is apt to keep them isolated while without a Bishop ; so that the life and prosperity of the parts do not circulate and become the Hfe and prosperity of the whole. To this end they need an authorized leader, a mind that is qualified and that is expected to atZvise and to devise meaisures for the common weal ; a head to their body, that its heart may beat intelligently as well as strongly ; and that there may be con- sistency, and order, foresight and efficiency in its movements towards the great ends of outward growth and of spiritual prosperity. 2. But in the Eastern States, there was a peculiar weak- ness in our Church, rendering it extremely difficult either to procure or to maintain Bishops in the Dioceses severally. This weakness arbse from the fact that the genius of New England people and of New England institutions was of all others most inimical to the introduction and growth of Epis- copacy. When Patrick Henry hurled the hot thunderbolts of his eloquence against the tithe- gathering clergy of the British province of Virginia, till they instinctively rose and fled in terror from his presence, we may easily conceive that the auguries of popularity to our Church in that quarter were indeed bodingly dark. But darker yet were they on the shores of New England, where the whole spirit of the people was a more constant as well as a more terrific orator against our Church than even the Virginian Demosthenes ; and where, for long years, every step, which she took, left the track of 136 MEMOIR OF THE a hunted thing ! After the War of the Revolution, indeed,, which resulted in the establishment of free institutions, in- cluding the toleration of all forms of religious worship, no- thing could be done openly against our Church in the East- ern States. It 'continued therefore to live without public molestation. Still the breath of popular sentiment set so strongly against it, that its continuance was ahnost as preca- rious as that of a newly transplanted tree amidst the sweep- ings of the whirlwind ! In Massachusetts the early strength, of our Church was greatest both in numbers and in wealth. Here, therefore, as early as May, 1796, a Bishop was elected in the person of fhe.Rev. Dr. Bass of Newburyport. He was not consecra- ted, however, till the year following, May 4th, 1797 ; and dying in September, 1803, was, but for little more than six years, permitted to give his counsels and his strength to the infant Diocese, over which he had been placed. In May, 1804, another effort to give a visible head to our Church in Massachusetts was made, which resulted in the election of Dr. Parker of Trinity Church, Boston. He was consecrated the following September ; — but dying in December of the same year, without ever having met his Convention, he left the Diocese to the discouragements, incident to such a sud- den disappointment of its hopes. Between the death of Bishop Bass and the election of Bi- shop Parker, there was an unofficial movement towards the Episcopate, of which, it is presumed, the public know no- thing, but which, had it been successful, would have pre- vented the subsequent formation of the Eastern Diocese ; inasmuch as the individual then in view lived for many years in the enjoyment of health and of well earned influence. I allude to the Hon. Dudley A. Tyng, the father of the Rev. Dr. Tyng of Philadelphia. It is from the latter that I have received the substance of the following account, the particu- lars of which will doubtless be deemed worthy of record. " The ancestors of Judge Tyng had from generation to generation been members of the Church of England ; in the communion of which he himself had been educated pre- LIFE OF BISHOP GRISWOLD. 137 vious to the period of our Revolution. His grandfather founded the Church in Newburyport ; — in the grave-yard of which five generations of the family he buried. When he entered Harvard College, in 1778, it was the single purpose of his heart to devote himself to the ministry of the Gospel in the Church of his fathers. But the non-intercourse, which war introduced between the two countries, made his visit to England for ordination impossible ; while the state of the family rendering immediate employment necessary, he turned his attention upon the study of law. Yet he never changed, so far as to abandon, the current of his earlier interests and stu- dies. Theology, in especial connexion with the Church of England, formed the basis of his favorite reading ; and the whole welfare of the Church, which, in these United States, had descended from that in which he was born, constituted one of the chief objects of his affection and care. When, therefore, the death of Bishop Bass in 1803, had deprived the Diocese of Massachusetts of its head. Dr. Dehon, then of Newport, Rhode Island, and afterwards Bishop in South CaroUna, waited on Judge Tyng, in the name and at the request of several of the clergy of Massachusetts and Rhode Island, with the earnest solicitation that he would consent to receive orders first as a deacon and then as a presbyter, that they might with as little delay as -possible elect him their Bishop in the place of that venerated man, of whom the Church had just been deprived, and to whom he had been most particularly attached. With a modesty characteristic of himself, however, he shrank from the proposal, and finally rejected it. Affairs, consequently, took another turn. Dr. Parker was elected and died ; and amidst the discourage- ments which ensued came up that shape of things, which eventuated in the organization of the Eastern Diocese, and in the consecration of Bishop Griswold. The incident just narrated is interesting, particularly as it shews, in the deep interest which Judge Tyng took in the welfare of our Church, the ground of that pecuhar intimacy and connexion which subsequently sprang up and was per- 138 MEMOIE OF THE petuated between himself and Bishop Griswold, and between their respective families. Seldom are two men found better fitted to win and secure each other's confidence than they. From the time of his election, Bishop Griswold became and continued a constant visiter, and fi-equent inmate at Judge Tyng's, whenever he visited Boston, and so long as his friend was spared to him." The depth of the discouragement, into which the Church in Massachusetts fell on the demise of Bishop Parker, ap- pears in the successive and abortive attempts, afterwards made to devise some way, in which the vacancy might again be filled. As early as the ensuing May, at the Massachusetts Con* vention of 1805, a vote was passed, recommending " proper measures for communicating with the^ States of 'Rhode Island and New Hampshire, on the subj.ect ot joining in one Dio- cese, and of making choice of a Bishop : — and the Standing Committee were ordered to correspond with the clergy of those states' on the subject of the proposition." Nothing however, — at least nothing effectual — was done in obedience to the order. At the the next Annual Convention in Massachusetts, May 1806, — " The President was requested, by vote, to write to the clergy of the several churches in the States aforesaid, on the subject of joining the Church in Massachu- setts in the choice of a Bishop to preside over these States in one Diocese.''^ This vote proved as fi:Tiitless as its predeces- sor. At the Conventicfn in Massachusetts, May 1807, "the Secretary was ordered to inform the severahchurches iri the State, that it was the wish of the Convention to take the sense of the several churches on the question of the necessity of electing a Bishop, or of putting themselves under a Bi- shop abeady elected ; and that their delegates be requested to come prepared accordingly." This order was even more inoperative than either of the former ones ; — for, before the Convention, which issued it, had adjourned, it died by the LIFE OF BISHOP GRISWOLD. I'SQ following vote; " that the question of the appointment of a Bishop subside."* Butj although thus unable again to bring the Church to action through the Convention, yet individuals among the clergy felt too strongly the pressure of necessity wholly to abandon effort, and in despondency wholly to give up the cause of the Church. The next year nothing was attempt- ed in the Convention ; but something in a different way, and with better effect, was done. At what particular date, it is now, impossible to determine, but probably between the Massachusetts Convention of May 1808, and the ensuing one of May 1809, not long before the latter, an informal meeting of some of the principal clergy of Massachusetts and Bhode Island was called for the twofold purpose of devising and recommending some plsm, by which they might secure Episcopal supervision ; and of concerting and adopting some measure for rendering available the landed property belong- ing to the Church in the several Eastern States. At this meeting, it appears by a written statement from one of its members, now in my possession, that the plan of the East- ern Diocese was' discussed and in good part matured; while to the same origin may doubtless be traced the meas- ures, which finally Resulted in securing to our Church much of the lands, in New Hampshire and Vermont, which had been left, under Charter from Colonial Governors, to " The Society in England for the Propagation of the Gospel in foreign parts." The meeting, to which I have adverted, was held in Ded- ham, at the house of the Rev. Wm. Montague. This gentle- man, as he states in a letter of a subsequent date to Bishop Griswold, was induced to call that meeting by assurances from the Rev. Drs. Morss and Gardiner, and the Rev. Mr. Bowers, that- they would share with him the expense, by which it might be attended. He accordingly engaged in the enterprize ; spent much time ; rode more than a thousand • For the above votes and proceedings, sec, abstract from the journals of the Massachusetts Convention, printed by order of the Convention, from 1784, to 1808 ; and prefixed to the printed journals for subsequent years. . 140 MEMOIR OF THE miles'in visiting the clergy, from first to last ; gave thus a vigorous impulse to the movement ; set other men to think- ing ; and, what they concerted at the meeting, he brought before the ensuing Convention. This Convention was held in Boston, May 30th, 1809 ; and by adjournment in Cam- bridge the last week in August of the same year. Its pro- ceedings reveal the efficiency of the influence, which emana- ted from the meeting in Dedham. The following are its most important votffs : " That, in the opinion of this Convention, it is expedient to proceed, as soon as maybe, to the choice of a Bishop ; and that the Standing Committee be requested to invite the Churches in Rhode Island and New Hampshire to join in the choice." This vote was passed in Boston. At the adjourned meeting in Cambridge, the following were added : " That the Standing Committee be authorized to inquire into the situation of the Episcopal Church in Ver- mont, and invite them to join us in the choice and mainte- nance of a Bishop." , " That contributions be obtained to a fundfor the sup- port of a Bishop:" " That a Committee be chosen to apply for an act of In- corporation for ' The Trustees of donations to the Protestant &)iscopal Church:' and, " That another Committee be appointed to inquire into the situation of any lands heretofore given to any Churches, (parishes,) in Massachusetts."* These votes all took effect. A subscription to the fund for the support of a Bishop w:as soon opened-. The Incor- poration of the Trustees of donations followed. The condi- tion of the Church lands, not only in Massachusetts, but also in the three other States, was investigated. And the plan for the organization of the Eastern Diocese was at once carried into execution. One week after the May session i. e., June 7th, 1809, the Convention in Rhode Island re- ceived and acted on the letter from the Standing Committee * See abstract from the Journal of Massachusetts Convention for 1809. LIFE OF BISHOP GEISWOLD. 141 of Massachusetts, inviting co-operation in the choice of a Bishop for the Diocese about to be formed. And a similar communication was in due course of time receiyed and acted on by the Convention in New Hampshire, and by the Churches in Vermont ; though to their early records I have not been able to obtain access. Whether Mr. Griswold was present pi the meeting in Ded- ham. which really originated all this movement, I am not informed ; but he was a member of the Convention in Rhode Island, which received and acted on the communication from the Standing Committee in Massachusetts, and took further and effective part in the measures, which resulted in the final and complete organization of the Eastern Diocese, as the following documents shew. My object, however, in giving these documents is, to exhibit the part, which the Churches in the other States took, in concurrence with that in Massachusetts, in giving effect to the plan, which had been matured. They are from ther Journals of the Rhode Island Convention ; but, the Convention in New Hampshire and the Church in Vermont took substantially the same steps, which are here indicated. From the Manuscript Journal, then, of the Rhode Island Convention, holden in Newport, June 7th, 1809, it appears that a letter was " read from the Convention of Massachusetts on the subject of electing a Bishop, whose jurisdiction should embrace the States of Massachusetts, Rhode Island and New Hampsl^ire. After some , debate, it was resolved that the further consideration of the business be postponed ; and that a Committee of correspondence be appointed, with power to call a Special Convention to hear the result." This Committee, as their report shews, consisted of " the Rev. Alexander V. Griswold, chairman, the Rev. Theodore Dehon, and the Rev. Nathan B. Crocker." A measure, preparatory to the Special Convention which this Committee were empowered to call, was rendered necessary by the disaffection, which, in the then unsettled and uncertain state of things, had seized on the ancient " Narraganset Church," as the principal parish on the west side of the Bay was originally termed. This was one of the 142 MEMOIR OF THE oldest parishes of our Church in New England ; and being of importance in other respects, it was highly desirable to bring it into cordial co-operation with the rest in the pro- posed measure. Its disaffection appears to have been of a general character, and not to have groww out Of thie move- ment in favor of the Eastern Diocese. The following letter, addressed to that parish by Mr. Griswold, as chairman of the Committee of Correspondence, reveals all that it is mecessa^ to know of the case ; while it is an interesting document as exhibiting the judicious and peace-making mind of its au- thor. "Bristol, July 2d, 1809. " Gentlemen, — The enclo^d copies of two" resolutions, passed in our State Convention, held at Newport on the 7th of June last, will shew you the reason and object of this ad- dress. ^' " It is with very great anxiety and regret that we find your Church not rg)resented in our Conventionsybr several years: and the coldness, dis-union and want of confidence, which* seem to exist, must be painful to every friend of rehgion, es- pecially to all who have any desire for the good' and pros- perity of our Church. Our blessed Rede^ner has solemnly forewarned us of the fatal effects of division ; and we need not tell you how repugnant it is to the nature and object of his Gospel. It is certainly our duty and yours to investigate the cause of this evil, and without delay to take every proper and prudent measure for its removal. " Actuated, therefore, nOt less by personal feeling than by public duty, we do, beloved brethren, with much earnest- ness, sincerity and affection, address you on this very in- teresting subject, and inquire of you ' whether there exists any cause, or causes, of this unhappy disunion, which it is in the power of this Convention to obviate,' and remove. And we do most cordially ' assure you of the interest which the Convention feel for St. Paul's Church, and our earnest desire that your Church should be represented in our future Conventions.' " A restoration of confidence and union among us is, at all LIFE OF BISHOP GRISWOLD. 143 times, and in its own nature, most devoutly to be desired ; while, at present, there are special reasons, which strongly call for our miited exertions. At our last Convention we re- ceived a cqfamunication from the Convention in Massachu- setts, inviting the Churches in Rhode Island and New Hamp- shire to unite with them in the choice of a Bishop. They request an answer to their proposals, previous to their seiiH- annual (adjourned ?) Convention on the last oi August. Our Convention, in acting upon this important question, did nothing more than to appoint our clergy in this State a Com- mittee to inquire into "the subject, and get from the Committee in Massachusetts every possible information respecting the principles and mode of the proposed election, and report to a Special Convention of our State, which it is proposed to call some time in August. "The time and place of this Special Convention are yet undetermined. In a question on which we are so much and so equally interested, we ^vish much, brethren, for your counsel and co-operation. If any, one of our churches is more than others concerned in the subject, it is yours. We hope, therefore, and we trust, that, from a sense both of in- terest and of duty, you will frankly communicate your senti- ments and wishes on this subject, and cordially unite with us in every measure for the general good of the Church ; and accept of bur assurances that nothing is intended or desired repugnant to the particular interest of your Society. On the contrary, we are decidedly of opinion that nothing, under God, could more certainly tend to the good of your Church, temporal and spiritual, than a union with the other churches in this State, especially in this business, of electing a Bishop. " As a step towards so desirable an object, and to promote harmony and good understanding among us, we propose, should it meet with your approbation, to hold the Special Convention, above mentioned, in North Kingston, at such time, within a few weeks to come, as shall be most agreea- ble to your parish. Be pleased, gentlemen, as soon as con- venient, to inform us whether the proposal meets with your 144 MEMOIR OF THE- approbation, and at what time you wish the Convention to meet." The foregoing letter, being a copy of the original, is with- out name. But it is in Mr. Griswold's haad--5ffriting and was evidently addressed by him, as chairman of the Com- mittee of Correspondence, to the Vestry of St. Paul's Church, North Kingston. Its .appeal, we may conclude, was at least partially successful ; inasmuch as the proposed Special Con- vention was held in that Church on the 23d of' the ensuing August. Thus, even in its inception, the Eastern Diocese began to effect, what it afterwards fally secured, the desira- ble end of preventing the revived growth, and of working the final extinction of a feeling in favor of independency, which, in earlier periods, had seemed to threaten an ecclesi- astical organization in the Eastern States, having no con- nexion with the main body of our Episcopal Church in the other parts of the Union. But, to proceed : The Rhode Island Special Convention met, as was stated, at North Kingston, August 23d, 1809 ; and the Committee previously appointed presented, doubtless through its chair- man, the following report; " The committeg, to whom was referred, at the last Con- vention, the letter from the Church in Massachusetts, inviting the Churches in this State to unite with them in the choice of a Bishop, beg leave to report:' ' " That they are unanimously of opinion, first, that it is expedient and very desirable that the Church, in this State, should have the superintending care and official service of a Bishop : and second, that the proposal from the Church in Massachusetts opens the best prospect of obtaining these benefits in the most satisfactory' manner ; and, as far as the Committee have been able to investigate the subject, it ap- pears to have arisen from cin impartial and disinterested re- spect to the general good of the Church. " The Committee do, therefore, recommend that this Con- vention should accede to the proposal from the Convention of Massachusetts ; and that the churches in this State be LIFE OF BISHOP GEISWOLD. 145 severally requested to appoint delegates to represent them in the united Convention, whenever it shall be held. All which is respectfully submitted. Alexander V. Griswold, ') Theodore Behon, V Committee." JVathan B. Crocker, j The above report having been read, it was by the Con- vention "voted; that the report of the Committee be re- ceived and adopted." And thus, so far as Rhode Island was concerned, the way was opened for the proposed united Convention, and for the election of a Bishop of the Eastern Diocese. How little did the author of the foregoing letter and report dream that he was himself to be Bishop of the new Diocese, which he was thus helping to organize ! This Special Convention was evidently held just after that almost fatal iUnesg, into which he fell during his exhausting journey in " the warm weather" of 1809, while visiting his family re- lations. For, such warm weather, journey and consequent sickness could hardly have happened (^ter a Convention, which lay but a week from opening autumn. Doubtless, therefore, he was thus engaged in the preparatory and actual business of this ecclesiastical meeting, while, as yet, he was "but slowly regaining" his health, and when' he had been thinking more of going to heaven" than of opening his own way into a Bishopric ! His biographer need not hesitate to say that, had the idea of his becoming a candidate for the contemplated office, even in its dimmest outlines, entered his mind, he would sooner have hidden amid the fastnesses of Montaup than have acted as chairman of the Committee of Correspondence to this preparatory Convention. But, the Convention was held ; and, with similar prepara- tory action on the part of the Convention in New Hampshire, the way for final action was open. The adjourned Conven- tion of Massachusetts was held at Cambridge the last of August. The action of Rhode Island and New Hampshire being found favorable, the bounds of the proposed union were then thrown round Vermont also ; and thus, nothing remained but to fix the time and place, and to make the 146 MEMOIR OF THE necessaiy arrangements, for Hie meeting of the first otnited Convention of the Churches in the three Dioceses of Massa- chusetts, Rhode Island and New Hanrpshire, and of the Church in Vermont, where, as yet no Diocese appears to have been organized.* And this remainder of preparatory * Since writing the atove, I am able to add the foUpSfing account of the action of the Church in Vermont. The fects have been received from the Rev. Mr. Bronson, the clerical delegate from the Church in that State, now resident in Ohio; and they shew that, although, as a Diocese, it had never been receiyed into union with the GeneralConvention, yet it was so far or- ganized as to have a Standing Committee, and to be capable t>f corporate action. By reference to the .Journals of the General Convention,'^p. 198, 199,204, ed. Bioren, 1817) it appears that, in 1801, and with a view most- ly to the care of the Church lands in those parts, a special dispensation was granted, by which a sort of Diocese Was formed, consisting of the Churches of Western New Hampshire, and Eastern Vermont, or those lying on each side of the Connecticut river, with power to hold Conventions, and to put itself under the jurisdiction of some neighboring Bishop. But this anomalous Diocese appears never to have been represented in the General Convention. Indeed, by a reference to the Journals, (p. 248, 251, 259, ed. Bioten,"1817,) it is rendered probable that in 1808, this anomaly was dissolved, and, that the parishes in Western Nevv Hampshire became thenceforth associated with those in the other parts of that State. Still, at the time, bf which I am writing, the Church in Vermont alone remained so far organized as to keep up its Convention, have a Standing Committee, and continue capable of corporate action through thatjpommittee. The follow- ing are Mr. Bronson's facts : ''-•' After the adjourned Convention of Massachusetts in Cambridge, August 1809, the Secretary for several months delayed actioa.under the resolution, which directed an inquiry into the situation of the Church in Vermont, ^t lengtli, however, in the ensuing November, the Rev. Mr. Montague in- quired of him whether he had yet written to the parishes in Western New Hampshire, and in Vermont. His reply was, that he knew of no Episco' palians in those parts to whom he could address his communication. Upon consultation with Judge Tyng, therefore, Mr. Montague took his'carriage, rode up to Claremont, New Hampshire ; was joined there by the Rev. Mr Barber; and thence passed the Green mountains to Manchester; at wliich place resided two of the lay-members of the Standing Committee of Vermont. These with Mr. Bronson, constituted a majority of that body; andtothesei on being called together, Mr. Montague opened the proposed measure of an Eastern Diocese. The Committee were in consultation for several days ; as the result of .which, they gave that measure their hearty concurrence. By Mr. Montague, they addressed a letter to Judge Tyng, signifying their wish to unite in the contemplated Diocese. The consequence of this move- ment was, that they soon received an official invitation from the Secretary LIFE OF BISHOP GEISWOLD. 147 work was probably voluntarily taken upon itself by the Stand- ing Committee of the Massachusetts Convention. The time and place for the meeting of this united Coftven- tion were the 29th day of May, 1810, in the city of Boston ; the usual time and place for the annual meeting of the Massachusetts Convention. This latter body, as it appears from its Journals, met as usual, and transacted its customary business, especially by appointing delegates to the next General Convention. But, upon the opening of the Con- vention from the four States, the clerical and lay-delegates from Massachusetts appeared and took their seats, like those from tlje other States, simply as joint members of the united body. This body was composed of the following delegates, clerical and lay, from their respective States, viz : MASSACHUSETTS. Clergy. Laity. Rev. John S. J. Gardiner, David Green, James Bowers, Joseph Foster, Wm. Montague, Joseph Head, James Morss, Shubael Bell, Asa Eaton, , Robt. Fennelly, Samuel Sewall. William Winthrop, Andrew Craigie, Samuel P. P. Fay, Edward Rand, Samuel A. Otis, Albert Smith, ' Dr. Winslow, Reuben Curtis, Jared Bradley, David Wainwright, George Johonnott. of the Massachusetts Convention to send delegates to the body, which was to assemble in Boston for tlie organization of the Eastern Diocese. They accepted the invitation, and sent their delegates accordingly ; and it was supposed, at the time, that, to the decided influence and active exertions of Mr. Chipman, one of the lay-members of tlieir delegation, much of the success, which attended the action of the organizing Convention, was to be attributed. 148 MEMOIR OF THE RHODE ISLAND. Clergy. Laity. Rev. Alexander V. Griswold, Thomas L. Halsey, " Nathan B. Crocker. Benj. Gardineri NEW HAMPSHIRE. Clergy. Laity. Rev, Daniel Barber. Erastiis Torrey, George Hubbard. VERMONT. Clergy. Laity. Rev. Abraham Bronson. . Daniel Chipman, John Whitlock, ,Dr. Samuel Qut|erl Upon the opening of the session, the Convention was or- ganized by the election of the Rev. John S. J. Gardiner as President; and of the Rev. Asa Eaton as Secretary ; and its principal action, on the first day of its session, consisted in the appointment of a committee " for the purpose of drafting a constitution for the four confederate States." This com- mittee consisted of eight, and was composed of the follow- ing clerical and lay-members,- one of each order from each of the four States : The Rev. Asa Eaton, 1 -.r i. jj Shubael Bell, \ -^"s^^cAwse^fe. The Rev. Alexander V. Griswold, ? dt j r ; j Thomas L. Halsey, \ ^^' ^^^°'*'^- The Rev. Daniel Barber, J ,» r^ , . Erastus Torrey, ^ ^ J^ew Hampshire. The Rev. Abraham Bronson, ) yr, . ^ Daniel Lhipman, ) This organization, and incipient action of the Convention, however, had been preceded by some preparatory consulta- tion. Several of the delegates having arrived in Boston on LIFE OF BISHOP GEISWOLD. 149 the "previous Saturday, arrangements were made for an infor- mal meeting on Monday evening; the opening of the Con- vention being fixed for Tuesday morning. The accounts, which I have received from three of the surviving delegates, of these preparatory consultations, are somewhat conflicting; but so far as I am able to harmonize them, they substantiate the" following facts : As the Rev. Mr. Gardiner was rector of the principal parish in the fourJStates, and was withal distinguished as a ■gentleman and a scholar, it was very naturally supposed that he would feel inclined to become the candidate for the ex- pected Bishopric. The first object of the consultations on Monday, therefore, was to ascertain his feelings on this point. Upon being approached, however, he disclaimed any view towards the office, and declared that he would not accept it, if offered him. It was then suggested that Dr. Hobart of New York had been named to some of them. To this sug- gestion, Mr. Gardiner replied, that he would not consent to go out of the Diocese for a candidate ; but that some middle- aged man, from among themselves, must be selected, capa- ble of enduring the fatigues of travelling, and of patiently submitting to the hardships and mortifications incident to the oflSce in such an extended territory, and under such unpro- mising circumstances. The question accordingly came up ; where could such a man be found ? During the day, Mr. Chipman from Vermont, and Mr. Halsey from Rhode Island, had fixed their thoughts upon Mr. Griswold ; and now, at the meeting in the evening, the Rev. Mr. Crocker, as the only additional clerical delegate from his own State, directly proposed him, and gave him such a character as a laborious and faithful parish minister, and as a soundly learned divine, as at once satisfied Mr. Gardiner, and secured his approba- tion of such a selection. At the same time, the suggestion was peculiarly satisfactory to Mr. Bronson, the only clerical delegate from Vermont, who had for some years known Mr. Griswold in Connecticut ; was aware of his having been con- sidered by his brethren in his native State as one of their best 150 MEMOIR OF THE and ablest men ; and was, therefore, very desirous that the choice might fall upon him. Mr. Griswold himself was not present at this meeting, the result of -which was thus to fix upon him the choice of the most influential clerical delegate from Massachusetts, of the only clergyman from Rhode Island besides himself, and of the sole clerical representative from the Church in Vermont'; as well as of the two leading lay delegates from the last named States. Upon retiring from the meeting to' their quarters, Mr. Bronson and Mr. Crocker found the Rev. Mr. Barber, the only clerical delegate from the Church in New Hamp- shire ; and, on communicating to him the proposed nomina- tion, he at once exclaimed assent ; saying he had Joiown Mr. Griswold from a child, had visited him since he had been in the ministry, and considered him one of the best men on the' list of our clergy. With the governing influences from all the four States thus secured, his" nomination at the proper period dm:ing the session of the Convention, was rendered morally certain. Upon the opening of the Convention the ensuing morning, Mr. Gardiner preached the sermon ; in the course of which he protested against going beyond the Diocese for their can- didate, and urged the selection from among themselves of a man such as has already been described. The organizing process then went forward ; the Committee for drafting a constitution for the proposed Diocese was appointed, and then the Convention adjourned for final action on the ensu- ing Thursday. In the mean time, this Committee met, on the business re- ferred to it, at their room in the Exchange Building ; and after making a few» alterations in the form of a constitution which Mr. Bronson had drawn up before he left home, all the members retired, with the exception of Mr. Bronson and Mr. Griswold, who were requested to copy the form on which they had agreed, and to imbody it in their report to the Convention on the following day. When this labor had been peiformed, and as Mr. Bronson was about entering on LIFE OF BISHOP GEISWOLD. 151 general conversation, Mr. Griswold inquired of him ■whether the members of the' Convention had any particular candidate for the new Bishopric in view ? Mr. Bronson told him they had, and asked him whether he had heard of their selection ? Upon his answering, " No :" Mr. Bronson rejoined ; " then let me tell you ; ' thou art the man.' " Upon this announce- ment, he started into wild agitation. After a few moments, howeve;:, he collected himself, and observed; "Mr. Bron- son, you cannot be in earnest; You must all be sensible of my unfitness for the office. ' I have not the talents, nor the learning, nor the manner, which are requisite to give to that office, dignity and respectability. You must select some more suitable man." To this Mr. Bronson replied : " Sir, you must be the candidate, or we shall have no election;" and was proceeding to urge his acceptance, when Mr. Gris- wold suddenly requested him to drop the subject, and in a few moments retired from the room. In what state of mind he spent the remainder of the day, and the ensuing night may be easily conjectured. Upon the re-opening of the Convention, on Thursday, May 31st, the morning was spent in presenting and acting on the Report of the Committee, and in completing the organization of the Eastern Diocese. They- adopted the proposed Constitution; acceded to the Constitution and Canons of the General Convention ; and then passed the following votes. "Voted; that this Convention, — -being duly assembled, and the provisions and Canons of the Episcopal Church hav- ing been complied with in all respects, to authorize their proceeding to the election of a Bishop, — may proceed to that important work." " Voted, unanimously ; that this Convention proceed to the choice of a Bishop." " Voted ; to adjourn to 5 o'clock, P. M." In these proceedings, it is proper to remark, that the dele- gates from the four States had an equal voice, and secured to the Church in each State equal rights ; and that the Dio- cese, which they organized, was not considered by them, as 152 MEMOIR OF THE a confederation of distinct and independent Dioceses,, but as one proper Diocese, with a Convention from the Churches of the four several States. In one of the States, Vermont, no distinct and independent Diocese had been organized in union with the jGeneral Convention. It had a Standing Committee, indeed, but was without regular diocesan organi- zation. It therefore entered into the Eastern Diocese. in its elementary character. It is true, indeed, that the Conven- tion of the Eastern Diocese was constituted, at first, of dele- gaties appointed by the Conventions of the separate States. Still, there is abundant evidence that, at the outset, the Diocese itself was regarded, not as a confederation of inde- pendent Dioceses, but as one, original and proper Diocese. The theory of this body appears not' in its origin, to have been weU studied ; nor, indeed, was it ever very easily un- derstood ; while, by its subsequent action and self-dissolution, the somewhat perplexed and difficult question of its true character has become a matter of comparative unimportance. But, to proceed with the history of its first action : During the transactions of Thursday morning, there was visible a marked change in the appearance and manner, of Mr. Griswold. He took no part in the debates on the proposed Constitution : , he scarcely noticed what was going forward ; but seemed lost in a continual reverie. .The same thing was manifest upon meeting, pursuant to adjournment, at 5 o'clock in the afternoon, and during the silent process of balloting for the choice of a Bishop. When the result of this process was declared, and it appeared that by the suffrages of every member of the Convention, with a single clerical exception, he had been elected to the newly created office, he appeared completely overwhelmed by the power of his emotions. What these emotions were, we may judge from his own re- mark in the auto-biography. "One of the first thoughts, that entered my mind, was, — th^t the Lord, in displeasure, had suffered such an election." After a moment's pause, he rose in great agitation, and declined the honor, which had been conferred upon him. Promptly and impulsively, yet (in the sincerity of his heart as it then beat within him) ut- 3fe; LIFE OF BISHOP GRISWOLD. 153 terly, did he decline both the honor and the office in which it was offered. It was then proposed to adjourn, to give him time for consideration. But he replied ; he wanted no time : he 'Was ready to give his decision at the call of the moment. The Convention, however, did adjourn for three months ; and when his emotion had in a measure subsided, and his diffidence was in a degree overcome, he finally consfented to take the question of acceptance into consideration. He yielded as to an unseen hand, that was shaping both his own destiny and that of the Church over which he was called to preside. With the result of his consideration we have already been made acquainted. The Rev. Mr. Montague took him in his carriage on a visit to Connecticut ; where he was even urgently entreated to accept the office, to which he had been -elected: and the Convention of that Diocese being about that time in session, it wcis moved, and unani- mously voted, in convocation of the clergy,, that a congratu- latory letter be addressed to him ; and that Bishop Jarvis be requested, in behalf of the convocation, to write and forward said letter to him. This letter, indeed, has not -been found among his papers ; but it was doubtless sent and received ; inasmuch as it- appears from a private letter of one of the membefs of the convocation, dated June 11th, 1810, that Bishop Jarvis acceded to the request of that body to act in its behalf; Meanwhile, in the new Diocese itself the strongest sense of the importance of his acceptance was felt, on the part of some at least of the electing members, mingled with the deepest fears of his final refusal. What the state of feeling, now alluded to, was, will be seen from the following letters addressed to him after his election : " Rockingham, Vt., June Slh, 1810. " Rev. and dear Sir, — As we had not all the opportunity that could have beefl wished, when together in Boston, I improve a few hours of leisure on my way home, to write you more fully on the important business, which has so lately occupied our attention. 154 MEMOIR OF THE "You doubtless remember with what perseveijng ewnest- ness, and with what cogent^ invincible arguments myself as w6ll as many others urged the proposed election. And I trust you observed, or was informed, that those members of the Convention, who were at first in opposition, (one clerical member excepted) finally acknowledged themselves con- vinced, and were pleased that the election: took place. As to the member, who opposed to the last, you must have per? ceived that his conduct was generally condemned. * * * * His opposition therefore should rather be an inducement to go forward in the ^course we have taken. If you fully ap- prehend the weight of the arguments used by the delegation from this quarter, and consider the situation of the Diocese generally, you will see that we can not take any other course without hazarding the most fatal consequences. In our present condition, I fear, we are rapidly falling to ruin. Our spiritual concerns are in a mOst deplorable" state. The cold, moralizing discourses, so fashionable in many of our churches, will justly bring inevitable destruction upon them, unless the spirit of piety be revived by true evangelical preaching. The real doctrines of the cross must be propagated and dif- fused among us, or we are ruined. A way to the attainment of this object appears now to be opened ; a .way, in which we can have, at least occasionally, such preaching, antd such doctrines fi:om authority ; such authority as the laity will al- ways respect, and as none of the clergy will presume to gainsay. You may, perhaps, fear that this wiU not be the case in the town. of Boston.' But, after a free and unreserved conversation with the members, clerical and lay, from Boston and Cambridge, I am convinced that you have their hearty approbation ; and that the people generally will be fond of receiving the doctrines of the Gospel, any thing in their present situation tp the contreiry notwithstanding. Thus, instead of having great difficulties and obstacles to encounter, it appears to me that you will enter upon your office under favorable auspices and prospects. The clergy, as a body, will feel thfemselves pledged to use their exertions to make your situation agreeable ; and a very decided majority of LIFE OF BISHOP GRISWOLD. 155 Jthem, I am confident, indeed all who have any regard for the spiritual interests of the Church, will certainly do it with sincere earnestness and alacrity. " With regard to the temporalities attached to the office, though they are not yet such as could be wished, yet I do not, can not, imagine that you will, on that account, hesitate a moment. Something already is, and something more can be, raised ; and the several churches can do something an- nually till the funds become sufficient. I shall use my en- deavors for this purpose in Vermont till our lands become productive. After all, however, I can easily conceive that the office, in our present situation, is far from desirable. But I entreat you to consider what will be our condition, if you should refuse it. There is not another man in the Diocese, who could unite the votes of a majority of the clergy. And as to going out of the Diocese, some of them have declared that to that they Tiever would consent. I should not myself like to do it, unless we could get Dr. Hobart ; who, as I told you, has, declared to me that he would not accept ; whOe, at the same time, I find he would not be agreeable to the Boston clergy. So that the matter has at length come to a point : either you must forego personal feehngs and considera- tions and accept the office ; or it must remain vacant, and the union, so happily and harmoniously formed, of these States, must be dissolved, and the Church left to sink , into ^ speedy oblivion. I can hardly conceive of any other alterna- tive. And if you do not view the matter in this hght, I must think it is because you did not take the same liberty with myself of sounding the feelings of the members of the Con- vention. " On the whole, I have made such high calculations upon the advantages that might be expected from this union, and upon the privilege of having a diocesan to visit the churches, perform appropriate Episcopal offices, and exercise discipline among us, that, if we are now disappointed, I shall be al- most entirely discouraged, and shall see no way, except by some unexpected interposition of Providence, in which our 156 MEMOIR OF THE sinking cause can be revived and liade to flourish. Do, I entreat yoti, before you give us a negative answer, take this matter into your serious consideration. Consider the necessi- ties of the Church, and the fatal consequences of a refusal : view the situation pf the Diocese at large : w'eigh the matter with care and deliberation : let the good of the Church be your paramount consideration, instead of giving way to feel- ings of modesty, or to personal convenience : and I trust, through divine grace, you will see the propriety and import- ance of taking upon you the solemn office, Mniih is so providentially placed at your disposal. " Please; Sir, excuse the freedom, I have used in this letter. Freedom among clergymen, it appears to me, ought always to be used. At any rate, there was no other way to satisfy my" own feelings. I trust to the sincerity and purify of my motives, for an ample apology for thus intruding myself upon your notice. With sincere respect and estefem, I am, Rev.- Sir, yours, Abraham Bronson." The Rev. Mr. Griswold. The foregoing letter is interes^ng and important, admitting us probably to a more intimate view, than would otherwise, at this late day, be obtainable of the religious state of the Eastern Diocese at the time of its organization. The follow- ing briefer communication is also worthy of insertion. The writer addresses Mr. Griswold as though he were already Bishop. "Claremont, N. H., July 30, 1810. " Right Rev. Sir, — I am sensible it was my duty to have addressed you before this, on the subject of your election. " Permit me now to say, that, when I consider the import- ant and salutary consequences, that will necessarily follow in the train of your judicious administration, setting in order, and strengthening the things that are ready to die, I rejeice LIFE OF BISHOP GRISWOLD. 157 exceedingly, and am also led to conclude your election to be the call of God, as well as the fruit and effect of that Spirit, which heals all our infirmities. "If I am thus far correct, as I feel confident that I am, it follows, that you must not, and suffer me to say, you dare not, refuse the office and work, to which you are called. Can you produce one instance_, (in times of the severest per- secution, and when death was the most certain consequence of consecration) of a Bishop refu!sing to accept the office .'' " Thank God, we are not now called to resist unto blood. But we must fight with beasts now and then ; else, what would be our victory and our crown, our reward and our rejoicing? Think, dear Sir, whose cause you are engaged in, and in whose name and strength you go forth. Moses said : ' Who am I that I should go unto Pharaoh ?' But God called him, and he must needs obey ; for he.darednot, like Jonah, flee from the presence of the Lord. Out of weakness he was made strong ; yea, so strong, that he saved the Church and people of God from destruction. " It is, indeed, a mark of true wisdom not to run before we are sent. But, when lawfully called, and when, as at this time, necessity urges, we are to play the man for our country and for the Churches of our God. "Meroz was cursed, because they refused to come up to the help of the Lord against the mighty. Let me entreat you not to refuse to comply with the wishes of your brethren : and be assured that the respect due to your personal and official character shall ever be accorded by Your very humble servant and brother, Daniel Barber." Rt. Rev. Alexander V. Griswold, > Bishop elect. \ About the same time, Mr. Bronson addressed him a second letter, of which the following is the principal part : " Manchester, July 31, 1810. " Rev. and dear Sir, — It is with much reluctance that I again intrude. But I am urged by peculiar circumstances. 158 MEMOIR OF THE Our State Cohyention is to meet in about four weeks, and ■we expect it will be unusually full, on account of the busi- ness done at Boston. But we have not all the data that could be wished, to enable us to proceed ; nor can we ex- pect, previous to that time, to receive them, through the official channel. I am anxious to know the full result of our late proceedings, in order to give our Convention every possi- ble satisfaction, and that measures may be taken according- ly. If, then, you have come to any conclusion, or have even formed an opinion upon the subject, I would thank you to write me seasonably what the probability is with regard to your acceptance of the office. " I am aware that this request may seem rather imperti- nent. But, after full consideration I hope you will be con- vinced -that it is justified by circumstances, ****,* » * « « * ^ multiplicity of avocations will, I am afraid, prevent my being at Boston," (at' the adjourned Convention) " but my heart will be Avith you iii every measure for the good of the Church at large. Some of the members o4.the body are so palsied that it is to be doubted whether they can ever be restored to vigor and activity. • Yet the means must be used, and the event lefl to God. Peradventure He may restore the decayed places, and build up the walls of our Zion, so that we may yet be a name and a praise in the earth. ********** J must renew the expression of my anxiety that you should accept the office. Should you decline, it appears to me that the constitutional union, effected at Boston, will become void, and that we must entire- ly give up our hopes of having, for the present, a diocesan in these States. I hope that the sermon to be delivered at the adjourned Convention, will be composed with a view to the press. If I am there, I shall move to have it pubUshed. With sincere respect. Rev. Sir, I am yours, Abraham Bronson." The Rev. Ma. Griswolo, The sermon, here alluded to by Mr. B., was that which LIFE OF BISHOP GRISWOLD. 159 the Convention in Boston, on the eve of its adjournment, re- quested Mr. Griswold to preach at the opening of its Sep- tember session. It will be found at the close of this memoir. Whether, at the suggestion of Mr. Bronson, he wrote it with a view to publication, or not, it was everyway worthy -of that notice. Considering the circumstances under which it was delivered, the audience before which he spake, and the position; in which he himself' stood, k was every way as ap- propriate to the occasion as it was full of Gospel truth, just thought, and happy diction ; in very deed, a remarkable sermon ; bold, yet not assuming ; faithful, yet not indiscreet ; pointed, yet not offensive ; correct, and even beautiful in style, yet not ambitious of notice for its beauty ; in a word, the outspeaking of the future Bishop. One of the leading Congregational ministers of Boston was present at its delivery, and, not knowing either the preacher, or the relation in which he-stood to the Convention, inquired, at the close of the ser- vice, who he was ? Upon being told by .the gentleman, of whom he inquired, that it was Mr. Griswold, the Bishop elect of the' Eastern Diocese, he rejoined ; " Well, I can only say that if such is to be the general character of his preaching, he is worthy to be njade ./SrcA-bishop of Christendom." The time for his anxiously expected decision was now drawing near. As yet, it is believed, no one knew what that decision was to be. Hope amidst fear was the best feeling that reigned in the minds of those, who had elected him. But, on the 12th of September he addressed to the President of the electing Convention the following letter of acceptance. " Bristol, September 12th, 1810. " Rev. and dear Sir, — As the time approaches, when our Convention, according to adjournment, will again convene, it becomes necessary, agreeably to their resolution, that I should cominunicate to you my determination respecting their late election. It will be needless to trouble you with observations on my inability and disqualifications, which will too soon be known. The Convention were pleased to call 160 MEMOIR OF THE me to a very sacred and important office, -which requires the most serious consideration. At first, indeed, there appeared no room for doubt, or hesitation : there seemed to be every reason for declining an undertaking so arduous, so responsi- ble in its nature, and for the effectual discharge of which I possessed so few of the requisite qualifications. But farther reflection suggested that a call of this serious and important nature ought not to be declined, any more than complied with, without great and mature deliberation ; that we ought not to shrink from any duty, to which God is pleased to call us, from a conscious inability of doing ourselves honor, in case we can do good. Nor is the sacrifice of ease and other temporal comforts, necessary to the discharge of this or any other oflice in the Church, sufficient excuse to satisfy the minds of those, who have sincerely engaged in the Gospel ministry. Having consulted with many, whose judgment and advice I have every reason to respect, it seems to- be their general, if not unanimous voice that the present pecu- liar state of this Diocese requires my acceptance of the Epis- copate ; and however desir&ble may be a more able and worthy candidate, that it is, under existing circumstances, my indispensable duty to acquiesce. To Him, therefore, who is able to make the humblest instrument subservient to the purposes of His Providence, I yield the result. , Should the Convention, who have now had time for more mature deliberation, judge it still expedient, all circumstances con- sidered, to adhere to what they have done, I shall not refuse any compUance with their wishes. Trusting in God and in their candid indulgence and friendly counsels, I shall devote my future hours to the good and benefit of those Churches, whom the Lord shall please to put under my care ; humbly endeavoring by zeal and diUgence to supply what in other talents is deficient. With all due respect, I am your friend and brother, Alexander V. Geiswold." Rev. John S. J. Gardiner, > President of Convention. C LIFE OF BISHOP GRISWOLD. 161 This letter was communicated to the Convention on Tues- day, the 25th of September, to which time it stood adjourned : and upon being read, the Cony ention^ was dissolved. On Wednesday, the 26th of September, was holden the first of the Biennial Conventions of the Eastern Diocese under the new constitution; delegates thereto having been ap- pointed by the separate Conventions of the four- States. Before this Convention the Bishop elect preached the ser- mon, to which I have referred. The action of the Conven- tion consisted in electing its first Standing Committee ; in devising means for the more ample support of the Bishop ; in requestinga copy of Mr. Griswold's sermon for the press; in appointing a committee to present him to the house of Bishops for consecration ; in signing his testimonials ; and in sending him by a committee the following vote : "That the Convention acknowledge with pleasure his acceptance of the Episcopate ; and assure him that they will cordially and faithfully co-operate with him in the discharge of his duty." Such, in its leading particulars, was the process, by which the Eastern Diocese came into existence, and by which its first and only Bishop was elected. The organization has lived out its day and accom'plished its purpose. It was de- manded by the exigences of the times and of the Church. Over its inception and result an almost visible divine Provi- dence has presided. It forms an item by itself in our Ecclesi- astical History ; and, as such, it deserves whatever of notice may be given of it in the ensuing pages of this memoir. The life of Bishop Griswold is the history of a Diocese, which be- gan, continued and ended with the office, which he received, honored and closed. I have said, an almost visible divine Providence presided over the inception of this movement. Here was a man, fitted beyond all others, then known, for the exigences which called him forth : a man, severe, simple, and primitive in his manners ; and thus qualified to smooth down and ulti- mately wear out those Pilgrim prejudices against Episcopacy, which had been excited by its accidental European associa- 162 , MEMOIR OF THE tion with wealth, and pomp and power : a man, increasingly filled with the very marrow and richness of the Gospel ; and thus fitted to meet and counteract that system of cold and merely moral preaching, which had so extensively obtained possession of our New England Episcopal pulpi|>: a man, ^ound and orthodox in his creed, both as a Churchman and as a divine ; and thus prepared to encounter and resist that fatal heterodoxy, which had eaten so deeply into the heart of the ancient New England Theology, and was even be- ginning to infect the leading congregatiops of, our own Church: a man, patient, humble and self-denying; and, thus formed to overcome, or to endure, the hardships, trials and discouragements, incident to a ministry which had, for its field, four rugged States, and one bleak extensive Territory, and, for its " nursing care," a body of few, feeble and scat- tered parishes, some of which were already falling into ruins : a man, well learned, of vigorous mind, and of most blame- lessly holy life ; and thus endowed Avith the best means of commanding the respect, winning the confidence, and secur- ing the love of all into whose fellowship, he should be brought, and to whose attention it might be his duty to com- mend the Gospel of his divine Lord and Master : and yet, a man, unknown by character, Eind almost by name, to far the greater part of the Convention that elected him ; virtually an entire stranger to that body ; never before in Boston, save once when in his youth he accompanied his uncle on his way to Nova Scotia ; brought to the Convention by a most Providential incident, when on the very eve of his final re- moval from the Diocese ; and, though active in all those arrangements in Rhode Island, which looked towards this primary electing Convention in Boston, yet entering this latter body and finding himself at the very heart of its pro- ceedings — ^before even the idea of being made a Bishop had entered his mind, or flitted on its most rapid wing through his thoughts ; startled into wild agitation when it was first privately hinted to him ; overwhelmed with emotion when its reality burst publicly on his senses ; declining instantane- ously, and from his deepest heart, the office to which he was LIFE OF BISHOP GEISWOLD, 163 called ; and tending under the burthen of the thought, that God "in displeasure had suffered such an election to take place !" Was there in that humble minister a spark of feeling that could be termed either seZ/^seeking, or o^ce-seeking ? Was it man's voice, or God's voice, that sounded inhis ear, and bad him go forth of his seclusion ? Was it the Conven- tion, seeking for such a Bishop, as would, at first, have best pleased the majority of itg members; or, was it God, provi- ding such a Bishop as He foresaw would, through a long life, minister most invigoratingly and most revivingly to the necessities of his own feeble and languishiilg Church ? God's Providence is often but his secret care over His own cause, evinced in the unforeseen results of human agency ; and in this sense it was, perhaps, never more visible them in that event, the history of which I have thus far been tracing, and the final issue of which is now so near at hand. As it has been stated, a year intervened between Bishop Griswold's- election and his consecration. The General Convention, at which it was expected his consecration would take place, was held in New Haven, from the 21st to the 24th of May, 1811. But, as the number of Bishops, required by Canon for the consecration of a Bishop elect, were not in at- tendance, nothing could be done beyond the presentation and signing of his testimonials, and the appointment of the 29th day of the month in the city of New York as the time and place for the consummation of the work. It appears, from Bishop White's memoirs of the Church, (Phila., 1820, pp. 277, 278,) that the circumstances, which rendered this postponement necessary, had almost proved fatal to the continuance ofour American Episcopacy, without a renewed recourse to the mother Church in England. Bishop Moore of New York, had just been " visited by a paralytic stroke." Bishop Claggett of Maryland, just re- covering from " severe indisposition," attempted to reach New Haven, but was compelled to return. Bishop Madison of Virginia felt bound under " the solemnity of an oath" not to leave the duties of the college of which he was President. Bishop Provoost, the Senior of Bishop Moore in New York, 164 MEMOIR OF THE "had never performed any ecclesiastical duty" since the appointment of his assistant in 1801 ; and at this time, be- sides suffering slightly from the remains of a former paralysis, was but beginning to recover from an attack of "the jaundice." Bishops White and Jar\T[s, therefore, were the only occupants of the Episcopal Bench at the General Con- vention in New Haven. And even on the 29th of the month, at the adjournment in- New York, it was, to the last hour, uncertain whether the consecration could proceed. During their absence at New Haven, Bishop Provoost had sijffered a relapse, and it was feared he Would be unable to attend. When the appointed hour arrived, however, " he found himself strong enough to give his attendance ; and thus," says Bishop White, " the business was happily ac- complished." The consecration was held in the old Trinity Church. Upon the general circumstances, which attended this act, it is not necessary heije to offer any remarks. It was, — like all similar acts in our Church, at a time when services of this kind had not begun to attract crowds, — the simple, solemn, sublime rite of admitting to the highest degree in the minis- try one who had proved himself meet by blamelessness and fidelity in both of the degrees foregoing.. And yet, it was attended by two particular circumistances, which rendered it for a long time a subject of more than ordinary interest and conversation. To one of these circumstances Bishop Whiter alludes, in his "Memoirs of the Church," (p. 286— 288.) It consisted in the accidental omission, at the laying on of hand's, of the words, " In the name eii the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Ghost." This omission was by some considered as invalidating the consecration ; and it was some time be- fore what Bishop White well styles " a criticism so indefen- sible," an " argument" on the ground of which " there is not at this time a Christian Bishop in the world," fell dead under the weight of its own absurdity. As if any particular form of words had ever been enjoined in the Bible, or could be enjoined by the Church, as that, vdthout which the au- LIFE OF BISHOP GEISWOLD. 165 thority to execute this high ministry can not be conveyed ! So early, however, in our American Episcopal Church did unscriptural and uncathohc notions begin to prevail touching the peculiar spiritual powers supposed to be communicated and transmitted in this last of our three ordaining acts. For a fuller view of this case, the reader is referred to the " Me- moirs of the Church" as above cited. It is observable that the anxiety, which was then felt about this supposed invali- dating omission, had respect exclusively to the case of Bishop Hobart, who was consecrated at the same time, and who, it was expected, would in due season become the presiding, or Senior Bishop in our Church. Not a word was said of any apprehended effect of the omission on Bishop Griswold's orders, although the omission happened in his case as well as in that of Bishop Hobart. To the other of the two circumstances Bishop Griswold himself alludes in his auto-biography. It consisted simply in the imposition of hands on Dr. Hobart before Mr. Gris- wold. The allusion to it is contained in the foUdwing para- graph from the auto-biography, written after Bishop Griswold had become, by the demise of Bishop White, and the pre- vious demise of Bishop Hobart, the Senior oh our Episcopal bench, " My consecration was at New York in 1811. Why the ordination of a Bishop should be so called, more than that of a Deacon or Presbyter, I do not know. The Rev. Dr. Hobart was ordained at the same time. , Though he was several years younger than myself, was elected nearly a year after my election, and was chosen to be but an assistant Bishop, still he was registered as my Senior, and uniformly had the precedence. The purpose of this partiality was that he, rather than I, should, in the probable course of events, be the presiding Bishop. I would to God it might so have been. Through all my life, I have deUghted most in retire- ment. To appear in any public or conspicuous station, has ever been unpleasant ; and, as far as duty would admit, I have avoided it. It was with great reluctance that I after- wards consented to preside in the house of Bishops. It was 166 MEMOIR OF THE much 'more painful to me from my knowmg that such measures had been taken to prevent it. The whole business has been much blessed to me in the subduing of a proud heart. My first two ordinations were not a little blessed in the same way ; but much more this last. Indeed, whether or not it be considered as boasting, I can truly say: that, at no period of my life, have I thought that I had less honor in this world than to my merits was due. In particular cases, certainly, (which may no doubt be said of almost every per- son, who has occupied a conspicuous sta^on in society,) I have been unjustly censured, and my motives and 'conduct have not been always duly appreciated : but in more instances my faihngs have not been generally known. A retrospect of my life past presents a most humiliating view of sins and follies." It may be thought by some that the above paragraph, assigning the reason why Bishop Hobart was put in pre- cedency to Bishop Griswold, had better been omitted in the present memoir. In reply to such a suggestion, however, I have two reasons to assign for its insertion. In the first place ; its author was better acquainted with the reasons and circumstances of the movement than the present writer can pretend to be ; and it is not likely that such a man as he, writing at such a period of his life, would deliberately state what he did not know, or had not good reasons for beheving, to be correct. In the' second place ; he has inserted it as part of an auto-biographical sketch, apparently intended for publication ; and therefore the present writer could not feel at Uberty to withhold it. He considers its insertion as a simple compli- ance with the apparent will of its author; with such an ex- pression of his will, as he is not at liberty to disregard. It would not be proper, however, to let this occasion pass without inserting, in connexion with what Bishop Griswold has left on record, the reason, which Bishop White is un- derstood to have' assigned for laying the ordaining hand first on Dr. Hobart, instead of Mr. Griswold. It is this : that the former was a Doctor in Divinity at the time of the con- LIFE OF BISHOP GRISWOLD. 167 secralion, while the latter was not ; and that, in England, whence our Episcopacy is derived, precedency is accorded, not to seniority in age, but to ' priority of date in university degrees. That such was Bishop White's reason, there is, I believe, no doubt ; and that he considered it a sound one, no man, who is acquainted with the character of that honored servant of Christ, will, for a moment, hesitate to beheve. Still, whether it was, indeed, a sound reason ; whether the English University Law of precedency in this matter is, or was, of any authority in this country ; or whether, under the very marked and peculiar circumstances of the case, it was even proper to make that law an wnauthoritative rule for our American practice ; these are points, which admit of serious question. That Bishop White, with his famihar knowledge of English customs, and with his attachment to English pre- cedents, should have given the assigned reason undue weight, it is easy to conceive : but it is not easy to conceive that, under the very peculiar circumstances of the case, he would have given that reason a governing weight, had not his mind, unconsciously to itself without doubt, felt the pressure of a strong feeling, in action about him, and moving him in the direction which the service of consecration took. It is not probable that the point, which has now been brought into view, will ever in this country become invested with any serious importance. Nor shoyld I have noticed it at all, had I not felt bound to let the writer of the auto-bio- graphy before me speak in the language, which he apparently intended should meet the public eye ; and had I not felt, moreover, that to write the life of a public man is not merely to describe his person and his character, but also to show his connexion with the times, in which he lived, and with the cotemporaries among whom he acted. A public man lives in the impress which he leaves on his age, and in the impress which his age has made on himself. The past is not dead, but alive ; and the feehngs which live in it may be of use to the present, even though they come not to us in the laws and institutes, which hold distant ages together. The men of the past may become the monitors of the present ; and, 168 MEMOIR OF THE what is more, the good men of the past may be appreciated by the present more justly perhaps than they were by their own generation ; and may understand one another now, better than while they were moving anjidst the mere twilight of this lower life. White, Hobart and Griswold do full justice to each other in heaven ; as certainly as it was never in their hearts to do injustice to one another on earth. The feelings of Bishop Griswold upon being called to act as Senior Bishop of our Church will appear again, when we come to notice that period of his life. His remark in the foregoing extract on the use of the word, " consecfation," as applied to Bishops in distinction from Presbyters and Deacons, is an index to the character of his mind, andto his views of the power supposed to be conveyed by the last of our three ordaining acts. He disUked the use of terms, which express more than should bemcEint; and was far from agreeing with those, who consider the ordination of a Bishop as investing him, by a sort of miraculous or mysterious trans- mission, with the extraordinary gifts of the Holy Ghost, or with the marvellous power of continuing an alleged perpetual incarnation of Christ in the visible body of his Church. Always in conversation, and generally in writing, he spoke of his investment with the Episcopal office as his ordination. Even in signing official formulae, such as letters of orders, which are usually dated in such or such a year of the Bishop's consecration, he always substituted some other word as often as he conveniently could. And yet, it 'is evident that he attached no very great importance to either the use, or the omission of the term, consecration; inasmuch as we occasion- ally meet with it in his writings, and even in his auto-bioo-- raphy, where its use was not required as a matter of official formality. While his eye was open to the truth, that great effects sometimes flow from little causes, still he was no more disposed to spend his time and his strength in contend- ing about trifles, than he'was to draw consideration towards himself by an undue magnifying of his office. LIFE OF BISHOP GRISWOLD. 169 EARLY EVENTS IN THE EPISCOPATE OF BISHOP GIIISWOLD. In the foregoing portions of this memoir, we hare traced, as minutely, and as faithfully as the materials furnished would allow, the history of the first fo'jrty-five years in the life of its revered subject. We have noticed the remarkable qualities of mind, which he so early developed ; the circumstances, amidst which' his character was formed ; the difficulties, under which he labored in the prosecution of his early studies ; the impressions, which these circumstances and difficulties left on his mind'; the discipline, which they fur- nished in laying the foundation of his principles, and in giv- ing direction to the course of his life ; the humble, quiet, laborious, and self-denying discharge of ministerial duty, on which he entered ; and the wonderful manner, in which a good Providence watched over all his movements and or- dered all his steps. And, in taking this observation, we have seen clearly- how God was, all along, fashioning him into an instrument for special use, in the work, upon which he was afterwards to enter ; how his Divine Teacher at first gradually led him forth from the^efective, or imperfect views of the Gospel, which so far as our Church was concerned, were characteristic of the times, in which he was bom, and the influences, amidst which he was educated; and finally, how that same heavenly Teacher gave depth and spirituality .to'.his religious experience and character, and anointed him with an uncommon measure of the " fulness" of Him, whose Gospel he was to .preach, and whose ministry he was to perpetuate. It may by some be supposed that, had Bishop GriswoM possessed more of the impjilsive and dazzling qualities of character ; had his modesty and self-distrust been less, and his power to strike at once the popular mind, and to put in motion great schemes for the extension of the Church, been p 170 MEMOIR OF THE greater ; he would have done a better -work in his day, and left behind him more splendid monuments of his usefulness. But, this may well be doubted. That which has the most sudden, and the most imposing beginning, does not always last longest, nor grow largest. Besides, when we consider, the character of the population,upon which he was to operate in the keen, cool, thoughtiful sons of the Pilgrims, and the nature of the prejudices, which he was to encounter in those feelings, which had once rSared themselves as if into a wall of fire along the whole New England coast, that Episcopacy might never live to effect a landing on their shores : — when, we consider even these things, it will be evident that had he been other than the severely simple, modest, unpretending, holy and blameless man that he was, he never could have acquired the influence, which he did ; he never could have laid that w.all of fire into a mere quiet, harmless pathway for our Church totravelon; he never, could have left-even in our own Church itself those deep, purifying and harmonizing influences, which it needed, which it has received, and on which, as a base, may now be reared a glorious superstruc- ture ; in the words of Mr. Bronson, " a name and a praise in the' earth." When God- hath a special work to do,^e uniformly fits His instrument to His occasion. Such evident- ly was His way in the case before us. To judge Bishop Griswold justly, we must not go to the city, where, indeed, his influence was always salutary and his reputation honora- ble, but to the country, where his great work lay, tmd where his preseiice was always haileji as that of a true man of God, and as tiiat of a richly endowed ambassador for Christ. Never, probably, will the hills and vallies of New England feel the tread of a foot, or hear the sound of a voice, that shall waken the echo of a more hearty welcome than his, or that shall find the moral elements around better prepared to yield to the quietly, unobtrusively growing influence of the man, who shall walk there, or of the messenger, who shall there proclaim "the unsearchable riches of Christ." No sooner had he received the office, than he entered on the work, of a true Bishop. Even before his consecration, LIFE OF BISHOP GRISWOLD. 171 he began to receive letters, which made him feel, by antici- pation, the pressure of the duties, which awaited him. Of such is the following brief epistle. " Lanesborough, May the 20th, 1811. " Rev. and dear Sir, — I have scarcely one moment to write, and- therefore you will excuse my brevity. "As I shall not attend at Boston, should you not fail of being consecrated for want of a proper number of Bishops,'! will thank, you to let me know, as soon as possible, viz : by the bearer, Mr. , when you wiU visit my Church. We want your aid extremely, in settling some serious difficulties in this parish, as well as in administering the holy rite of confirmation. Do not so make your arrangements but that you can spfend a number of days with us, not less than four. The bearer is impatient. Your humble servant in Christ', Amos Pardee." The Rev. Alexander V. Geiswold, J Bishop elect. ^ The present writer remembers well the visit, which, in five weeks from his consecration, the Bishop paid (in answer to this invitation) to the churches in the valley of the Housa- tonic, at Lanesborough, Lenox and Gt. Barrington. It waS 1ile first they had ever received from a Bishop. Although Bishop Bass held .lie office for six years, yet he never visited these distant parishes of his charge. The visit of Bishop Griswold was therefore received with the greatest satisfac- tion, and regarded as a most signal event. The whole body of communicants in each parish, besides many not commu- nicants, was to be confirmed. In that of Gt. Barriifgton, especially, where the Bishop's brother was Rector, and where the present writesr was a parishioner, the 4th of July, 1811, was rendered "memorable to Episcopalians, not by the ring- ing of bells, and the firing of cannon, and the huzzas of those, who shouted to the liberties of their country, but, by the fact that 128 of their number knelt around the chancel rails of the quiet little village Church, before the first Bishop that had ever spoken within its walls, and received fi-om him 172 MEMOm OF THE that hand of blessing and that voice of sacred cheer, which had them go on their way holily, as the citizens of a heavenly kingdom and the soldiers of a more than earthly king. He, who traces these lines, was among tJie number of those who thus knelt and were encouraged ; and though he was young, and, (like the youth who once knelt before Bishop Seabury, but' whose fatherly hand was then pressinghis own boyish head) not fully aware of the nature and extent of the obliga- tion, which he assumed, yet he remembers vividly the deep solemnity, which reigned over that crowded assembly, and especially over those, who gathered round the holy man, as he gave them his words of blessing and his prayer to God for their future growth in grace. The day was long remem- bered, andiby many doubtless as a season of rich spirittial blessing to their souls. Similar scenes met the Bishop wherever he went on that his first Episcopal visitation. Even in those parts of his Diocese, which had formerly been favored with the presence of Bishop Bass, eight years'had passed without any recur- rence of the favor. All the parishes therefore had begun deeply to feel the need of that refreshing influence, which, under our system, so generally accompanies tlie movements of a truly faithful Bishop. Bishop Griswold was then in the ripe prime of life : his voice, though not strong, was yet clear, and musical ; his appearance remarkably dignified arid impressive ; and his influence ^peculiarly sweet,-' conciliating and harmonizing. The hand of God had already twice been laid upon him, and~ was about to be laid upon him again, in the death of beloved children. His first Harriet died, as we have seen, in 1805. His daughter Eunice, in the Ibvely womanhood of twenty, died but a few weeks before his consecration. And now, his 'eldest childj Elizabeth, his first born, the wife of Mr. Augustus CoUins, was just ready to drop from the parent stem, on which she had grown ; while Viets, his oldest son, was on the eve of starting for Cuba in the vain hope of averting the approach of the insidious destroyer, which had so openly fixed himself within the family circle. LIFE OF BISHOP GRISWOLD. 173 Thus he already stood like a man in the midst of his flower- garden ; seeing his cherished and beautiful flowers fading and dying around him ; calm indeed, and uncomplaining at the sight, yet filled by it with a strong and irrepressible sensi- ' bility, and touched by it to a deep and sacred musing. Such was Bishop Griswold, when he first began to move among the 'Churches committed to his care ; the well- furnished and diligent, the meek, the subdued, the lovely servant of Jesus. All 'felt that he was a man, whose thoughts were much in heaven. All realized that there was in his presence a something spiritual not seen on other men. And many found that with him came the- prayer that " availeth much," and the anointing of that Hdly One, who teacheth to kilow all things profitable to salvation. The condition of his diocese, when he entered on his duties, may be judged by what has already been incidentally said, and from the following statement. Jn the four States of Massachusetts, (which then included the District of Maine,) Rhode Island, New Hampshire and Vermont, there were in all twenty-two parishes, and sixteen officiating clergymen. Of these parishes, however, several existed in little more than name : several others were very feeble ; and the main streng'th of the Diocese lay in a small number of old and comparatively wealthy congregations. Even of these, how- ever, Trinity Church, Boston ; St. John's, Providence ; and Trinity, Newport, were the only ones possessed of much strength. Christ Church, Boston ; St. Paul's,^Newburyport; St. Michael's, Bristol ; St. Paul's, Narraganset country ; St, John's, Portsmouth ; and St. James', Gt. Barrington, were respectable and ante-revolutionary parishes, able to support their own clergymen, but not able to contribute much towards tjie endowment of a bishopric. Besides the twenty-two parishes in actual existence, there were the ashes of a few extinct ones, upon which, however, have since sprung up new and thriving congregations. Such was the state of the Diocese in this particular. Of the clergy, some were lax and soon became the sub- jects of discipline. Most of them, however, were worthy 174 MEMOIR OF THE men, and continued to labor under their new Bishop with diligence and exemplary fidelity. On the ;whole, the state of the Diocese was one of great and previously increasing weakness. Its eight years of exis- tence without the superintending care of a Bishop, had proved years of decay. Its tone of religious feeling and confidence had become confessedly depressed. Discouragement in some parts was setting in to sink it still lower. And the lack of discipline was admitting irregularities both in rrforals Eind in order, especially in the more retired parts of the Diocese. The consecration of a new Bishop was, indeed, hailed with satisfaction every where ; and every where he was received with cordiality and warm support. "Still, as it is easy to see, an arduous work lay before him ; in some respects mote arduous than that of building up , an entirely new Diocese. To revive what has become languid, .and fixed in habits' of inactivity ; and to harmonize and cement elements, which have become loose and jarring through long absence of uni- ting, binding influences ; is often more diflicult than to collect new materials, and keep them in the progress of growth and in a state of consolidation. There isj in this latter case, a feeling of fresh, new-born life, and of cheerful onward follow- ing in the Counsels of a recognized and influential head, which is unknown in the former ; , and which is decidedly favorable to vigorous effort and tq successfiil enterprise. But, the very weakness of the Diocese, to which he was called, was one of the reasons, why he accepted the call ; and there- fore, the proofs of it, with which he met, neither surprised nor disheartened him. He entered on the diificjilt work be- fore him, prepared for all its exigences, and' braced agamst all its discouragements ; resolved, by ceaseless diligence and blameless devotion to his Master's cause, to do all that through the grace of God, might be possible in' rearing up the fabric of a vital Church out of the still feeble remains of what the shock of revolutionary war had left well nigh des- titute of life. It has passed into a sort of proverb, that, the mitre is a sovereign specific for the cure of defective churchmanship ; LIFE OF BISHOP GUISWOLD. 175 and by many it has been supposed to minister strengthingly to a Bishop's love of power, and to a disposition to "mag- nify his office" even beyond the measure of apostoUc zeal. But, however well founded such views may, be, they were not realized in the case of Bishop Griswold. For, in fact, he hadi,iio defective churchmanship to be cured; while, in every other respect,, the influence of his election and consecration was to fix and settle him in wisely moder- ate views of the Church and of that chief ministry in the Church, to which he had been called. He. was a Protestant Episcopal , churchman in the fullest and best sense of the terms ; but, as a Bishop, he never belonged to any party in the Church. He went for Christ and the salvation of men : he went for the Church in her integrity and purify : but he ^ent for no strained theory in either doctrine or- polity ; and was more anxious by humble zeal and noiseless fidelity to adorn the office which he bore, than by extravagant claims and vociferous panegyric to urge it on the attention of others. It was evident to all, who noticed him, that he regarded his office, not as an occasion for setting himself up as a lord over Gbd's heritage, -but simply as a means of doing .in- creased good to the sheep of his pasture i He looked upon that office, not as conferring on him rights, titles and immu- nities, but as imposing on him cares, dutiesj and responsi- bilities. Yiefelt its call to increased diligence, humility and spiritua;lity in the service of Christ ; and besides this, felt little else, and thought, of little more. To the fact of his belonging to no party in the Church, he alludes in the following paragraph from his auto-biography ; and I give it as an important illustration of one of the leading traits in his Episcopal character and conduct : " Soon after my consecration, I found, and was in some degree surprized at finding, a remarkable change in my feel- ings and aS'ections towards the 'clergy in my Diocese. I had before, as I supposed, viewed those with whom I was ac- quainted, as brethren and friends, and as Christian charity required. But, after I became their Bishop, they seemed to me as children. I felt a Uvely interest in their honor, hap- 176 MEMOIR OF THE piness and prosperity, which I had never felt before. Whether this was selfishness concealed from my own view, I will not decide. I .was disposed, (perhaps too much so) to regard it as the result of -good ahd right influences : it cer- tainly gave me pleasure; and it- no less certainly influenced me in the determination to treat them as a parent should his children, with equal favor and love. However, in sentiment some may have differed from me, I certainly have endeavor- ed, to the utmost of my knowledge and power, to treat them all with strict impartiality. It was very natural that any one, in the like_ situation, should, by those especially who were interested, be suspected of partiality. I have accordingly been accused of it. On the contrary, however, some have thought that I did not sufficiently regard-the interests of the Church in my adherence to such impartiality as that which I had determined, to observe. Of this, I leave others ^td judge ; intending no more than to declare what have been the facts and the principles of my conduct. " One thing is too evident to those, who have any know- ledge of mankind, that, in times when conflicting interests, party spirit and differing creeds . agitate society and divide Christians, (ahd such are the times in which almost all Chris- tians live,) no one will be popular, or much extolled or caressed, unless he becomes a partisan, and promotes the interest and cause of some one of the Contending parties.- He, who would steer a middle course, doing, justice to all and injury to none ; who, as the case cotamonly is, sees something good and something wrong in every party, or sect, must hope, at the most, only to escape censure and to have the answer of a good conscience. As he will not. go to the extremes of any party and advocate what they chiefly aim at, they will expect little from him ; he therefore is of course neglected of all. And happy, as he ought to view it, is" such neglect. In a world like this,- if it will but let us alone, if it will but let us qciietly pass through it, walking in the straight-forward course of our duty, with this should a good man be satisfied. Though I have probably been as decided in my opinions as other men are, I have from my youth de* LIFE OF BISHOP GRISWOLD. 177 termined to be of no party in politics, or in sectarianism. In regard to the former, it is, in my judgment, better for the clergy, and for their parishes, and indeed for their country, Ulat they should leave civil government and the management of public temporal concerns to the laity. The history of the world shews that politics and state affairs have seldom been well managed ;when in the hands of priests. Their business is with a kingdom, which is not of this world ; and they are engaged in a warfare, whose weapons are not carnal." This last remark brings to mind the answer, which he gave -to his Connecticut inquisitor, when the latter attempted to ejttort a cojifession of Mr. Griswold's politics; and it shows, not only that the Bishop was accustomed to act on principlij but also that, with him, principles were ' Ufe-long things; not adopted without consideration, and therefore, when adopted, seldom if ever laid aside. - As to the influence of his entrance on the Episcopate upon his religious feelings,- character and labors, it is a remark of the Rev. Dr. Crocker, who was his colleague from Rhode Island in the electing Convention at Boston in 1810: that, "to all who knew him intimately, and observed him care- fully, it was obvious that his providential promotion was the means of bringing home to his heart, with a power, which he had never before, felt, the conviction that he was an ap- pointed instrument in the hands of God for the good of his people. His public discourses assumed a warmth, an unc- tion, an authority, an evangelical character, that had not previously belonged to them. And it should never be for- gotten that the extraordinary revival in t|ie summer of 1812, one year after his consecration, was the fruit of his growing faithfulness." To the same effect remarks the Rev. Mr. Bronson, the clerical delegate to the same Convention from the. ChurCh in Vermont, and one of the Bishop's early and constant friends. In his new situation, " he labored, Uterally labored, preach- ing statedly gn Wednesday 'evenings besides his three ser- vices every Sunday ; in his leisure hours working a large 178 MEMOIR OF THE garden, "and prodding for his family ; and writing Jiis ser- mons mostly in the night. Nor did he * preach Matthew Henry, or Thomas Scott,^ or any other earthly Master; but the warm effusions of his own heart. By his feithfiil labois he soon laid the foundation for "that remarkable revival, which, in one season, brought about 100 members to the communion of his Church." ' Of the striking fact, noticed in both the above extracts, it is a matter for devout thEmkfulness that the Bishop has left us in his auto-biography his own simple account. ' I give it with a feeling of assurance that none will read it without satis- faction, and that many ■will see in it an occasion for fesrVent praise to God. The Bishop says : ■ - "In the year 1812, there was in Bristol an awakenedat- tentionto the subject of religion, which was very wonderful, and the like of which I had never before witnessed. It commenced among the members of my parish, when no siich thing was looked for, nor indeed thought of. No unusual efforts had been made with any view to such an excitement. My administering of confirmation in the parish a few months previously had not improbably some effect. My recent or- dination to the Episcopate was the means of awakening my own mind to more serious thoughts of duty as a minister of Christ ; and in consequence I had, no doubt, with mo're ear- nest zeal preached ' Jesus Christ and him Crucified.' The change, which- 1 first noticed was the appearance of increased seriousness in the congregation ; especially on leaving the Church after service. . There was little or no laughing, or merry salutation ^ong tiie people ; neither talking of world- ly things. ■ After ^e benediction, and a minute of private prayer, tiiey retired silent and thoughtful. Some soon- began to express a religious concern respecting their spiritual state, and were anxious to know ' what they ^ould do to be saved.' "In cohsequence of this awakened and increasing inquiry, I began to meet with them one or two evenings in the week, not only that we might unite in praying that they might be LIFE OF BISHOP GKISWOLD. 179 led intO' the way of- truth, and enjoy the "comforts of hope, and of peace in believing, but that I might save time to my- Self 'and them, by conversing at the same time with a num- ber who were in the same state of mind. I soon found that the number of such inquirers had increased to about thirty ; and in a very short time the awakening was general through the town, and very wonderful. " Very much to my regret, the number of communicants had hitherto been small, but about forty : and yet, notwith- standing the very zealous efibrts of those of other denomina- tiojis to draw the converts to their respective communions, a large number of adults (forty-four) were baptized, and a h"uiidred were added to my communion, of whom more than half had before been accustomed to attend worship in other places, or in no place. These converts were not en- couraged in ranting, or in any enthusiastic raptures ; nor did they incline to any extravagance ; but gladly hearkened to the ' words of truth and soberness ;' and very few of Aem afterwards ' turned from the holy commandment delivered unto them.' " The subject of revivals is one, against which many in our Church feel strong prejudices ; not because they dislike the religious feelings and- results, which such seasons may ex- hibit, but because they have heard so much of the evils, which are alleged to accompany them, and which, in some instances, have doubtless been their accompaniments. But it is belieyed no reasonable objection can be made to such a series of facts as that, which the foregoing judicious narra- tive of the Bishop presents. To object to such facts would be evidence of a mind prepared " to fight against God." No minister of Christ, under whose ministry such facts have oc- curred, will ever be found on the list of such objectors. To see suchlruits of one's regular, faithful, warm-hearted min- isterial labors, is to stand too nearly in the manifested prer sence of God's Holy Spirit, to allow of any feeling of doubt or objection as to the origin of what he sees. The feeling of opposition cannot live a moment in any Christian heart amidst such demonstrations of the sacred, though silent 180 MEMOIR OF THE goings of God in His sanctuary and among, his people, as He graciously sheds the dews of His Spirit on the faithfully implanted seed of His word, and on the trustingly discharged duties of His servant. If all our parishes were scenes of such gracious blessing, few of our ministers would fail Jto give God thanks for His mercy while acknowledging His presence with their flocks, and His seal upon their lahors. In the case of Bishop Griswold we need not hesitate to say; the facts, which he has narrated, were among the best credentials, which he ever received, that God had indeed commissioned him to a specially good and great -work in His Church ; and, among the best of. proofs ever to be given, that, where this high ministry is, — not coveted and sought for the honor which it confers, and the distinction which it brings, but — simply received, in an bumble and self-renounc- ing spirit, as an opportunity and an incentive to more abun- dant and spiritual labors for the glory of God and the salva- tioiiof souls, with but one eye to this divine end, — there it will ever prove one of the richest of God's visible gifl:s to His Church upon earth. The Bishop's daughter, Mrs. Collins, to whom reference has already been made, died the 29th of December, 1811 : and his son Viets, who, as we have seen, went to Cuba for his health, survived no longer than May 1st, 1812.* Yet, * The followng letter, written to his son in Cuha, ahout a fortnight be- fore Mrs. Collins's death, is deemed worthy of preservation in a note. It speaks the quietly submissive, yet anxiously affectionate parent : "Bristol, Dec. 13, 1811. " Dear Son, — There are several vessels, about this time sailing from this town for the Havana, so that, in case it has pleased Divine Providence to preserve you in safety to the same place, you may, 'tis hopeful, have the satisfaction of hearing from us often. We have nothing very material to acquaint you with. Our last news from Betsey was unfavorable : she was more iU than she had been. At home, we continue in health, but in very great anxiety for those, who are absent from us. You will ordinarily be able soon to determine whether the change of climate is likely to prove favorable to your health. Should the prospect be unfavorable, especially if you find yourself growing more ill, we hope and desire that you will not fail to return by the first convenient opportunity. But I have heard of bo LIFE OF BISHOP GRISWOLD. 181 notwithstanding the recentness and> the pressure of these afflictions, and though God was manifestly and wonderfully blessing his labors in his own parish, he felt it his duty to fulfil his engagements to his Diocese. He was the ^eryant of all the churches now ; and therefore, in the very midst of the awakened interest of which he has given us an account, he departed on his second Episcopal tour through the fouf States. Still, the blessing, which he had seen falling on his parish ministry, continued to descend ; and after his anxious- ly expected return, he performed the glad office of gathering in its rich, ripe fruits ; " Joyous as when the reapers bear Their harvest treasures home." Of the condition of his parish, and of the progress of tlie sacred movement during his absence, he received, at Mid- dlebury, Vermont, the following account from the present Bishop of Rhode Island, who was at that time pursuing his theological studies in Bristol, as a candidate for orders under Bishop Griswold. I give the most important parts of the letter. many instances, in which complaints similar to yours have been removed, or much relieved, by a voyage to sea, that we are not witheut hope that it will please God to give a favorable issue to yours. Do not fail often to write and let us know exactly the state of your health. This we desire the rather because verbal reports in such cases are so little to be relied on. Should you be in want of money, or any thing we can send, let us know it. " I expect soon to go to Connecticut, and we shall attempt removing Betsey, home, if we shall judge her able to bear so long a journey in so cold' a season. We hear, however, that she is very contented with her present situatiouj- and wishes not to return unless it is our request. - " It is needless, I trust, to add any directions or cautions respecting your own health. You will, no doubt, use all the prudence in your power : the rest we must submit to Him to whom alone belong the issues of life and death. To His mercy and holy keeping I commend you ; hoping and praying that, thiough His great goodness, you may again be restored to Your loving parent, Alexander V. Griswold." Q 182 MEMOia OF THE "Bristol, 23d August, 1812, " Rt. Rev. and dear Sir, — Such interesting erents have occurred since you left us, and the present state of your peo- ple is so peculiarly and pleasingly interesting, that I have, for a few days past, had a strong inclination to write you a line; and this inclination could not be resisted when seconded last evening by the request of Mrs. Griswold." * * * * *»«****** "Since your departure the engagedness of your people in the good cause has apparent- ly increased. There have been some new instances of awakening: some, who were slightly impressed, are now mourning in bitterness for their sins ; and some, who were lately ' heavy laden' with the burden of guilt, have entered into the promised 'rest,' and are rejoicing in the love of God." (After mentioning the names of many individuals, the letter proceeds:) "At our last meeting, we had indeed a solemn but joyful season. A great number were present, ten or twelve of whom were dissolved in tears and crying for mercy. I have no doubt that the work of God is extend- ing and increasing both in power and in purity. Nothing like fanaticism has been manifested among our people ; but a most earnest hungering and thirsting for the bread and the waters of life eternal. I cannot express my own impatience and the anxiety of the people for your return. I fear much, lest the good work should be checked among us for want of an experienced pastor to encourage and promote it. At a time like the present, when God is shedding forth His Spirit, opening the eyes of the blind, and extorting from the hearts of many the cry of the awakened jailer, (' what shall I do to be saved .'") I most sensibly feel my weakness and insuffi- ciency for the work to which lam called." ***** * * * " The revival has just commenced among other denominations of Christians, and they are extremely active. I fear they are using means to draw some from our congre- gation ; and on that account your presence is more particular- ly needed. "I have the painful task of- announcing to you another afflicting stroke of Divine Providence. Mrs. Griswold has LIFE OF BISHOP GRISWOLD. 183 just heard of the death of her second brother." * * * * " Never have I known the words of the apostle, ' Whom the Lord loveth He chasteneth,' more fully verified than in your family. That God, in His infinite mercy may saniitify to you and yours all your afflictions * * * *, is the fervent prayer of Your affectionate disciple In the Gospel of our Lord, John P. K. Henshaw." The influence of the events of the summer of 1812, on the parish of St. Michael's, Bristol, is felt to the present day, both in its spiritual and in its temporal condition. Precious fruits, put forth on that season, are still ripening there ; and, as we shall see, other seasons like it, and with like precious fruits, have since been added. Of the influence of that summer on the external growth of the parish, the Bishop thus writes in the auto-biography : " Though the church edifice in Bristol had, as before re- lated, been enlarged, yet it was soon found to be too small to accommodate all who desired seats in it. In other re- spects, also, it was judged not to be so comfortable and con- venient, nor indeed so respectable, as a ()arish so large and wealthy ought to have. Accordingly proposals -^ere made, and subscriptions soon filled for building a stone church, 90 feet by 60. But because a few of the principal families disapproved of the measure, it was judged to be prudent to postpone the work for a time. And most providential it was that they did so : for not long after there were such failures in business, such losses arid pecuniary distress, as affected nearly every person in the town. The banks lost a large part of their stock. A very considerable part of the httle property which I then had, was lost. Many were so re- duced that they would not have been able ,to pay their s.ub- scriptions to the proposed new church ; and had it been be- gun, it would have added to the distress. The parish has since built a handsome, convenient church, of wood however, and not quite so large as was at first intended." 184 MEMOIR OF THE The GOngregation continued to meet, and worship in the old church till after the Bishop's removal from Bristol: and the new edifice, of which he speaks was built under the rec- torship of his immediate and efficient successor in the parish, the Rev. Mr. Bristed, As the auto-biography, which has furnished so many in- teresting and important portions of the memoir thus far, is about to close ; and as the only portion of it, which remains to be transferred to these pages, is a sort of list of the courses of evening sermons or lectures, which the Bishop delivered in Bristol, before as well as after his consecration, and upon which God vouchsafed so abundant a blessing ; it inay as well be inserted here, as in any subsequent portion of the work. " While inBristol," hewrites, " I delivered several courses of lectures : one of about eighty or ninety on the four Gos- pels in the way of .a harmony. After having finished them, I was much urged by my hearers to publish them. Biit, though"!- had reason to hope that, through the blessing of God, they were not a little useful to my congregation and to many others, who attended Church in the evening to hear them, yet, as they were necessarily prepared in much haste, and I could not find time, (having then a large school, and preach- ing three times a Sunday) to correct and improve them, they were none of them published, and have since been destroyed with many hundreds of other manuscript discourses. In pre- paring them I made some use of the Harmonies of Bishop Newcome and Macknight, of Bishop Porteus' Lectures on Matthew, of Hunter's Sacred Biography, and of several com- mentators and other writers ; but no use, I trust, which was inconsistent with a claim to originality. I have already burnt, or otherwise destroyed, about twelve or fourteen hun- dred of my manuscript sermons, not because less my own composition than those which remain, but because I had more than I could ever use in future, aind because they would all probably be useless after my decease. I have in many instances declined giving my sermons for the press, when requested, from observing how little such publications LIFE OF BISHOP GBISWOLD. 185 are read, and how soon, like old newspapers, they are thrown away. In the present age, when Ught reading for amuse- ment is so much in vogue, good sermons are but httle read, though published in elegant volumes, which seems to be al* most necessary to their being read at aU. "I delivered also- a series of discourses, thirty- three in number, on the Acts of the Apostles : about twelve on the Catholic Doctrine of the Trinity, which I would gladly find time better to digest and complete-: one on each of the ten Commandments, to which I added five on our Lord's sum- mary of the Decalogue : several on the Catechism, and the Apostle's Creed, and on each chapter of the Revelation of St. John. " A celebrated author has observed that Calvin was wise in not writing upon the Revelation ; and the mOre celebrated Voltaire has thought fit to say that ' Sir Isaac Newton wrote his comment upon the Revelation to console mankind for the great superiority which he had over them in other re- spects.' But I considered that One, who is much wiser and of infinitely better authority, has said ; ' Blessed is he that readeth, and they that hear the words of this prophesy, and keep those things that are written therein.' Rev. i. 3. With this text in view, I endeavored, in a practical way, to in<- struct my congregation to hear to edification what can already be understood of those prophecies, and to keep the things written therein. But, in preparing those discourses, though the preparation was hastily done, light seemed to break upon my mind, and interesting views of what was there predicted, which I long hoped to find time to digest and arrange into some regular form. That time, however, has never been found. " I also delivered a course of seventy lectures on the five books of Moses. In all these I had a general text in view, the words of our Saviour, ' search the Scriptures ; for in them ye think ye have eternal life ; and they are they which testify of me:' particularly noticing what we learn from those Scrip- tures of Christ and his work of redemption. Such a plan, Q* 186 MEMOIR OF THE well executed, would, in my judgment, be a valuablfe acqui- sition to our Theological Libraries. "These courses of lectures were ^11 d^liyered Sunday evenings, and, so far as I can judge, have been among the most efficacious of my pulpit labors. During the services, such portions of Scripture were read as were thought most appropriate to the subject, respectively, of each discourse." After reading such paragraphs as those which have now been transcribed, and with which, amidst many regrets," we •take leave of the modest Bishop's auto-biographical sketch of himself, it is difficult to say which, at the outset, would have been the more desirable, that he should become the constant- ly engrossed supervisor of his parish and his diocese, spend- ing all his time in gathering, uniting, cementing and instru- mentally vivifying the elements of that extended ecclesiasti- cal body, which was placed under his caise ; or that he should have it in his power to follow the strong native bent of his incHnations as a man of reading and research ; to become the patient as well as the ardent student, the productive as well as the profound theologisin, the voluminous as well as the luminous author; and thus, instead of committing to the fl^imes bushels of manuscript evidently rich in the rudiments of valuable truth and knowledge, to pour the light which gathered upon his own mind over the mind of his age and over the libraries of the Church in all coming ages. That the estimate, here implied, of big ability to bless the world, not beyond, but as one among, the rich and ripe scholars of the Church, is not extravagant, enough, I trust, has in the foregoing pages been said to shew. However little the world may have been aware of it, that quiet, mod- est, humble Bishop drew froni his German ancestry so large an inspiration of the German industry, aye, and of the Ger- man genius, for scholarship, that, had he been even moder- ately able to indulge his inchnations, free as he was, by divine grace, from German errors, he could not have failed of leaving behind him, as the fruit of his long Ufe of study, some of fhe most precious as well as abundant contributions LIFE OF BISHOP GRISWOLD. 187 to the theological learning of the Church. There is no dis- position to claim for him, or ascribe to him the attributes of uncommonly dazzling and incentive genius. Evidently, his place never could have been among the few suns, which hang so gloriously in the firmament of letters. Nor could it ever have been among the lesser satellites of the System. But it would have been among the Planets, which while they gather most do most give forth the light ; and which while they receive most warmth do also produce most fruit, for the sustenance of spiritual and intellectual life. His genius lay not in splendid invention, but in diligent ac- cumulation and rich acquisition ; in luminous illustration, and in useful production. The few writings, which he has already given to the world, pure in style and sometimes beautiful in ornament, shew what he might have been and what he might have done in the walks of scholarship. Nor does the world yet know what he actually was, in this re- spect, notwithstanding the unusual hindrances which lay in the way of his studies. His best labors as a theologian, lay, after all, not in his Episcopal sermons and addresses, as he delivered them on his numerous official tours through his Diocese, but in the parish, where he so long and so modest- ly dispensed the fruits of his midnight studies, beyond the notice of this world's eye. That this last remark is not without foundation will be manifest from the following tribute from the pen of one, who lived long and intimately by the Bishop's side ; sitting under his weekly ministry ; studying with him for the work of an Evangelist ; knowing him amidst all the soul-trying, heart- revealing intimacies and incidents of private life ; and after- wards succeeding him as rector in his favorite parish of St. Michael's, Bristol. Mr. Bristed, himsplf an accomplished classic, an author before entering on the ministry, and very extensively acquainted with authorship, in giving an account, in an unpublished manuscript, of the trials which beset his; entrance into the Church, thus bears his testimony not only to the kindness which he received from the Bishop, but also to the theological and general character of his friend. The 188 MEMOIR OF THE judgment, which he here expresses, was indeed formed at a somewhat later period than that now under review in the life of the Bishop : but it applies as well to this period as to any other ; indeed equally well to all periods, in the life of him to whom the tribute is paid. " I cannot close this statement," he observes, " without bearing the little tribute of my unfeigned respect and undissem- bled affection for the truly apostohcal and evangehcal Bishop Griswold. To a very high order of human talent, he joins the profoundest and most comprehensive acquaintance vsdth Scriptural Divinity. I have heard some of the greatest preachers on either side of the Atlantic, including the mighty. Horsley, on the one, and the giant Mason on the other ; but I never sate under a minister, from whom I received so much and so varied instruction in the word of God. I scarcely ever open the Bible, without being conscious of reading it by the reflected light of his clear intelligence. And above all, he crowns and consecrates his great talents and extensive learning with a most Catholic and Christian spirit, which is forever breathing the words of wisdom from the lips of love. He has, in very deed, been a blessed instru- ment, in the hands of his Divine Master, of awakening his perishing fellow-sinners from their natural death-sleep in tres- passes and guilt ; alike, in the place privileged to enjoy his fixed residence, Eind throughout his Diocese, wher£ver he .has had an opportunity of scattering the bread of life. That great and awful day only, which shall reveal the secrets of every hunian heart, will be able to disclose how many souls he has been permitted and empowered to turn unto righteous- ness. " In his daily and hourly walk and conversation, life and conduct, he examplifies the blessed doctrines, which he so ably, so faithfully, so lovingly proclaims in the service of the Sanctuary. In unaffected simplicity, meekness and holiness in thought, word and deed ; in the conscientious and? fear- less discharge of the duties of his high and responsible office ; in the unmeasured benignity of his Christian charity and love for all who bear the impress and image of our common na- LIFE OF BISHOP GRISWOLD. 189 ture, that nature, which is infinitely ennobled by being united with the godhead in the ever-blessed and adorable person of our once crucified but now ascended and glorified Redeemer ; he is second to no one of all those worthies, who, in the apostolic and primitive ages of Christianity, counted their lives nothing in comparison with preaching the doctrines of the Cross, the doctrines oi grace." This, doubtless, is high praise ; and may be considered as a burst from the warm heart of devoted friendship. Still, warm hearted friendship does not necessarily color too highly. If it ordinarily speak most strongly, it is, sometimes at least, because it knows most thoroughly whereof it afiirms. Be- sides, the testimony of others, who have lived in favorable vicinity to the Bishop, as well as facts, which remain to be recorded, shew that, as an estimate of Christian character, and of apostolic self-sacrifice, as well as of learning and ability, the tribute, which has been quoted, is but an honest, though a glowing, expression of the truth. The best test of a man's character, if not of his intellectual power, is to be found in the fact that they who live in closest intimacy with him have most to say in his praise. It is not every one, who figures most largely and most loudly before the world, that can bear the application of such a test. The subject of this memoir could. If his biographer finds nothing to say in abatement of his claims to regard and veneration, it is because, from whatever point he has approached his sub- ject, whether from that of the Bishop's nativity and early youth, or from that of his various places of ministerial labor ; whether from the bosom of his family, or from the circle of his bosom friends ; whether from the Diary of his private thoughts, written without the expectation of their ever see- ing the light, or from the scrutiny of those, who might be supposed most inclined to make his failings manifest ; firom whatever point the approach has been made, he has uni- formly found that the nearest approximation gave the most favorable view, both of the moral and of the intellectual man. A lady of great piety and intelligence, who was much in his family before the decease of his first wife, and there- 190 MEMOIR OF THE fore thoroughly acquainted with him, upon being requested by the present writer to furnish him with her recollections or the Bishop, in speaking of his ministry and the estimate, in which he was commonly held in Bristol, says : " It was a remark then often made respecting him ; that there was one specimen of perfection in the world." And in closing her account, she writes thus: "I must take this opportunity to thank you. Sir, for the suggestion of this attempt at recollec- tions ; it has brought so vividly before me his exalted charac- ter. . The nearer the inspection, the more angelic -the like- ness." . From this view of the Bishop himself and of the results of his parochial ministry, it is proper to go back for a moment, in order to notice some other things, connected principally with the progress of his new Biocesp. ^ « The plan, which, at the adjourned Convention of Massa- chusetts in August, 1809, was suggested^ of an Incorpora- tion under the name of " Trustees of Donations to the Protest- ant Episcopal Church," was soon after carried into effect. An act of Incorporation was passed at the next session ofthte Massachusetts Legislature, and was approved by the Gover- nor, March 3d, 1810. Thi^ act was somewhat enlarged at the following session of the Legislature, Feb. 14, 1811. The object of this -Incorporation was, the raising and management of a fund for the support of the Bishop of the Eastern Diocese, and the care and management of such funds and property as might be entrusted to it for the special use, benefit and support of any of the Churches or institutions of the Church, within the Diocese. For these purposes it was clothed, says an address " To the friends of the Protestant Episcopal Church," which was forthwith issued, "with every power and privilege that any society of Christians in this, or any other CQuntry,'could reasonably wish or desire." Into the history of several of the trusts, committed to this corporation, it will not be necessary to enter. The New Hampshire lands held by the Board are on a special trust as to a part of the income, leaving the residue subject to the disposal of the Board. One tenth of the income was to be LIFE OF BISHOP GRISWOLD. 191 applied to the support of the Bishop of the Eastern Diocese ; and was so applied, while that Diocese continued to esAst. But when, at the demise of Bishop Griswold, the Diocese was dissolved, this tenth passed to the support of the fiiture Bishop of the Diocese of New Hampshire. " The Bass Fund," so called from the first Bishop of our Church in Massachu- setts, is hfild in trust by' the Board for the benefit of St. Paul's Church, Newbutyport, and is to accumulate in their hands till its income reaches the annual amount of $1000; when it is to be used in payment of the salary of the Rector of that parish. There are some other trusts in the hands of the Board ; but the amount of property involved in them is very small. The most important fund held by the board is that, for the creation and management of which, mainly, their charter was granted ; the fund for the support of the Bishop of the Eastern Diocese. Subscriptions to this fimd were opened immediately after the Convention in September, 1810, at which Mr. Griswold signified his acceptance of the Episco- pate. At that time, about $6,000 were subscribed in Bos- ton and its vicinity ; that is ; between $3,000 and $4;000 by members of Trinity Church, $2,000 by members of Christ Church, and something by individuals in Cambridge. In 1815, $5,000 more, from two unknown individuals, by the hands of the Rev. Asa Eaton, and Shubael Bell, Esq., of Boston, were added. Since that time, the fund has been slowly increasing, under its safe and judicious investment, till it now amounts to something more than the sum of $15,000 ; yielding towards the support of the Bishop about $900 per annum. The object of the enlargement of the act of Incorporation in 1811, was to enable the Trustees to increase the fund, by electing other Trustees, and obtaining other subscriptions, in all the four states composing the Diocese. Under the ex- pectation of realizing this object, an article was inserted in the By-laws of the Corporation, providing for the division of the fund in the event of the dissolution of the Eastern Dia- 192 MEMOIR OF THE cese. By the occurrence of this event, that article has be- come important. It is as follows : " Whenever it shall happen that the Eastern Diocese shall be formed into two or more Dioceses, and a corporation shall be created and By-laws established, for purposes and with powers similar to those of this corporation, in either of the States of Rhode Island, New Hampshire, or Vermont, and the Churches in such States respectively being erected into a Diocese distinct from the Churches in Massachusetts, all the property given or devised to, or entrusted with this cor- poration by any inhabitant of such State, amounting to the sum or value of fifty dollars given or devised by one person, shall, at the request of the corporation so to be created, and with the consent of the donor or his legal representatives, be assigned, transferred, or paid over, to such corporation so, as aforesaid, to be created and established ; and this article shall not be subject to repeal or alteration but with the con- sent in writing of the members of this board belonging to such State for the time being." From this By-law, framed in the exercise of the power granted by the act of Incorporation, it will be seenthat no part of this fund can be distributed among the Dioceses of Rhode Island, New Hampshire and Vermont, until those Dioceses shall have procured the creation of corporations similar to that which exists in Massachusetts; nor unless such ftiture corporations shall request such distribution ; nor in sums under Jifty dollars from a single individual ; nor without the consent of the donor of such sum, or of his legal representatives. It is not probable, therefore, that any dis- tribution of the. fund will ever be made. For although the enlargement of the Charter was designed to give the Trus- tees an opportunity to increase the fund by obtaining sub- scriptions and donations to it from all the four States com- prising the Eastern Diocese, yet, it is believed, very slight success attended their efforts. Nearly the whole fund, as it now exists, was contributed from Boston Euid its immediate vicinity. Some contributions, were received from other LIFE OF BISHOP GRISWOLD. 193 parts of Massachusetts ; and some increase of the fimd has been realized, it is believed, from its judicious investment and management. ■ But, very little of it has ever been re- ceived from the other States of the Diocese, in any sums ; and probably less still, if any thing at all, in sums so large as ffty dollars from a single individual. It is concluded, there- fore, that the fund will remain undisturbed where it origina- ted, and where virtually the whole of it has been contributed. It evidehtly needs increase, and will, it is hoped, be aug- mented till its income shalL be adequate to the decent and comfortable support of the. Episcopate in the Diocese- of Massachusetts. . Beyond this point the Episcopalians of that State, if they are wise, will never wish to press its revenue. Upon the history of the Church lands in New Hampshire, Vermont, and Rhode Island, much might be said. But, al- though " the Trustees of Donations" have had no little to do with those lands in the first and last of those States, and even in Vermont, yet it would not add to either the interest or the value of this work to, enter at large on the subject. It will be enough to.say that, although the grants from the Colonial Governors of . New Hampshire to our parishes, and to the Society in England for the Propagation of the Gospel in Foreign parts, were ori- ginally ample and valuable, yet the titles to these grants were all lost during the war of the Revolution, with the ex- ception of those to the Society in Englaijd ; that even of these, few but the poorest were ever recovered, as the re- sult of a long and tedious process of litigation in the courts of the United States ; and that, in effecting the recovery of any portion of them, the agency of the Rev. Wm. Montague was from the first largely efficient and very important. In the discharge of his agency, this gentleman spent months and years of travel and expense ; and in this way, as well as in other measures touching the origin of the Eastern Dio- cese, was, so far as the external history of the Church was concerned, one of the most actively influential members of the Diocese. The first appearance of Bishop Griswold in any Con- vention after his consecration was in that of Massachusetts, B 194 MEMOIR OF THE August 29th, 1811. This was an adjourned meeting. The regular meeting in May was so thinly attended in conse- quence of its being simultaneous with the General Conven- tion in New Haven and the consecration of Bishop Gris- wold, that no business was done. But .at the adjourned session in August, the attendance was full, and the new Bi- shop took his seat as the presiding officer. Inasmuch, how- ever, as he considered himself Bishop, — not of the Church in Massachusetts, nor of the Church in any other of the four States, separately,— cbut of the Eastern Diocese in its joint capacity, having been elected by that and consecrated fgr that alone ; — ^he dehvered neither charge nor address on this first occasion of his appearance as a Bishop in. Conven- tion.. .The same rule he ever afterwards followed. All his charges, pastoral letters, and Episcopal addresses were de- livered to the Conventions and the Clergy of the Eastern Diocese as one whole. The first Convention of this Diocese, which was held after his consecration, its meetings now being only biennial, as- sembled at Providence, September 30th, 1812. At this Convention the Bishop's letter of consecration was ordered to be read and recorded-; after which he proceeded to the delivery of the following brief address : " Respected Brethren, the Clerical and Lay Delegates of this Convention, " I now -for the first time meet you since my appointment to the'Episcopal jurisdiction in this Diocese ; and the 45th Canon of the General Convention makes it my duty on this occasion to lay before you the situation of our churches and the official duties, which I have performed. With very few exceptions I have visited the Churches of this Diocese once, and some of them a second time : and the present appear- ance is, that most of them are increasing in numbers, piety and attention to the doctrines and discipline of the Church. I have administered the holy rite of confirmation to 1,212 persons, and have very generally and with much satisfaction witnessed the appearance of great sincerity and devotion in those who received it." LIFE OF BISHOP GRISWOLD. 195 The address then proceeds to record the consecration of two churches ; the admission of five candidates for orders ; the ordination of one deacon, and that of two presbyters ; — the disposition made of the services of some of the new clergy ; — and the institution of two rectors into the cure of ■ parishes. After this, it thus concludes : " To this statement. Brethren, I hare only to add my prayers that the Lord will inspire us witli wisdom, unity and zeal, and that He will direct our counsels and prosper our labors to the advancement of. his glory and the prosperity of his people. Alexander V. Griswold." I have given this ' address for two reasons ; 1, because it is short ; and 2, because it seems to me a remarkable proof of the remarkable modesty of its author. He evidently started on his course of duty with the feeling that it did not become him, while young in office, to put himself forth in any labored production ; with the determination not to as- sume the exercise of an influence, which he had not yet acquired ; and on the principle of letting his actions, rather than ^\s words, define his ecclesiastical position, and inter- pret his religious views. One can hardly read such an ad- dress, delivered on such an occasion, without feeling that it was peculiarly, characteristic of the man, who, on a difTerent occasion, remarked ; — " Words cost but little ; and are of- ten worth no more than they cost." At this Convention the project of a Diocesan library was started ; but it never amounted to any thing more than a project. A movement of more importance originated at the same time, and was followed by a measure at least of its in- tended results. I allude to what were called, " Easter col- lections," — contributions to a Missionary fiind to be placed in the hands of the " Trustees of Donations" subject to the order of the Bishop of the Eastern Diocese, and chiefly for the benefit of the feeble parishes under his care. These collections originated in the following vote by the Conven- tion, and in the resulting circular of the Bishop.- 196 MEMOIR OF THE " Voted ; that the Bishop be requested to appoint a Sun- day, annually, on which a contribution shall be' made at each Church within the Diocese, and transmitted by the B-ector and Wardens thereof to the Treasurer of ' The Trustees of Donations to the Protestant Episcopal Church,' to be appro- priated under the direction of the Bishop to the supplying of vacant parishes with preaching, and to the distributing of cheap tracts explanatory of the doctrines and discipline of the Episcopal Church." The foUowiiig is the circular, which, in obedience to this vote, the Bishop forthwith addressed to his Clergy. " "Whereas the Biennial Convention of the Ea.stern Dio- cese, holden at Providence, in the Stat^ of Rhode Island, on the 30th day of September, a. d., 1812, ' Voted,' &c. ' In compliance with the above resolution and request, I do hereby appoint Easter-day to be the Sunday, on which said annual contributions shall be made ; most cordially recom- mending to the friends of religion, and especially to all who desire the prosperity of the Protestant Episcopal Church, an object so laudable and benevolent. Whilst, (so much to the honor of the Christian name) a liberal spirit of piety and zeal for distributing the Holy Scriptures and for diffusing the light of the Gospel to the remotest nations of the earth, per- vades the Christian world ; it may reasonably be expected that the state and the ' exigences of the Church in this Dio- cese will not, by its' friends, be forgotten or neglected ; — that they especially who, through God's merciful goodness, enjoy the inestimable privileges of a preached Gospel, and the means of religious knowledge, will not be unmindful of those, who are destitute of these "blessings ; and that each iifdividual will cheerfully contribute something to a little fund for their assistance. In all human appearance, no charitable donations could more directly or more surely pro- mote the glory of God and the increase of His Church than the contributions hereby .solicited. By a little aid from their Christian brethren, many small parishes, now wholly desti- tute of the sacred ordinances of Christianity, would, through LIFE OF BISHOP GEISWOLD. 197 the Divine blessing, be materially benefited, and, there is good reason to hope, enabled soon to obtain ft permanent ministry among them. Deeply impressed with the import- ance of this subject, the Convention were induced to make this appeal to the pious liberality of all the friends of the Church, and not without confidence that the Lord will open their hearts to give according as he hath blessed them with the means : ' for, with such sacrifices God is well pleased.' " " The Easter collections," thus started, were regularly -continued till the dissolution of the Diocese. The tract distribution, which they at first contemplated, was, indeed, dropped after a time ; but the collections themselves con- tinued as a' Missionary fund in tjie hands of the Bishop, and were of essential service in reviving the languid and almost, extinct parishes^ which existed in various parts of the Dio- cese ; and in aiding the struggles of others through a feeble infancy towards a vigorous maturity. These collections and the " Board of Trustees of Dona- tions," — together 'with the Standing Committee successively elected, and the Diocesan Conventions, at first Biennial, and afterwards annual, made up the Body of the Institutions of the Eastern Diocese. It was, at the outset, so far as these its institutions Were concerned, a simple organization ; and so continued to the period of it^ dissolution. That it never had more numerous and more efficient instrumentahties in the great work of Christian benevolence at home and abroad, was owing to its complex structure in other respects. The churches in the respective States, though united- into one Diocese, yet conti%ed to meet in their separate Conven- tions, as well as in those of the whole Diocese. Through those separate Conventions they were represented in the General Councils of the Church ; and the effect of these peculiarities was to beget a kind of ecclesiastico-" State Rights" feeling, drawing almost all the proper efficient ac- tion of the Church from the Diocesan to the State Institu- tions. This was unavoidable, and all well enough. Con- sidering circumstances, it could not, and should not, have been otherwise. Still, it is easy to perceive that, with such 198 MEMOIR OF THE an organization, it was impossible for the Eastern Diocese and its Bislipp to take that stand among the other.Dioceses and general institutions of the Church, which would other- wise have been both desirable and practicable. In fact, the pecuUar structure of. the body kept both the whole. .and its parts from that measure of activity, efficiency and ^growth, which, under other circumstances, •would have been >*easy and natural. The influence of this structure was doubtlfess less felt -at first, thsQi it was at a later' period. At first there was so httle strength in any of the parts that they were glad to increase it by combinatpn. But most of .the parts, soon began to gather separate strength ; 'and, as they did so, tend- ed more and more to separate action. Then it was that the existence of the central Diocese, with its Bishop specially attached to it, proved a manifest restraint on the capabilities and freedom of action, which would have been appropriate to the States, had they existed as in'dependent Dioceses ; while the capabilities and freedom, which they actually as- sumed and e:^ercised proved as manifest a drain of strength and vitality from the Diocese of which they were associated parts. - ,„ "The feeling has often been expressed by his Clergy, that the characteristic modesty of Bishop GriswoM, and his ap- parent reluctance to put /oith his influence in forwarding great leading measures of policy in his Diocese, detracted much from his true usefulness. But, the longfer I reflect on this subject the more strongly am I persuaded 'of the injus- tice, which such a feeling did him. The truth is, (to take a somewhat different view of this subject J«om th^f which was taken, a few pages back,) it was his modesty and his appa- rent reluctance to act in many matters, that kept the centri- fugal paitg of his Diocese together, till, at his demise, they were all ready, in strength and experience, to stand up at once, fov/r well-braced, and well-organized Dioceses, with their weU-furnished and efficient Bishops, instead of oree. What appeared to be reluctance to put forth his influence was, in fact, less that, than a wise caution under the circumstances,' in which he found himself placed. He felt his own j)osition LIFE OF BISHOP GRISWOLD. 199 better than the Clergy of the separate States cpuld feel it for him. While they were thinking of their separate State in- terests, longing for their more rapid advancement, and, per- haps, pondering the question how soon they might be called to elect, from among themselves, their own independent Bi- shop, — he was feeling the difficulty of presiding in harmony over such separately tending elements,, and the almost im- possibility of either originating, or infiising life into, any general measures for their increased prosperity, or even into any State measures for that end, consistently with the rela- tion, which he bore to the whole body. In such a state of things it had been easy for him to put that whole body into intense action ; but it would have been the action of con- vulsions, not that of health. On the whole, when it is re- membered, that, after the Eastern Diocese began to meet armually. Bishop Griswold had five Conventions to attend, where other Bishops have but one, and for the greater part of the tim6 a parish to care for besides ; that he had to com- bine and guide the movements of a complex whole, while the Clergy and the measures of the separate parts were often tending away from general and gathering iJiemselves around /lariicuZar," and sometimes conflicting laievesis'; and that, into which part soever of his Diocese he went, he felt the pre- sence of a something,, that was instinctively, without special design, working itself up into a sort of rival influence with his own ; it will be seen that his position was full of pecu- liar difficulties, and called for the constant exercise not only of all that wondj^rful industry, but also of all that uncommon meekness, prudence and wisdom for which he was so re- markable., And when, moreover, it is considered, that,' as B. parish minister, feW among us have ever b^en more largely successful, more richly blessed, than he ; and that, as a Bi- shop, he began, in 1811, to watch over a few scattered pa- rishes, feeble and " ready to die," and yet left them, in 1843, multiphed to an hundred, distributed into five ftilly organized Dioceses, and ready to support four active Bishops, it may well be doubted whether the evidence of his useful- ness could have been more full and complete. 200 MEMOIR OF THE* But to return ftom this general, survey, into -which I have been led, to the measures of the first Diocesan Convention, over which he presided ' It appears from the Journal of the Eastern Diocese for 1812, that, notwithstanding the, judicious addrei^,-wliich, as chairman of the Committee of the Rhode Island Convention in 1809, he wrote to' the Narraganset Church ; aad'the fact that this address so far succeeded in the begun work of paci- fication, as to induce that Church to consent to the session in their parish of the Special Convention of Rhode Island, called to consider the proposal for an Eastern Diocese ; their alienation from the body of the Churches was not then ■v^hol- ly overcome. Inde.ed, firom some cause, it was subsequently and seriously increased ; so much so as to threaten the entire severance of that ancient parish fi-om our communion. Its case was referred to a Committee of this Convention in 1812, whose report, as follows, will give us all the information on the subject, which it is desirable at this time to possess. "The Committee, appointed to -take into consideration the state of St. Paul's Church, Narraganset, submitted Uie following report, ■which was unanimously accepted : ";The Committee, to whom were referred certain papers, produced by Capt. Ro4man Gardiner, beg leave to report : " That a certain party in Wickford, denominating them- selves members of St. Paul's Church, Narraganset country, having" announced in a public newspaper, the Newport .^^ Mercury, of April 11, 1812, that they have withdrawn them- selves from the Eastern Diocese,>and have renounced the Episcopal authority, have thereby expos^^emselves to the censure of the Bishop, and deprived themselves o|' the privi- leges of the Episcopal Church ; but that, at present, it is in- expedient for the Convention to take any order on this sub- ject ; it being the opinion of your Committee that it "may be adjiisted by the Bishop in a Convention of the State of Rhode Island more to the satisfaction of the aggrieved members of said Church than by this Convention. • N. B. Ckogker, Chairman." LIFE OF BISHOP GRISWOLD. 201 It is sufficient to add that the course recommende(i proved effectual ; and that the old Narraganset Church soon became a part of the consolidated body of the Diocese; leaving, thus not a single dissentient from the general harmony, which reigned over the whole. During the year 1812, Bishop Jarvis of Connecticut, amidst the increasing infirmities of age, was dra^wing near the close of life ; and the project of electing a co-adjutor Bishop was^ to some extent, agitated among his clergy. But it is not probably known to many, that Bishop Griswold was once sounded' on the question, whether he would be willing to come and reside in Connecticut, as that co-adjutor with a parish, while at 'the same time he retained jurisdic- tion and discharged Episcopal offices in the Eastern Diocese. Yet such was the fact, as the following extract from a letter written by one of the clergy of Connecticut wiU shew. " , 15 Feb., 1812. "Rt. Rev. Sir,-^ *«*♦#*****• * * * * A few words relative to the Church. * * * The Bishop of the Diocese has notified the clergy * • » that a convocation will be holden in New Haven on the 19th inst. * * '* I have i;ot heard what is the principal object of calling us together at this time. Perhaps it may be to in- quire what is best to be done further in regard to the Acade- my petition, or to the selection of a candidate for co-adjutor Bishop. The latter has of late been spoken of among -th^ clergy. As yet, however, we cannot fix upon any person, in whom we can agree. I would take the liberty to suggest one thing to you, (no other person shall know it) and to solicit your answer. ' It is this : whether you are of opinion that one Bishop,- in the prime of life, of good health, and living in this State, could faithfully discharge the 'duties of this and of the Eastern Diocese, having at the same time the charge of a parish ? It is my opinion that it could be done, by the clergy taking turns in supplying his parish during his absence. I beg your answer, upon the assurance that it shall 202 MEMOIR OF THE rest with me. I am persuaded that, if you were the Bishop of this Diocese, and resided here, it would, ^yith the bless- ing of heaven, flourish beyond all present calculation." Of course, the suggestion made in this extract could not, for a moment, be entertained. The extract itself, however, is interesting, inasmuch as it shews- the estimate, in which the Bishop was held in his native State, and the probability that, had he continued there, he would have been called to that Diocese, instead of the Eastej'n. In this latter his lot was now cast, and to it he considered his whole life and his best powers devoted. To the depressed and discouraging state of this Diocese at the period when he received jurisdiction over it, aUusipn has already been made. About the time of which I am now spe?iking, the winter of 1812, he received many letters, which must have made him feel most sensibly the difficul- ties, with which te had to struggle. St. Paul's Church, Portland, was considered to be at its last gasp; and it re- quired great faith in him to maintain, both among its few members and in his own mind, the assurance that it might yet be saved alive. St. Michael's, Marblehead, had sur- vived the convulsions of the past in a very feeble state, and was strug-gling as for its life. The Church in Taunton had its very name trodden out by the iron hoof of revolutionary war, and was just beginning to cry, from the dust of its small remaining endowment, for a hand to raise it up and' give it new existence. And the old parish at Bridgewater lay still un- moved amidst its ashes without a sign of vitality. While, of some others all traces had perished, and no thought of their revival was started. There was, also, a very dis- couraging want of -clergy, ind a still lingering, irremovable prejudice against laj-reading. A Congregational minister, who had conformed to the Church, and was a candidate for orders, was advised, not by the Bishop, but by one of his clergy, to continue preaching his own sermons before his ordi- nation. A very young candidate, of high promise, who had been licensed as a lay-reader, and had been allowed by the LIFE OF BISHOP GRISWOLD. 203 Bishop to " adapf'pnnfed sermons to the exigences ofhis place of labor, ventured to extend the license to the preaching ofhis own sermons, in the face of the 19th Canon of 1808, which made such an act " a disqualification for orders ;" and so eager were the hungry people for ministerial services, that he even proceeded to ask for ordination before he had reached the age of twenty-one years, as required by Canon. The Rev. Mr. Fisher, Rector of St. Peter's, Salem, having been taken away by sudden death, the Congregational clergy of the town, who had acted as pall-bear^rs at his funeral, kindly offered their services to supply his pulpit by preaching there in rota- tira ; and so impossible was it to procure even a temporary Episcopal supply, that their offer was accepted. Two of our own clergy m Vermont became subjects of ecclesiastical discipline for immoral conduct. And, to finish the picture of difiSculty and discouragement, the enemies of the Church in New Hampshire were evidently at work in secret at what they doubtless considered a commendable effort at its over- throw. Under such circumstances, the following letter could not have sounded a very pleasant note in tiie Bishop's ear. -, Sep , 1812. "Rt. Rev.^Sir, — My love and zeal for the Church, espe- cially fc^r that branch of it ' over which the Holy Ghost has made you overseer,' will ever prompt me with caution and due r.everence to give the earliest notice of every threatening appearance, both in the Church and out of it. For this pur- pose are we placed around the sacred enclosure, to be al- ways ready to defend it from the assaults of open and avowed enemies, and from the artful machinations of secret and insi- dious foes ; that so, ' the wrath' of God, through our neglect, come not 'upon the congregation.' " Last evening -was handed me, by a particular friend of yours, (the Rev.M. ',) a letter singular and strange both for its matter and for its style. As I send it enclosed, it will be needless to make any remarks on it, further than to ob- 204 MEMOIR OF THE serve ttat Mr. and myself feel truly alarmed lest ' fire have gone out of the Bramble, which may devour the Cedars of Lebanon.' Your affectionate and very humble servant, The difficulty of obtaining clergy at tiiis early period; in the history of the Diocese, not only led young candidates for orders to preach their own sermons, (contrary to the wish of the Bishop, doubtless,) but also induced a proposition to license lay-readers, who were not candidates. This proposi- tion, however, urgent as were the' necessities of the case, the Bishop evidently resisted, as appears from the following ex- tract from a letter, written by the Rev. Mr. , of New Hampshire. . July , 1812. "Rt. Rev. Sir, — Your very friendly letter of June 16th, is just come to hand ; and I thank you for the timely communi- cation ************** * * What ideas brother C. has of a license for a lay- reader, I do not comprehend. It is something to me entirely new, and in my opinion would seem to add a new order in the Church. It is a thing unprecedented either in ancient or in modern times ; and if once introduced might lead on to evils, of which we are hardly aware. The Bish&p's observa- tions on tJie subject are perfectly correct. Esq. C. is a good reader and a worthy character ; but experiejice teaches that reading only has a tendency rather to weaken than to ^eep together. ' Itching ears' and a fondness for novelty are to be found in the Church as well as out of it. The recommendation, which you mentioned from the Standing Committee, 1 conclude, can have reference to none but carir didaies for holy orders." But, though the Bishop evidently concurred with the writer of this letter in the matter of licensing lay-readers, not candidates for orders, yet it is not probable that he assented LIFK OF BISHOP GRISWOLD. 205 to a proposition, which the writer himself makes in the same letter. " On Saturday," he writes, " after the Convention, I shall wish to have this Church consecrated, and also the Church-yard, or hwrying ground.^' The Bishop, who was so strongly disposed to reject the term, " consecration," from the act, by which he was invested with the Episcopal office, was not likely either to borrow, or to construct a ser- vice for the special purpose of " consecrating" a Church-yard in his Diocese. How the difficulty of obtaining clergy for his parishes affected the Bishop himself, as well as the qualities, which he sought in his clergy, both religious and literary, may be seen in the following extract froni a letter, which he wrote this year to the Rev. Mr. Bronson of Vermont. It is a live- ly transcript of the Bishop's own practical views of what a minister of Christ should always and every where be. "Bristol, April lOtb, 1812. " Rev. and dear Sir, «»«***««*« *«*«**# fjjg account, which you give of your success in the ministry is very pleasing. I see that ' the fields are white unto the harvest.' If it shaU please ' the Lord of the harvest to send into it such laborers as we need, and as we ought daily to pray for and to seek, we may yet see the Church in this Diocese in a more flourish- ing state. # » * * * WTe ought to exert ourselves more in selecting and training young men for the ministry. We shall not find, at present, a sufficient number from our Colleges. And it is, unhappily, the fact that too many of those, who condescend to take holy orders, expect to Uve in ease and affluence ; to find Churches already organized mth good livings. We have none such to bestow on any. We need laborers, possessed of apostolic zeal, who are willing to plant before they reap ; who are willing to go into the spiritual wilderness and cultivate for themselves ; who, duly impressed with the importance and duties of the sacred min- istry, are content to ' spend and be spent' for God's glory and the salvation of men ; and who, of course, ' seek first s 206 MEMOIR OF THE the Inngdom of God and His righteousness,' trasting that He will add whatever is necessary for the comfort of this life. One such is worth twenty drones in the sacred minis- try. Such, indeed, are most likely to succeed in obtaining a comfortable living; for they have the promise of Christ himself to rely upon. If you find any, who are likely to be of this description, they ought to be encouraged to turn their attention to the ministry, and assisted in attaining the neces- SEQy qualifications.' JTiese last are not to be neglected. It is ■important thdt our^clerical body be made respect?ible for learning and talents, as well as useful- in piety and zeal. " But I have no reason to think you inattentive to these filing; and I write them unto you but to ' stir up your pure mind by way of remembrance.' That the Lord wiU merci- fully preserve your life, inspire you vdth wisdom and bless your labors to His own glory and to your present and eternal good, is the fervent and humble prayer of, &c." The above sentiments were not recorded by a man, who preached one thing, and practised another. He did not say to the laborers amidst the real toils and sacrifices of the min- istry ; "go work in the Lord's vineyard;" but, placing him- self in their fore-front, and' shewing them the manner of their day-labor, he said, " come, follow me, arjd let us bear to- gether the burden and heat of the day." Having thus looked at those public events in the life of Bishop Griswold, which, after the period of his consecration, occurred earliest, both in his parish and in his Diocese, and having seen the latter fully organized and fairly on its way ; it may be well to note here a few things, not less public in- deed, but less ecclesiastical. It wiU be remembered that at the time of his consecration, he had never been admitted to the degree of Doctor of Di- vinity. For that degree, however, though he sought it not, yet he did not long wait. It came in the following letter from the President of Princeton College. " Princeton, Oct. 9, 1811. " Rev. Sir, — I have the pleasure to aimounce to you that LIFE OF BISHOP GRISWOLD. 207 llie corporation of the College of New Jersey, at the late commencement, unanimously agreed to confer on you the degree of Doctor of Divinity. I am happy to believe that this well earned distinction will receive as much honor from the wearer as it can confer. I am. Rev. Sir, with the greatest respect, Your most obedient, and most humble servant, Samuel S. Smith." From Brown University, Rhode Island, where his merits as a scholar became gradually known, he soon began to re- ceive Uterary honors, and to enter into those relations with the institution, which he continued so long and so satisfac- torily to fill. While on this subject, it may be as well to dispose of it entirely ; although some notices connected with it will run forward to a period in his hfe much beyond that, which we are now considering. In the year 1810, he was admitted to the honorary degree of Master of Arts, and, in 1811, to that of Doctor of Divinity, in Brown University. On the 2d of September, 1812, he was elevated to one of the highest seats in the corporation of that Institution by being elected a " Fellow in the University." In 1815, he was made " Chancellor of the University," and held the office till his removal to Salem, in 1828-9. And in 1832, he was elected a member of the Rhode Island Alpha of the Phi Beta Kappa Society, in connexion with the same Institution. In communicating to me all these facts and dates except the last. Professor Gammell observes ; " I may add, for the explanation of the above, that the corporation of the College is made up of two bodies. The Board of Fellows is the higher and more honorable ; the Board of Trustees has charge of the Finances. The office of Chancellor is that of presiding in all meetings of the lower body. In order to accept his appointment to this office, Bishop Griswold, it appears, re- signed his seat as a Fellow in 1815. During the period of his connexion with the College — he performed the duties of his office with great faithfulness, and always manifested a 208 MEMOIR OF THE generous interest in the prosperity of the Institntipn. Though his connexion with the College ceased before my appoint- ment as one of its officers, yet I well remember how much his venerable appearance used to add to the dignity and interest of the academic pageant of commencement days." Which of his two degrees of Doctor of Divinity bears the earlier date, I am unable to ascertain ; probably that of Brown University, though by a few days only. The year 1812 opened our second war with England. With the bitterness of party spirit, which preceded and fol- lowed that opening, many of us are well acquainted. I find among the papers of Bishop Griswold a document, which shews how bitter that spirit must have been in Bristol, and how severely it must have tried the Bishop's principle of always leaving- politics and the management of State affairs to lay- men. Although the Bishop was an American in all the best feelings inyolved in a love of country, yet, it is not likely that he felt any sympathy with that unmeasured hostility to the British, which this document betrays. On this account, however, the testimony which the document bears to his Christian character is the more valuable. The document is superscribed; " Charles CoUins's Resolution, taken August 26th, 1812 ; read and adopted in presence of George Munroe 2d., Town Clerk." It is as follows: " Bristol, August 2Gth, 1812. " Having for eight years past constantly attended on re- ligious worship on the Sabbath, and having during that time been forward in encouraging the progress of the Gospel by divers donations to religious Societies, (for all which things I am heartily glad,) but having ascertained by the issue and result of the election held in this town yesterday that hypo- crisy has become so far intermixed with true religion that it is exceeding difficult for a man of an honest and unsuspect- ing disposition to discern, and know who is a saint and who is an hypocrite ; and further, having read and known enough of the history of Great Britain and its rulers^tobe convinced that the said nation is the most hypocritical one that is, or LIFE OF BISHOP GRISWOLD. 209 ever was, suffered to exist; and having ascertained that many of my worthy neighbors, whose opinions I much value on all subjects but that of religion, are, or affect to be, of opinion that Great Britain is the most righteous nation on earth, and some people would almost affect to beheve that the blessed Gospel of Jesus Christ cannot be effectually com- municated to the praying sinners of this (as they call it) re- bellious and sinful land,- but through the medium of Great Britain ; I say ; in consequence of the foregoing premises, I have taken a firm resolution to discontinue the practices aforesaid, and endeavor to be enlightened into the mysteries of the true religion, by reading the Bible and such other books as shall appear to be best calculated to answer the purpose : this resolution to continue in force until my beloved country shall have settled a peace with Great Britain : provided, how- ever, that it shall be void in case my excellent friend, the Bishop, (whom I believe to be the best man this side heaven) shall convince me that this is a rash and improper resolution. Chahles Collins." The fact that this document is found among the Bishop's papers shews that the question, involved in its closing pro- viso, was doubtless submitted to his decision. But had he been a man of known political preferences and activities^ it is not probable, either that Mr. Collins would have made him umpire in such a case, or that he would have ranked his " excellent friend" quite so high as he then did on the scale of perfection. How many minds, susceptible of safe guid- ance towards heaven, have broken utterly away from clerical influence, simply by being made to /eel that their mini|ter's political creed was at war with their own ! In what has thus far been said, it has been the design of the writer to exhibit, in connexion with such incidents as he could collect, the early mind and the ripening character of Bishop Griswold, together with the origin, structure and early condition of the Diocese, which began with his elec- tion, continued with his life, and ended in his death ; in other 210 MEMOIR OF- THE words, to trape the formation of his character, and to exhibit the peculiarity of his position. In doing this, some of the incidents, widch have been presented, were, in themselves, of sUght importance. Nevertheless, it is beUeved that they all had important connexions, and have all contributed some- thing of meaning to the work in the various stages of its pro- gress. With the Bishop himself, the Diocese over which he presided, his character and his position, fairly before our minds and well understood, we are prepared for the remainder of his course ; a remainder, full of anxieties and cares, labors and sorrows, but exhibiting, it is believed, nothing inconsistent with what has gone before ; shewing enough of progress, development and ripening, but reveal- ing nothing of change, fluctuation, or decay. LIFE OF BISHOP GRISWOLD. 211 BRIEP NOTICES OF THE EA3TEKN DIOCESE, AND OP INCIDENTS IN THE LITE OP ITS BISHOP, AS CONNECTED THEREWITH. FIBST CALL TO SALEU. From the time of Bishop Griswold's consecration, the re- moteness of his place of residence from Boston, the chief ecclesiastical centre of his diocese, the place whence the principal routes of travel diverge, and from which therefore he could with the greatest ease, and at the least expense, visit the various parishes under his supervision ; the place, too, where the main strength of the Diocese lay, and at "which he might most readily gather round himself all need- ful influences of counsel and co-operation in his labors; was seen to be a serious inconvenience, and the wish was gene- rally felt and often expressed, that he might have aparish, if not in Boston itself, at least in its immediate vicinity. At the opening of the year 1813, an opportunity for the gratify- ing of this wish was offered in a unanimous call to the Rec- torship of St. Peter's Church, Salem. The proprietors of this parish met- on the 13th of February, at the office of Mr. Joshua Gushing ; and, after organizing the meeting, imani- mously elected Bishop Griswold, as " their select and estab- lished Pastor." He doubtless felt that there were some strong reasons why he should accept the call. He visited the parish ; was waited on by a committee of the proprietors ; and, though no decision was then made, yet hopes were evidently excited that he would accept the call which he had received. Some months, however, passed in uncertainty, when the parish were induced to repeat and press their in- vitation, through a most respectable Committee, of whic^i Mr. Joseph Story, (now Judge Story of the United States Court) was chairman. The letter of this Committee, in Judge Story's hand, is as follows : 212 MEMOIR, &C. " Salem, June 11th, 1813, »» " Rt. Rev. Sir, — We have the honor to renew in behalf of the proprietors of St. Peter's Church, the request, ■which was some time since made to you, to become the es- tablished Pastor over that Church. At present we are able to offer you a salary of $700 per annum, and we shall most cheerfully defray all the expenses incident to the removal of yourself and family. We trust and hope, if you should settle among us, that the increase of the Church under your countenance and patronage will enable us hereafter to add to the salary ; and the general zeal and increase of parishioners, already exhibited, augurs very favorably to the support" of the Episcopalian worship. " At present the zeal of our friends' is great ; but unless we should establish a permanent :pastor, we cannot entertain very sanguine expectations of preserving its spirit. But, on the other hand, we have as little doubt that your presence would give a steady advancement to our interests, and that very many, who approve of our worship, would gather round our standard. ' " We hope therefore that we shall not be deemed impro- perly earnest by pressing your immediate acceptance of our ofier,,and assuring you that, as it is made in a spirit of per- fect sincerity and harmony, so your acceptance will confer the highest obligations upon us; We have the honor to be, with the highest respect, Rt. Rev. Sir, By the order and command of St. Peter's Church, Your very obedient servants, Joseph Story, Ezekiel Savage, W. Shepard Gray, Thomas Thomas." The Rt. Rev. Bishop Griswold. Subsequently to this, the Committee, in two further com- munications, most earnestly urged his acceptance of the call ; FIRST CALL TO SALEM. 213 and during the correspondence, the Rev. Mr. Burroughs of St. John's Church, Portsmouth, New Hampshire, warmly seconded their solicitations. " It may be improper for me" — says Mr. B., in a'letter dated, April 22d, 1813, "to make any inquiry as to your decision respecting your invitation to Salem. But it cannot be improper for me to express my most ardent wish that cir- cumstances might be so favorable as to induce you to ac- cept the invitation. Your situation would then be so cen- tral, that you might visit with the greatest ease the largest number of your most important parishes ; I confess too I feel a little selfish, as I wish you to be nearer to my own Church." But, notwithstanding the urgency of the call and the rea- sons, independent of it, for his removal, the Bishop found it so difficult, if not impossible, to leave Bristol, that he finally sent the Committee in Salem a negative answer. The feeling of discouragement and despondency, which seized upon them, is manifest in the coldly respectful letter which the Wardens sent him in reply. They express con- fidence in him, submission to his decision, and a disposition still to look to him as their Bishop for guidance smd aid ; but at the same time complain bitterly of loneliness and de- sertion, and especially of a want of faithfulness to his word in a young candidate, who had bgen sent to officiate for them as lay-reader after the Rev. Mr. Fisher's decease : — and they even intimate an apprehension that the consequence of their disappointments may be the loss of that parish to the Episcopal Church. I give a portion of their letter as illustrating, perhaps, more strongly than any thing, which has yet been said, the condition of the Diocese at that time in its want of clergy and in its thorough repugnance to lay-readers as a substitute. After laying their situation and discouragements before the Bishop, particularly the conduct of the candidate referred to, they proceed : — " With these vexatious disappointments, and the yet greater one of your not coming when expectation had been so highly raised, we are fearful that the consequences may be, the entire disper- S14 MEMOIR, &C. Bion of the parish, or its secession from the Diocese j (this latter would not be without reason ; for if those, who belong to our own communion, and who are candidates for the minis- try, forfeit their word, and treat us rudely, what inducement have we to adhere to a staff" that yields us no support 1) To you, therefore, we must look for a shepherd to a flock, -which is so extremely discouraged by such repeated disappoint- ments, and which is weary of hearing cold and uninteresting readers, who cannot administer the necessary rites of the Church, nor exchange with those, who can," &c. So feeble was the tie, which still bound some of the parishes of the Diocese to the rest ! It ought, however, to be borne in mind, in accounting for a portion of the weakness and proneness to despondency of this and of some others of our Eastern parishes, that at this time the War of 1812-15 was raging, and that many of the towns on the seaboard, particularly Salem and Marble- head, being extensively dependent on foreign commerce and on the fishing trade, suffered most severely in all their tem- poral interests, and were, even morally and religiously, de- pressed by that feeling of loneliness and desertion, the visible signs of which appeared in the stillness and deso- lateness of their almost depopulated streets.. Nor were the parishes on the sea-board the only ones, in which the hostile influence of the war on morals and religion was felt. It was felt in all the parishes, great and small, in the turning of men's thoughts from the Church to politics, and from rehgious to party zeal. Over weak parishes in the interior and those just beginning to rise, its power was peculiarly disastrous. One of the the Clergy in Vermont in writing to the Bishop, March 15th, 1813, gives the foUoiy- ing picture of things in his immediate neighborhood. A fatal epidemic had been sweeping through the State on its wings of death ; and yet he says : — " Although the judg- ments of God are in the earth that the inhabitants of the world may learn righteousness, yet we all remain more than commonly stupid. The Church, this winter, appears very forlorn. At Middlebury, you had an opportunity of learning EVILS OF WAH AND POLITICS. 215 its state last summer. Though it was then truly discourag- ing, yet it is now much worse. They are both fewer in number and less engaged. The War, in which our country is involved, or the rage of politics, or the influence of Sa- tan's kingdom, or something else, has palsied every nerve of religion. I hear nothing of building a Church either in Middlebury or in Vergennes. Nor do I find any one of any intelligence, who appears to entertain a rational hope of ever seeing the Church established in either place." During this year, too, the Bishop began to receive letters from the parish in Great Barsington on the subject of those difficulties, which laid on him one of the sorest trials of his life ; in that they involved the ministerial character and use- fulness of his brother, then Rector of that parish ; — leading through years of wasting dissention to his ultimate separa- tion from his charge, and to his final displacement from the ministry. These difficulties originated chiefly in the active political preferences of his brother at a time when the whole blood of the country was heated and feverish ; although, in their progress, they drew in other questions, and ended in leaving a parish, which had been uncommonly prosperous, in a state of ruin, from which it has taken long years to raise it to its former condition of harmony and prosperity. At the close of this year, moreover, the parish in Ports- mouth, New Hampshire, in common with their fellow towns- men, suffered severely from a disastrous conflagration, which laid a large portion of that town in ashes. The Chaplain, or school master, on board one of the United States' Ships of War, then lying in that harbor, who was a candidate for orders under Bishop Griswold, thus writes immediately after the melancholy event. " Congress, Portsmouth, Dec. 14, 1813. ■ " Dear Sir, — I need not tell you that your kind letter was received with much pleasure. I should have answered it sooner, but for a misfortune, which my feeble pen is unable to describe, and which imagination can hardly conceive. The beautiful town of Portsmouth is ruined. About 200 216 MEMOIR, &C. houses are in ashes : and their miserable inhabitants driven to seek shelter at this inclement season where charity pro- vides. "Night before last, I -was at your worthy friend's, the Hon. J. Sheafe's, where Capt. Hull, Capt. Smith and a num- ber of the officers were met to take supper. At half-past 7 we were alarmed by the cry oi fire! It was soon dis- covered to proceed from a barn near the Alms-house. The wind was very strong from the southward and westward. A number of us took our stand upon the top of Mr. Sheafe's house, which the flakes of fire soon «overed like a shower. We were able to extinguish it where it caught, ■ for about two hours, when the houses about us were all in flames. By this time they had been able to remove most of the valuable furniture ; and we then made our retreat through the garden, amidst showers of falling fire. " The exertions of the officers and men from our vessels were unparalleled ; and the names of many in the Navy will long be dear to the suffering inhabitants of Portsmouth. The fire raged with unabated fury, and little hopes were enter- tained by many of saving the town, until one o'clock, when it was found that we had gotten the upper hand of it. I trembled for the Church and Mr. Burroughs' house ; but by the great exertions of Capt. Smith, Capt. Creighton, and others, the fire was stopped in its rage at the corner below. Between 12 and 1, being so exhausted that I could do no more, I went to the top of the Church with Mr. Burroughs. No pencil could paint such a scene. * * * * * * * * » « * You will easily conceive that my heart ached to see the poor women leaving their houses, conveying their dearest treasures, their children, in their arms, and abandoning their property to the merci- less flames, or to the more merciless wretches, who, amidst the distressing scene, were sufficiently abandoned to pillage the sufferers. " I am happy to inform you that my parish have given about |700 to relieve the sufferers, leaving out our worthy commander, who will, no doubt, give more than that sum. PABISH ENDOWMENTS. 217 I trust that measures will be taken by our Church and the public generally to alleviate in some degree the distress of their suffering fellow beings. " Mr, Sheafe and family have been the most considerable sufferers. Next to them, Capt. Shapley. Mr. Sheafe lost three houses, and three stores, besides considerable other property. These men, however, have not, like many, lost their all. Many, who were in comfortable circumstances, have, in one hour, been reduced to the most abject poverty. With great respect, your servant, ." Rt. Rev. Bishop Griswold. Near the time of this afflictive visitation, moreover, the attention of the Bishop was called to the condition of the parish and its property in the town of Hopkinton, Massachu- setts. Mrs. Price, a wealthy and benevolent lady of that town, attached to the Episcopal Church, had formerly given a farm towards the endowment of a parish ; and a Church was subsequently built. But so few Episcopalians were found to sustain it and take care of its endowment, that it fell into decay, and all its concerns ran into a state of neg- lect, in which they have lain wholly unproductive of bene- fit to the parish. Nor from this state have they ever yet been rescued. This is one of the few waste places of our Church, which the Bishop did not live to see rebuilt and repeopled. Indeed, it is generally true, that those parishes, which originated under the old system of partial or complete endowments, even where they have been recovered from the desolations of War and change, have not proved to be among the most flourishing, active, self-multiplying parts of our ecclesiastical body. They have ordinarily been stinted, or stationary in themselves, doing nothing for the growth of our institutions, and dependent for their own languid exist- ence on the endowments, which they held. The life, the energy, the enterprize of our Church, it is believed, have never been found investing themselves, and seeking to ren- der their self-investments productive, in this species of eccle- siastical stock. The true spirit of Christianity is one of T 218 MEMOIR, &C. spontaneous benevolence, seeking to spread abroad both it- self and the blessed influences in which, it hath its spring. And it is supposed to be demonstrated by the experience of some thousands of years, that the safe investment, and quiet possession of money do not favor the birth, the growth, or the activity of this heaven-descended progeny. fiut, whatever was the weakness of any of the parishes of his Diocese, or however despairing were any of his clergy of their ultimate revival, or their increase of self-sustaining strength, the Bishop was always the last man, in whose bosom hope died. He could see danger, and feel discou- ragement ; and, in his annual addresses, he often used the language of a heart, that mourned and felt sad over the dangers and discouragements, by which the Church was be- set. But whatever he felt, he generally used the language of devout thankfulness for all the success, with which he met, and of cheerful hope in view of all that remained to be achieved : and whenever the question came up of actually abandoning ground already occupied, he was never found among the number of those, who consented to the abandon- ment. Of this we shall meet, by and by, with interesting proofs. During the year 1813, sprang up, under the auspices of the Rev. Mr, Chase, of Christ Church, Hartford, (now Bishop of HUnois) and of the Rev. Asa Cornwall, then of East Windsor, Connecticut,-^— the idteresting parish of St. James' Church, Greenfield, which soon settled down under the faithful ministry of the Rev. Titus Strong, and has never yet had. but one Rector. Of the origin of this parish, Mr. Cornwall gives the following account : " East Windsor, January 6th, 1813. " Rt. Rev'd and Dear Sir, — At the request of Brother Chase, I have officiated in your Diocese, at Greenfield; presuming that it would not be disagreeable to you. Before I went, I had understood from him that the few Episcopa- lians in that village had but a short time ago begun to hold regidar service. My expectation of course was that there, ORIGIN OF ST. JAMEs', GREENFIELD. 219 as in' other places, where the Church and its modes of wor- ship are new, or little known, numbe'rs might be drawn to- gether by curiosity, but few from principle, or the desire of receiving instruction with regard to the Church. Judge, then, my dear sir, how much I was surprised and delighted to meet a small congregation assembled in a chan^ber, fitted up in the form of our well finished churches, with pulpit, reading-desk, slips, and every other convenience ; and a great proportion of the congregation with Prayer-books, anxious to b,e instructed in the proper use of them, and unit- ing their voices apparently with most fervent devotion in the prayers and praises of the Church. A scene was presented there, which I believe is seldom excelled even among those, who have long called themselVes Churchmen. The true Church has the^e at length found a place in the midst of a far surrounding wilderness of error. The Zion of our Redeemer is rising at last and- .shaking herself from the dust. For the first time had the festival of our Lord's Na- tivity been recently celebrated there. On the Sunday fol- lowing, the holy rite of baptism was administered to five ; and seven received the holy communion. Of these latter, five received that sacrament for the firsttime. As a minister of Christ, I thought, my duty required me to administer it to them, upon receiving satisfaction of the correctness of their faith and the purity of their motives, and an assurance that they would embrace the earhest opportunity of being con- firmed. For this purpose, they were, when I left them, ex- tremely desirous of a visit from their Bishop. * * * * * Their zeal promises much ; but their ability, I imagine, is not adequate to the speedy and permanent es- tablishment of the Church in that place, without some as- sistance from abroad. If, sir, you could visit them in the course of the winter, or early in the spring, it would confer on them a favor, which they would gratefully receive ; and I do think it would be of essential service to them, as indivi- duals, and to their, infant parish. And should our Church 220 MEMOIR, &C. once "obtain a sure footing in that quarter, where 'Episcopa- lians were, never before known, I cannot but believe, from what I saw and heard, that very many of other denomina- tions would flock to it as an ark of safety from the threaten- ing deluge of Socinianisrn, &c. « « * « * « * » * With sentiments of esteem, Your sincere friend and humble servant, Asa Cornwall." The Rt. Rev. ? Alexander V. Griswold. j During the following May, in giving an account of the laying of the corner-stone of the new Church in this parish, the Rev. Mr. Chase, in his welt known style, writes thu? : " They have begun in the Lord, and with his blessing promised to his Church they will prosper. However ' let and hindered'' by the Samaritans of the present day, they will succeed if they ' watch and pray,' and pray and watch. It is devoutly to be hoped that no enemy may creep in amon^ them to disturb their harmony and mar their work. They are truly p^mifee in their faith and practice ; avoiding the sin of Korah on the one hand, and that of the Scribes and Pharisees on the other. Would that we were all of this mind ! Would that we all had the firmness of Azariah and the piety of John ! Then and then only should we be in that narrow path, which leads to life. In great haste, I am, Rt. Rev. Sir, Yours very dutifully, Philander Chas?." The Rt. Rev. . Bishop Gkiswqld. The following October, Mr. Strong, being only a candi- date for orders, began to preach for this parish ; thus afford- ing another instance, in which the pressure of New England necessities led to a virtual, though not, it is presumed, to an intentional, infraction of our Canon on this point. Mr. Thos. Chapman of Greenfield, in writing to tiie Bishop says ; " The Sunday after the receipt of your esteemed favor THE bishop's views. OF OTHER DENOMINATIONS. 221 of the 6th October, Mr. Stroi^g, being on a visit to his friends at Northampton, came up and performed Divine Ser- vice, and preached two Sundays in our Church-room, and one evening lecture ;" and Mr. C. assures the Bishop that if he " would have the goodness to put Mr. S. in deacon's orders," he had no doubt the parish would at onCe raise a sum ade- quate to the securing of his services. In the foregoing letters from Mr. Cornwall and Mr. Chase, so far as they express, or imply, apprehensions of danger from the growth and prevalence of Socinian errors in New Eng- land, the Bishop deeply sympathised ; but, if they were in- tended to deny the character and privileges of the Church to other bodies of New England Christians, it is not proba- ble that they met with any very cordial response from him. The Bishop was every inch an Episcopalian ; but he never thought that the Church of Christ cannot, in any sense, exist without Episcopacy^ any more than he thought that the hu- man body ceases ,to be a body, when it has lost its right hand, but has still head and heart united in right relations, and both of them sound, healthy and active. He saw and felt the dangers, to which .other denominations are exposed ; but he considered them Christian Churches, and rejoiced in all the good, of which they were instruments. His feeUngs on this subject wer,e, in his own peculiar way, expressed in connexion with the following incident. As he was one day riding through. Massachusetts in the progress of one of his Episcopal visitations, and in company, I beUeve, with Mr. Strong of Greenfield, he passed many houses of worship be- longing to the orthodox Congregationalists, Baptists and Methodists ; but not one belonging .to Episcopalians. The fact elicited remark, in the course of which the Bishop ob- served; ""As we have passed along, I have been thinking what the- people of our State would do, if they could not find religion except by seeking it in our Church ?" Letters received this year from the Rev. Mr Bronson, of Vermont, shew that, in that distant portion of the Diocese, notwithstanding the evils of war and the desolations of pestilence, he was proving himself a faithful, active, and, to 222 MEMOIEi &C. ' ' some encouraging extent, successful laborer, under his be- loved Diocesan. In the spring of the year 1814, a triennial session of our General Convention was held in Philadelphia ; at which time Bishop Griswold preached before that body. It could not, however, have been what is termed the Convention ser- mon, or that delivered at, the opening of the session; inas- much as it appears, from the journals of that and of the next triennial session, that this opening discourse in 1814, was preached by Bishop, Hobart;- and that Bishop Griswold de- livered the next before the Convention at New York, in 1817. The great difficulty of obtaining clergy for the vacant pa- rishes of his Diocese, and the necessity of employing lay- readers, candidates for orders, in their stead, are matters, to which I have already alluded. I have also referred to the pecuKarly strong inducement, which was found in New Eng- land tastes ".and habits, and under which candidates for orders were repeatedly led to assume so^iething of -the min- isterial character, in violation of the 19th Canon of 1808. These facts, it seems, at length attracted notice, and called forth an official expression of the Bishop's views on the subject. The following communication from him to one of his candidates is quite characteristic, and shews Hiat, though he did not place Ecclesiastical and 'Scriptural Canons on the same ground of authority, yet he knew how as well to en- force the former as to expound the latter. " Bristol, July isth. " Dear Sir, Your letter of the 15th inst. I have just now received, and am set down to return you an answer. " Your subject is, the difficulties of complying with the restrictions of Canon 19th; Without any reference to its merits, or the expediency of such a rule, it would be suffi- cient to observe, that I have no power to alter or dispense with it, but am bound by it no less than yourself. But, give me leave to add, that nothing, which I have ever seen or LETTER TO A LAY-EEADER, &C. ^ 223 I". heard, has more clearly evinced the propriety of that 9^^od than your letter. " As to what you say of * a number accused of irregular- ity,' I can only answer that I had not heard of the accusa- tion ; though I fear, from what you write, that there is too much ground for one. I have no recollections that the Canon has been violated in my presence, or that any regular complaint against any one for such violation has been made ; and in your supposition of my previous knowledge of the irregularities, which you report, you are much mistaken. " I^especting the custom in Boston, and what has been heretofore practiced, I would briefly state, what probably you already know, that there has been, among the clergy of this Diocese, soine difference pf opinion respecting the con- struction of that Canon ; and it was by some deemed ex- pedient to postpone a rigorous enforcement of it till the meeting of the General Convention, when its true intention might be ascertained. This has since been done. No doubt can now remain with any one. " We do not question your being ' entitled to a gown.' The Canon only forbids your wearing it when performing Divine Service ; and the reason of this prohibition I should suppose you must know ; though what you next add implies the contrary". You' assign, as a reason for going into the pulpit, its beii^ less sqcred than other places, as though the object of the Canon were, to prevent the candidate's profan- ing the place in which he officiates. Can you then be igno- rant that the design of the Canon is to prevent the evil (and 'tis no small or uncommon one) of the ipeople's making no distinction between clergymen and lay-readers ? " Respecting what you say, or mean to insinuate from the fact, that certain candidates wore gowns at the consecration of St. Mary's Church, Newton, 'tis sufficient to observe that, if the whole congregation had seen fit to appear in gowns, it would have been no infringement of the letter, whatever it might have been of the spirit of the 19th Canon. " I rejoice at your declaration that, for yourself, you have no hostiUty to the restriction ; for there is reason to fear that 224 MEMOIR, ^C. some might be actuated, in such case, by a vanity of making a clerical appearance, totally repugnant to that meekness, truth and simplicity, which are most essentially necessary to the Christian character. j "As to your apprehensions of an unfavorable effect on the Church, I think that such effect may be prevented by a fair explanation of the matter, being careful to suggest no- thing to prejudice the people's minds. " You speak of my being surprised of hearing at a can- didate's procuring a gown. I acknowledge myself, indeed, truly surprised at the following words from your Jetter ; ' I fear tlie people of Church will not consent to hear prmching from the desk, and pay so dezijvrit as they now do.^ If these'things are so, if the parishioners of Church think that you are ' authorized to pjeach, and that you do preach ; and if they are paying you a salary on that supposition ; — ^you certainly must see the propriety of the Canon in question. You ought long since to have informed them better. To suffer them to remain in ignorance on such a point, and still more to do any thing to confirm them in it, would be, on many accounts, very unjustifiable. What is it — short of profiting by deception ? I request you now to inform the Vestry and Wardens of — ■ • Church, (by shewing them this letter or otherwise) that candidates for orders, so called in our Church, are considered students in Divinity ; — that their reading prayers and a printed sermon occasionally is ' an indulgence for their convenience ; that their business is, to prepare for examination, when, if they are found qualified and desir^ it, they may be regularly li- censed to preach ; and that, at present, you have no more authsrity to preach than any one of the congregation. " I have great respect as well as affection for the people in , and am sure that their good sense will teach them that 'tis reasonable, (in our church as it is in other churches) that a candidate should go through with his regu- la'r studies and examinations before he is licensed to officiate as a minister of Christ. Can you believe that these en- lightened people will blame me for not sending one into LETTER TO A LAY-READER, &C. 225 their pulpit to preach, whom I have never examined, who has never offered himself to me for examination, and of whose qualifications I am almost totally ignorant ? I desire particularly that Messrs. , and. , may see this letter, that we may prevent these apprehended evils. Let these worthy gentlemen know the rules of our Church, and the reasons of them, and they will cheerfully acquiesce ; and if they prefer you as their future minister, they wiU wil- lingly wait the time of your necessary preparation for the sacred office. " You state that the prospects of the Church in r were fair before this' prohibition. But you cannot surely be ignorant that the same prohibition, without the least altera- tion, has existed for six years, and long before you offered yourself as a candidate. Your hopes, expressed, of organi- zing that Church, I do not understand, seeing that it has been organized for many years. Should you, through the Divine blessing, be made the instrument of its growth in piety and numbers, we shall rejoice and bless" God. What you mean by your intention of being ' governed entirely by the feeling of the people,' and your willingness to submit to the regulations of. the Church, so far as you can do it with •propriety, will, with some other things, require explanation. " As to your receiving orders within the year, the Bishops, with whom I consulted, were clearly of opinion that it is not in such case aidmissible : besides, as I once told you, it is scarce .pa^ssible, with the closest apphcalion, that you can go through with the requisite studies in a less time. " You express a willingness to ' make any personal sacrifi- ces' for the btoefit of that people ; which is very laudable : but I must charitably suppose, though against the most obvi- ous sense, that you do not reckon forbearing to wear a gown and appear in the pulpit, as one among the number of such sacrifices. From what Christian motives could you wish to do it ? Should any, as you fear, leave our Church on this account, it wiU be a great grief and add to the painful cares, which are daily accumulating upon me. The Lord's will be done. I desire the prayers of every member of our Church 226 MEMOIR, &C. that I may be guided by His wisdom, and faithful to my duty. But I trust in God, that no pious Christiaii, who is from principle at^ched to our Churchj will leave it for so very trivial an objection, or from a disappointment of the vanity of appearing as a clergyman before he is one. That G.od may direct your heart and your studies to better things. than a vain show, and prepare you to become an able, faithful and successful minister of His Word, and true to your duly, is the prayer of Yours, afi'ectionately, Alexander V. Griswold." If there was ever a case, in^ which authority was used without arrogance, or keen but holy rebuke administered to one, who evidently needed it, I think we have it in the above letter ; and if the candidate, who received it, was not made better by it, he gave, to himself at least, good evidence that, for whatever other calling he was qualified, he was mistaken in supposing himself called and qualified to enter the minis- try of the Gospel. In the course of the foregoing letter, allusion is made to the consecration of St. Mary's Church, Newton. This was one of the n,ew and interesting parishes, which arose soon after the consecration of Bishop Griswold, and which, in a few years, was settled under the care of its present faithful and useful Rector, the Rev. A. L. Baury. The new parish in Greenfield was rapidly rising in pros- perity, as appears from the following passages in a letter to Mr. Strong, who afterwards became its Rector. I give this letter, as I would all others from its authisr, with the remark that, when- ever, in his correspondence with his clergy, he touches on important subjects, his own language is a better contribution to his memoirs, than any which his biographer could use ; inasmuch as in it we see the good Bishop still alive, and hear him, "though dead, yet speaking." " Bristol, August 9, 1814. " Rev. and dear Sir, — I hiave received your favor of the 19th ult,, and most sincerely thank you for the information, LETTERS TO THE HEV.;T. STRONG. 227 ■which it gives. The prosperous state of that young parish and its increase, for the time, are very •wonderfiil. Much praise is due to that people for their active zeal in this pious 5Vork; and 'tis a subject of great thankfulness to God, whose fa.vor and blessing have crowned their labor with such suc- cess. ******** The method of teaching in your sermons, which you mention as having adopted, I think judicious and most likely to have a good effect. The government, worship and discipline of the Church are important to be taught the people, as their case may require ; but the doctrines of the Church, or (which I conceive to be the same) of the Gospel, are most essential. If their hearts be first renewed unto faith arid well established in the doctrines of the Cross, they will_/eeZ as weU as see the excellence of our Liturgy and gladly receive and support an Apostolic ministry. *«**«*« " It wiU be proper that you should prepare the people for confirmation, that they may be in readiness, whenever we are able to attend to its administration. Though the fitness of persons for receiving that rite depends, chiefly, on their knowledge of rehgion and their pious affections, yet, it wiU seldom occur, that any CEin be deemed of sufficient age and understanding' for so solemn a devotion of themselves to God, till the age of "fourteen. Generally speaking, those qualifica- tions, which would fit them to receive baptism, will fit them for confirmation. And 'tis to-be desired that those, who have been confirmed, should be prepared, the sooner the better, to come to the Lord's Supper. Yet, it may in some cases be prudent and proper to confirm those, whom we would wish, for a little while, to, delay their communing, especially in. the case of very young persons, that we may have further evidence of their faith and stability. ********** I am, with esteem. Yours respectfully, Alexander V. Griswold." The Rev. Titus Strono. 228 MEMOIR, &C. The Biennial Convention of the Eastern Diocese met this year at Portsmouth, N. H. ; but its business was unimport- ant. The Bishop's address, though longer than his former at Newport, was still bri«f and modest, recording with grati- tude to God all the encouragements, with which he had met in the condition of his Diocese, especially in the rise of the two new parishes, to which I have referred, and in the favor- able beginning of the " Easter collections ;" but passing over in silence the many discouragements, by which he was beset. . . The incidents^ which can be gathered to illustrate this period in the memoir, in addition to the mere details of the Journals of Conventions, are but few. The following parts of a correspondence with the Rev. Mr. Strong of Greenfield, however, will be read with some interest : '. " Bristdl, 24th January, 1815. " Rev. and dear Sir, — Your letter, of December 30th, has not only relieved me of some degree of painful anxiety, but also given me great pleasure. I had feared that some unfa- vorable events might check the zeal of that parish and dis- courage your settling with them. How great then must be the satisfaction of learning, that their zeal in so good a work remains unabated, that their number still increases, and chiefr ly that the business of your settlement is agreed upon. Did the same laudable zeal inspire the scattered members qf our communion throughout this Diocese, soon, we may trust,i would pur Church assume that rank £ind dignity amongst us, to which, by her sound doctrines and apostolic order, she is so well ei;titled. -^ " As to the opposition, with which you meet, 'tis much to be deplored that enmity should exist among those, who name themselves of Christ ; but what we deem the truth of God we must teach and maintain. Let it be done, however, with meekness and charity: render not evil for evil, nor rail- ing for railing ; but rather put to silence all opposition by well doing; by exhibiting in your lives and conduct the superior excellence of our holy faith. What notice ought to t LETTERS TO THE REV. T. STRONG. 229 be taken of the sermons which you mention, can better be determined when they come abroad. We may well suppose liiat Mr. Olds has urged nothing against Episcopacy but what has been a hundred times refuted. But, considering what has so often happened, we shall not be surprised if the same thing's are again advanced with the same vain confi- dence of boasting, and read by the ignorant with the same avidity, as if they neither had been nor could be answered. Should it be expedient, the Lord permitting, a suitable an- swer to the sermons in question will be foimd. * * " That you are sensible of the v^st importance of the min- isterial office, and the awful responsibilities of a Christian Ambassador, is much to be commended. Let it humble, but not discourage you. Let us devoutiy look to him, who alone ' is sufficient for these things.' The Lord, we trust, has al- ready Tslessed your labors, and shewn you the way to further usefulness in His holy vineyard. Go on, then, with confi- dence that He, who has begun a good work in you, will finish it. Improve the talents given you. ' Do the work of an Evangelist ; make full proof of thy ministry :' and remember that ' they that have used the office, of a Deacon well, pur- chase to themselves a good degree, and great boldness in the faith, which is in Christ Jesus.' Your friend and brother, Alexander V. Griswold." The Rev. Titus Strong. This letter was written in view of Mr. Strong's ordination as Presbyter; and it is a model of fatherly affection and of apostolical faithfulness. It shews that its writer knew how to commend as well as how to rebuke ; how to encourage as well as how to instruct. What his subsequent view was of Mr. Olds' attack t)n the Church, we shall see fi'om a subse- quent letter to Mr. Strong, written after the threatened publi- cation had been made. " Bristol, September 12th, 1815. " Rev. and dear Sir, — I most sincerely thank you for your 230 MEMOIR, &C. letter of the 4th August, containing an account of the state of the new parish at Montague. I was much pleased with those of them, whom I saw at Greenfield. They appeared to be sensible, judicious, intelligent Christians, who acted conscientiously and not without due consideration. * * * I would certainly advise them to continue to meet for divine service every Lord's day ; and also in their pirivate devo- tions to pray the Lord of the harvest to guide them with His wisdom, and to send faithful laborers intp that part of His vineyard. I wish you to help them to suitable sermons for public reading ; such as are calculated equally to mend the heart and enlighten the vmderstanding. ,. * . * » * * " I wish you, at present certainly, to consider them as under your care and inspection, and that you will give them all the counsel and assistance which shall be consistent with your duty to your own parish. «* * * * They are near you. Providence has thrown them under your care ; and not to afford it would be barbarous. There is no other clergyman at present, to whose care we can commend them. " With respect to Mr. Olds' sermons, or book, 'till it shall be found of serious injury to us, let him and his people en- joy in quiet their imaginary triumph. To answer him is no difficult thing. It would require indeed little more than to repeat what has been many times written. The trouble and expense of a rehgious controversy are serious evils. And if it were to be prosecuted with the same bitter and uncharita- ble spirit, with which Mr. 0. has commenced, the injury to the general cause of religion would be much more serious. The temptation to reply when so provoked is, I am sensible, strong, and requires much self-denial ; but there are times and occasions, when it is our duty to suffer reproach in the cause of truth. May the Lord direct us, in this and in all things, to that.which shall best promote His glory and the prosperity of His Church. , * ' * * * * * " Be assured that, with sentiments of esteem and respect, I remain, your friend and brother, Alexander V. Griswold," The Rev. Titds Strong. PROPOSED REMOVAL TO CAMBRIDGE. 231 These are sentiments on the subject of religious contro- versy, vfhich, under all ordinary circumsteinces, it would be well for the whole body of the Church to adopt and carry into practice. " TM trouble and expense of such controversies" had, in general, better be bestowed on a peaceable effort to spread the blessings of a Gospel of love. In the anxiety and tender care, which the Bishop "ex- presses for the little flock at Montague, we see with what joy he hailed, and with what assiduity he sought to nurse into an abiding and heaivenly flame, every new spark of hfe and growth, however feeble and faint at first, and in what- ever part of his Diocese it appeared. He exhibits, too, sound Christian wisdom in sending that little flock to secret prayer, for a faithful and spiritual ministry among themselves. They, who really pray thus for such a ministry, will never knowing- ly take up with any other. I have already alluded to the desire felt by niany that the Bishop should reside nearer the centre of his Diocese, and to the result of the effort which was made to induce his removal to Salem, In the Spring of the year 1816, a further effort, originating in the same cause, was made to secure his settle- ment in Cambridge. The small, but important parish in that town was now vacant ; but being unable of itself to sup- port the Bishop as its rector, the friends of the Church, in and about Boston, took measures to secure such a salary as' would be sufficient for that purpose ; and on (he 21st of April, Judge Tyng wrote to the* Bishpp in their behalf, and by way ' of preparing him for a call from the Vestry. Portions of the correspondence, which ensued, I shall give ; not because the removal contemplated was effected, or would have been a splendid event, but because that correspondence gives an interesting view of the Bishop's character, and shews the direction in which his Diocese was moving. He evidently received the overtures through Judge Tyng with favor ; for, on the 2d of May, he wrote to hi? brother-in-law, Howard Mitchelson, that he had' in contemplation the removal of his family to Cambridge, although he had not as yet determined 232 MEMOIR, &C. on such a step. His answer to Judge Tyng discloses, to a careful reader, the same state of mind. It is dated, " Bristol, May 3d, 1816. " Dear Sir, — I had the honor of receiving your favor of the 21st of April, and return you cordial thanlisfor the kind and interesting information, which it contains. " That the Church in Cambridge is very small I had sup- posed ; that more vigorous measures are in operation for its future prosperity's a subject of gratulation. May the Lord give them success. That those measures have not beep adopted with unanimity is, however, very much to be re- gretted. " Respecting my removal to Cambridge I shaU affect no reserve, but answer with that frankness of communication, which both the manner and the subject of your letter require. I consider myself as de^voted to the service of the Churches in this Diocese, and bound certainly to do whatever shall be in my power to promote their interest and prosperity. Nor can it be denied, that a more central situation would apparent- ly enable me to perform the duties of a Diocesan with more facility and convenience, both to myself and to the Churches. Were I less engaged in parochial duties, and in a siliuation to bestow more of my time in visiting the various parts of the Diocese, my time, we may reasonably suppose, would be more profitably bestowed. It must also be allowed, that Cambridge is sufficiently central and convenient. But, still, to my removal thither there are several obstacles, and some of serious consideration. That of the least weight is my private interest, which, from the preculiarity of my situation, must suffer very considerably by a removal from this place : nor can I reasonably expect to find another situation so con- venient for my family, as the one, which I now possess. But of these things, I am sensible, little account should be made. " A point of much more serious importance to my feeling is the separating from a people, with whom for many years PROPOSED REMOVAL TO CAMBRIDGE. 233 I have lived in the most perfect harmony, ^d whose very great and uniform kindness, to me and mine," have engaged me to them with ,the most tender ties of gratitude and affec- tion. Should it be urged in reply, that private feelings ought no more than private interests to interfere in a matter of more public concern, I have to add very serious apprehensions, that the Church here in Bristol would suffer in consequence of my leaving them. Being already bound to them as their minister, my heart revolts from a separation against their con- sent ; nor would it consist with my duty to leave them un- supplied. " Supposing that they may be satisfactorily supplied with another minister, it would remain only to consider my pros- pects of a maintenance in Cambridge, To those generous friends, who have offered to contribute for my benefit, as also to those, who hare already done it, I am under the greatest obligations ; and it is my daily prayer that the Lord, who is able, may bless and reward them. You can, better perhaps than myself, judge what will be the ordinary ex- pense of a large family in that place : not less, I suppose, than in Boston. To myself, it is less painful to suffer almost any privation than to burthen my friends. We, who are dependent on the gratuitous contributions of Christian people, should be content with such styl? of living as they judge fit and becoming. I have little doubt, while the Lord shall preserve my health, of being able to clothe and feed my family with the sum, which you mention. But, whether it would be possible, with the most rigid economy, to hve in such a manner as would there be thought respectable and decent, my friends in that vicinity are best able to judge. Should it be the Lord's will that I reside among them, my chief concern in these things will be, not to disgrace them ; my careful endeavor, that nothing bestowed upon me be needlessly wasted ; and my confidence, that they will not expect what is impossible, nor be offended with a plainness and finigality which must be necessary. "The time, we may hope, is not far distant, though prob- ably beyond my day, when the funds of our Church shall 234 MEMOIR, &C. place the Bishop of this Diocese in a situation for greater usefuhiess. Till such time arrives, the most retired situation for his residence is perhaps the best. But this must be as the mil of the Lord and the yoice of His people shall direct. My desire is, to spend my few remaining days among the kind friends, who here surroun4 me ; but I hold myself in readiness to go whithersoever duty and the good of the Churches may call me. " And whatever shall be determined, of one thing be assured, that I am, with aflfection and respect. Your friend and humble servant, Alexander V. Griswold. Dudley A. Tyng, Esq. The apprehension, expressed in this letter, that his private interests would suffer by a removal from Bristol, arose, it is presumed, simply from the necessity, to which such a removal ivould subject him, of selling at a sacrifice the house and garden in Bristol, which he had contrived by his little savings to purchase, and which, with his skill and industry in horticulture, were vastly more available to the support of his family than they could be made by either sale or rent. Still, his letter, on the whole, makes it evident that, though a removal threatened to involve pecuniary loss, and, what was vastly more regarded, a most painful sacrifice of feel- ings, yet he desired, and, perhaps expected, to settle in Cam- bridge. But, theletter is valuable chiefly as shewing the modest views, which he entertained, of the style becoming a Bishop in the Church of Christ. He desired indeed what would not disgrace the friends among wl^om he might be called to move. But of the style, which men of the world affect, he thought little, and for it cared less. He deemed that the honor and dignity of the Bishopric were best sus- tained by holiness of life, and a self-sacrificing devotion to its duties. His reference, too, to the future prospects of the funds of the Church, shews that, at this time, he expected the Eastern Diocese would Uve after himself, and that he should have a successor in the Bishopric, which he fiUed., PROPOSED REMOVAL TO CAMBRIDGE. 235 Upon the receipt of his letter hy Judge Tyng, the parish in Cambridge proceeded to call him to its rectorship ; and on the 8th of May the wardens of the parish, Abraham Bigelow and W. D. Peck, communicated the result in a very appropriate letter of invitation. The salary, which ■with the aid of friends and the fund, they were enabled to offer him, was $1500. And, as will be seen by the follow- ing extract from' their letter, they, urged his acceptance of the call on. the ground, that it was the wish of his Diocese no les?: than that of. their parish. They say : ." While these prospects haVe emboldened us to make the request, which is the object of this address, we cannot avoid the observation, that they also imply a general wish of the Diocese that it may meet your approbation and concurrence. Although the parish have been principally induced to adopt this measure from a desire of their own religious and moral improvement, under your pastoral care, yet they cannot but indulge the idea, that your local situation here will afford you opportunity for an increased usefulness in the discharge of your Episcopal functions, from the vicinity of many churches to this place, and the easy and frequent means of communi- cation to be enjoyed here with every part of the Diocese. We may also be permitted to recollect, in this connexion, the large and valuable hbrary of the University here estab- lished, to which you will have free access, and the society of learned and amiable men employed in the government and instruction of that Institution." The Diocesan reason for his removal, urged in this extract, was doubtless that, which influenced his mind, both as a Bishop and as a Christian, in his wish to. settle in Cam- bridge ; though there need be no doubt that, so far as the literary advantages, which \vere offered by such a settlement might be allowed to operate on him as a man, they had in his case an uncommon degree of weight. The first step, which he took in the business, was to return an answer to the letter from the wardens, intimating that their proposal demanded " mature consideration," and proposing to visit them in the course of a few weeks with a view to " a more 236 MEMOIR, '&C. decisive answer."' In the mean time, his next step was to lay the subject of the call before his own Vestry in Bristol. This, however, brought forth so strong an expression of feel- ing from the parish, and disclosed such strength in the ties, which bound him there, that he ultimately relinquished the project of a removal. And yet, he had evidently excited so strong an expectation of his removal, in Cambridge and in Boston, that he felt it would be extremely unpleasant to re- turn a positive refusal of the call ; and thus it appears to have remained an undecided matter for atleaSt a yeai;. His Vestry, indeed, held a meeting as soon as t}ie call was laid before them, at which, while they expressed the strongest reluctance to a separation, they offered to release him from further correspondence with the Cambridge parish, aiid avowed an undoubting conviction of their ability to satisfy the wardens of that parish that the removal, which they sought, ought not to take place. Still, when they had thus induced him to relinquish his purpose of removal, his Vestry themselves appear to have dropped the matter, and left the parish in Cambridge for a twelve-month in a state of uncer- tainty, which was finally terminated by the Bishop himself. In the year 1814, the Bishop, in addition to his address to the Convention of his Diocese assembled in Portsmouth, N. H., delivered a charge to his clergy, noticed in the Journal of that Convention, as "a solemn and excellent charge." This was subsequently published, with " a Pastoral letter" prefixed ; and, being sent to England, was very favorably noticed in the Missionary Register of the Church Missionary Society, for 1816 and 1817. A considerable portion of this Pastoral letter and charge, was on the subject of the mission- ary duty of our Church : and as the part, which Bishop Gris- wold modestly bore in our early missionary organization, is not generally known, and especially as he has been unjustly suspected of indifference to the cause of Foreign Missions, it will be well to present here some portions of the correspond- ence, in which he was about this time engaged ; together with, some of the notices of his" Pastoral letter and charge, which were taken in the London Missionary Register. CORRESPONDENCE WITH CHURCH MISSIONARY SOCIETY. 237 The correspondence referred to was opened by the Rev. Josiah Pratt, the able and excellent Secretary of " the Church Missionary Society," London, by a sort of circular letter, ad- dressed to " several of the leading members of the Episco- pal Church in the United States," dated in August 1815, and designed to awaken attention to the work of missions in this Church. To this letter it would seem that Bishop Gris- wold was the only man, whose answer had been received, when the Missionary Register for 1816 was issued. The following notice of this matter is found on pages 367, 368, of that work, for the year 1816. " The Secretary of the Church Missionary Society having addressed letters, accompanied by various publications, as has been already stated in our abstract of the report, to several of the leading members of the Episcopal Church in the United States ; the Bishop of the Eastern Diocese, the Rt. Rev. Dr. Griswold, has returned an answer, which, with its accompanying documents, will be read with great pleasure by every friend of the missionary cause." To this notice, the Register appends the answer firom Bishop Griswold, as follows : " Bristol, State of Rhode Island, July 17, 1816. " Rev. and dear Sir, — Your much esteemed favor of August last has long since been received, with (he books ex- plaining the objects and proceedings of the Church Mission- ary Society : for which favor be pleased to accept, for your- self and the Committee of that Society, my most cordial thanks. Any like benefits, in future, will be gratefully ac- cepted ; and will, no doubt, contribute much to the promo- tion of zeal and godliness in this part of the Lord's vineyard. " It is with us a subject of great joy and thankfulness to the Father of mercies, that the Church of England is rising in her strength, and putting on her beautiful garments ; that a spirit of zeal for the cause of truth and the extension of the Redeemer's kingdom, is apparently increasing within the pale of the establishment ; and that your Zion is becoming the joy, as it has long been the admiration, of the whole earth. 238 MEMOIR, &C. " I herewith send you a Pastoral Letter to the Churches, and a Charge addressed to the clergy, of this Dioceise ;' which are not otherwise worth your perusal, than as they may give you some information of the present state of rehgion.in this country, especially as relating to the subject of your commu- nications. "Most gladly would we unite with you, in sending mis- sionaries to Africa and the East ; and hope that the time is not far distant, when some of our pious young men will be zealously disposed to engage in that interesting work. At present, however, we have not funds, nor other means of doing much in -any missionary labor ; not even of supplying the wants of our own country. > " It would never be credited on your side of the water, what multitudes there are in these United States destitute of the Gospel ministrations. Others there.are, in still greater number, who, though not wholly destitute, are but occasion- ally and very imperfectly supplied. In any labors of this kind, and in every thing, which will promote the cause of piety and godliness in this, or in any other country of thfi earth, we will most cordially co-operate with you, so far as our means and power will permit ; and a correspondence upon this subject with the Committee of the Church Mis- sionary Society, will be highly pleasing to our Church here. " The Protestant Episcopal Church is, we have good rea- son to believe, rapidly increasing here ; not only in numbers, bjit, in what is far more desirable, inward piety and zeal for God. Religious prejudices. Which heretofore have operated very much to our disadvantage, are happily diminishing, and giving place to a more Catholic and Christian spirit of chari- ty and zeal. May this spirit increase, till it fill the world, and aU mankind see the salvation of our God and Saviour. I have the honor to be, with much respect and esteem, Your sincere friend, and brother in the Lord, Alexander V. Griswold, . Bishop of the Eastern Diocese, in the States of JMassachu- } setts, Rhode Island, New Hampshire and Vermont." J CORRESPONDENCE WITH CHURCH MISSIONARY SOCIETY. 239 Having thus introduced the Bishop to its readers, the Missionary Register proceeds in the Vol. for 1816, and in that for 1817, to give large extracts from the pastoral letter and charge, quoting those parts, which touch specially the Mission- ary subject, ifhese extracts are prefaced with commendatory remarks, which I will here insert, because they shew not only the early interest, which Bishop Griswold felt in the cause of Missions, but also that the impulse, which put in motion our first Missionary organization^ came, in no small measure, from the London Church Missionary Society. For the ex- tracts,' themselves, which the Register makes from the Bi- shop's pastoral letter and charge, the reader is referred to these documents in the Appendix at the close of this work. They will be found in the paragraphs, which relate to the cause of Missions. The Missionary Register of 1816 thus introduces its ex- tracts fiom the pastoral letter : " We subjoin some extracts from this address ; and shall, in a future number, give such parts of the Bishop's charge as relate to the subject of Missions. " These indications of a growing and conscientious regard to the great duty of Missions must be noticed with gratitude to the Giver of all good things." — (Miss. Reg'r. for 1816, p. 368.) In the Vol. for 1817, it prefaces its extracts from the charge thus more at large : "In the number for September, we printed a letter- to the Secretary of the Church Missionary Society Irom the Rt, Rev. Dr. Griswold, Bishop of the Eastern Diocese of the United States, with a pastoral letter of the Bishop. " We proceed to lay before our readers, as we promised, such parts of the Bishop's charge to his clergy, as relate to the subject of Missions. They cannot fail to excite a lively hope, that the Episcopal Church of America will take her share in the benevolent exertions of the Christian world, to bring the heathen to the knowledge of the Gospel. This great cause cannot in vain be pleaded so ably and so 240 MEMOIR, &C. eloquently by a Christian Bishop with his clergy and his ■people. "Most heartly should we rejoice, if the just animadver- sion of the Bishop on our own Church, for the tardiness, with which her discipline is communicated to our colonial possessions, may beheardno more."' — (Miss. Reg'r. for 1817, p. 57.) Having written to the Rev. Mr. Pratt the foregoing letter of July 17th, 1816, with its accompanying documents, which draw forth these notices from the Church Missionary Society, the Bishop, on the 24th of November of the same year, addressed to the same gentleman another letter, in which it probably was that he proposed to the notice of that Society the young candidate for Missionary service, men- tioned in the following paragraph from the Register for 1817 : " ' The Committee having requested Sir Alexander,' (Sir A. Johnston, the Chief Justice for Ceylon) ' to suggest the most expedient method of introducing their labors in Ceylon, he was pleased to forward, under date of July 18th, a plan for establishing Free-schools at all the four principal stations of Colombo, Galle, JafTnapatam and Trincomale. " In order to accomplish this plan, the Committee have resolved to send out four clergymen to act as Missionaries and superintendents of schools at the said stations. They have three. of these clergymen in view; and they have it in contemplation to propose, the Rev. Joseph R. Ahdrus, a young American clergyman of the Episcopal Church, strongly recommended to them by the Rt. Rev. Bishop Griswold, shall occupy the fourth station ; unless a fourth English . clergyman should offer ; in which case they will still invite Mr. Andrus to proceed to Ceylon in order to co- operate with the Missionaries of the Society," (Missionary Reg'r. for 1817, p. 427.) In the foUoAving paragraph from the Register for the same year, the influence of the "London Church Missionary So- ciety on (mr first Missionary organization comes into view in connexion with the agency of Bishops Griswold, and White, CORRESPONDENCE WITH CHURCH MISSIONARY SOCIETY. 241 " It was stated in the last report, that letters had been ad- dressed to several of the leading members' of the Protestant Episcopal Church in the United States of America, in the hope of obtaining the co-operation of that Church in the work of Missions. The Committee have much pleasure in reporting that very encouraging answers have been received from the Bishops of the Eastern Diocese and of Philadelphia,"' (Pennsylvania) " which will /lead, as we trust, to an in- crease of Missionary exertions among the members of the Episcopal body. " In furthesance of this object, the Committee have sug- gested the expediency of formihg, in the Episcopal Church of the United States, a Missionary Society for the advancement of the kingdom of Christ among the heathen ; and have autho- rized Bishop Griswold to. draw on this Society for the sum of ^6200, as an encouragement to its own exertions, and in full persuasion that those exertions will be, as they are daily felt to be in this country, a blessing to those who make them, as well as to those, towards whose immediate benefit they are directed. The Committee have also suggested the propriety of the Rev. Mr. Andrus, before mentioned, pro- ceeding to Ceylon, under the patronage of the Society to be so formed ; in the hope, that the maintenance by the Institu- tion of a pious and exemplary Missionary among the hea- then will not only call forth the liberal contributions of the members of the American Episcopal Church in support of the funds, but excite their prayers for its success, and in- duce other clergymen to follow his example." — (Missionary Reg'r. for 1817, p. 434.) The following is the communication from the Society to Bishop Griswold, referred to in the above peiragraph : " Church Missionary House, I Loudon, July 31, 1817. \ " Rt. Reverend Sir, — Your lettiers of the 17th July and 24th November last ■^ere duly received. My very exten- sive and important duties, as Secretary of the Church Mis- sionary Society," have prevented me from writing before, x 242 MEMOIR, &C. gratefiiUy to acknowledge the kindness, with which you had received our communications, and to thank you for the im- portant information, with which you furnished us. " We take the present opportunity of sending you the Registers for the year 1816, and all that have been published this year. You will see by them, that we have availed our- selves of such parts 'of your address and charge, as related to Missionary subjects ; and have communicated them, with your letter to me, to our friends. We were anxious to shew them, that the hearts of ttie members of the Episcopal Church in America had been warmed in this holy cause. , " Your last letter brings before us a subject of great im- portance. We are truly glad to hear that the Missionary spirit is rising among pious members of the Episcopal Church in America, and especially in the heart of such a man as you represent Mr. Andrus to be. Since we received your letter, his dffer of himself has occupied much of our thoughts ; and the Committee have been anxious to decide on a plan, by which the proposal might be made most wide- ly beneficial in promoting the cause of Christ. "The Island of Ceylon has long been contemplated by us as a very promising field of labor ; but from the pressing calls to other stations, and not having a sufiicient number of Missionaries, and an adequate income to support them, we have not, as yet, had it in our power to avail ourselves of the great opening there. The Committee are now about to send three or four English clergymen to Ceylon ; they will probably sail in October, or Ndvember ; and it has appear- ed to the Committee as the most promising station for Mr. Andrus-, and that he should go thither and labor with theta. " The Committee have thought, however, that the most effectual way of raising the Missionary zeal in America would be by the formation of a Missionary Society in the Episcopal Church of the United States, which, however small in its be^nings, might ultimately so increase as to produce the most extensive good." After speaking of a complet^ set of the Society's publica- tions, which were sent as a present to Bishop Griswold) as CORKESPONDENCE WITH CHUKCH MISSION AKY SOCIETY. 243 illustrative of the manner, in which the Society interested its patrons in England and secured regular contributions to its funds, — the letter proceeds : "Should the formation of an American Episcopal- Mis- sionary Society be accomplished, the Committee of the Church Missionary Society authorise you to draw on me for the sum of je200, to encourage the contributions of the friends of the Episcopal Church and of Christianity at large'. In this case, Mr. Andrus had better be sent to Ceylon un- der the proposed Society, and be instructed to co-operate with such of our Missionaries as may be fixed in that Island." With a reference to the information, which the Register and Sir A. Johnston conveyed on the subject of the great opening in Ceylon, the letter thus concludes : " I need only in conclusion remark, that, after much ex- perience, we have invariably found, that endeavors to excite and foster a Missionary spirit at home have not only suc- ceeded in their immediate object, but have been productive of great collateral good to the places themselves. A spirit of piety has been fostered and increased ; the friends of re- ligion, till then little acquainted with one another, have been brought together ; domestic charities have been greatly enlarged ; and we have all found the truth of the declara- tion ; ' There is that scattereth and yet increaseth.' " We have written to the Bishop of Philadelphia on this • subject ; and also to Mr. Andrus, and Mr. Eaton. I am. Right Reverend Sir, With great respect and regard. Your faithful servant, JosiAH Pkatt, Sec'y Ch. Mis. Soc." Et. Rev. BisifoF GmswoLD. On the 3d of Feb. 1818, Mr. Pratt again wrote to the Bishop, informing him that the Society had sent the four pro- posed clergymen to Ceylon from England, and urging again the mission of Mr. Andrus from a Society of the Church in 244 MEMOIR, &C. this country. Both these letters were answered by Bishop Griswold in the following, dated, " Bristol, (R. I.) November 16, 1820. " Rey. and dear Sir, — ^The dates of your last two letters of July 31st, 1817, and February 3d, 1818, both which, with the books, were, duly received, rerpind me daily how long I hare delayed the due acknowledgment of favors so very obliging and acceptable. Several things have contributed to this delay, which, if they do not wholly^ excuse, will at least account for it. Among these, one of the chief has been a hope continually cherished of being able to commu- nicate some progress, or at least favorable .prospects, in the matter of forming the Society for Foreign Missions, so kindly recommended by the Church Missionary Society in Englemd, and so much the subject of my own desire. Another cause of this delay has been the ill state of my health, which, for more than a year, has rendered it scarce practicable to attend to the more urgent and necessary concerns of the Diocese under my care. Through the goodnesjs of God, I have been now, for several months, convalescent, and may hope for a complete restoration. " After the meeting of the General Convention of our Church early in May last, I wrote with the intention of giving you advice of what we had done ; but through some negli- gence the letter was never forwarded. Others wrote with the, same intention, from whom, no doubt, you learned that the Convention in May last formed a Missionary Society, to be designated ; ' The Protestant Episcopal Missionary Society in the United States for Foreign and Domestic Missions.' In compliance with the wishes of some individuals. Domestic Missions are embraced ; but the main object of its promo- ters is, the propagation of the Gospel in Foreign parts. What progress has been made in collecting fonds I am unable to state. Should the Church Missionary Society think it fitting, and find it convenient, to extend to us the aid, which was once so liberally offered, it will be most Ihankfiilly ac- cepted. Mr. Andrus, whose zeal in the good cause is in -CORRESPONDENCE WITH CHURCH MISSIONARY SOCIETY. 245 no degree abated, has been engaged • as a missionary and agent for the Colonization Society on the coast of Afiica, for which field of labor he several weeks since departed. His labors, we trust, will be much aided and more useful by being conducted in concert with those. of your Mission^es on the coast. " The publications of the Church Missionary Society do much honor to the Institution, and must be extensively use- ful. The Register contains much information, valuable as it is interesting. I have received the numbers of that work doWn to Mayj 1820, with the exception of five, of the year 1818, from August to December inclusive, which by some mistake or accident have not come. The reports of the So- ciety and its proceedings sufficiently evince the wisdom, piety and zeal of its members ; and the success, which has atten4ed its efforts, is a gratifying evidence that your Society takes the very first rank among the many blessed charities, by which the Lord is doing His work. From the sure word of prophecy, and the evident signs of the times, we are au- thorized in the belief, that the wonderful exaltation of the British Empire is, in the gracious purposes of God's Provi- dence, intended to facilitate the extension of the Redeemer's kingdom. The design of Providence, we may trust, is, that those, fleets, which distribute throygh the world the various productions of nature and art, shall be freighted also with the richer treasures of heavenly knowledge, even of the Gos- pel of our salvation. From their various Societies for re- Ugious and charitable objects, from their many and liberal contributions to every good enterprise, from the increasing disposition of various denominations of Christians to unite their efforts in propagating the faith of Christ, your people, we may believe, are not insensible how much it is in their power to accomplish in the spread of pure Christianity, and what obligations are attached to their pre-eminence among the nations of the earth. " To this country also the Lord is pleased to extend his blessings, both temporal and spiritual. He has many faith- fijl laborers in this part of His vineyard, and His work, we ' X* 246 MEMOIR, &C. trust, is still advancing. It is, however, not a little impeded by the prevalence of unsound doctrines in one part of these States, and of slavery in the other. The latter evil is e\i- dently increasing. The pertinacity, with which so large a part of our citizens adhere to the slave-holding interest, precludes the hope of this country's soon becoming what it is so often and -so absurdly called, ' a land of freedom.' The next State to be admitted into the Union has a constitutipn admitting negro slaves, but excluding those' who are free. We have reason to bless God that there is at least one country on this globe, into which if a man steps his foot he is sure not to be a slave. "My gratitude- is much engaged by yoTir past favors. Any further communications will be most thankfiilly re- ceived. I remain. Rev. and dear Sir, Respectfully, Your friend and humble servant, Alexander V. Griswold." The Rev. Josiah Pratt, ) Sec. C. M. Society. \ " The above answer," says the Bisiiop, " was much cor- rected." But, in what the corrections consisted, I have no means of ascertaining ; I have tl\erefore given it from the rough draft, which he left among- his papers; correcting only here and there an expression, which he had inarked for cor- rection, and inserting' the date in accordance with that assigned it in the Rev. Mr. Pratt's reply ; which is as fol- lows : ■ " Church Missionary House, J London, July 2d, 1821. J- " Right Rev. Sir, — I beg to acknowledge your favor of Nov. 16th, which reVhedus on the 12th ultimo, and to ex- press the satisfaction of .the Committee at this kind commu- nication. " "We were apprized of the formation of « the Protestant CORRESPONDENCE WITH CHURCH MISSIONARY SOCIETY. 247 Episcopal Missionary Society in the United States for Foreign and Domestic Missions, by Bishop White and Mr. Boyd, and we have abeady communicated to them the congratula- tions of our Committee on this auspicious event. " Our Committee will have much pleasure in affording to your newly formed Society that friendly aid, which was offered in my letter to you of July the 31st, 1817. I write by this post to Mr. Boyd to apprize him, that he is authorized to draw on me for j6200 sterling, to promote the effective es- tablishment of the Society. " We have received advices from our missionaries in Sierra Leone to the date of the 31st of March. At that period, Mr. Andrus and his fellow laborers had arrived. It was suggested to them, by our friends in the Colony, that a spot in the Bassa Country, Cape Messurado, or St. John's River, each of which places is about 400 miles from Sierra Leone, would be a more eligible point for establishing them- selves than one nearer the Colony. This advice has, we understand, been followed ; and your Colonists have proceed- ed to that part of the coast, accompanied by William Tam- bah, and William Davies, two Christian Negroes from Re- gent's Town, acquainted with the coast and with the chiefs, to act as interpreters, and to afford such other assistcince as may be in their power, in forming the new settlement, t " We are happy to find that the Missionary Register is so acceptable to yourself and the . other friends of religion in America. We hope that you receive it regularly ; as it is forwarded to Mr. Boyd monthly for the use of yourself and the other members of the Episcopal body. The numbers from August to December, 1818, inclusive, which you state to be deficient in your set of the Register, are forwarded in Mr. Boyd's last parcel. I remain. Right Rev. Sir, With much respect and esteem, Your faithful servant, JosiAH Pratt." To the Right Rev. Bishof Griswold. 248 MEMOIR, &C. The correspondence, which I have thus given, has much interest for the present work. It shews that the strong and decided stand, which Bishop GrisWold took in favor of Missions, so early as his Charge of 1814, and its accompany- ing Pastoral Letter, was, in the Providence of God, if not the means, yet certainly one of the leading means, used in awakening our Church to the missionary wprk, and to her first Missionary Organization; that this organization was originally an expression of interest in the work of Foreign Missions ; that, in the iaterest thus, expressed, Bishop Gris- wold deeply shared ; that the Church Missionary Society evidently regarded his agency in our early Missionary move- ments as one of great importance ; that the first Foreign Missionary, ever sent from our Church, was brought forward on Bishop Griswold's suggestion and recommendation ; and that, in view of all these facts, it is not claiming too much for him to say, that, in his quiet, modest, unobtrusive way, he was among the very first of those truly evangeUcal men, who began themselves to breathe, and to, commimicate to others, that Missionary spirit, which is identical with the life of our Christianity, and which has ever since been gain- ing power in the mind of our Church. While on the subject of his foreign correspondence, it will be sufficient just to state, that at various periods, be- tween 1811 and 1824, he received letters from the Secre- taries of "the Church of England Tract Society," instituted in Bristol; of " the London Prayer Book and Homily Socie- ty ;" and of " the London Society for promoting Christianity among the Jews ;" accompanied in each case with fuU sets of their pubUcations, and in one, with a, valuable present of books ; in testimony of their regard for him, as one of the faithful servants of Christ in promoting the cause of true re- ligion in our American Episcopal Church. But to return to our proper place in the memoir ; the Bi- ennial Convention for the year 1816, was held at Wiadsor, Vermont ; and, the war being now ended, and Peace, with all its blessmgs, restored to the country, the Bishop's address CONVENTION AT WINDSOR, 1816. _ 249 was full of accounts of newly awakened prosperity to the ex- ternal affairs of the Church. As the divine secreji; too of every thing truly prosperous in its outward condition^ he re- corded, with a grateful heart, various instances, especiaBy in Vermont and Rhode Island, in which God had, in a distin- guished manner, been doing His own work through the labors of his faithful ministers. Of one of these instances, perhaps the most important, he thus spoke: "The Church in Provi- dence," (St. John's,) "though of long standing, has become almost a new one by the renovating work of the Lord among them ; it is now one of the largest in the Diocese." In Pawtucket, or North Providence, also, " true godliness was much increased. Many there had been awakened to the glorious truths and experienced the unspeakable comforts of the Saviour's Gospel." "In Middlebury" likewise, "it had pleased the Lord to pour out his spirit, and to awaken many to righteousness." While, from Fairfield, Sheldon and St. Albans, he had " the most pleasing intelligence. A considerable number of communicants had been added to those Churches ; and a spirit of serious inquiry, and awakened concern for the one thing needful, extensively prevailed in those parts." In this address is mentioned, one thing, which I have never seen elsewhere noticed. After the death of Bishop Jarvis, Bishop Griswold, it seems, had been, according to Canon, invited to perform Episcopal duties in the Diocese of Connecticut, and had accordingly made one tour for that purpose. These facts he thus recorded : " Since the last meeting of this Convention, being invited according to the directiom of the 20th Canon, I have visited some of the Churches in Connecticut, and confirmed in Mid- dletown, Hartford and Warehouse Point, one hundred and thirty-one persons. I admitted Ezekiel Gear^ and Reuben Sherwood, to the order of Deacons : and the Rev. B. G. Noble, A. Gear, Hsury Croswell, and Aaron Humphrey, Deacons, were ordained Presbyters. I have heard, though not by any official notice, that the Churches in Connecticut have since placed themselves under ■ the care of Bishop 250 MEMOIR, &C. Hobart. The invitation previously givenis, therefore, no doubt, revoked." This is probably the only notice, which Bishop Griswold ever took, whether in writing or in conversation, of an ap- parent want of official comity. If, as is implied in the above extract from the address, the Convention or Standing Com- mittee of Connecticut had, according to the Canon, invited Bishop Griswold to visit and perform Episcopal offices in that State, their breach of comity was most manifest. Th6 clause in the Canon, which refers to this case, was in the following words : " The Bishop of any Diocese, State or District, may, on the invitation of the Convention, or Standing Committee of the Church, in any State or Diocese where there is not a Bishop, visit and perform the Episcopal offices in that State, or part of the State, as the case may be : provision being made for defraying his expenses as aforesaid : and such State, or part of a State, shall be considered, as annexed to the District or Dio- cese of such Bishop, until a Bishop is duly elected and conse- crated for such State or Diocese, or, until the invitation given by the Convention or Standing Committee be revoked." That Bishop Griswold, under this clause, considered the Diocese of Connecticut as having been provisionally and re- gularly annexed to his own, during the vacancy in the Epis- copate, occasioned by the death of Bishop Jarvis, there can, in view of what he recorded in his address of 1816, be no doubt. Whether the invitation to him was ever " revoked," or, if so, why he was not officially notified of its revocation, I have no means of knowing. Nor am I aware of the reason for the apparent change, which was made, of the provisional aimexation of Connecticut from the Eastern Diocese to that of New York. It is true that the style of Episcopacy, which was springing up in the former, was somewhat new, and not fuUy in sympathy with the older state of things, which had become established in Connecticut and in the Dioceses further to the West and South. But whether this had any influence in producing the change can be known to those only, by whom that change was made. CONVENTION AT ■WINDSOR, 1816, 251 In concluding his address, for 1816, which was much fuller than either of its predecessors, the Bishop recommend- ed various practical measures for the increase of the already increasing prosperity of the Diocese. Amongst these measures, were a nursing of the funds in the hands of the corporation of " the Trustees of Donations," which he calls, " this Palla- dium of the Eastern Diocese ;" the formation of Missionary Societies ; the multiplication of Prayer-books ; and the fre- quent supply of .vacant parishes hy the settled clergy, " as a temporary relief " while the great want of clergy continued to be felt. In recommending the multiplication of Prayer-books, he remarked : "Next after the word and ministers of God, this is the best gift, which you can send. Its value and useful- ness are too well known in this Convention to require praise. Through the pious liberality of Christians of all denomina- tions, Bibles are dispensed to a large portion of those who are disposed to read them. Various Tracts also have been distributed in great abundance. But this Book of Common Prayer, second only to the Bible in its utility among us, is' in many places scarcely to be obtained. Could measures be taken, either by gratuitous distribution, or by so dispersing cheap editions that all, who are disposed t6 purchase, may find them, it would be attended with extensive and salutary effects.?' It was this recommendation doubtless, in connexion with its motive, that led to the subsequent pubhcation, under the auspices of the Massachusetts Episcopal Missionary Society, of that valuable stereotype edition of the Book of Common Prayer, so long in use, especially in the Eastern Diocese, but now in a great measure superceded by smaller and cheaper editions. The manner, in which he urged the last named charity, that of supplying vacant parishes with the frequent services of settled ministers, was characteristic of the man, and of the mode, in which he sought to infuse into his flock the benevo- lent spirit of the Gospel. 262 MEMOIR, &C. . " This," said he, "must be a painful sacrifice to a de- vout congregation, who delight in the worship of God ; but it is a sacrifice, which,- if offered with a free will and a good heart, will be approved and accepted. Remember what are the great objects of our religion; not personal gratification, but to do good ; to promote the salvation of mankind, and extend the borders of the Redeemer's kingdom. It is lauda- ble in every Christian congregation to desire the regular and constant administration of the •word and doctrine, and never needlessly to relinquish the comforts of the sanctuary. But, in this, as in other things, it is, in some cases, more blessed to give than to receive. While we enjoy a fulness of Gos- pel privileges, let us not forget those, who are totally desti- tute, who have no preaching, no divine service, no sacra- ments. To assist such, even in the way now proposed, may be as true Christian charity as to relieve the temporal wants of your sufTering fellow-creatures. If, from good will towards men, and to extend the influence of the Gospel, Christians sometimes deny themselves the comfortable refreshments of God's house, it will, we need not doubt, be even more ac- ceptable to Him, and better promote their own salvation, than a rigid claim to all their privileges. In such" case, our prayers should attend our minister in his labor of love." It maybe doubted, whether many of his parishes and their ministers ever rose to that height of Christian charity, here recommended. But however this may be, the following extract from one of his letters will shew that, in one instance at least, his recommendation was not unheeded : " Bristol, March 18, 1817. " Rev. and dear Sir,. — Your favor of the 5th has been re- ceived, and it gives me no small pleasure to find your- cares not confined to the flock under your immediate and more particular charge, but extended to the needy and destitute of other parts. Never, perhaps, since the apostle^'s days, has any body of clergy had more pressing calls for unusual exer- tions and labors, in season and out of season,- than we in this LETTER TO THE REV< T. STRONG. 253 Diocese. The harvest truly is great/and the laborers few. That \he pecuniary encouragements to- our laborers were more adequate to • their necessary expenses, is much to be desired. But, as things are, we have the better opportunity to evince that our object is, not to shear the flock of Christ, but to feed it ; that we "labor for him rather than for ourselves ; and that we truly confide in his promise to provide for ihoge, who sfeek first his kingdom and righteousness. Let us, with faith and love, unite in the glorious work of his ministry, and^ be perfectly contented with the reward, which he will At this critiieal time, if we expect the Lord's blessing, and hope, that our Church may prosper, we must none of us be selfish, but regard the general good. I hope, throu^ the Lord's goodness, the time will soon arrive, when we can give more assistance and encouragement to that exemplary little flock in Montague. Their fidelity and perseverance, we trust, will yet be rewarded. * * * * ♦ * The chief question of a minister of Christ, (if~ he be truly such,) is, not where he shall be most pleasantly situa- ted, or obtain most honor to himself, but, where can he do most good ; where has the Lord called him ? May the Lord help us all to consider of these things. * * ♦ * Accept for yourself the assurance of friendship and esteem, from Yours affectionately, Alexander V. Griswold." The Rev. Tiths Strong. Early in the year^ 1818, the Bishop received veiy en- couraging accounts fi'om the Church in Gardiner, Maine ; while, from Springfield, on the Connecticut, at the opening of the next year, came information, which promised to be favorable or unfavorable, according as the new state of things there should tijm. It seems that, in the young society, which was springing up in that town, were several wealthy and influential Unitarians; apd it soon became a question, whether the new house of worship, to be erected there, should Y 254 MEMOIR, &C. be for Unitarians or for Episcopalians ? This question w^s nltimately decided in favor of the former, and thus, the strength of the latter being inadequate to the work of build- ing a church for themselves, the prospects of Episcopacy in that place were for a consid§rable time put in check. In the event, however, I cannot doubt, the result has proved advantageous to our interests. A very flourishing parish has since been gathered there of more unmixed elements, aiid therefore with far better promise of permanent life 'and health. The Bishop's correspondence, at this period, carries distinct indications of the progress, which the friends of our General Theological Seminary, were niaking in the endowment of that Institution. An agency for the collection of funds, in every part of the Church in the United States', was contem- plated ; and two of the most eminent presbyters in our com- munion, Drs. How and Jarvis', were appointed to this agency in the Diocese of Bishop Griswold. Unforeseen, and in some respects extraordinary events, however, defeated this part of the movement ; and, little, -if anything, was»its result. The favorite plan of the Bishop of the Diocese 6f New York, had originally been to organize and endow a Diocesan Semi- nary, under his own control ; but the force of providential circumstances gave it a general character, and threw it, at l§ast nominally, under the control of the General Conven- tion. Nevertheless,' by the principle, adopted into the con- stitution of the Seminary, of giving to each, Diocese a num- ber of Trustees bearing a certain proportion to the funds con- tributed by each, as well as by the fact of its present actual location, its practical control, has fallen as really within the Diocese of New York, as it would have done -had it been made a professedly Diocesan Institution. And,- under the principle adopted, this is certainly equitable. If to the wis- dom of the Church it seemed good to make money the mea- sure of a right to govern the Institution, then, clearly, the Diocese, which pays most, has a right to govern most; and if it should happen tiiat one Diocese contributes all, or nearly alljhe funds, then, as clearly, that Diocese has a right to all, EFFORT FOR THE GEN. THEOL, SEM. 255 or virtually ail, the governing in the Institution so endowed. Still, it is easy to see how this principle may entirely defeat the object in view, in making it a general instead of a Dio- cesan Institution ; and how, in the actual working of the present case, we have been brought to this'result, that, what ever may become, the theology of .New Yorkj we have sh insurance that such, so far as a general Seminary can have influence, shall become the theology of the Protestant Epis- copal Church in the United States of America, r Our destiny as a Church, is now practically in the hands of our General Theological: School ; and as God shall be pleased to govern that, and the influences which shape its ends, so shall we be most likely to be^overnrid in whatever involves our spiritual life and health. * At the close of the year 1818, the question of consecrating a Bishop for the new Diocesef of Ohio occupied the minds of the Bishops already consecrated ; and, some dpposition to the candidate elect being made, he addressed a letter to his old fiiend. Bishop Griswold, earnestly soliciting a visit from the latter to Philadelphia, where' the candidate then was, await- ing the result of measures either for, or against, his consecra- tion. A copy of the reply' of Bishop' Griswold lies before lie ; and as it carries so much of its author's mind, and shews so much of his relations to the geijeral body of the CJlurch ; and especially as the character of the first Bishop of Ohio has been so long and so favorably known through- out our communion ; I yield to the inducement, which I feel, to spread that reply on the preseiit pages : " Bristol, Nov. 16, 1818. " Rev. and dear Sir, — I have the pleasure of receiving your .two letters, one from Zanesville and the other from Philadelphiasi Having just returned from one journey, and being very much engaged, in preparing for another, I have but little time to write on the important subject of your con- secration. Happily, however, this is of no great conse- quence. There is no other of our Bishops so little able as 256 MEMOIR, &C. . myself, though none, I trust, are more willing, tO give you advice, or aid in this business. ^ " Your two letters, with one from my brother ih Worth- ington, bring me nearly all the infonnation of it that I hafe had. I am rarely consulted upon any subject concerning the general interests of our Church ; know little of 'what is doing- beyon'd the limits of my own Diocese ; and beyond those Umits my influence iS little or nothing. Our ecclesias- tical affairs are managed by wiser heads, and I hope by bet- ter> hearts. My regard for the Church, and sincere friend- ship fof yourself, -will certainly induce me to do any thing and every thing, proper and practicable, to facilitate the busi- ness of your ordination. But, what is proper and what is practicable, I am yet to learn ; and I should feel much anxie- ty, did I not know that you are with those, who are far bet- ter qualified to advise and to do whatever is necessary or expedient. I learned from my brother thatj in JYew Jersey, your testimonials were not signed. From your letters I in- fer that, in some other stg.tes, there is a like hesitancy. What is the reason of their demurrer, I know not. Certainly I had never a thought of its being what you intimate in your last. I have no recollection of having heard any thing reported to the injury of your moral character. " My going to Philadelphia duringthe approaching winter, were it necessary, would bei exceedingly inconvenient. Since the first of June, I have been a gre&t part of the time absent from my parish-j much to its injury, and much to the neglect of some necessary studies ; to say nothing 'of my family, whom I am compelled painfully to neglect. To- morrow, if the Lord will, I am to commence another jburriey. After my return in December, I have, by appointment, some ordinations ahd other business of the Diocese to attend. As the Church here increases, so of course do the cares of the Episcopate. But I see no necessity for my going thither. Bishop White, with the assistance of others in his vicinity, has invariably now for many years performed our consecra- tions. A deviation from this usage in yourcase would havfe LETTER TO THE REV. P.. CHASE, &C. 257 a novel appearance. There are, indeed, some reasons of serious consideration, -why it would be b^etter that I should not be present at your consecraiSon. My approbation, my good wishes, my prayers, though unworthy to be heard, you certainly have. -Permit me, however, to add the expression, of my regret, that you should feel any other anxiety in this business, than apprehension of the extreme cares and awful responsibility of the office, which" you are about to assume. Such, at least, are my own feelings and sense of the thing. It is yet almost my daily fear that I did wrong in accepting ^is office. Jf there, are difficulties, or obstacles in the way of your ordination, wait with patience,, (my advice is) and with entire resignation, till the Lord shall remove them. In such cases, He will open 'the right way, and perhaps better without our concern than with it. If it be the Lord's will to commit to your trugt this ministry, you must bid adieu to temporal ease and worldly happiness ; but, for your comfort, you will know who has said ; ' If a man desire the office of a Bishop, he desireth ,a good work.'' Should it appear, however, that the Lord, has not called you to this work, you may well rejoice -in escaping its cares and responsibleness. Or, should the'Ohurch deemit expedient, that the consecra- tion be postponed till the next meeting of the General Con- vention, that will soon arrive.. The time is but little longer than I, in a like situation, gladly waited, and had that time heed doubled, should have thought it short enough in pre- paring for* such a work. " But do not suppose me forgetful that I am writing to one who, much better than myself, can judge of these things. That the Lord may preserve and direct you, and bless your pious labors to His great glory and the building-up of the Redeemer's kingdom., is the devout and humble prayer of '' Your' friend and brother, Alexander V. Griswold." The Rev. Philandek Chase. The Biennial Convention of the Eastern Piocese met, this year, in Greenfield, ancftransacted its ordinary business. But 258 MEMOIfi, &c. the Bishop's address, instead of being, like its predecessors, recorded in the Manuscript Journals, was ordered to he printedJ In this address, the Bishop notices, among many other things, his correspondence with the Secretary of the Church Missionary Society in England; the steps, which had been taken, to encourage the formation in this country of an Epis- copal^Foreign Missionary Society: and the fact that its' for- mation,, at that time, had been deemed by our Bishops and clergy " inexpedient and even impracticable." He also enumerates some of the hindrances to the growth of our Church in the Eastern Diocese ; in doing which, his r'emarks are so illustrative of the history of this period of his Episcopate, that I cannot do better than to transcribe them : "Among our peculiar discouragements may well be reckoned, as not- the least, the remote situation of our churches, which are thinly scattered over a large extent of country, rendering it inconvenient for our clergy to convene. Such, too, is the constitution of this Diocese, that a part of them have no seat in its Convention. In every other Dio- cese of the United States, the whole of the clergy axe ac- customed annually to assemble, and for severed days, 'in council with the lay-delegates, to apply themselves to such business^ and to.the devising gf such measures, as the good of their Churches and the interests of religion may reqilire. With us, but few assemble,' and those few but for a short time. Of course, our clergy are too little acquainted ; their labors and efforts not sufficiently systematic, and in unison ; and at our Conventions but little is done. I mention this, the rather as an apology for not oftener- delivering such Charges as our Canons r'equire. Could I meet, in greater numbers, my respected brethren of the sacred ministry, I should, the Lord permitting, more frequently, though with much diffidence, perform that duty. " Another and more serious difficulty, under which we still labor, is the almost total want of Missionary funds. It is to be feared, or rather it cannot be denied, that no other body of Christians in the United States is so inattentive to CONVENTION AT GREENFIELD, I8I8. 259 this important thing as ourselres. The consequence is, what I. have formerly- more than once stated, and what it is my painful duty again to repeat, that many of our brethren are still suffering ' a famine, of hearing the Word of God ;' aiid that the present increase of our Churches is but a part of ■what, had we been more zealous, it probably would have been. Our Easter collections are annually about three hundred dollars : ' But, what are these among so many ?' - "Another impediment to the increase of our Church in these Eastern States, is the constant and very great emigration of its members to other parts of the country. This may be favourable to the general cause of religion ; the seeds of the Gospel may thus be wafted to distant parts, and the borders of Zion be enlarged : but, in estimating the comparative growth and prosperity of our Churches, it' is necessary that this be brought into consideration. In those States, where there is a great influx and rapid increase of population, except the Church increase in proportipihtj it indeed declines. But, in these States, from which so many of our members, both ministers and people, are constantly removing, if our num- bers are kept good, our Churches are prosperous, " Considering, then, the peculiar difficulties attending our labors ; our own culpable deficiency in missionary zeal, and what numbers of our brethren have migrated, we have the more abundant reason to bless God for our present prosperity. I should judge, that at a moderate estimate, the old Churches, of which seven years ago, this Diocese consisted, have since doubled the number of their communicants ; besides the ad- dition of fifteen or twenty Churches, (many of them indeed yet small,) which are new. And, what is much more pleas- ing, there is good reason to believe, that the increase of piety and true godliness has been equally great. Not, unto us, but unto God be the praise." The truth of the above paragraphs is as evident, as it was important to the judgment,, which the Bishop was then seek- ing to form in the minds of the Convention, on the subject of the comparative growth of the Diocese. The work of filling one vessel, from which a stream flows at the bottom, is very 260 MEMOIR, &C. different from that of filling- another vessel, which receives what flows from the former, and retains all that it receives from a twofold source of supply. There are other portions of the address for 1818, which are full of interest ; b,ut the above is of chief importance to this history. . • •? The only action of this Convention, worthy of special notice, consisted in the adoption of the following resolution: " Whereas, different opinions prevail respecting-the moral and religious tendency of public balls and othejr fashionable amusements, it is hereby unanimously resolved, as the sense of this Convention; that the following resolution of the house of Bishops respecting them be published with the address of our Diocesan to his clergy, and that it be earnestly com- mended- to the serious and o6e&w^ attention of professing Christians." " The house of Bishops, solicitous for the preservation of the purity of the Church and the piety of its merabers, are in- duced to impress upon the clergy the important duty, with a discreet, but earnest zeal, of warning the people of their re- spective cures of the danger of an indulgence in those world- ly pleasures, which may tend to withdraw the affections from spiritual things. And 'especially on the subject of gaming, of amusements involving-cruelty to the brute creation, and of theatrical representations, to which some peculiar circum- stances have called their attention, they do not hesitate to express their unanimous opinion that these amusements, as well from their licentious tendency, as from the strong temp- tations to vice, which they afford, ought not to be frequented. And the Bishops cannot refrain from expressing their deep regret at the information that, in some of our large cities, so little respect is paid to the feelings of the merabers of the Church, that theatrical representations are fixed for the even- ings of her most solemn festivals." This resolution expresses the sense of the Eastern Diocese on a most important subject ; and yet it is evident that the whole practical value of the expression depends on ,the clergy, who are therein exhorted' to impress that subject on LETTER TO ME. A. L. BAURY. 261 the minds of their people, especially of tKe communicants of their parishes. Few of these ever read the warnings of the house of Bishops, or the resolutions of Conventions. In vain, therefore, are those warning^ sounded, and those resolutions passed, if the clergy, either frqm the fear of man, or from a too indulgent feeling towards any of the condemned amuse- ments, neglect the duty, which rests on them, or preach a Gospel, which tolerates practices corrupting to the purify of the Church, and destructive of the piety of its members. In addition to what I have given from the* Bishop's ad- dress for this year, I insert' the, folk wing extract of a letter, as 'furnishing a practical view of the manner in which he al- ways devoted himself 'to the service of his Diocese. .The gentleman, tO' whom it was addressed, was Mr. Baury, after- wards the faithful Rector of St. Mary's, Newton. He was then laboring as candidate and lay-reader at Guilford, Vt. " Bristo), Dec. 16, 18ia " Dear Sir, — Your favor of the 8th instant arrived yester- day. We are much Obliged to you for the information, which it contains, and rejoice and bless God for the success, given'to your labors in that place. * * * * ***** After some deliberation, I have postponed the appointment of the day for consecrating the Church, till I hear from you again. As travelling, especially in stages, in the winter, when the weather is cold and the nights. long, is inconvenient to people advanced in life, my calculation has been to spend the" winter in my'study and the duties of my parish. I have now, a very few days since, finished my joumeyings, which have been more than usual the past season, ^d am about engaging in some necessary studies : to which I may weU add, that my expenses this year have, to the amount of some hundreds of dollars, over- run my scanty income ; and it will be somewhat difficult for me immediately to obtain the means of defraying the expense of. this proposed new journey. Yet, if it is judged to be of sufficient importance, and will probably conduce to the build- ing up of the Church in Guilford, I will not hesitate at all. 262 MEMOIR, &C. but, if the Lord permit, .will, visit you this winter. _ I would prefer, for several reasons, that it be deferred tiH. February at least ; but if tha,t be thought too late, I will endeavor to be with you sooner. Please to write me, soon as you can, what is thought expedient ; and I particularly desire that no regard to my convenience shoiild induce any dereliction of the interests of religion." * , * « * * * The remainder of the letter is a brief notice, by way of answer to some parts of Mr. Olds' book against the Church ; especially those parts, in which he objected to the formula, sometimes used at our.ordinatiqns, " receive the Holy Ghost, &c. ;" and to our practice in the declaration of absolution. His answers on these points are sententious and conclusive ; though they would not class him amon^ those, who have since learned their theology from Dr. Pusey. To' shew his 'sincerity in offering to visit Guilford in the winter, notwithstanding the strong reasons urged' for delay, upon receiving a further communication from Mr. Baury, he fixed the time for the proposed consecration in February; adding : "It vnll not be best that any one should go all the way from Guilford to Boston on my account only. It is bet- ter that I should be in the cold a few hours, than another person for several days." He would, doubtless, have been glad so to arrange his Episcopal visitations, as to make them all fall in the summer and autumn of each year ; and he. did so arrange them as far as it was practicable to do it. • And yet, he always held himself ready to go, whenever and wherever he was per- suaded good. Would result to the cause of religion and the Church. Facts to this point are abundant. So earnest was he to secure every promised advantage, and so fearful lest aaiy interest of the cause should suffer from his neglect, that neither distance of place, nor inclemency of season ; neither enfeebled strength, nor exhausted purse ; neither foncbess for home, nor love of study could detain him from the -scene of invited labor and of promised usefulness; whether the call were to confirm, or to ordain ; to lay a comer stone, or to consecrate a Church. ORIGIN OF ST. Paul's, boston. 263 During the year 1819, a work was in progress, which, in its completion and subsequent results, added greatly to •the active strength of the Diocese. It was the building of St. Paul's Church, Boston. In 1817 an effort had been made by the Rev. G. S. White and his friends to organize a new parish under that name ; but its origin and object were quite distinct from those of the present St. Paul's. It origi- nated in the agency of Mr. White, and its object was to ac^ commodate that portion of the resident EngUsh in Boston, who were attached to the Church of their fathers, and such others as would naturally fall in with them, but who were not able to take pews in the old and more expensive churches.- It was a most commendable object; and, had it been attained, might have been a rich blessing to the city. But the enterprise failed, and its projector, having fallen into troubles, which finally ended in his abandonment of the labors of the ministry, removed from- Massachusetts into Connecticut. His troubles consisted in long and exciting litigations with George Brinley, Esq., -pf Boston, and with Col. Putnam of Brooklyn, near Pomfret, Connecticut : and whatever may have been the original merits, or demerits of his cause, it was at least managed in such a temper, and with such results, as proved ruinous to his prospects of usefulness in the Church ; — while, in its progress, it brought not a little of discomforting trial upon the peace-loving Bishop, under whose favor he had come forward in the ministry. But, the present St. Paul's, Boston, originated with seve- ral wealthy and highly respectable gentlemen of the old parish of Trinity Church, associating with themselves others of similar standing and influence in society ; and its object was to meet a demand, which had for some time been felt in Boston, for the growth of the main body of our Church in that city. Among the original proprietors in this new parish were such men as John Amory, Dudley A. Tyng, Stephen Codman, Wm. Appleton, Dr. Warren, David Sears, George Sullivan and Daniel Webster; andi although, in the sight of God, great names are as little names, yet has it pleased Him, through' the instrumentaUty of such, to 264 MEMOIR, &C. bring into actioii and influence a most ipiportant parish, which has more and more distinctly taken its stand as a supporter of the best spiritual interests of our Church ; — in ■which wealth, station and rich intellectual resources have, we trust, become consecrated in growing measures to the service of Christ and his cause ;— and through which many choice blessings, we may hope, wiU long continue to flow not only upon feebler parishes in the Diocese, but even to the wide ends of the earth. Their new and noble church edifice was consecrated in 1820, under the Rectorship of the Rev. Dr. Jarvis, previously of New York. Measures having been taken for receiving the District of Maine into the Union as an independent State, the principal of our clergy and laity there begEin, at the same time, to move in the business of organizing a separate Convention of our Church in the State, and of representing themselves in our approaching General Convention. In this movement the parishes in Portland and Gardiner were chiefly active, the latter of which was rapidly growing into importance, and expected soon to have their new and beautiful stone church ready for consecration. Agreeably to the direction of the Bishop, the primary Convention of our Church in the State of Maine was held in Brunswick, on the 3d day of May, 1820. At this Con- vention, a constitution was adopted. Canons enacted, rules of order passed, delegates to the approaching General Con- vention appointed, — £uid a Standing Committee chosen :-r- and although, at the organization of the Eastern Diocegp, Maine constituted a part of the State of Massachusetts, and was therefore included within the origineJ limits of Bishop Griswold's jurisdiction, yet, as it now became .politically a separate and independent State, it seems to have been taken for granted, by this primary Convention, that it had also become ecclesiastically separate and independent of the Eastern Diocese ; and therefore a vote was passed, by which the Bishop was " requested to exercise Episcopal ju- risdiction over the Churches" in Maine ; and thus this State was considered as " annexed to the Eastern Diocese." REMARK ON THE SEPARATION OF MAINE. 265 To .the present writer, this appears to have been a needless formality. Had the District of Maine seceded from our national union, and erected itself into an independent foreign nation, qr annexed itself to the foreign British pro- vinces on the north, its act would have severed its original connexion with the Eastern Diocese ; just as our Declaration of Independence, by making these States a new nation foreign to Great Britain, cut the bond of our ■ecclesiastical union with the Church of England, and left us beyond the jurisdiction of her Bishops. But why the erection of the District of Maine into a separate State under the same na- tional government, to whose law it had been previously sub- ject, should be considered as effecting its severance from the Eastern Diocese, of which it was originally a part, so as to render necessary its formal annexation to that ecclesi- astical body ; . or as leaving it beyond the limits of an Epis- copal jurisdiction, within which it had been preidously em- braced, so as to render it necessary formally to place itself under that jurisdiction ;^the present writer is unable to con- ceive. This question, however, so far as the parties then in action are concerned, is now of no importance. Like all others, once affecting the constitution of the Eastern Diocese, it has passed away with an organization, which originally looked to a succession in its Bishopric, but which, through its own subsequent action, became dissolved by the fact of its first Bishop's demise. It is sufficient to add here, in the words of Bishop Griswold, that the " Delegates, sent frofn Maine to the General Convention, were received, and their proceedings recognized and approved ;" — that, " agreeably to their request, they were annexed to the East- em Diocese ;" that, at the Biennial Convention of this Dio- cese in September following, it was proposed, that its con- stitution be so altered as to nbake the Diocese consist oi five States instead oifour ; and that this simple alteration of the constitution was apparently all that the erection of Maine into an independent State originally rendered necessary. The principal action of this Biennial Convention consisted in this proposed alteration of its constitution"; in taking the 266 MEMOIR, &C. first step towards making its meetings annual; — and in re- commending the General Theological Seminary to the pe- cuniary patrbneige of the Diocese. The Bishop met his Convention this year, as he says in his address, " under some circumstances of peculiar disad- vantage." Jle alludSs to the very dangerous Eind protracted illness of nine months, through which he had been passing, and to the peculiarly engrossing nature of his other engage- ments ; in consequence of both which circumstances, he had been unable to perform that amount of Episcopal duty, and to render that full account of his Episcopal acts, which had been customary in former years, and at former Conven- tions. To these circumstances of his dangerous illness, and his other engrpssing cares, I shall have occasion again to refer, when- 1 come to review his parochial and domestic life during the period now under examination. For the present, therefore, I pass them without further remark. His address, notwithstanding his apology for its deficiencies, was an inte- resting document, and breathes the growingly devout and devoted spirit, which was so evidently spreading through his own soul. Besides the details of his address, it contains several pas- sages of such peculiar interest, as illustrations of his charac- ter and views, that I am tempted to transfer some of them to these pages. Lamenting the indifference to the cause of Missions, which he still found in his Diocese, he thus pleads : ' " When shall we perform the work of propagating his faith, which the Saviour requires .? In every State, sho\ild be a Missionary Society, encouraged by every parish, and supported by every Churchman. He, who cannot give one dollar, if such there be, should give a cent, or a mite : let him sJmo that he loves the Lord, regards His Word, and de- sires to build up' His kingdom." * * * « » * # * *# * tf If j^ * * * , * "It would seem that the soil of the Eastern Diocese is peculiarly unfavorable to Missionary BIENNIAL ADDEESS FOR 1820. 267 Societies." •*••*••• • * * * " Ther apology, which is usually made, for not aslcing the people to contribute is, that the parishes are poor, and their burthens already heavy : facts, which we well know and sensibly feel. But this excuse, as I conceive, is founded on a misapprehension of what is required. It is not enjoined upon any parish, or individual, to contribute any thing but what can be given with conve- nience, and with ' a willing mind.', .It is required only that our people may have an opportunity to giv^. In the poorest parish there may be a few persons, who are able, and wil- ling, and desirous to contribute something to this most im- portant and charitable object. ***** We know that many of our people contribute to the pro- pagation of the Gospel by other sects, who would more gladly give, if, with even less importunity, they were called on by the clergy of our own communion. Should it by any be said, that the sum, like to be collected, will be so small that they are ashamed to present it, let such reflect on the impiety of thus dishonoring our Divine Master, and neglecting his work, through fear of bringing discredit on ourselves? Is it thus we take his cross, and bear his re- proach ? Permit me, my clerical brethren, to ask, whether we are not the chief delinquents in this thing ; we, who ought to lead in every measure, which will spread the faith of the BlesSed Saviour, and build up his kingdom ? Are not the people more ready to give for this noble purpose, than we to ask ? Are we duly mindful of our Lord's com- mand to preach his Gospel to every creature ?" With similar earnestness and point, he proceeded to urge the" claims of our General Missionary Society, which had then recently been organized ; using language, which no one can read, and yet suppose him tb have been indifferent to the cause of Missions, whether in their Foreign, or in their Domestic field. Our General Theological Seminary had then been auspi- ciously opened at New Haven, and, as it was supposed, per- manently fixed in Hiat city ; he therefore proceeded to com- 268 MliMOIR, &c. mend it to the patronage of his Diocese, and to urge various strong and convincing reasons, why that location was to be preferred to New York. The Pastoral letter also of the house of Bishops for 1820, had just then appeared, enjoin- ing upon all the members of our Church due regard to our system of " EvangelicaJ doctrine :" "the fall of man from original righteousness ; the consequent depravity of his na- ture ; his uttet inability, by any act of his own, to recover from the privations of the apostacy ; and that most essential truth, resulting from the preceding^ that " we are accounted righteous before God, only for the merits of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ, by faith, and not of our own works or deservings." This system, therefore, he urged on the atten- tion of his clergy as one, who knew well of what he spake, and who spake as one who felt, that the doctrines, which he urged, were of unchangeable importance to the life of the Church. The cause of the Sunday Schools next received a passing commendation ; after which he proceeded to touch upon a topic, which has as^ much interest for the present, and is likely to have as much for the future, as it had for the time, in which he then lived. A religious periodical, called ; " The Churchman's Repository for the Eastern Diocese ;" had lately appeared at Newburyport, which, upon Dr. Jarvis' settlement as Rector of St. Paul's, was soon removed to Boston, and took the name of; " The Gospel Advocate.-" After alluding to this fact, and to the great utility of such periodicals, lightly conducted, he continued, as if with a foresight of what was to follow, and in language, which ought still to be sounded in our ears, to say : " Permit me, then, to recommend, that this work betaken by our people throughout this Diocese ; and' that all, who are able and wilUng in this way to do good, will contribute to enrich its pages by judicious and valuable communica- tions. Permit me, however, to add, that, in my decided opinion, a work of this kind, to do much good and obtain the patronage of the pious, must have for its chief object the glory of God in the salvation of men : to shew th6 sinner the sure foundation of hope in Christ, and what he must do to DECAYED PARISHES. 269 be saved. A knowledge of God, of their Saviour, and of themselves is what all men most need ; and serious people will prefer, and they ought to prefer, those religious pubUca- tidns, which w^ill make them wise unto salvation ; which tend most directly and most powerfully to produce in their heart and life that faith and that holiness, without which they cannot be justified nor ' see the Lord.' Let us also be careful to manifest a spirit of candor, charity and Chris- tian love. The best evidence that we are indeed Christians, is, loving those, who love the Lord Jesus. We had never surely more occasion for the exercise of forbearance ; but though we are reviled, let us not revile again; but, as much as lieth in us, live peaceably with all men." Were he now alive, he could not utter better, or more necessary advice to either the editors, or the patrons of our reUgious periodicals. I have already spoken of the weak acnd decayed state of several of the parishes of the Diocese. Over these the Bishop watched with anxious fidelity, and with varying feelings, as the flame of their reviving life now shot up heavenward, and now sunk again almost to extinction. Perhaps in none of them were these alternations more frequent, or more marked, than in those of Portland and Marblehead. Certainly none of them ever called forth a letter more truly characteristic of the Bishop than that, which hb addressed to the Rev. Mr. Carlile, on the subject of a proposed alienation of the Church property in the latter of those two, p^ishes. Its members in 1821 had become reduced to a very small number, and were utterly disheartened ; while, at the same time, a new Congregational Society was rising in the town, and were de- sirous of purchasing the lot and building of the Episcopal parish ; a majority of whose members were found willing 'to sell. The case was subsequently carried up to the legisla- ture of the State, on a petition, as nearly as I can learn, for permission, or power, to effect the proposed alienation. The prayer of the petition, however, was not granted ; being op- posed there by as firm a resistance as that, with which it met z* 270 MEM,OIR, &C. when the case vizs first referred to thfe Bishop for his advice. His manful stand will be seen in his letter ,to Mr. Carlile. " Bristol^ January 11,^^21. '^Rer. and d^ar Sir,' — It was not till yesterday, P. M., that I received your favor of the 5th instant. Its subject is painful indeed ; yet most sincerely do I render you gratefiil acknowledgments for the interest you take in the Church at Marblehead, and for acquainting me with its melancholy situation. " With regard to the question, whether its few remaining friends shall dispose of their pews for the purpose stated^, without pretending to -interfere with their legal right to doit, and without expressing or feeling any hostility, or opposition to the proposed new Sociely, I cannot for a moment hesitate in, giving my decided disapprobation. If that Church, of so many years standing, is to be absindoned and given up ; and its property, which hasbeen piously devoted to its sacred use, is to be ^ienated ; it must be done without my consent. I can never advise or consent to such a measure. Suppose the worst ; that the Church there will never be revived ; shall the clergy, its guardians and protectors, hasten its dissolution ? S,haH the physician murther the patient, whom he despairs of healing.'' But, are we sure that the Church in 'Marblehead will never be revived .^ Have we no fa,ith in the power and providence of God .'' Four years ago, the Church in Port- land was more hopeless : and now they support a worthy and pious minister. If all of the present generation should for- sake that Church, who knows what zeal God may awaken , in that which is to succeed ? God often tries our faith by shewing us the folly of human wisdom, and the weakness of human means. A zealous, praying people He never did, and never will, forsake. Let us consider why it is, that the Lord removes the candlesticks from his Churches ; beca~use we lose our first love ; because we are cold in our leligious affection, and serve the world mor& than our God. Let us, with united, humble hearts,; and with fervent persevering THE BISHOP FIUM, YET YIELDING. 271 zeal, look to the Lord our God, and He will return in mercy. "Besides ; have we reason to believe-, that converting our Churches into Congregational Societies is likely, in the end, to resist the errors of the day ? I respect our Congregational brethren, and, I trust, sincerely esteem them in the Lord. But, who does not know, -that their inefficient system has given facility to the introduction of those errors? What Church is so likely to withstand them as ours ? What would cause greater joy to the supporters of those errors, than to see all our Churches given up in the same way? " With respect to Mr. 3haw's going to Sdlem, I very much approve of your view of the subject ; and your remarks upon it are so judicious, that I can do no better than to request you to conduct the business as you shall approve, and as Mr. Shaw shall agree. * * * f * « * * « * / Accept the assurance of my friendship and esteem, Alexander V. Griswold." Rev. Thomas Carlile. There, is an insight into the Bishop's real character ; an insight not often obtained, because modesty and humility made him yielding, or conciliating in matters of indifference, or of his own mere personal convenience ; an insight, for want of which his character was often misunderstood and mis-stated ; an insight, which shews, that when matters of principle, of conscience, of duty, were concerned, he was decision, firmness, inflexibility itself. Let such a matter come in what shape it would, though hemmed in with diffi- culty, and dark jvith discouragement, it moved him not at all; He knew how to hope, when all others feared ; to be- lieve, when all others doubted ; to draw encouragement out of discouragement ; and to hold fixedly on God, though nought on earth was holding with him. An incident occurred about this time, which illustrates his character in its yielding, conciliating aspect. I have already 272 MEMom, &c related the circumstances, which formerly defeated his wishes and plans, and those of his parishioners, for a new Church edifice in Bristol; and the readiness, with which he ac- quiesced in the. determination to continue still in their old and inconvenient building. Under the great increase of his parish, the discomforts of this continued to be increasingly- felt, and to prompt the unceasing and the growing wish for a better Church. On one of his tours, when consecrating a new edifice for a small parish in New Hampshire, he recorded this sentiment; "I have often wondered why it is, that there is scEircely a parish in my Diocese, however weak, that can- not succeed in building a new Church,- except my own." This year, his feelings and those ofhis parishioners prompted a new effort ; and teing on a New Hampshire tour, he ad- dressed a letter to one of his principal' parishioners, without whose concurrence he did not choOse to proceed in the work ; urging upon him various powerful and convincing reasons, why a new church edifice should be forthwith built. This parishioner, however, still refused to sanction the movement ; and therefore it was again abandoned. A new church was not n§cessary, in such a sense that they could not do without it. He could still preach, and his people could still hear, the true Gospel in the old church, uncomfortable, and, to their worldly pride, mortifying as it was. All this was better than contention and strife ; and therefore he chose it; In the words ofhis letter, just alluded to ; "the interesting subject of building a new church was, when I left home, in agitation. On this subject, there was a difference of opinion, and some danger tiiat it might cause dissension, and disturb that har- mony, which has so long and so happily prevailed among us. This, in my estimation, would be a greater evil than having no church, new or old, to worship in." There, was another insight into his character ! It was the Bishop still : not an- other man ; but the same man, acting under other circum- stances. He could preach the Gospel in a barn, or in the open air, rather than injure peace and breed strife ; although he could not consent to alienate consecrated Church proper- ty, even when there appeared scarce a human probability, INTERESTING. LETTER FROM VERMONT. 273 that it ■would ever again be used for the purposes, to vrhieh it had been consecrated. He had his reward.' St. Michael's, Bristol, built a new church, when it could be done vdthout wounding his love of peace : and St. Michael's, Marblehea,d, lived to see firmer strength and fairer prospects, than those, which it enjoyed, when it stood trembling on the result of a petition to the Legislature of Massachusetts, the prayer of which was urged by those, who desired to possess its ancient heritage. I have just spoken of the tour, which he was making, when he wrote his letter to Bristol, urging reasons for the building of a new church. Another letter has reached me, written on the same tour, which, as it is the unbosoming of warm, generous friendship, the heart of the Bishop embalmed for preservation, and as it will shew us in what spirit, and amidst what feelings, he pursued his various way over moim- tain and valley, while carrjdng his embassage for Christ to the people of his charge, I am glad to insert : " BeUows FaUs, Vt., June 26, 1821. " Dear H^^ — ,• — Almost for the first time since commenc- ing the labors of this tour, I have two or three hours of leisure ; and to what better use, (consulting my own feelings,) can I appropriate them, thaii in this manner of communica- tion with those, to whom, if the Lord will, I hope soon to-be restored in still more pleasing and social intercourse.' In writing to my friends, I am accustomed so to presume on their friendship, as to write chiefly of myself. Can you, as some others have done, bear with me.-" Sure I am, that you will cordially unite with me in devout and humble thanks to the Father of Mercies, that His unseen hand has conducted me thus far through one more of these (what many call very laborious) journies. Did L think as much of the labors per- formed, as of the mercies received, I should be (more, if possible, than I am) unworthy of the least of them. That I do so little of what is 'to be done ; that I am so remiss in the service of such a Master ; that I so often feel weary and 274 MEMOIR, '&C. languid and lifeless, when the immortal destinies of, God only knows how many of, my fellow-creatures are at stake, and perhaps in some mysterious sense and awful degrefe, dependent on my fidelity, is the subject of daily sorrow. Is there not too much reason for that painful apprehension, which I most certainly and often feel, that the Lord's corf- tinuing, in an office so important,«one so unworthy, is an evi- dence of His displeasure 'against the Churches of this Dio- cese ? But, whatever I am, the Lord's will be done : cease not to pray for us ; and that.He will send into this field, now vfhite for the harvest, laborers according to His own mind. " I have now almost finished the circuit of Vermont. The State has never before appeared to me so interesting. The season is uncommonly fine. - One, more promising to the husbandman, probably, was never seen. The general im- provement of this State in the last ten, and more especially in the last three years, is , remarkably visible ;^- visible in the neatness and better management of their farms ; in llieir industry and all their business ; in their morals and reUgion ; which last, probably, is.the cause of all the others. ' God- liness is profitable unto all things.' The people here are better disposed to hear sound doctrine, and more rationally 4esirous to obtain a regular ministration of the Christian or- dinances. May we not hope, that the increase of the Epis- copal Church and the efforts qf its friends have contributed something to this change .'' ' Not unto us, Lord, but unto thy name, be the praise' for every blessing. " Saturday the 30th. What I said above of leisure hours, was somewhat premature; I was soon interrupted by some gentlemen, who called to see me ; and now here, (in Green- field) for the first time am I •able again to take my pen. This repose was unexpected. My arrangement was to have gone this morning to Montague, and, after the usual services, to have returned in the evening to this place. I had left it, however, with Mr. Strong and his parish to alter the arrange- ment as they should deem it expedient ; and they, consult- INTERESTING LETTER FROM VERMONT. 275 ing, I fear, my ease more than the good of the Church, haye determined, that I should spend the day in this place. " How wonderful, 'dear H , have been the Lor4'.S mercies to the most unworthy of his creatures ! When I reflect- that now, for ten y^ars, I have been engaged in these visitations ; that all the arrangements for my services, with regard to time and place, have been made several weeks before, and many of tjiem under circumstanices of doubt and difficulty, which you cannot well conceive ; and yet, that I have never, failed in any one appointment ; it seems incredi- ble and as a dream. The Lord mercifully grant, that this experience of His prptecting goodness may not make me presumptuous. My appointments for Monday and Tuesday next seem scarce practicable, It is written ; ' Thou shalt not tempt the Lord thy God.' " No tour, that I have made, has been more interesting, none, probably, more usefiil, than the present. In none, certainly, have I received more kindness from Christian brethren, and ' friends no less than brethren dear.' Large and valuable additions are made to the number of my ac- quaintance. I have visited three new parishes, and expect next Monday, if the Lord permit, to visit a fourth. If there were room on this small sheet of bad paper, I would give you some account of my tour. . The following is a short ex- tract from my Journal. " June 15th. In the morning we proceed, over a bad road, through a new and interesting country, to Berkshire ;" (a town in Vt., on the Canada line,) "Dr. W. and lady, very excellent people ; was much pleased with their simpli- city of mannei^ and unaffected kindness ; and chiefly with tljeir attachment to the Church and liberality in its support. Our services, P. M., very interesting. The school-house not being sufficient to contain the congregation expected, preparations were made in a beautiful grove of young maples, on a fine rising ground ; and the timberj collected near the spot for building a new Church, furnished abundant mate- rials for the stage and seats. Thus was its use anticipated, 276 MEMOIR, "&C. and our altar reared, we may almost say, with unhewn stones. These materials, now preparing to be ' fitly joined togeither' in a regular temple, to be dedicated to God, suggest the thought, that they who sit upon them, are, we may hope, materials in preparation, — even ' lively stones,' — to be here- after united in a temple infinitely more glorious, — ' a building not made' with hands; eternal in the heavens.' Many cir- cumstances conspired to heighten the interest of the scenery and the occasion. At a small distance in firont, without the grove, which was semicircular, was the iritended site of the new Church. Below, at the foot of a gentle descent, the road leads along ; and beyond it, for a long distance on either hand, the river Missisque is 'seen winding its beauti- ful course through an ext-ended vale. And still beyond are rising forests, and fields, and hills swelling into various shapes and, sizes ; while mountains, rearing their unequal and lofty summits, terminate the view. In such a situation, surrounded by a numerous assembly, collected from several towns and ma'ny miles in every direction, and, like Corne- lius and his Mends waiting ' to hear all things, that were commanded us of Godj' — my thoughts were such as I have not language to express. How deep are the counsels of the Almighty! Why is an instrument, so weak and unworthy, sent on a 'message>"of such importance .'' ' Who shall satisfy these men with^bread here in the wilderness ?' ' God's power is made manifest in weakness. We sung the 50th hymn ;" (the 36th of our present* selection, ' Far from my thoughts, vain world,'begone;' &c.) "Evening prayer was performed by Mr. Leonard. After the 2d lesson, seven young persons, four men and three women, with the appearance of the most sincere ■ devotion, presiented themselves for baptism, which was administered by Mr. Clapp. The sermon was heard with an attention Worthy of a better discourse. After ser- mon, thirty-five persons received confirmation, and received it, there was no reason to doubt, with a just and deep sense of its nature and design. And then the Lord's Supper was administered to a respectable number of very devout com- municants. REMARKS, &C. 277 " In Windsor, I heard from Bristol ; and I trust am not the less happy for learning that the people there have been rr^ore so, in consequence of my absence. How desirable it is, and how difficult, to love our neighbor as ourself. '.' It is possible that I may arrive in Bristol before this letter ; in which case you will, probably, not have the trouble of reading it. . Yours, most affectionately, A. V. Griswold." Who, with a Christian heart, can read this letter, and not wish, that he had been with the holy Bishop, and a sharer in his unutterable feelings, as he surveyed the scene, which he described, and engaged in the duties, which he performed, in the midst of that hungering congregation of the wilder- ness .'' The world will say, there is no evidence of great- ness in these and the thousand other details, which fiU the Episcopal" career of Bishop Griswold ; — and, as the men of the world count greatness, their saying- is true. There is nothing here of the orator on Bunker Hill, who keeps the tides of a human, oqean swaying to and frcr, in obedience to the power of his burning eye and of his voiced thoughts : nothing of the negotiator of a treaty, on the result of which hangs the question of peace, or war, between the nations of the earth : Jiothjng of the mighty B?ird, whose epic song charms the cultured mjnd of a reading world through the distance of thousands of years : nothing of the awful philoso- pher, who, with a little instrument in his hand, weighs plan- ets and measures the courses and the periods of .the heavens. Nevertheless, in all the details, through which we have been passing, and are yet to peiss, there is greatness still ; the greatness of a mind, that could repress, though not extinguish, its inborn, deathless passion for literature and science ; of a mind, that could forego its young ambition for distinction among men, whether at the , bar, or at the board of com- merce ; whether in the debates of Senates, or in the affairs of State ; — of a mind, which, thus refrained, could devote itself, not to schemes of party agitation, nor to plans for splf- AA 278 MEMOIR, &C. aggrandizement, in the Church ; not to the magnificence of titulary priesthood, nor to the toils of political Churchman- ship ; — but to the solemn work of a humble, holy, Christian Bishop; willing, in poverty and self-denial, to CfUry the Go§pel of his Great Lord and Master to ' the poor destitute,' and to the unfed dwellers of the wilderness ; — living amidst •unutterable conceptions of the divine greatness of bis voca- tion ; and falling into the most unaffected and habitual self- abasement in view of what was ever rising before him,— ^the condescension of God in employing him in such a work, and the mercy of God in keeping him through its perils. In views of religion and of duty, such as he" embraced, few men could appear great to the eye of the world ; and these few belong to a class, whose opulence and brilliancy of genius cannot be hid, place them where you may. But, though these are greatest, yet they are not the only great ; — and the reason why men of inferior, though still impressive greatness, when constituted, sanctified and employed like Bishop Griswold, do not appear great to worldly apprehen- aons, is, that they-are too far above the world to be mea- sured. Men of the world judge accurately of men like themselves; as they do of the size and shape , of objects beside them on the earth, their houses, their equipage, and their farms. But they do not ordinarily judge with accu- racy of the great Christian, who is thoroughly imbued with his Master's Spirit, ' and' self-denyingly given up to his Master's work. Such a Christian, like a man standing on the summit of a tall mountain, may appear little to the be- holders below, his .stepVmay be wnAeard, 'and bis action may seem weak ; — but, it is not because he is little, nor because his step wakes no eclw, nor because his action is feeble • but, because he is so distant fi-om them, and so much nearer heaven than themselves. I referred just now to Bishop Griswold's constitutional peculiarity, as one of the reasons, why he was nevet, or but seldom, justly estimated. This, perhaps, is as fitting a place as any to say, that, in speaking, as I have occasionally done, of his constitutional modesty, and of that Christian humility. EEMARKS. 279 which became, in a manner, inwrought into his constitution, and which kept him from pushing himself forward upon the world's notice, I would not be understood as. ascribing to him any constitutional weakness. His was not that physi- cal infirmity, that shrinking sensitiveness of nerve, which seems to have kept the beautiful genius of Addison and of Cowper from shining in the Parliament and Courts of Great Britain. For, whenever he was brought into situations cal- culated to intimidate, or overpower, he had a coolness, which never deserted him, and a nerve, which never trem- bled ; and when he felt it necessary for him to speak, he was always able to express himself — if not with the fire of a great orator, — ^yet with the accuracy and brief point of a clear, well-trained mind. ' What is meant by the remark, at the close of the letter given above, that he was not made " less happy for learning that his people had been more so, in consequence of his ab- sencey"— ^I am not sure thati understand. It seems to imply, that some, at least, of his people had become disaffected ; but that he was too conscious of having acted rightly to be disturbed by a knowledge of their feelings. ' Probably, the allusion is to an incident, which appears in his correspond- ence about this period. It seems that, having felt seriously the double burthen of Diocesan and of parochial labors, as it pressed ' both on his health and on his usefulness, and knowing that he was supported, not by the voluntary con- tributions of his parishioners, but by a fund, which was, or appears to have been, left for the purpose of supporting an assistant ; he had ventured to ask for one to aid him in his parish, while he was absent with his Diocese. It also ap- pears that his Vestry refused either to appoint, or to support such an assistant ; — and that one of them treated him with great harshness and discourtesy. , In consequence of this, a sort of private and confidential effort was renewed to'in- duce him to leave Bristol, and settle in the vicinity of Bos- ton ; circumstances there at the time offering him again a favorable opportunity for such a settlement. But the fact that he did not encourage this effort, but continued still the 280 MEMOIR, &C. unassisted Rector of St. Michael's, (and tkat, for seven or eight years longer,) shews that, ■whatever may have occur- red, it did not shake his attachment for his flock, nOr their confidence in him. In truth,- there is no evidence that the difficulty touched the feelings of his congregation in general ; or that they ever felt towards him any other sentiment than that of devoted and almost worshipping affection. ' They, I have reason to believe, would, at any tim&, have forced either the building of a Church, or the support of an assist- ant, for him. But the . truth seems to have been, that he would not have either, unless with the hearty concurrence of certain influential members of the parish. . The difficulties, between the Bishop's brother and his parish in Great Barrington, came at this period to a crisis, and resulted in his brother's yielding to what he had long re- sisted, — the stem necessity, which compelled him to separate from that people. The correspondence of the two brothers on this subject would give a painful interest in this work': but it would take us into those intimacies of private life, and of family relations, which are not for the public eye. It is sufficient to say that, in no part of his correspondence, does the Bishop's character appear, to the view. of his bio- grapher, more meek, more gentle, or more noble in Chris- tian bearing, than in this. In September of the year 1822, the Bishop received a let- ter from James Eastbum, Esq., of New York, from which it appears that Dr. Jaryis of Boston, in co-operation with the Bishop, had been making an effort to induce the Rev. Man- ton Eastburn, then lately ordainedj to take charge of the parish in Cambridge, Mass. The effort did not succeed ; and it was left, for this youthful minister to be placed, in his maturer years, over -that parish in common with all others of our Church in the Pilgrim State, though in a higher capacity than that of simply its rector. The Biennial Convention of the Diocese assembled this year, and for the last time, at Portsmouth^ New Hampshire. I say the last; for, at this sessioh', the alteration of thejcon- stitution, which was proposed two years before, and which DIVISION OF DIOCESE FIRST PKOPOSED. 281 was to make -the meetings of the body annual, though not fully adopted, -was yet so far acted on, that the next Conven- tion was ordered for September, 1823 ; and thus, as the Church in Maine had before received its organization, there were henceforth in the Eastern Diocese six Conventions every year ; one in each of the five States, and one in the Diocese as comprehending them all. This last the Bishop always attended ; and was present and presided at all the rest, as often as it was practicable ; at those in Rhode Island and Massachusetts almost uniformly ; and at those in the more northern States often. The Bishop's Address at this Convention was full, of in- terest. He had, sipce the last annual meeting, visited every parish in his Diocese with the exception of " some very re- cently organized." To the former list of candidates, seven had been added, including his son George Griswold : nine had been ordained Deacons, and one, a Presbyter: and six hundred and ftfty-two persons had -received Confirmation. Upon this last fact he remarks, that it is " a number certainly not large for so many Churches." But then, he urges, as a reason for this, that the parishes were mostly very small, and that he " had not thought it his duty to encourage any to make that solemn profession of their belief and devotion to God, except they were sufficiently instructed in Christianity, and could receive the ordinance from pious and conscien- tious motives." " The -practice," he continues, " which we may well fear has not been uncommon, of admitting to Con- firmation, and even urging to be confirmed, those who have no serious sense of religion, nor real intention to devote themselves to God,, through Christ, is injurious to Christi- anity, and to our Church in particular : it has caused Confir- mation to be Ughtly esteemed and much neglected. We may add,. as a further reason why there are in this Diocese so few Confirmations, that a great proportion of our largest parishes are on the sea-board ; in which it is painful to state there are. fewer males, who receive the Christian ordinances. In a visitation to one of our principal Churches, there were fifty females confirmed, and not one male. In our country 282 MEMOIR,. &C. Churches the men are little enough attentwe to spiritual things : but they are still less so in commercial towns. ' If ' one goes his way to his farm, rather than his Saviour, still more frequently does another to his merchandize.'' " This remark on the tendencies of town and country life, is worthy of attention. " God made the country, but man made the town :" and thpugh God reigns every where, yet He doth not every where reign unto salvation. His own works, npt man's, are the best helpers of His word. ■, In the Address of this year-, he first introduces the subject of a division of his Diocese, in consequence of its growth, and the difficulty of visiting its scattered parishes as often as their spiritual good required. His remarks on this subject are of permanent value. " It is decidedly my opinion," says he, "that the spiritual interest and prosperity of our Churchfes require that every parish should be awwMa% visited by its Diocesan. * * * * * It requires no great wisdom to foresee,- what experience will probably soon verify, that our present practice of making a State, ^however large, but one Diocese, ma^ be very pernicious to the cause of true godliness, and the best interest of our Churches. Thirty, or at most forty parishes are enough for one Diocese, unless their location is very compact. And though the num- ber in this Diocese, excepting some very small, does not much exceed forty, yet it is desirable that, as soon as it can with propriety be effected, this Diooese should be divided. Vermont, especially, however reluctantly I might relinquish the happiness of my very interesting connexion with its Churches, ought, as soon as circumstances will admit, to have a Bishop wholly its own." Passing from this topic, which is not likely soon to lose its interest, he alludes to a very attractive and solemn even- ing service, which had been held in St. Paul's, Newbuiy- port, at which Dr. Jarvis preached ; and goes on to argue, from its evidently valuable results, the great importance of opening all our Churches for such services; especially on Sunday evenings, and in lai^ towns and cities ; where, if the young are not allured-to the hduse pf God,, they will too NOTICES OF AJfNUAL ADDRESS FOR 1821. 283 often spend their evenings " in idl? parties, and vain conver- sation j" and where many can conveniently attend such ser- vices in our Church, who- cannot be present at them at any other time. He then inserts the account, which has already been given in his letter to his Bristol friend, of his visit to the town of Berkshire on the northern borders of Vermont ; after which he adds : " The next morning, we proceeded to Montgomery, where Ve had the pleasure- of meeting with another newly formed society, and where the services were very similar and not less interesting. The tears of many evinced how much awakened was their sense that the Lord is good, and they, sinners." * * » » » " It was pleasing, and an evidence of their sincere desire to hear the word and receive the ordinances of Christ, to observe the distance whjch the people, in that and other parts-of Verniont, will travel, and many of them walk, tO' attend public worship, and share in the ministrations of the sanctuary. How unfaithful, and without excuse would be the stewards of God's mysteries — the pastors of His fold, — if they, who thus hunger and thirst feft^r .righteousness, should ever, unnecessarily, be "sent empty-away !" Such zeal in the people was felt as a strong, though silent reproof of my own remissness in the Saviour's cause." On the 27th of June, 1821, while on 'this tour through Vermont, he attended the annual. Convention of the Church in that State, at Bellows Falls ; the fullest that had ever as- sembled in that part of his Diocese. His remarks, in this Address, on his visits to Holdemess and Hopkinton, New Hampshire, will shew the manner, in which he was affected by every little symptom of awakening interest on the subject of religion, and in -which he strove to encourage every such awakening towards a full and ubiding love of heavenly things. Speaking of his visit to the former place, he says : "Some of the people remarked that ' it was the happiest day they had ever seen.' They, who thus de- light in the blessings of the sanctuary, who prize above 284 MEMOIR, &C. wprldly pleasures the -words of life and the ministrations, of mercy and grace, cannot be ' far from the kinodom of God.' There must be many in this world, who love their Saviour, when the most unworthy of his.ministers are, for his. sake, so kindly received, and so much respected ; and when the sa- cred memorials of rede^eming love give greater satisfaction than the fascinating allurements of this world." Of the lat-- ter place, where there was a small congregation, in which " the Lord had some faithful souls," he says : " Their readi- ness to ' receive a prophet in the name of a prophet,' is a pleasing assurance that ' a prophet's reward' shall be their portion. Often have they given more than ' a cup of cold water to one of the least of the Lord's disciples ;' may/ the Lord remember them for good.' " The effectual, fervent firayer of the righteous man availe.th much; and these parishes, in common with others, may find the saying true, long years after the time, when he who breathed his frequent intercessions for them, went to his rest. It appears from this address, that these visits to Holder- ness and Hopkinton, as well as others, were made on a second tour for the year 1821, into New Hampshire and Ver- mont. The latter was made in October, and terminated at Arlington ; firom which place, he proceeded, by Troy, and New York, to attend a special General Convention of our Church at Philadelphia, calltjd to act on the affairs of our General Theological Seriinary. The result of that Conven- tion was to transfer and finally to locate this Institution at New York, instead of New Haven. It was a subject on which intense interest was felt ; and the change was not made without much excitement of feeling. The Bishop thus alludes to. it in his address of 1822 : " The result was happier than perhaps any of the mem-f bers, under existing circumstances, had dared to hope. To avoid the dreadful evils of strife and litigation, it was wisely^ judged expedient to yield, almost wholly,- to the high claims of the Diocese of New York. The constitution adopted gives the General Convention some control in the concerns SYSTEM OF SUNDAY SCHOOL INSTRUCTION PROPOSED. 285 of the Seminary: but, in its operation, it will no doubt be managed chiefly by that Diocese. It is not my intention, however, to insinuate that the management is placed' in im- proper hands. It§ location in the most populous, commer- cial and frequented city of our country will necessarily ex- clude a large part of our Theological students from the school; and is, in my judgment, on other accounts, injudi- cious." * . In the same address, he reports' having presided at an ad- journed Convention of the Church in Massachusetts, which met in Salem, in July, 1822, for the painful business of at- tending to the trial of two of our clergy in that State, on charges, whidh hadf been preferred against them ; a duty, which he had the discomfort of repeating the same year, when on his October tour through New Hampshire and Ver- mont, towards the special General Convention in Philadel- phia. The general condition of his Diocese, however, as indi- cated in this address, is that of cheering lincrease and pros- perity^; with sad evidences, indeed, of former weakness still remaining ; but with multiplying proofs of freshly spring- ing ,life, all over the moral soil, which had been brought under cultivation. The Committee, appointed at this Convention to set forth a system of Catechetical instruction for the Sunday-schobls of the Diocese, soon made progress in their work. Consult- ing with Bishop Brownell, of Connecticut, and a Committee of that Diocese, which seems to have been appointed on the same subject, the chairman of the Committee for the Eastern Diocese, at the opening of the year 1823, addressed a letter to Bishop Griswold, in which he informs his Diocesan, that the system was in a" state of forwardness, and that he was very desirous, of its completion, of the Bishop's sanction, and of its ijitroduction at an early period into the schools of the Diocese. Its use, ho'wever, never became general, and has since, I apprehend, been wholly superceded by that of the system prepared by our General Sunday School Union, 286 MEMOIR, &C. combined, in many instances, with that of the system of \he American Sabbath School Union. We are now at the opening of those developments in Church affairs, whichj from this period, became more and more full, and which brought upon Bishop Griswold some of the most enduring, if not the most painful trials of his Epis- copal life. The subject of " Prayer meeiings'^ in* the Epis- copal Church, and in connexion with the Eastern Diocese, had already bfegun to attract attention in the columns of " tlie Gospel Advocate," by the publication, in the September No. of that periodical, for 1822, of a sermon on James iii. 1. In this discourse an evident allusion to these nieetings was made, and a loud note of warning against them,' sounded. This bjought out a writer in theMardh No., for 1823, under the signature of "An Episcopal Layman;" who, conceiving the character and tendency of the meetings to have been seriously misrepresented, or at least misstated, entered' ear- nestly into their defence, and insisted, strongly on their high importance to the spiritual life and growth of religion in the Church. To this writer the editors replied in the same No., and as earnestly espoused the views, which were put forth in the sermon on James iii. 1. In the May No., for the same year, appeared a.layman, signed " P.,," who took extravagant positions on the side of the editor and of the sermon, and spoke against the meetings" and their friends with levity as well as with severity. The Editors, having thus given both sides a hearing, expressed their determination to close the columns of the periodical against further communications on the sub- ject ; or rather, expressed their hope that wo further commu^ nications on the subject would be offered for insertion. And yet, in their address at the opening of the year 1825, they introduced the subject again, at such len^, and with so much injustice to the friends of the meetings, especially in Rhode Island, that the Bishop felt it his duty to prepaid a series of articles, with a view to remove the unjust impress- ions, which had been made, and to vindicate the true CORRESPONDENCE WITH BISHOP HOBART, &C. 287 character of .the exercises, which had been assailed. These essays were refused insertion in the columns of the Gospel Advocate, and therefore subsequently appeared in " The Episcopal Regi'ster," a periodical, which had been started in Vermont, But, as the history of this controversy runs forwards be- yond' the period now under review, I shall reserve a more particular notice of it for its more proper place. The year 1823 was rendered memorable by a controversy of a difler- ent character and With different connexions. This now de- mands a more special attention. I refer to that, which oc* curred between Bishop Griswold and Bishop Hobart, on the case of Dr. Ducachet. This case was of so much importance, from its connexioh with our canon law on the subject in- volved, and excited so much attention throughout the Church, that it would be improper to pass it without notice in the present work. It would be equally improper for the present writer to enter into the controversy as an advocate for either of the parties engaged. Nothing further, therefore, will be attempted, than to give the correspondence of the two Bishops, with such other documents as may be necessary to shew the true position and the real views of each. It is pre- sumed that the memory of neither of those distinguished men will suffer from the adoption of such a course. Dr. Ducachet, having been in the practice of medicine in the city of New York, was induced to change his profession, and devote his life to the work of the ministry. He applied for admission, as a candidate for orders in the Diocese of New York and was received. But subsequent events in- duced Bishop Hobart to refuse to ordain him ; and be therefore, after some delay, applied for admission anew, as a candidate for orders in the Eastern Diocese. After his re- fusal to give him orders. Bishop Hobart sent the canonical notification of the fact to the other Bishops of our Church ; upon the receipt of which by Bishop Griswold the corres- pondence was opened, which I now proceed to give, and which will explain the case without any further comment 288 . MEMom, &c. , \ -from the present writer. It may be jvell, hovrever, before proceeding to^ the correspqndence, to giye the Canon, by which the case was governed. It is as follows : " Canon xvi." (as printed in 18.25.) " Of Candidates, who may be refuse4 orders.") " No Bishop shall ordain any candidate until he has re- quired of him whether he has ever, directly or indirectly, applied for orders in any. other. Diocese or State ; and if the Bishop has reason to believe, that the candidate has been refused orders in any other Diocese, or State, he shall write to the Bishop of the Diocese, or, if there be no Bishop, to the Standing Committee, to know whether any just cause ex- ists why the candidate should not be ordained. When any Bishop rejects the application of any candidate for orders, he shall immediately give notice to the Bishop of eyeiy State or Diocese, or, if there^be no Bishop, to the Standing Committee." According to the requisition of this Canon, and while Mr. Ducachet's application for admission as a candidate in the Eastern Diocese, was pending. Bishop Griswold address- ed to Bishop Hobart the following letter : " Bristol, July 9th, 1823, " Rt. Rev. and dear Sir, — That perplexing subject, the ap- plication of Mr. Ducachet to this Diocese to be received as a candidate for orders, is still in agitation; and^it is proper that you should be apprized of what is doing, and consulted in whatever steps may be taken. Whether our Standing ■ Committee" (that in Rhode Island) " wiU recommend him, I know not ; nor have I formed any determination respecting my future conduct in the business. To prevent any misun- derstanding, it will be proper to state to you my general view of such questions, and to ask a statement of yours, and of this case particularly. A Bishop's authority, we know, is confined io his" own Diocese., , It is decidedly my opinion that a candidate's .being rejected by lone Bishop, does not, «^ COKRESPONDENCE WITH BISHOP HOBAET, &C. 289 in itself, debar, him of the right of applying to, and being re- ceived by, another ; for, such a rule might sanction the most intolerable oppression. It is also my opinion, that if any Bishop receives one, who has been refused by another, it does not necessarily imply any censure upon the conduct of the Bishop, who refused. They act independently, each (we must suppose) according to his best judgment, and of course, as his conscience dictates. Either of them may act injudiciously ; or the case may very possibly be so equally balanced, that a wise and impartial judge would hesitate to say which of the two pursued the wiser course. It is also my opinion, and it is evident to all, that the Bishop and Standing Committee, who receive the person, that has been rejected, take on themselves the whole responsibility. If the person is unworthy, no blame can rest on those who, rejected him. The case is similar to what we daily see in civil causes. If one judge reverses the decision of another, no censure is implied or understood. It is no uncommon thing for a man to bring an action before a court and lose it ; a new trial is granted him, and he gains his cause. In such cascj no manner of disrespect is shown to the former court. Of course, in the present case, you are interested only in the general honor and good of the Church. Mr. D. comes here very highly and abundantly recommended. You judge him to be an unfit person. The reasons for it giveii me verbally by yourself are worthy of serious consideration. But, with deference, I conceive that we ought to have some definite statement in writing of his disqualifications, with the proper proof. His address, delivered on a certain funeral occasion, and published, to which w;e have been referred, is reprehen- sible, but is not, in my judgment, sufficient to debar him from the sacred ministry. I have to request, then, that you will address to me, or to Mr. Wheaton, the President of our Standing Committee, such statement, and such proof, of Mr. Diicachet's unfitness for the holy ministry as you shall think proper. This, I know, is to you an unpleasant business ; but to me it is much more so; called, as I probably soon BB 290 MEMOIR, &C. shall be, to decide in a question -of such great delicacy and importance. Most respectfully, your frien^ and brother, Alexander V. Griswold." To this communication Bishop Hobart returned the follow- ing answer, dated, " " New York, August 6th, 1823. " Rt. Rey. and dear Sir, — Your letter of the 9th of July last arrived during my absence on a visitation of part of the Diocese ; and before I could answer it, on my return, I was seized with an intermittent fever. The information which I received of what passed among tiie Bishops at the General Convention, induced me to hope, that the subject of Mr. Ducachet's application to you for orders wojild not engross much more of fonr or my attention. The state of my health must be my apology for my delay in writing to you, and for my not going very fully into the subject. This, however, is the less necessary, as the views, which appear to me correct, are stated by our presiding Bishop, in the opinion, which he read in the house of Bishops ; and, as you may not have a copy of it, I take the'liberty of subjoining one, taken from a copy, with which Bishop White furnished me : " ' Question. Is there any possible case, in which a per- son, refused orders by a Bishop, and applying to another Bishop for ordination, may justifiably be ordained by him?' " ' Answer. The case is here supposed to be possible ; but not under any circumstances, in which such an act would not be an open testimony against either the heterodoxy, or the injustice of a brother Bishop.' "Let there be supposed two cases, as happening either -in the Diocese of Bishop Kemp, or in that t)f Bishop Croes. These Right Rev. Brethren will excuse the attaching of their names to the fictitious cases ; because the question is con- templated as having a bearing on a possible application to CORRESPONDENCE WITH BISHOP HOBART, &C. 291 the writer of this ; and because, if either of their Dioceses should be passed over to reach that of Pennsylvania, such a procedure would be considered by him as evidence of the belief of a diversity of sentiment, influencipg the administra- tion of ecclesiastical discipline. The suggestion would pre- vent procedure in the case : although it might not prevent the consulting of. Bishops on the subject, abstractly con- sideted, as is done in the present instance. " Let it be supposed, that in either of the two named Dio- ceses, there should be hereafter a Bishop, denying the sacri- fice of the Cross to have been made for all.- Scripture aflSrms it to have been 'for the sins of' the whole world ;' but he would give the interpretation that it might have been so extensive, had such been the will of God. Our Church says ; — ' who redeemed me and aU mankind :' but this would be interpreted of all sorts of men. Before the Bishop there appears a candidate, who is rejected, because, not giving satisfactory answers on the specified points, he is considered as a denier of the sovereignty of God ; and as excluding the agency of the Holy Spirit from the giving of a beginning to ' the work of saving grace: doubtless just causes of rejection if truly predicated of the person. In the circumstances stated, it may be supposed, that the latter of the Bishops ap- plied to would enter into a Christian correspondence with his Right Rev. Brother ; not for the discussion of the impli- cated points, but perhaps for friendly expostulation ; and at any rate, for the ascertaining of the facts : and on the latter account, other resources might be had recourse to. If the cause of the rejection should be found to be as stated, there would seem no hindrance to the ordaining of the party ; al- though not even then, without the advice of the Standing Committee of the Diocese, and after taking the advice of some brother Bishops. " Another case. Let the circumstances be as before ; ex- cept that the rejection -is for some act contrary to good morals. Let it be the manifesting of a disposition to intemperate abuse of. character : than which there can scarcely be a fault more tending to the disgrace of the Christian ministry. If it 292 MEMOIR, &C. should not bring down personal vengeance on the minister ; there will be the sting of professed forbearance, because of the sacred profession of the offender. One would hope that no Standing Committee would sign the requisite testimonials of such a person. If this should be done, it might further be hoped, that the Standing Committee of the Diocese ap- plied to would not strain their consciences to the same ex- tent. But we will suppose both 'these events to have hap- pened. The opinion entertained is, that the Bishop applied to should disregard them both, and not take on himseK the heavy responsibility, which would result from his compli- ance. Let the above case be so varied as that, in the estima- tion of the second Bishop applied to, the offence is resolvable into an act of indiscretion, not evidencing inalignity of mind. That this is possible, cannot be denied. But how great should be the caution of predicating ordination on the ground of the unreasonable severity, and, as would be alleged, the tyranny of another Bishop ! If, however, -the extreme case should happen, and if it should be continued, after reasonable time and endeavor for conciliation ; no doubt the majority, or rather all the rest, of the Bishops would express such sen- timents concerning it, as would make the course of conduct clear to the Bishop applied to, and justify his compliance with the request made. W. W. 5> "Agreeably to the principles laid down in the opinion referred to, I should consider it to be my duty to act in any particular case, which might come before me. If an appli-" cation should be made to me to ordain a candidate rejected in the Eastern Diocese, I should not proceed, because, as suggested by Bishop White, this measure would imply a be- lief that there was some ' diversity of sentiment,' which, in the opinion of the candidate, would render his application more likely to succeed with me than with the Bishop of Con- necticut, to whom, as the nearest Bishop, it would be na- tural and proper that the candidate should apply. If the case of a candidate, rejected by kn adjoining Bishop, should come before me, I should not think proper to ordain him, CORRESPONDENCE WITH BISHOP HOBART, &C. 293 unless I were satisfied of ' the heterodoxy or injustice of my brother Bishop,' in rejecting him. I conceive that only in an extreme ease of this kind, would I be justifiable in ordain- ing a person rejected by another Bishop, and not then with- out 'consulting my brother Bishops.' I should, in the first instance, inquire of the Bishop, who had rejected the can- didate, ' Whether,' (in the words of the canon) ' any just . cause exists why the candidate should not be ordained.' K he answered in the aifirmatiye, if, for example, he stated that, after full inquiry, he was satisfied that the candidate did not possess ' the qualifications whicji would render him apt and meet to exercise the ministry ;' that his temper and disposition led him to language and conduct so violent as to expose him to just censure, and that his temper had been particularly displayed in an 'intemperate abuse of cljaracter,' I should immediately refuse to act in the case. Satisfied that I could not ordain the candidate without bearing ' an open testimony' against the ' severity and injustice of my brother Bishop ;' and of this ' severity and injustice! I must have strong and full evidence, before I should consider tnyself justifiable in ordaining the man, whom he had rejected. His general assurance, that he had full and satisfactory evidence of the moral unfitness of the candidate would satisfy me, un- less there were clear and decisive proof to invalidate an assurance, to which, from every consideration, I was bound to give full credit. But if my brother Bishop went further, and laid before me, as proof of "the disposition of the person, •whom he had rejected, to ' an intemperate abuse of charac- ter,' a pamphlet, containing the severest charges against individuals, amounting, if false, to slander, and, at the same time, assured me, that he was satisfied, by full evidence, that at least some of these charges, and particularly the most exceptionable charge, were false, I should be still more for- tified in my deterrpination to reject the application of the candidate ; as, by not doing so, I should consider myself as impeaching the veracitj^, and the capacity, and the purity of intention, as well as the justice of my brother Bishop, by the supposition that he had not this evidence, as he asserted ; or 294 MEMOIR, &C. that he was incapable of estimating the force of evidence ; or had judged and decided corruptly and unjustly. To re- quire of him a detail of the evidence, I should think unrea- sonable and improper. Unreasonablcj because it might be impossible to present this detail, as cases may readily be con- ceived, where individuals, on whpse information and testi- mony the judgment of the Bishop may be founded, would not consent to come forward in a public mannfer : and impro- per, because, by this procedure, I should bring my brother Bishop, and the person rejected by him, before my tribunal, and, by my decision, determine on the correctness of the conduct of the parties. And if I should decide in favor of the Bishop and against the other party, he might, by the pre- cedent, which I should establish, apply to all the other Bishops, and thus cite the Bishop, who has refused him orders, before their tribunals successively. Having full con- fidence in the capacity and integrity of my brother Bishop,' I should^ think that, however he might err in matters of opin- ion, in regard to matters of fact, as in this case, to the moral fitness of the candidate, determined by the facts, of which he became possessed, and of which he could judge much better than myself, I ought to respect his decision. At any rate, conceiving that the canons, instead of favoring these appli- cations fi-om rejected candidates, rather guard against them, and that though injustice might possibly be done, yet this possible case ought not to weigh against the certainty of the weakening of ecclesiastical discipline, and of the injury to the character, reputation and influence of my brother Bishop, I should think it decidedly the safest course not to ordain the candidate. " I have thus. Right Rev. and Dear Sir, with that frank- ness, which you have invited by your friendly and frank communication to me, stated my views on this unpleasant business. The case above supposed is that of Dr. Duca- chet. The ground of rejecting the supposed candidate, as I stated to you, and to soriie members of your Standing- Committee, is the ground, on which I rejected Dr. D. The testimony, on which I formed my judgment, is the testimony CORRESPONDENCE WITH BISHOP HOBART, &C. 295 of most respectable individuals, some of whom are the per- sonal friends of Dr. D., though they think him very unfit for the ministry. But more particularly, my judgment was de- cided by the published address, not on account merely of what some consider as reprehensible , language, but of the matter, which amounts, in one case more particularly, to gross slander. The individual, whom he charges with be- ing ' a dastardly traduber of Dr. Dykeman's character,' and holds up as deserving of ' public execration,' is a most re- spectable and exemplary jjaan, a member of our- Vestry, and long a communicant of our Church ; — and I now repeat to you the assurance, that there is no ground whatsoever for this charge. This assurance is founded on a minute know- ledge of the circumstances of the case. The considerations, that this attack on character was without any provobation, that Dr. Ducachet, had withdrawn from the medical pro- fession, and become a candidate for orders; and that the cir- ' cumstances, on which he professes to found the charge, took place nearly three years before the delivery of the address, ot eulogium, much aggravate the offence. To require me to exhibit ' proof of all this would, I humbly conceive, be liable to the objections which I have stated in the supposed , case ; and would, indeed, from the reluctance of individuals to come forward, be perhaps impracticable. And I do fur- ther respectfully suggest, whether, if credit cannot be given to the declarations of a Bishop, as to the grounds, on which he has acted in rejecting a candidate, and the facts, on which his decision is founded, there is not an entire end to confi- tlence and harmony between the Bishops. The power of Ordination is a discretionary power, fOr the exercise of which a Bishop is responsible . to God and the Church. The act of ordination is an admission to privileges, which no indi- vidual has a right to claim, — analogous to admission to the legal, or medical profession, or to membership in any society, which may be, and is, refused to individuals, on satisfactory evidence of unfitness, without the forms of a trial. " The act of a Bishop in ordaining a rejected candidate is not an- independent act, affecting only himself; inasmuch 296 MEMOIR, &C. as it must fix ' heterodoxy or injustice' on a brother Bishop. The reversal of the sentence qf one court by another, is in a process of law not contemplated in cases of ordination. But eren here, I should^ suppose, that, if a judge or jury pronounced a judgment, or verdict, relative not to legal points^ but to matters of fact ^ on evidence laid before them, and another judge or jury, on the same evidence, .pro- nounced a different decision, — the latter would be considered a crimjnation of the former. " With regard to the high and abundant recommendations of Dr. D., I would only remind.yourself and the Standing Committee of the ease, with which testimonials may be pro- cured, and of the circumstance, that the testimony of a hun- dred persons, to the general good character of an individuaJ, could not invalidate the testimony of two to his guilt, in any particular case. The persons, who met with Dr. D. on re- ligious occasions, where he would be on his guard^ could not have had an opportunity of judging of the faults of his temper disqualifying him for the . ministry. I can only say, that gentlemen, of the most respectable character and stand- ing, who know Dr. D., have expressed to me, not merely a cold, but the warmest, approbation of the course, which I have pursued. One gentleman, of judgment and discrimi- nation, -who, by the representations made to him, became somewhat interested in, Dr. JD.'s favor, and consented to a personal interview with him, informed a friend of mine, that he thought no explanation, or justification, on my part neces- sary ; he was perfectly satisfied, from the language and con- duct .of Dr. D. on that occasion, that I had done right in refusing him orders. " In the event of Dr. D.'s receiying orders, I shall find myself placed in a most unpleasant predicament. Unwea- ried' pains have been taken, to circulate extensively imputa- tions on me of severity,, of tyranny and of injustice, in re- lation to Dr. D. .1 have submitted in silence, trusting for my vindication to the gradual progress of truth. But should these imputations receive sanction, (as they certainly will, though unintentionally on his part) by the ordination of Dr. COERESPONDENCE WITH BISHOP HOBART, &C. 297 D. by another Bishop, they will become much more serious in their import, and in their influence on my personal and official character and reputation. " I deprecate this measure even more on account of the effect, which it will have, as a precedent, on the Church, — weakening the legitimate exercise of Episcopal authority, and leading to an interruption of that confidence and har- mony among the Bishops, so essential to their dignity and usefulness, and to the honor and peace of the Church. " I must beg you to have the goodness to lay this letter before the Standing Committee. And I remain, Right Rev. and Dear Sir, Very respectfully and truly. Your firiend and brother, J. H. HoBART." Shortly after despatching this communication. Bishop Hobart added another for the purpose, mainly, of amplifying one of the topics, to which he had just alluded in the former. It was dated, " New York, Sept. 9th, 1823. " Right Rev. and Dear Sir, — I wrote you from Quebec, informing you that the Bishop of Quebec, through his son. Arch-deacon Mountain, in answer to inquiries from Dr. Du- cachet's friends in that place, whether a candidate -for orders from the States would receive ordination from him, returned for answer, — not unless he produced satisfactory testimonials, or letters dimissory from the Bishop, under, whom he was a candidate. " I have been informed, since my return to the city, that Dr. Ducachet has written to his friends there, that the Stand- ing Committee of Rhode Island have recommended him as a candidate for orders, and that he expects to receive ordi- nation in a few months. There must, I presume, be some mistake in this ; as it does not follow from the recommenda- tion of the Standing Committee, that you have admitted him 298 MEMOIR,, &C. as a candidate, — and even in tiiis ease,' a year must elapse before he can receive ordination ; and, as I am satisfied, he will not be able to produce, an urdrnpeached character for piety, good morals and orderly conduct, for three years last past. " In my letter to you, I -omitted to notice your remark, that Dr. Ducachet conies ' very highly and abundantly re- commended.' " ' You know how easy it is, from the indifierence of many in such a case, or from compassion, or from a desire to escape from importunity,' or from false representations, to obtain testimonials. Against these, however, I should sup- pose, my declaration, that I received testimony the most re- spectable of Dr. Ducachet's unfitness, and particularly the fact of a slanderous publication by him, would have decided weight. A deliberate, and unprovoked, and slanderous at- tack on respectable individuals, evidencing^ in connexion with other facts, ' a disposition to intemperate abuse of cha- racter' is surely ' a fault,' (I use the language of our vene- rable presiding Bishop) ' than which there can scarcely be one more tending to the disgrace of the Christian ministry;' and let me be permitted, to go on with his opinion, — ' One would hope that no Standing Committee would sign the re- quisite testimonial in favor of such a person. If this should be done, it might further be hoped, that the Standing Com- mittee of the Diocese applied to would not strain their con- sciences to the same extent. But we will suppose both these events to have happened. The opinion entertained is, that the Bishop applied to should disregard them both, and not take on himself, the heavy responsibility which would result from his compliance.' " I have not seen the testimouials, to which you allude. But I presume they are signed by the religious companions of Dr. Ducachet, in whose society he probably has been careful never to exhibit those violent tempers, which he has elsewhere displayed ; — and by others, whose signatures have been obtained by the assiduous application and misrepresen- tations of interested individuals. . Where is the person, who, COaKESPONDENCE WITH BISHOP HOBART, &C. 299 by certain arts, cannot obtain, from some person,* or from some quarter, testimonials of character ? " Allow me. Right Rev. and Dear Sir, to suppose it scarce- ly possible, that a candidate for orders, rejected by one Bishop, on the ground of ' moral unfitness, arising from a disposition to intemperate abuse of characterj' should be received as a candidate by another, on whom, as there were, other Bishops, more contiguous to the residence of the candidate, there was no particular call to attend to his case ; and that this should be done, in deviation from the prudent and judicious course pointed out, in an opinion delivered at the request of this Bishop, by, the presiding Bishop ; in op- position to the earnest and solemn representations of the Bishop, who rejected the candidate, that this measure was the result of serious deliberation and inquiry, and of satis- factory testimony of impartial individuals, who had the full- est opportunity of judging of his dispositions and charac- ter; and in disregard of the fact, that an eulogium, delivered and published by him, in departure from his appropriate cha- racter as a candidate for the ministry, contained, not merely unprovoked and unmerited invective, but slanderous charges against respectable individuals. " If Dr. Ducachet be admitted as a candidate for orders in the Eastern Diocese, then it will be impossible to prevent the community from drawing the conclusion, that the charges of ' injustice and intolerable oppression,' ' of unreasonable severity and tyranny,' which have been industriously and extensively circulated against me, have received the high sanction of the Ecclesiastical authority of the Diocese ; the Episcopal character and office will be lowered in public es- timation ; — distrust and division will, in the present instance, and hereafter, if the precedent should be followed, be intro- duced among those, who, fronl their eminent stations in the Church, it is of peculiar importance, should exhibit^ in the exercise of discipline especially, unity of counsel, and mu- tual confidence and co-operation ; — and then the guards, with which the Canons of the Church have so solicitously surrounded the door of entrance into the ministry, will be 300 MEMOIR, &C. . riiaterially weakened. It is the result on the general In- terests of our Church, which, even more than its effects as to my personal and official character, excites, with respect to this measure, my deepest solicitude. " I expected to proceed from Canada on a visitation of the Diocese ; but the morning I left Quebec, I was attacked with fever, for the third time this summer, and was induced to make the best of my "^ay home. The state of my health, in the opinion of my physicians and friends, renders highly expedient a sea voyage, and a respite from official cares and labors ; I accordingly expect to sail for England on the 24th of this month. I must previously prepare my address to our Convention, exhibiting an account of my proceedings, among which I must, of course, mention my rejection of Dr. Ducachet, as a candidate for orders. I shall, therefore, esteem it a great favorj if you will, as early as convenient, acquaint me with your determination as to this case, and if he be admitted as a candidate, at what time it is. proposed to ordain him. I remain. Right Rev. and dear Sir, Sincerely your friend and brother, J. H. HOBART." The Right Rev. Bishop Geiswold, ■ { Very soon after the receipt of this communication, the Conventions met of both Dioceses ; that of the Eastern, September 25th, and that of New York, October 21st ; and as Bishop Hobart would have to lay his proceedings and views on the case before the latter body,* Bishop Griswold, it seems, instead of the continuance of a direct correspond- ence, preferred taking the same course. "Upon the de- livery of his Annual Address, therefore, he laid his pro- * At the meeting of the New York Convention, although Bishop Hobart had sailed for England, yet his Annual Address was read bj the Secretary ; and embodied a full statement of the case of Dr. Ducachet, including the whole previous correspondence between Bishop Griswold and himself, with additional prefatory and concluding remarks. CORRESPONDENCE WITH BISHOP HOBAET, &C. 301 ceedings and views on the case before the -Convention of his Diocese, in the following statement of what had trans- . pired at the date of the, meeting of that body. " To- the list of, Candidates for holy orders- have been added the names qP'' — several individuals, and among them that of — " Henry W. DucacheV " Respecting the gentleman last mentioned, it will be proper, bothforinformation,,andto prevent misapprehension, to state, that, during the greater _part of a year, he was a candidate in the Diocese of New York. A short time before the meeting of the General Convention last May, I received an official notification- from the Bishop of that Diocese, that he had refused to give Mr. Ducachet orders. Our Canons do not, in such case, prohibit an application elsewhere ; and he applied to the Standing Committee of the State of Rhode Island, requesting to be admitted as a candidate here. The Standing Committee, consisting of eight respectable and judicious members, all met in council on this difficult and interesting question, and gave it, I have good reason to be- lieve, a faithful examination. I had previously written to the Bishop of New York, informing him of,'Mr. Ducachet's application to this Diocese, and requesting a statement of the objections against his receiving orders. A long, particu- lar, and very friendly answer was promptly returned. This correspondence has also been laid before the Standing Com- mittee. Mr. Ducachet produced abundant testimonials to his talents, piety, good morals, and respectability of cha- racter. With a view to the Christian ministry, he had re- linquished a successful practice in an honorable profession. The groundj on which he had been rejected, was violence of temper, and his- having used language injurious to the character of individuals. Some instances of this, not to be justified, were produced ; but not, in the jud^ent of our Standing Committee, to a degree, which ought to debar him from being admitted as a candidate for the ministry in this Diocese. He was accordingly recommended ; seven of the Committee signed his testimonials. He is not ordained, but received, as other candidates, on probation : Should any CO 302 MEMOIE, &C. reasons hereafter appear, why he ought not to receive orders, they will be duly considered. "I desire, also, it inay be -distinctly and very careful|y understood, that, in thus receiving him as a candidate, there is not intended, and ought not to be implied, any manner of censure, or even disapprobation, of what was done by the Ecclesiastical authority in the other Diocese. The highly respectable Bishop,, who presides there, undoubtedly dic^ what he conscientiously beheved the honor of the Church and the cause of religion required ; and very possibly has acted a wiser part than myself. This case is becorning pub- lic and well known. If in any thing I have done wrong, I can, by such misconduct, injure no character but my own. There may be reasons for refusing a man orders in one Dio- cese, which are not of equal weight in another. And that men should differ in judgment is one of the most common things in life. A number of Judges, who hear a cause, with the same evidence of facts, and the same arguments of counsel before them, are often in their decisions divided, and, in many cases, equally divided. Each one acts con- scientiously according to. his own best judgment, Avithout designing or even thinking of any censure upon the opinions of those who judge differently. And I can truly say, that should our brethren, in any other Diocese, judge that one, who has been rejected in this, might be useful in the minis- try among them, and should ordain him, I should be pleased rather than offended ; should sincerely pray that he might not disappoint their expectations ; and should rejoice to hear of his well-doing. " During the sitting of the last General Convention, with reference to this case the opinion of thje House of Bishops was requested. From what was said on the subject, I was rather inclined to the course, which I have since pursued. The presiding Bishop, whose opinion is always highly and Very justly esteemed, stated in writing his view of the general question ; but not in such terms, or under such sup- posed circumstances, as, in my apprehension, to include the present case. In all the cases he put, it was supposed that CORRESPONDENCE WITH BISHOP HOBART, &C. 303 the second Bishop applied to is to be a judge of the other's conduct ; he views it as ' predicating an ordination pn the ground of the unreasohable sererity, and, as it would be termed, tyranny, of another Bishop.' In such a case, my judgment would coincide with his. Bui such is not my view of the present case. I am not called, nor am I autho- rized, to judge of the principles, or character, or official con- duct of another Bishop. My part, in this business, is not to de^cide whether Mr. Ducachet ought to have been ordain- ed in another Diocese, but whelfher he may with propriety be received as a candidate in thisv? Permit me, then, to re- peat that I do not, and that- 1 ought not to judge, nor do I in this case entertain any opinion contrary to Christian charity, respecting 'the heterodoxy or injustice of a brother Bishop.' With such a view of'the case, I see no need of ' taking the advice of some brother Bishops' further than I have done. Their advice on this and every important point will ever ■ be heard by me with pleasure, and, I trust, re- spectfully and duly regarded. If Mr. Ducachet were now ordained, on the score of his having been a candidate in th6 other Diocese, the case would be materially different ; but, as the case is, he is received on trial, and, like other candidates, to be ordained, or not, as he is found worthy. " This, undoubtedly, is a case of some importance ; and must be decided with impartial regard to Ecclesiastical dis- cipline, and to the character and claims of an individual. We must respect the honor of the Church, that we neither bring it into contempt by enervating its just authority, nor give countenance to the prejudice, which unhappily exists respecting its arbitrary exercise, of power. Chiefly must we regard the interests of religion ; the prosperity of the Re- deemer's kingdom. 'The utmost vigilance should unques- tionably be used respecting the character and qualifications of those admitted to holy orders. Not only does this re- quire the exercise of all the wisdom giv'en us, but we are devoutly to pray the Lord of the harvest to send such labor- ers as he approves ; we must look iii faith and earnest sup- 304 MEMOIR, &e. plication to Him, who knows and rules the hearts of men. No Christian is authorized to hope, nor ought he to expect, that our Churches will or can be well supphed with clergy- men, except he often and fervently prays to God to send them. An4 if we see Churches vacant, or, what-is worse, filled with disqualified, or unfaithful ministers, our first thought should be, whether we have been faithful. Have we used the means and efforts, which our Lord has given and directed for preventing such great evils ? Have we prayed as we ought, to ' the Lord of tiie harvest ?' " i?hough this extract from the Address was not put forth as a formal answer to the communications firom Bishop Ho- bart, yet it will be evident to the attentive reader, that it was written witb a careful and wise reference to those com- munications, and in fact contains an answer to every import- ant point, which they, embraced : and perhaps it will not be deemed inconsistent with my relation, as an impartial narrator of facts, to say ; that it evinces not only a fair and respectful, a kind and Christian regard for the position and the opinions of the eminent and Right Rev. Brethren, who sought to influence his action in the premises, but also a clear and thorough insight into the case ; a mind, in short, which, while it respected the judgment of others, was calinly poised on its own just sense of things, and felt its own ground too well not to act_ on it with decision and with confidence. Thusfar, howeter, his action had been only introductory ; and it still remained to be seen whether Mr. Ducachet would be actually admitted to the orders, for which he had thus become the second time ^a candidate. -The documents which follow, have never been given to the public ; but they will shew what steps were taken to prepare the way for Mr. D.'s ordination, and, in part at least, on what grounds the Bishop finally proceeded to ordain him. The first is part of a letter fi-om Dr. Jarvis, including an extract from one, which he heid received from a gentleman in New York: ■ . COERESPONDENCE WITH BISHOP HOBART, &C. 305 " Boston, Feb. 5th, 1824. " Rt. Rev. and Dear Sir,— * * * * * ******! some time ago told Dr. Ducachet my opinion, that a reconciliation between him and Dr. Watts ought to take place, as a preliminaty to any ap- plication for orders. To bring , about this desirable event, I wrote to Mr. John Pintard of New York, who, I knew, was a friend of both parties, requesting him to call on Dr. Watts, and learn from him what were the grounds of his difference with Dr. Ducachet, and on what terms he would consent to a reconciliation. A few days since, I received an answer," (from Mr. Pintard,) " from which I copy the passage relative to this subject, which I think will give you pleasure. " ' The obtuseness of my hearing,' (says Mr. Pintard,) ' induced me to approach Dr. Watts- through the medium of Mr. Eastbum and Mr. Hill, both warm, the latter the bosom friend of Dr. Ducachet. The result of this interview, last evening, I give in Mr. Eastburn's words : ' I called, with Mr. John H. Hill, on Dr. Watts, with whom we had a long conversation. We agree in saying, that Dr. Watts acted the part of a Christian and a gentleman. He stated explicitly, that he had never believed that Dr.. D. was actuated by any malignity towards him. On the contrary, that Dr. D. had been carried away by the natural warmth and impetu- osity of his dispositipn, on misrepresentation made to him by others. In no other way could he account, even to this day, for the attack on his character. Dr. W. added that whatever momentary irritation he might have felt, he had deemed it his dtity to dismiss it from him. As a Christian, he did not, and could not retain it.' — ^He said, ' that he sincerely wished Dr. D. every success in his new profession ;' and added,, ' that he' (Dr. W.) ' should feel extremely sorry if the occurrence should either retard his advancement, or affect his usefulness. ^ Indeed,' he said, ' / do not think it ought. What Dr. D. said in his address is not of sufficient moment to produce, such a result.' On our asking Dr. W. what apology would satisfy him? he promptly replied; 'that he CO* 306 ^ MEMOIR, &C. did not wish for any at all, nor did lie think thp case re- quired it. Believing Dr. D. to be altogether innocent of any malicious intention, he had ever disclaimed any apology from him. All he had wished, at first, was, to ascertain the source of the information, on which his attack was founded ; but that even this he was willing to pass by.' Dr. W. con- cluded with good wishes for Dr. D.'s ' happiness and pros- perity.' " (Thus far Mr. Eastburn^s report. But Mr. Pin- tard continues:) 'Although Dr. Watts disclaimed any apology, it is the opinion of Mr. HiU and myself, that his conduct ought to be met with equal magnanimity on the part of Dr. Ducachet ; and it- will be to his credit and comfort to give, through the medium of his friend, some explaiation to Dr. W .' " ' This, my dear and Rev. friend,' (says, Mr. Pintard) ' will, I trust, prove perfectly satisfactory to you, and, I trust, to Dr. D., to whom his friend, Mr. Hill, will no doubt write ; and that Dr. D. will conform to the wish expressed by Messrs. E. and H., which must tend to remove the stig- ma on his character, and the very unfavorable impression on the minds of Bishop Hobart's friends here. After the ordi- nation of Dr. D., it appears to me that it will be due to Bishop Griswold for him, (Dr. D.,) to publish his vindica- tion.' '^' " ' This extract from Mr. Pintard's letter' " (adds Dr. Jarvis) " ' is long ; but its importance will, I trust,-justify my inserting it here. I have not seen Dr. D. since I re- ceived it, nor have I written him ; thinldng it best to lay the matter before you, and leave it for him to act on the sugges- tion of his friends in New York. I am, Rt. Rev. and dear Sir, Your affectionate son and servant in the Lord, Samuel F. Jakvis.' " To the Right Reverend AxExANDKB V. Griswold, D. D., ) > Bishop of tlie Eastern Diocese, ^ After Dr. Ducachet had remained a candidate-for brders, for the term of one year from the date of this application to COERESPONDENCE WITH BISHOP HOBAKT, &C. 307 the Standing Committee of Rhode Island, — Bishog Griswold, having determined on his ordination, proposed that it should take place simultaneously with the consecration of a new Church in Leicester, Massachusetts, in which State Dr. D. was laboring as a candidate and lay-reader, and where he had a call to settle as minister of a parish, as soon as he should be in orders. Here, however, a new difficulty arose. The Standing Committee of Massachusetts refused to recom- mend him for orders, on the ground that, as he had been admitted ,a candidate by the Committee in Rhode Island, they were the proper body to act in bringing his case to its issue. But, as he had not what the Canon denominates " a title," in Rhode Island, that is, a call to settlement from some parish within that State, the Bishop for several months longer delayed action in the matter of his ordination. It was during this period of delay that he received the two following, among many other communications : V Boston, May 28th, 1824. " Right Reverend and dear Sir, — As Dr.- Ducachet has been admitted a candidate for orders in Rhode Island, and continued so the whole canonical term,* there seems a pecu- liar hardship in puttings obstacles in his way at this late period, when from all I can learn, his character has been so irreproachable, as to conciliate the esteem of all, who have known him. The Standing Committee of Rhode Island having recommended him for orders, it is clear, that, if he bad a title in that State, no one would have a right to op- * Strictly speaking,, this statement is incorrect. Dr. D. had remained a candidate for one year from the' date of his application to the Standing Committee of Rhode Island, By that Committee, however, he- was notre- ceived as a candidate until the 25th of July ; so that, though in ordinary cases, candidateship was often, by a sort of mutual understanding, reckoned from the dat^ of application, yet, in strictness, Dr. D. did not complete hie canonical term till the 25th of July : and Bishop Griswold assigned this fact to Dr. D. as one reason for his delay. As the case was an extraordi- nary one, he finally thought it best to enforce a literal observance of the Canon. The real delay in the case was only from July 25th to August 15th, or three weeks. 308 MEMOIR, i&C. pose his ordination, except on charges, affecting his moral character. It is also, clear, by the 13th Canon, that, if he ■were to be ofdained Piiest, the Standing Committee of the State, for which he should be ordained, must either know that some Church, in that State, would receive and settle him as their minister, or must certify to the Bishop their full beUef and expectation, that he would be so .settled. But, as he is only to be ordained Beacon, I see not why it is necessary that he should have any title at all. To ordain him, espe- cially for a parish in Massachusetts, on the recommendation of the Standing Committee of Rhode Island, would, I appre- hend, be inconsistent with the Canon, to whi-ch I have re- ferred. But, by the same Canon, a Deacon is subject to the regulation of the Bishop, and may be sent by him any where. Why, then, should not Dr. Ducachet be ordained Deacon in Rhode Island without any title .' If, after his ordination as a clergyman of that State, you think, proper to send him into Massachusetts, I presume none of the clergy of this State, will oppose it. At least, I can answer for myself, that I shall not. When he has served the whole term of his Diaconate, the Standing Committee of Massachusetts will, of course, be the only body, to which he will apply for testimonials for Priest's orders. , It is h,igh time, it seerns to me, to put a stop to this most unpleasant collision of sentiment, and this cruel torture to the feelings of a gentleman of Dr. Ducachet's character. I am. Right Reverend and dear Sir, Very faithfully and truly, Your son and servant in the Lord, Samuel F. Jar%is." The Right Reverend Bishop Griswold. The delay, to which reference is here made, seems to have arisen, on the part of Bishop Griswold, not only from the fact thait Dr. D. was laboring in Massachusetts while he belonged canonically to Rhode Island, but also from some indiscre- tions on the part of Dr. D.'s friends, in writing to the Bishop CORRESPONDENCE WITH BISHOP HOBART, &C. 309 and urging his speedyordination, with a somewhat unbe- coming importunity ; indiscrjetions, to which the Bishop sup- posed Dr. D. might himself have been privy. A communi- cation from the latter, however, at a later period, convinced the Bishop, that there was no ground for his supposition, but that, however anxious Dr. D. was for the termination of his trial, he was perfectly satisfied with the Bishop's course, and perfectly willing to leave his case in the Bishop's hands. But neither the above communication, from Dr. Jarvis, nor the following from Dr. Milnor, was among the number of the epistolary indiscretions, to which I have alluded ; on the contrary, they each weighed favorably on the final decision of the case. Dr. M. wrote as follows : " New York, June 23d, 1824. " Right Rev. and dear Sir, — I am duly sensible of the risk, to which I expose myself, of incurring your displeasure, by presuming to write to you on a subject, with which I have no special concern, except that arising out of the claims of personal friendship ; unless, indeed, an apology be found in the deep sense of what, in my judgment, is claimed by jus- tice to an injured individualj and by a regard to the good of the Church. If I know my own heart, I have been in- fluenced by no motives of a sinister kind in my advocacy of the cause of Dr. Ducachet. I have always considered his as a case, that was to stand on its own merits, and not to de- pend for its issue upon those differing views, which, on some points, obtain among the members of our communion ; but which, for one, I have never considered as by any means marshalling them into contending parties. Indeed, such are the ^varying grades of sentiment and feeling on the questions, that have been, fronli time to time, agitated, that I consider a division into two parties about as impracticable as it would be undesirable^ and injurious to the interests of our Zion. " It is for this reason, that I have avoided all participation in the disputes carried on inpamphlets and in periodical pub- lications, at home and abroad ; though the authorship of 310 MEMpm, &c. some pieces has been mistakingly attributed to me, and I have been, on that supposition, assailed by their answerers. The truth, as I view it, I must pteach ; conscientious obliga- tions of duty I must fulfil : but I hetve carefully abstained from all personal attacks^ and have, I believe, been enabled to bear, with meekness, such as have been unkindly made by others upon my principles and conduct. *To the doctrines, discipline and worship of the Church I am sincerely at- tached; and if I am compelled to think, thtit these do' not warrEmt. certain, opinions, that' are entertained by some, nor forbid certain exertions for the promotion of Christian union and vital piety, that are employed by others, I nevei;theless entertain no uncharitable or angry sentiments towards those, from whom I differ; but look forward to the time when mutual explanations and incricased liberality of feeling sheJI lessen ' our apparent disparities, and make us willing to con- cede to each other the right of mildly differing where we cannot perfectly agree. ' " These things- are mentioned, only to repel the insinua- tion, which a few of those most opposed to Dr. Ducachet have, I think not very generously, thrown out,!of his friends being influenced by party feeling ; whereas, for one, I am free to declare, that I would at once abandoh his cause, if I did not believe in my heart, ^s far as regards its merits up to the time of his leaving this Diocese, (and I know of nothing that has since occurred to affect it,) that it rests upon the principles of substantial justice. And I am peiSUa46d that this is the prevailing impression, both in. and out of the . Church, with" but Very few exceptions, and those principally of individuals accustomed to defer impliciAlytothe judgment of one, who, with all- the talents he unquestionably possesses^ would ^not, I presume, claim the praise of an exemption from the possibility of error. So far as I can Igarn, impartial men every where accord with the clear views exhibited" on this subject in the communication, which you made to the Con- vention of your Diocese ; and disapprove of the personal feel- ing, manifested in the one made to that' of the Diocese from CORRESPONDENCE WITH BISHOP HOBART, &C. 311 ■which I now write ; and have been anxiously looMng for- ward to the ordination of Dr. Ducachet, as a measure of strict propriety arid of certain occurrence. That it has been de- layed beyond the required terrh, I would not intimate as a ground of complaint ; considering the excitement, however unjustified, which for a time prevailed. But now, that feel- ing has, in a good degree, subsided, wlU you. Right Rev. Sir, excuse me for presuming to say, that, if no canonical impediment occurs, it would be highly gratifying to many friends of yourself and of the Church to* see this matter, now so painfully suspended, brought to it^ expected conclusion ? , ",From the Rev. Mr. Adams, when on his way to South Caroling, I learnt that a competent number of the Standing Committee of Rhode Island, (includi^ himself,) had signed the required testimonial ; but that the Rev. Mr. W., who had taken up an early prejudice on the subject, and another clerical member Of the Committee, — though they would not oppose Dr. Ducachet's ordination, yet dechned subscribing that document. Col. J., also called to see me, on his re- turn from Virginia, and stated fes sanguine expectation that tiie ordination had taken place at the same time with the consecration of a Church in Massachusetts. From other sources, I have since learnt, thclt some of the clergy in Massa- chusetts suggested a formal difficulty in the way of that measure, resulting from the candidate's belonging, not to their State, but to Rhode Island. Now I suppose, the same difficulty wopld be considered as opposing an official recom- mendation for orders by the Standing Committee of Massa- chusetts, as was successfully urged against his ordination thefe, on the recommendation of that of Rhode Island ; and therefore, unless he can be ordained in the latter State on the canonical testimonials that have been furnished. Dr. D. must ^ve up his hopes of a ministerial commission altogether : for those efforts, which, it is to be feared, have hitherto been em- ployed to prevent entire unanimity in Rhode Island, will, I have no doubt, continue to be availably exerted ;' and espe- cially if it be believed, that the want of it will be a barrier 312 MEMOIR, &C, to prevent his ordination, and that a minority-may, by per- severing opposition, defeat the "wishes of the majority; " I have not supposed, that any objection to his ordination in Rhode Island could arise from Dr. Ducachet's temporary' non-residence in that State during his period of study ; as cases are constantly occurring, where an allowed residence, and particularly as, in this case, associated with the perform* ance of authorized dutieSj in another State, is not considered to affect the claim of the candidate to ordination in that, wherd he was previously received as a candidate. This has been the case with many of our young gentlemen in the General Theological Seminary; and I have known other cases, in which a similar principle has been recognized. " On the whole, though it is with unaffected diffidence I make the suggestion, , if no canonical objection can be urged to the measure, may not the^ friends of Dr. D., after, his ap- proved reception as a candidate, and his compliance with every requisite for ordination, indulge the hope that you will kindly reheve his and their anxiety by investing him with orders ? I am persuaded that it~will be a proceeding, which will meet the approbation of the unbiased friends of the Church in every region of our country ; for the case of Dr. D. is generally known, and has excited an unusual degree of sympathy and interest. In my own congregation, where he was for some time known as one of the foremost in piety and zeal, much soHcitude in his behalf exists ; and I hope this circumstance will furnish a further apology for" my venturing on the dehcate office of writing to you upon the subject. If I shall have offended against propriety in doing so, I must put myself on your known goodness for pardon. You will, I am sure. Right Rev. Sir, justly appreciate my assurance that no offensive interference has been designed, nor any umbrage intended, either personally to yourself; as the ven- eratei judge, on whom devolves the task of decision, or to any of those, from whom I have been obliged to difier in relation to the unhappy issue 6f Dr. D.'s former application. " Earnestly praying that the great Head of the Church CORRESPONDENCE WITH BISHOP HOBART, &C. 313 may cause all your measures in this case to eventuate in his own glory, and the good of His mystical body, and finally reward your laborious exertions for the promotion of both. I remain, Rt. Rev. and dear Sir, Most respectfully and affectionately, yours, / James Milnor." The Right Rev. i Alexander V. Griswold, D. D. \ But, letters in favor of Dr. D.'s ordination were not the only ones, which the Bishop received during this period of protracted delay. To shew how important the case was deemed, and how extensively it awakened .the attention of the Church, I insert one more out of the mass of documents before me. "Beaufort, (S. C.,) April 23d, 1824. " Right Rev. and dear Sir, — The present is pregnant with great things, both political and religious. Good men must see this and tremble. From causes, which it is difficult to exhibit,, we have already arrived at a state of great instability. Much is daily said and done both for political and for reli- gious liberty ; but are we not fast approaching a crisis, in which both will be lost ? Can a nation be fi-ee, that places such a man on their throne as a ; .'' Can religious liberty be enjoyed, when a Bishop is forced to give holy orders to any one, whorn he honestly believes not worthy ? "That you would willingly give any cause of offence to a brother Bishop is not for a moment to be conceived. Or that you would deliberately degrade or lessen authority, is not to be believed. But, in fact, will you not do both by giving orders to Dr. ? We are fully sensible how great an interest is made for him ; and we doubt not, that you have prayerfully considered the subject; yet the best of men err in judgment. Who will be the first to break the golden chain of harmony which has existed among the American Bishops .'' And what may.be the consequences if this should take place .'' Pause, most Rev. Sir ; and may the God of wisdom fill your soul with light, and enable you to judge and act for the glory of our Zion. DD 314 MEMOIE, &C. " Suppose the individual to be an injured man, is it not better that one man should suffer, than that such a bold ad- venture should be made ? We are fiiUy aware, that it is more reasonable that both parties in this case should err, than that both should be right. Men generally proceed to ex- tremes ; and the extremes in our Church are awfuUy great. Do not Antinomian principles already exist in our Church.' Look at our angry disputes : is it not the great effort to mis- represent, and abuse; to satirizfe and defame; and not to instruct and enlighten, and consequently to make better men? " May the God of all mercy and -wisdom be your ready help, in this your day of trial, for Christ's sake, is the prayer of A Weak membek of oue. Zion." The Right Rev. Bishop Gkiswold. It is hazarding nothing to say, that the apparent piety of this anonymous epistle weighed vastly more with the Bishop, than its avowed argument. The time of decision at length came. After hearing all that could be said on either side, and after being charged with injustice and presumption by one class, and with hesitation and vacillancy by another, he proceeded, with the consciousness that he was justly charge- able with neither the one, nor the other, to admit Dr. Duca- chet to Deacon's orders. His ordination took place in Bris- tol, Rhode Island, on the 15th of August, 1824 ; and it only remains to give the Bishop's own view; of this his decisive act in tiie case. It is contained in his Annual Address to his Convention, assembled in Portland, Maine, Sept. 29ih ; and is as follows : " On the 15th of the same month, Henry W.Ducachet was ordained Deacon. " The case of this gentleman, and the views with which he was admitted as a candidate in this Diocese, were stated in my address to our laSt Convention. Our Canons evidently allow, and a just regard to the rights of men requires, that a person, who has been refused orders in one Diocese, may be ordained in another. It is only made necessaiy, before he is CORRESPONDENCE WITH BISHOP HOBART, &C. 315 received as a candidate, to ascertain and duly consider the reasons, for which he was refused. If these reasons, so far as they can be ascertained, da not amount to what (in the Diocese to, which the second application is made) is in other cases deemed a disqualification, they ought not, in my judg- ment, to be so deemed in this: to reject an applicant in such case would evidently be unjust. On this ground was Dr. D. received in this Diocese as a candidate for holy orders. " The chief objection to this proceeding, which has come to my knowledge, is, that it may be viewed as an indirect censure upon the ecclesiastical authority, which had before refused orders. This objection I have formally, and I hope satisfactorally, obviated. Such are the circumstances of the present case, and such the principles,, on which I have acted, that it can no more justly be considered as a censure, or even disapprobation, of -what was done in New York, than a dif- ference of opinion between any two gentlemen, or of judg- ment between two courts, is a censure upon each other ; nor, indeed, even so much ; because circumstances may render it inexpedient to ordain him in the one Diocese, which do not exist in the other. We might, indeed, add ; that, ad- mitting^ the objection were correct and well founded, the ap- prehension that another might be censured would be no good reason for refusing to do justly. But this, in my view, ought not to be supposed, nor made a matter of any consideration. If any one, whom we have refused orders in this Diocese, could be received and made useful in another, which of us would not rejoice and bless God ? Let it be duly considered that human judgment is not infallible ; that all men are liable to err ; and that nothing is more common than difference of opinion, where circumstances do not diSer. And who can- not see that two Standing Committees, or two Bishops, may judge differently of facts, or qualifications, or expediency, without either intending or causing any manner of censure? We certainly in this case intend none : nothing can be further from our view : and indeed, what has been done in another Diocese cannot be rendered more or less wise by any thing. 316 MEMOIK, &C. that we do. It may also be, that discipline is generally more rigid in one Diocese than in another ; or the qualifications, so far as they are left (and in a great degree they are and must be left) discretionary, may be different. Discipline may be too lax, or too rigid ; and there may, without any disparagement to the parties concerned, be some difference of opinion respecting the just medium. From these con- siderations it is evident, that the authority in one Diocese may discreetly reject a candidate, and another, without any indiscretion, or impropriety, receive him. It seems to be fiie opinion of some, that though a man, so refused, may be received as a candidate, yet he ought not to be ordained till the Bishop, first refusing him, gives his con- sent ; and of course, without such consent, he must never be ordained. But this course would be the most objectionable of any ; it would operate more to the injury of the candidate than, at his second- application, to refuse him without a hear- ing. And it would lead to this greater evil of admitting, that the authority in one Diocese may interfere in, and ob- struct, the business of another. When a Bishop has dismissed a candidate and canonically given his reasons for refusing him orders, he has then, in regard to himself, finished the business. His further assent, or dissent, is, in my judgment, of no more concern than that of any other Bishop. The history of the Church, in ages past, must be surely sufficient to teach us the importance of maintaining the just power and equal independence of each Diocese., and of allowing no paramount authority but that, which is voluntarily delegated for the common good. "I speak, brethren, the more particularly on this case, because it is in some respects a novel one, and may become a precedent. It is my duty to lay before you my views of the business, and the principles, on which I have acted. K they are unreasonable, or unsound, the sooner they are cor- rected the better. And it would be gratifying to me, should the Convention deem it fitting to express an opinion on the subject; and the rather, as the counsel, which I have chiefly had, is that of the Standing' Committee of one State only." CORRESPONDENCE WITH BISHOP HOBART, &C. 317 I have thus given all the important documents, which be- long to this case. What I have given are sufficient, and were required, to exhibit a fair view of the whole, in its principles and bearings, in its extent and importance. The motives, the views and the conduct of the Bishop I leave to the judgment of the candid and attentive reader. These it is not my duty to justify, any further than they may find justi- fication in the document^ which he has left. I have deemed it right to insert these papers, though of so great length, be- cause, whatever may be thought of the individuals con- cerned, particularly of the candidate, whose character they involve, they imbody a case, which has had much influence upon the position and action of our great association of Dio- ceses in the United States. Few other cases, perhaps, have had more influence than this, in defining the relative position of these Dioceses towards each other, or in shaping the ac- tion of their intercourse with each- other. It is a case full of principles. An attentive study of it will shew that, in it are shadowed forth two great theories, either the one, or the other of which is to overspread and control the destinies of our American Episcopacy ; or both of- which are to become so blended into one as that neither shall tend to its extreme, while each acts, with as much of good and as little of evil, as are compatible with the condition of the Church while in contact with the world. It shews the deep sympathy, which, on some points, the various Dioceses have with each other, as parts of one great whole, bound together for one grand and common destiny : while' it reveals the important rights, which, on other points, each Diocese possesses as a separate body, an equal weight with others in the balance, which is to hold us all in peaceful poise. -Upon that sympathy it did not, on the whole, inflict any serious wound. Around these rights it drew a distinct line of guards. That wound, so far as it was 6ne, has, it is believed, long since ceased to be felt. These guards, as they were then drawn, will, it may be hoped, stand as long as the constitution of our American Episcopacy endures. 318 MEMOIR, &.C, That such a case, as has now been recorded, should have agitated the Church, with deep and widespread feeling, was . doubtless ineritable. It was equally inevitable, that a first case like that should, sooner or later, have occurred. Per- haps it could not have occurred under more favorable cir- cumstances, than those, which we have reviewed. On the one hand, was a man of ardent temperament, high powersj- and, ^om his position as well as frpm his character, of wide- ly felt influence ; capable of moving the associated masses of our system with a power, which, all things considered, was entrusted to no other single individual. On the other hand, was a man of calm wisdom, clear intelligence, and deep judgment ; a man, too, meek as he was wise, prudent as he was intelligent, and firm as he was deep-judging. While, between them, was an individual every way calcu- lated to excite a strong interest , in himself, in which direc- tion soever, favorable, or unfavorable, that interest might happen to lie. In short, all the circumstances of the case were full of power. The movement throughout the Church was therefore deep and thorough ; and the principles, which the case involved, were wrought into our ecclesiastical con- stitution with corresponding depth and thoroughness ; while the sweet spirit of our Eastern Bishop, combined with his entire mastery of the case and his prudent firmness in its management, was like a power, sent of God to put bounds to the agitation, and as an emollient furnished by Him to sooth, or to heal, whatever of pain, or of wound, may have been inevitable under the circumstances of such a conflict. " The golden chain," of brotherhood among our Bishops was not then broken. Second apphcations for. orders, citer a first refusal, have not been either multiplied, or facilitated. While the right both to make and to grant them, under proper circumstances, may be considered as now placed among the axioms, on which our canon law rests, and must continue to rest, until fundamental change shall have re- moved it from our system. By a letter from the Rev. Dr. Hawks to Bishop Griswold, CASE OF MR. BRISTED. 319 in the year 1841, 1 perceive that this case, in its bearings on the interpretation of our Canon-law, has already been examined, and the principles, involved in it, developed at iajge, — in " The Church Record," a periodical of which Dr. H. was then Editor. I have never seen the examina- tion to which I refer ; but, from the well known ability of Dr. H. as a Canonist, I presume his examination to h^ve been fiill and fair ; and, as my present object is, not to Write a Commentary on our Ecclesiastical statutes, but to narrate the events in the life of Bishop Griswold, I content myself with giving the principal facts of the case, and with such a reference to its importance as will suffice to put those, who are curious in such matters, upon its fuller study and investigation. It was just now remarked that by the decision of Dr. Ducachet's case, second applications for orders, after a first refusal, have not been either multiplied or facilitated. That they have not been thereby multiplied, will, I apprehend, be readily admitted ; and that, when they have occurred, they have not he&a. facilitated by that decision, will be made evident by a brief allusion to the case oiMr. Bristed, which came up while Dr. Ducachet was awaiting orders. Mr. Bristed, a man of splendid talents, and high legal and general scholarship, of unquestionable piety and unim- peachable morals, was induced, by the leadings of Divine Providence, to abandon his practice of the Law, and to de- vote himself to the work of the ministry. He accordingly announced his intention to Bishop Hobart, in whose Diocese he was then living. He did not apply to the Standing Committee of New York to be admitted a candidate ; but simply announced to the Bishop his intention of studying for the ministry. The Bishop, however, decidedly discou- raged the movement ; whereupon, Mr. Bristed soon after transferred not only his canonical, but also his actual, residence from New York to Bristol, for the purpose of studying under Bishop Griswold. But, although his case was thus essen- tially difTerent from that of Dr. Ducachet, yet, as he came from the same Diocese, and with the influence of the same 320 MEMOIR, &C. Bishop against him, so strongly was that influence felt, and so little did Dr. Ducachet's precedent avail in his favor, that his application to the Standing Committee of Rhode Island was rejected ; and it was only after protracted, most tedious, and most unreasonable delays, that he succeeded in obtain- ing admission as a candidate through the Standing Com- mittee of Vermont. The case of Dr. Ducachet was an im- pediment in his way, which had well-nigh prevented the success of his application. , Events of such a public and exciting character are begin- ning to thicken upon our attention, that it is difficult to turn from them for the purpose of noticing the yearly details of Dio- cesan duty, in which the JBishop was engaged. This, how- ever, has become the less necessary, inasmuch as the details, already furnished, may serve as a specimen of all that occur- red during the Bishop's supervision of the Diocese. We have seen the manner, in which he moved among his pa- rishes, and the general routine of duty, in which he was engaged. ■ And all that it is needful further to know is, that, in the same manner, he continued to move, and in the same duties to be engaged, with only a steady increase of his cares, with the increase of his years and in correspon- dence with the growth of the Church committed to his care. With these remarks, our attention will, for a time, be con- fined principally to a notice of the most prominent events, which mark the remaining years of Bishop Griswold. The establishment and conduct of the GoSpel Advocate seem to have been the means of producing an unpleasant state of relations among the Clergy of the Eastern Diocese, and between some of them and their Bishop. Meanwhile, events, in the new and importsbt parish of St. Paul's, Bos- ton, were threatening to bring on a more serious conflict be- tween the congregation and the Rector of that parish ; and, more largely between the Rector and his friends, on the one side, and the Bishop with the body of the Clergy, on the other. These events came to their crisis in the spring and sum- DIFFICULTIES IN ST. PAUl's, BOSTON. 321 mer of 1825. A controversy, into the merits of which it is not necessary here to enter, but which was violent in its character, broke out, at least as early as April, between the proprietors and Rector of St. Paul's ; and, in spite of the efforts of many to compose the strife, continued to growf in seriousness, till, in June, the Wardens and Vestiy, having been empowered at a previous meeting of the proprietors, laid their case before the Bishop. They represented that the controversy had passed the point, at which an amicable adjustment might have been effected ; and they therefore re- quested the Bishop to take such measures, in concert with his presbyters, as might be proper, under the Canons, to effect a siparation between the Rector and his parish. In this request the Rector refused to join ; but expressed his willingness to appear before the proper authority at any time and place, which the Bishop might appoint. The Wardens and Vestry therefore urged a speedy investigation of the case between them and their Rector as the best and only means of allaying the ferment, and of preventing se- rious evil to the Church at large. Accordingly, a council of the presbyters in Massachusetts was called to meet on tihe case in Boston, the 13th of July. In consequence, how- ever, of a further attempt at compromise, which it was deemed advisable to make, this council did not meet till a fortnight from that date. At that time, (the attempt at com- promise having failed,) the council assembled, and the in- vestigation took place. The Bishop presided, till the de- cease of his daughter, Mrs. Usher of Bristol, suddenly call- ed him home ; after which the Rev. Dr. Gardiner of Boston was appointed chairman, and the investigation was brought to a close. It resulted in the award, that the pastoral con- nexion between the Rector and his parish should be dissolv- ed, on condition that the parish secured to him the payment of $5,000 ; leaving the date of the dissolution and the time of payment, it seems, to be fixed by the Bishop. In conse- quence of the Bishop's necessary absence from the close of the council, some delay in the official announcement of its' award occurred. At length, however, that announcement 322 MEMOIR, &C. was made ; and in it the Bishop decided, that the dissolution should take place the 22d day of August ; that one half of the amount awarded should be paid one year from the termi- nation of the pastoral connexion, and that the other half should be paid two years from that date. To this decision, Dr. Jarvis demurred ; and insisted that, as a condition of resigning his Rectorship, the whole amount should be paid at once. The parish, on the contrary, though they deemed' the amount awarded most unreasonable, especially in their weak and indebted condition, without corporate funds, yet submitted to the award of the council, and to the Bishop's decision. The refusal of Dr. Jarvis to resign his Rectorship, with his demand that the whole amount awarded him should, contrary to the decision, or advice of the Bishop, be paid him at once, instantly blew the flame of contention into in- creased fury ; — and the feelings of many, who had previously been incliried to favor him, were now brought strongly into action against him. Meanwhile, he attempted, in separate interviews with the presbyters composing the council, to procure from them a written declaration, that the Bishop's promulgation of their decision had been incorrect. To many, indeed, the attitude, which he assumed, appeared to be one of contumacy against the Bishop and his council. Undpr such circumstances, it will be readily perceived that there was but feeble hope of success to a second effort, which some of his friends were induced to make, with a view to a com- promise of the difficulty. That effort was utterly abortive ; and amidst the movements of the Rector, ruin stared the parish in the face. To avert it, and bring matters to an issue, a second councjl of the same presbyters was summon- ed, and met about the 25th of September. This council affirmed the correctness of the Bishop's promulgation of their former decision ; — and of course left the Rector of St. Paul's without apology for longer withholding his resigna- tion. Instead, however, of placing his resignation in the hands of the Vestry, he plE^ced it in the hands of two of his friends, not members of the parish, " to be delivered to the 323 Wardens, Vestry and proprietors, upon their complying with the terms on their part." This was, virtually, no resigna- tion ; especially as those terms did not bind the parish to make any payment till the - expiration of at least one year from the date of the award. At this point, new troubles would doubtless have arisen, had not one of the parishioners voluntarily advanced the whole amount awarded to Dr. Jarvis, by a loan to the parish, to be repaid at the stipula- ted periods. This generous act brought the difficulty to a close, so far as the Rector and his parish were concerned ; for, after asserting his right to the Rectorship till near the middle of October, when the money was paid into his hands, his instrument of resignation was dehvered to the authori- ties of the parish ; and its Rectorship thereon became vacant. But the general troubles brought on by the case did not here terminate. Instead of suffering the unhappy controversy to sleep and be forgotten, after the dissolution of his con- nexion w^th the parish, and after receiving from the council a testimonial to his character as a clergyman in good stand- ing, and entitled to the confidence of any parish, that might wish his services, he engaged in the preparation of a heavy pamphlet, in which he imbodied his own views of the whole case ; and which, instead of publishing, he privately printed and distributed not only among his friends in Boston, but elsewhere throughout the Church. In this pamphlet, he charged the Bishop with an unwarrantable stretch of power, or Episcopal prerogative, and cast a heavy load of odium upon the parish, from which he had been separated. To this pamphlet, the Bishop replied in a written commu- nication to Dr. Jarvis, which has never seen the light, ex- cept through a few manuscript copies, one of which lies be- fore me. In strict justice, it ought to have been published at the time ; for it is a masterly vindication of himself and of the proceedings of the Council; and though necessarily severe, was y6t strictly courteous, and simply defensive. It retorted no charges and sought to cast no odium, on his assailant ; but was content with throwing off, as it did sue- 324 f MEMOIR, &C. cessfuUy and entirely, all the odium, which had been so un- justly cast upon himself. Of course, it never reached "the great mass of those, to whom the printed pamphlet was sent; but, with the exception of the few more immediately con- cerned in the transaction, all the rest received their impres- sion of the Bishop and of the parish of St. Paul's from a pamphlet, the issuing of which, was a cause of deep surprise and regret to even its author's friends. Previous to the issuing of this pamphlet, in his Annual Address to the Diocesan Convention, which met in Boston, the 28th of September, the Bishop laid before that body the case of difficulty between the Rector of St. Paul's and his parish, with the action thereon of the Council, wbi^ had been held, and the principles, on which he had acted in that part of the case, which had been left to^his discretion. This notice was exceedingly discreet, respectful and even kind, not only towards the parish, but especially towards its Rec- tor. But, after the appearance of the pamphlet, and in his next Annual Address to the Convention of the Diocese, which assembled in his own parish, September 27th, 1826, he felt it his duty to notice the case in a somewhat different man- ner. "At the time of our last Convention," he observes, "the situation of St. Paul's Church, Boston, was such as caused us painful anxiety, and deep concern. But here, too, the Lord has blessed us beyond all, that we could reasonably ex- pect. The reasons for my conduct in that case were then briefly stated. Soon after, Dr. Jarvis caused to be printed and sent into all parts of the country, especially of this Dio- cese, a narrative of the transactions in that unhappy busi- ness; intended, of course, to exculpate himself and throw all blame upon others. I deem it my duty, however painful, to say, that in that narrative, and especially in the conclud- ing remarks, my conduct is much misrepresented ; and (with what intention! pretend not to say) that opinions and motives are ascribed to me, which have no foundation in truth. After my having exercised this ministry for fifteen years, the peo- ple of this Diocese can easily judge, whether I am disposed DIFFICULTIES IN ST. PAUL's, BOSTON. 325 to usurp power, which does not appertain to my office, or to abuse that which does." ■ The unexpected blessing, which he here mentions, as having followed the disastrous controversy, consisted in the settlement, which he proceeds to record, of the Rev. Mr. Potter, as second Rector of that important parish, and in the bright promises of good, which were opening through his ministry. In^consequence of the notice, which he here bestows upon the pamphlet of Dr. Jarvis, the Convention of the Church in Massachusetts, at its next annual meeting in Boston, June 20th, 1827, felt itself called upon to make an expression of its views of the Bishop's conduct and of the treatment, which he had received. Accordingly, we find upon its journal the following entry : " The Bishop having occasion to retire, the Rev. Dr. Gardiner took the chair, and the following resolution, offer- ed by one of the members of the Convention, was seconded and passed, viz : " Whereas, the Right Rev. Bishop of this Diocese, in his address to the Diocesan Convention, . in September last, deemed it his duty publicly to declare that, in a certain in- stance, opinions and motives had, from some cause, been ascribed to him, which had no foundation in truth ; and a pifeper opportunity seems therefrom to have arisen for the people of this Diocese, after fifteen years' experience, to ex- press their esteem of his Episcopal character and govern- ment ; Therefore, " Resolved; that it is the opinion of this Convention that the Right Rev. Alexander V. Griswold, so far from being * disposed to usurp power, which doth not appertain to his office, or to abuse that, which does,' hath uniformly dis- charged the duties of his high station with exemplary discre- tion, meekness, fidelity and moderation; and this Convention gladly embrace the opportunity, now offered to them, of ex- pressing their undiminished confidence in his prudent, zeal- ous and Apostolical care and government of the Churches under his jurisdiction, — of reciprocating the assurances of his affection and concern, — arid of offering their prayers for EE 326 MEMOIR, &C. his long continuance in an office, which, difficult and ardu- ous as it is, has been so faithfully discharged." The testimony of this resolution is most true, though it ex- presses the truth with far less strength than the facts of the case would have justly warranted. Happily, they who assailedhim in this business, made their assault, as he expresses himself in one of his letters to Dr. Jarvis, on one of the least vulnera- ble points of his character. Both the assumption and the abuse of power were, with him, matters contemplated only with dread and horror ; and his feelings on the subject had as much influence on his practice as on his theory. The sentiment, which he once expressed to the Secretary of the council in the case of Dr. Jarvis, though not in connexion with the proceedings and results of that council, — was the imbodying of his life, as well as the expression of his thoughts, on this point. " I like not," said he, " the accu- mulation of power in the hands of any set of men what- ever. I wish that our Bishops might always be poor, and have no more power than is necessary to the discharge of the proper duties of their office. If the station is rendered one of ease and splendor, improper persons will always be intriguing and striving for it. But, if it is only a place of labor and usefulness, without the reward of worldly honors * or emolument, there will be little danger of any one's seek- ing or accepting it but from desire to do good." Would to God ' that this sentiment might, on this point, become the imbodied spirit, and the forth-acting genius of the Episcopal Church, wherever she is or shall be known, from the rising up of the sun, even unto the going down of the same ! It would furnish the best argument, ever ad- duced, for the Divine origin of Episcopacy. It would be bringing the Great " Bishop and Shepherd of souls" once more into life and action among the sheep of his fold ; and, out of the aboundings of his poverty, making them rich in- deed. , Let us now look, a moment, into the state of the Bishop's own mind, as it was while actually passing through the pain- ful trials, which have been narrated, and which were ren- DIFFICULTIES IN ST. PAUl's, BOSTON. 327 dered doubly paihful by their harsh grating upon the still and sacred feelings of a heart, wounded in the very midst of those trials by another in the long series of his domestic bereave- ments. I happen to have in my possession a letter written to one of his female friends in Bristol, soon after the death of Mrs. Usher, and but a few days after the second council of presbyters in the case of Dr. Jarvis ; while he was en- gaged in one of his Episcopal tours through his Diocese. It is just what every previous view, which has been taken of his character, would lead us to expect. "Hopkinton, N. H., Oct. 3d, 1825. " Dear E.,' — Impatient to avail myself of your permissidn, I should have written you from Boston ; but other more necessary and less pleasing occupations would not permit. ********* ^Ve had a fine day in the stage to Boston ; nothing unplea- sant disturbed the pleasure of the ride ; and this pleasure was much increased by the blessing of an agreeable travel- ling companion ; a blessing the more grateful to me, be- cause in my journeyings so rare. Mr. Smith's good sense, and very sincere devotion to his holy profession render his conversation both agreeable and edifying. Deep anxiety, however, and the trials, which awaited me in Boston, rendered me less capable of either imparting, or enjoying pleasure. Not that I had forgotten who has said ; ' Sufficient unto the day is the evil thereof.' It is as unwise, as it is un- christian, to permit ourselves to be tormented with the ap- prehension of future ills. What I have so much recommend- ed in my teachings, I have not wholly neglected in practice ; that we are, at all times, and under all circumstances, to confide in that wise and good Providence, which governs all things ; not doubting that He will make all things work to- gether for the benefit of good and faithfiil men. But, who are the good and faij^ful ? Afflictions are often, perhaps chiefly, sent to punish us for our sins and follies ; and though they are sent in mercy, and intended to reclaim us, yet they ought the rather to awaken in our minds deep solicitude 328 MEMOIR, &C. and concern. The roice of Wisdom is ; — ' In the day of adversity consider.^ Mo troubles can, none certainly should, lessen the christian's resignation and trust in God. We know that, in every thing. He is just and good. _ But afflic- tions should excite deep self-examination^and should awaken fears that we may have offended HIM, who is as holy as He is good. "When I arrived in Boston, my ^xieties were not dimin- ished, but increased. I found things worse than I had ex- pected. I have never allowed myself to view any person as my enemy ; but I have now discovered, beyond what I had ever before known, that some persons are much oppos- ed to me, and that very much has been said against my character and conduct. My actions have been ascribed to interested and base motives. I have milch reason for anxiety and self-examination. It is among the common infirmities of o\ir nature to be too hasty in justifying ourselves ; and also to consider as our enemies those, who think us unworthy. These are the remains of unsubdued pride. If a man honestly thinks me unworthy -of the place, which I fill, it is no evidence of his hostility. I ought to think the same pf myself. I know, indeed, that some of the things, which are said to my injury, are not true : but I ought to consider that they, who say them, probably believe them to be true ; and also, that if some think me worse, there are others who think me better, than I am. But I shall not dismiss this sub- ject without some boasting ; for I think that with truth I may say. that my anxieties have not been for what my own character, but for what the Church, was likdy to suffer. In this, through the Lord's goodness, I was not a little relieved on Tuesday morning, by finding that the Clergy in Massa- chusetts were (much beyond what I expected) ready to sup- port me in the measures, which were taken in regard to Dr. Jarvjs and St Paul's Church. But you will hear firom George and others what was done in Boston. I have written the above in great haste, and almost without time for thought; being determined to finish this letter now, though I am detaining some people, who expect me. •■* EPISCOPAL PRAYEK-MEETINGS. 329 * * « «,« * *«» We had excellent weather, and a pleasant journey from Bos- ton to this place ; and more excellent, if possible, and more pleasant are 'the friends, whom I find here. * ■» « How can I be duly thankful for the mercies, which I have received and am daily receiving ! « « * « ****** If I allowed myself to hope for any pleasure in future, I should expect not a little on my arrival in Middlehury. But we, who expect none, have this advantage, that, what we do receive is clear gain. With great haste, and still greater sincerity. Your affectionate friend, Alexander V. Griswold." I leave this letter to make its own impressions, nothing doubting that they will be the same on other minds, as on my own, that he, who wrote it, was, both as a. Christian and as a Bishop, a man of rare elevation, above this world, and of a most divinely chastened and heavenly temper. I have a great mass of documents before me, on the case, which I have thus presented ; several of tjiem of high importance and deep interest, especially those from the Bishop ; but I have ijot deemed it wise to insert them here. Perhaps some will think that the case, which they involve, should not have been even touched in the present memoir. But, the facts and documents, which I have given, are already so public, and withal involve so important a passage in the Bishop's life, that I have not felt at liberty to pass them without notice. Justice to my subject would not have al- lowed me to say less, while many considerations of propriety restrain me from saying more, than in the foregoing statement is contained. I recur, now, to a subject formerly mentioned, but re- served for fuller notice in its more proper place ; — I mean, the subject of "Prayer-meetings in the Episcopal Church," especially as they marked the practice of many of the par- ishes in Rhode Island during Bishop Griswold's residence in that State. These meetings, it is believed, origmated as EE* 330 MEMOIR, &C. early as the year 1812, and were the attendants, or fruits, of that remarkable awakening on the subject of religion, which then occurred in the parish of St. Michael's, Bristol ; and of which the Bishop has left us sjich an interesting account in his auto-biography. They became and continued com- mon among the parishes of that State. But, so orderly and noiseless were they, that little was known of them save in the good, by which they were accompanied, and in the thanks- givings of many pious hearts j by which that good was followed. Those, who frequented them, were quiet members of the -Church, by the world overlooked, even as they lookedabove the world. They molested no one, and no one molested them ; till, as I have already remarked, " The Gospel Advocate," not long after its establishment, published a sermon, in which they were evidently assailed, and their character, as well as that of their advocates, was held up to unfavorable observa- tion. From that time, they became objects of more public attention ; and the sphit, in which they were assailed, was evidently the means of drawing out and imbodying those elements of disunion in the Diocese, which, haply, had else slumbered on/to their extinction. Under such a spirit as that of Bishop Griswold, the fire of conflicting views never could have bpen kindled, had not some such influence been brought to fan the spark, which is always and every where latent in human nature, even when that nature is found imbodied in the Church of Christ ; and which, when once blown into a flame, it is one of the most difficult things beneath the sun to extinguish. Lit up, in the Eastern Dio- cese, it continued to blaze with varying fierceness, according as some new excitement, fed it with fresh fuel, and kept up those fires, in which it is not too much to say that the Bishop's patient love of peace, tried often, but never over- come, burnt, martyr-like, for more than twenty of the last years of his life. Blessed was the spirit in which he suffer- ed ; and blessed have been its fruits. His fear of aggravat- ing existing differences kept him, I am aware, from pro- posing, or from urging, many things, which, under ordinary circumstances, would have put more of impulse and activity EPISCOPAL PKAYER-MEETINGS. 331 into the Diocese under his administration ; but it also favor- ed the gradual return of more composed times ; since, by holding himself aloof from strife, by throwing himself into neither of the opposing ranks, by 'withholding, so far as he could, every thing that might feed the fires, and especially by bridling his tongue, except when, as he conceived, the defence of truth and righteousness required him to open his mouth, he had the happiness, especially before the close of his life, of seeing the flames, which had been ht up, bum lower and lower, till at last, before his death, they went out ; or at least ceased to shoot visible spires above the tranquillized surface of affairs in his Diocese. With the above remarks on his love of peace, and his un- willingness to increase strife, his defence of the Rhode Island Prayer-meetings was by no means in conflict. That was a case, in which he felt that duty required him to speak. It was, in truth, his love of peace, that made him open his mouth. He spoke, " not to accuse, but to defend.'''' He sought to close a virtual war upon peace : and had his de- fence been admitted into the Journal, to which it was first offered, it had, so much the sooner, effected its pacific object. Its influence, when it finally appeared in the Episcopal Register of Vermont, in the years 1827 and 1828, was powerfully felt ; as well it might be ; for, it is believed, that no one, with a Christian spirit in his heart, whatever may have been his previous prejudices against Episcopal prayer- meetings, can read it without feeling, with its author, that " If, after due consideration, our sober and most candid judg- ment is unfavorable to these" meetings, "the safer way is to let them alone. We cannot be too careful not to be found fighting against God." The spirit, in which he defended the meetings and those, who joined in them, may be judged from a sentence, which I find in the 5th chapter of the work. " If it be admitted," he says, " that the meetings are according to the will of God, and liiat His Spirit will and does 'bless those, who unite in fervent supplication, it must, accprding to the Scriptures, be expected that men will pppose them. They, who cry earnestly 332 MEMOIR, &C. to their Saviour for mercy and grace, may be rebuked that they should Hold their peace ; but, in such case, they -vrill do ■well, like some in the Gospel, to cry the more ; ' Haye mercy on us, Lord, thou son of David.' " To be rightly estimated, however, the whole of his little book, (for the numbers have since been collected and pub- lished in a volume by themselves,) should be read with candid attention. It will then be found as full of point and abihty, as it is of piety and moderation. It is the best production on the subject, any where to be met with. So far as any thing human can avail, it shuts the mouth of objection, excites thought, and stirs up consideration. There is in it, indeed, what seldom appeared in either his writings, or, his conversation, a quiet but forceful under-play of that talent, for which he was distinguished in his youthful days, of saying pithy and pointed things. But, so far as this talent appears here, and as it partakes of the nature of wit and satire, it is wit and satire sanctified. It has enough of point to prick the sides of attention, but not enough to wound the heart of love ; enough to awaken a quiet smile, but not enough to chafe a peaceful spirit. Its subject is not popular with the world ; and even with many Christians, the name of a book in de- fence of prayer-meetings is sufficient to keep its covers closed. And yet, there is enough between those covers, if not to lead men of the world and over-cautious Christians into prayer-meetings, at least to repay them for their trouble in reading the work, even if they seek nothing further than an exhibition of well-disciplined powers skilfully and happily applied to their purpose. The book ought to be reprinted and read by every member of our Church. In the year 1826, at the triennial meeting of our General Convention, a proposal was made, by some of the other Bishops, to introduce certain " alterations in the book of Common Prayer ;" " chiefly for the purpose of removing the objections so generally made to the length of our Morning Service." This proposal was referred to the Conventions of the several Dioceses for their consideration, and, after being PROPOSED ALTERATIONS OF THE LITRRGY. 333 thus considered, was to be acted on at the next triennial meeting of the General Convention. Of this proposal Bishop Griswold took notice in his Annual Address to the Conven- tion of the Eastern Diocese, in 1827; and the next year, July 1828, he commenced a series of articles in. the Episco- pal Register on the sjibject of an "improvement of the Liturgy." This series was continued till August, 1829, and contained a great variety of suggestions on its, subject, show- ing the most minute study of our forms and offices, and im- bodying some rich and valuable thoughts on the best manner of performing our service. His pieces were strongly assailed by a writer in "the Gospel Messenger," a paper pubHshed in Western New York ; and such was the unfair and sneer- ing temper of the assault, that the Bishop was constrained to devote a portion of his, series to tlie work of self-defence. In this, he proved himself a formidable defendant, and demon- strated that, as a controvertist, he possessed powers, which, had he chosen to wield them on this, or any other subject, and with the usual freedom of controversial writers, would have placed him high on the list of able Polemics. But con- troversy was not his main .object; nor did his articles in general breathe the spirit of controversy. He doubtless believed the Liturgy, susceptible of improvement, and would have been willing to see it really improved. But his object in this series of. essays was, in truth, to prevent the specific alterations, which had been proposed in General Convention, by shewing that, if any thing were done, something more and other than had been recommended, was desirable. In short, he would have the Liturgy either left untouched, or touched to better purpose than that, which the Convention had in view. Hence he says, in replying to his reviewer in the Gospel Messenger ; " I have suggested some things, and might add others, which, in my view, go to shew that we had better make no change, or make more than is now pro- posed." ***** "Probably nine-tenths at least of our brethren would wish that alteration, {improve- ment of course) were made in our Liturgy, but for the great inconvenience and serious evils, which must necessarily at- 334 MEMOIR, &C, tend all attempts at such change, though for the better. No one can reasonably doubt but alterations in the Prayer-book ■will continue to be made in the time to come, as they have been made in the time past. Whether the present is a favorable time to make them may well be doubted. My wish is to make none, or to make all that, are needed ; and if what I have written shall contribute to .either the one or the other result, my purpose will be accomplished." The stand, which he took, when the alterations were pro- posed in the General Convention, seems to have brought upon him the undeserved charges of a want of attachment to the Liturgy and the Church, and of a change from his early and well known loyalty to these our cherished institutions. This drew from him, in his Annual Address for 1827, the following strong-toned and spirited paragraphof self- vindica- tion, while laying the proposed alterations before his Con- vention : " I am well aware of the delicacy and difEcuWes of this subject, and how necessary it is, if we would be accounted Churchmen, to eulogize the Liturgy, and to deprecate as sacrilege even the least alteration. But on this point I have little anxiety. Nursed, as I have been, from earliest infancy, in the bosom of this Church, having passed my whole life among Episcopalians, as much so perhaps as any man of my age in this country living, and having-been above forty years a member of its communion, I have long since imbibed a deep prepossession (not to say prejudice) in its favor. Nor have I, ('as we be slanderously reported, and as some aifirm that' the fact is,) been changed in my opinion respecting it. That I am wholly free even from bigotry, I dare not affirm ; but, for many years, I have endeavored impartially to examine the claims of our Church to Scriptural orthodoxy and primitive order ; and the examination has confirmed me in the undoubting belief, that her claims are well founded. Nor am I conscious of having ever said, or done, any thing inconsistent with such beUef. I humbly trust that I have also, in some small degree, imbibed that truly liberal spirit of forbearance and charity, which our Church, more than PROPOSED ALTERATIONS OF THE LITURGY. 335 any other Christian community on earth, inculcates; and which is not the least among the many proofs that she is, indeed, the Church of Christ. In what manner, and by what means, the interest and -prosperity of this Church, and of true rehgion, will best be promoted, there wiU be among us, it must be expected, some diversity of opinion ; but, in decided attachment to its order and worship, and in a sincere desire to promote its best good, I shall not yield to siny one, however lofty or exclusive may be his pretensions. Though I may seem to ' speak foolishly in this confidence of boast- ing,' yet this confession, you must well know, is not uncalled for, and I hope not inexcusable. It is also in some degree necessary to give you a right view of the part I acted in the Convention on the subject of altering the Liturgy, and to prevent any wrong inference from what I take the liberty of suggesting in this address." It has been remarked that the essays, which he sent to the Episcopal Register, besides minutely noticing the improve- ments, of which the Liturgy is susceptible, contained some rich and valuable thoughts on the best mode of preforming our services. Those, with which he closed the whole series, are so just and striking, and shew so well the whole spirit of his essays, that they may not improperly be quoted here, in dismissing our notice of this passage of his life. He is speak- ing of that studied and artificial mode of reading, which Cojvper so sarcastically hits in his character of one, who " Soils accent, tone, And emphasis in scorie, and gives to prayer The adagio and andante it demands." "Raising and. falling the voice too much," he observes, " always lessens the solemnity of prayer, and in most in- stances is worse than monotony. That pitch of the voice should be assumed, which best unites with gravity and ease ; and any deviation from it, beyond what in music is called a third, is generally in uttering prayers a fault. If we rightly understand and truly feel, nature will be the best teacher of cadence and emphasis. In this lies the main secret of read- ing the service well, that the heart be truly and deeply im- 336 ]*IEMOIR, &c. pressed with -pious feeling and t)ie worship of God ; that we think nothing of ourselves, but as sinful, needy creatures ; nor of the congregation present, but as fellow sinners uniting with us at the throne of grace ; (what they may think of our performance, should never enter our mind;), that we avoid all manner of affectation, and attempts to appear well before men, or to gain applause ; and that it be our one and con- stant endeavor, that the words uttered by our lips exactly express the feelings of our heart. To aim at our own glory when we preach, is a great sin ; but in our prayers, it is the greatest of abominations." Whatever fault may be found with his idea of the im- provableness of the Liturgy itself, none, it is presumed, will be found with this idea of the manner, in which it should ever be iised. The Bishop's Annual Address for 1827, besides touching on the proposed alterations of the Liturgy, and some other topics, which had occupied the attention of the previous General Convention, dwells, more particularly than any of his former addresses had done, on the subject of a division of the Eastern Diocese, and on the causes, which might be considered as. obstructing the general growth of our Church. His remarks on both these heads are worthy of being tran- scribed. But as his addresses in general have this merit, I allude to its presence in this, for the special purpose of intro- ducing the remark ; that these annual communications were by him inade to answer the ordinary ends of Charges to his clergy, and of Pastoral Letters to 'his people. Besides laying before his Conventions from year to year the information re- quired by canon, he usually took occasion in his addresses to discuss such topics as were of general interest to his clergy and people, and to spread before them such views as he wished to make operative in moulding the ecclesiastical insti- tutions of the Diocese, and in forming the religious characters of those committed to his care. Hence it was that he de- livered so few discourses, bearing the name of Charges ; and hence, that his Annual Addresses assumed, so uniformly, a character pf more than ordinary importance. They abounided DK, POTTER SUCCEEDS TO ST. PAUL's. 337 in pious thoughts an^ breathings, in clear, Scriptural yiews of truth, and in sound expositions of the doctrines and prin- ciples of our. Church. A valuable volume might be made by a judiciously arranged selection from this class of his writings. Having noticed the principal events connected with this memoir during the last few years, I pausei a moment upon a few belonging to the same period, though of a different character. ^ •^The settlement of the Rev. Mr. Potter, as .successor to Dr. Jarvis, in St. Paul's Church, Boston, has already been men- tioned. Coming from the Diocese of New York, where his exalted • character and attainments had already placed him high on the list of those, around whom the best hopes of the Church were clustered, his settlement in Boston was deemed auspicious to the cultivation of kindly feelings between the Diocese, from which he came, and that, into which he en- tered. -Accordingly, the Senior Warden of St. Paul's, Dr. Warren, in announcing to the- Bishop the fact of Mr. Potter's acceptance of the rectorship, which has been offered him, took occasion to suggest the expediency of inviting Bishop Hobart to visit Boston, for the purpose of preaching the ser- mon at the expected institution of the new Rector. In his letter of June 4th, 1826, he says : "Mr. Potter proposes to come here on the first of August. The ceremony of institution should, I presump, take place as early as possible after that time. " Bishop Hobart has treated us kindly in this affair; and, considering the connexion, which has subsisted between him and Mr. Potter, it has occurred to me, that it might be pro- ductive of good to seize this opportunity to invite him to visit Boston, for the purpose of delivering the institution ser- mon. In this, of course, I should be wholly governed by you, Sir ; and therefore I have not mentioned the thought to any one but yourself. We have the fullest confidence in your paternal aid, and the firmest determination to abide by your judgment in this, ^d. in all other matters relating to our Church. We hope, with the blessing of Divine Provi- FF 338 MEMOIR, &C. dence, to raise pur Church, trampled and broken down, as it tas been by evil passions ; and to make it a useMinstru^ ment for the diffusion of evangelical principles. * * Jfc Tf tP tP irt ^'^ , ■ ■ - T » Very respectfully, j^our servant, • John C. Wahren." The suggestion was favorably received, and Bishop Hobart was accordingly invited, and accepted the invitation, to preach the proposed institution sermon. His visit to Boston was peculiarly acceptable ; most respectful attentions were bestowed uponliim ; and the whole impression of the visit was such as had been sought. The institution services were highly interesting. Five and twenty of. the clergy, besides the two Bishops, were present. Bishop Griswold, for the first time in his life, performed the institution office ; and was followed by Bishop Hobart in -the sermon. Bright hopes dawrted afresh on this importsmt parish ; and, as one of the most important results of the arrangement,, which had been made, a practical dernonstration was given to the Church, that "the golden chain of brotherhood" between our Bishops was still strong in the link, where most fearshad been felt, that it would be broken. "k- In April, of this year, the Bishop was called to part with his daughter, Julia, on whom his paternal affection seems to have fixed with peculiar tenderness and power ; and soon after, he engaged, as if with the hope of calling off his mind from too painful thoughts, in an excursion, such as he did not often take. It. was a tour- throtigh the north of his Dio- cese into Canada, Death bad already made melancholy ravages in his household^ His beloved wife had been, in an instant, stricken from his side. And. now, the loss of his eldest surviving daughter, the'iiead of his household,. the prop of his comfort, seemed to threaten the utter crushing of his spirit; and all the anxieties of his friends were awakened to the task of cheering and -sustaining him. To these topics, however, I shall have occasion to recur, when I come to dwell moreparticularly on his domestic life CLERICAL ASSOCLATION SUGGESTED. 339 during the long period of his Episcopate. For the present, therefore, I pass them by, and proceed with the memoir. In' the year 1828, came forth that sign of spiritual life and growth, which continued to become more and more manifest among the clergy of the Diocese, in a disposition to cultivate close religious intercourse with each other, beyond what was practicable in the mere annual recurrence of the business- like, formal meetings of the Convention. A want was felt, which these meetings could not supply. A desire sprang up, which asked for more than the contact of business could fur- nish. -The hearts of Christ's ministering servants, separated by long miles of distance from each other', beat with long- ings after fellowship in prayer, and high converse on the themes of their common ministry. , The' wish to help each other on in their own Christian walk, and to take counsel together for the greater prosperity of thecause of Christ, was stirring more and more vitally among them. The earliest expression of this feeling, which I find among the Bishop's papers, though doubtless not the earliest move- ment' of it, is in the following letter from the Rev. Mr. Potter : " Boston, September 1, 1S28; " Right Rev, and Dear Sir,— It has been suggested to me, that a more frequent and familiar intercourse, among the clergy of our State, would'be productive of some important benefits ; and I can easily conceive that such might be the case. One is not infrequently restrained from embarking in some particular measure, or proposing some particular plan for the benefit of the Church, by an apprehension, that it may not meet the approbatioft of his brethren ; and it would appear, that an intercourse, which could make us fully ac- quainted with each other's views, would be likely to prevent any such' embarrassment. In addition to this, it may be hoped that, if we were brought more frequently together, some more enlarged and better concerted means would be devised for extending the institutions of our Church, man can at present be expected. For example ; it has appeared 340 MEMOIR, &C. to me, that the union" of a few persons might produce a series of Tracts illustrating our doctrines in a mode, calculated to arrest the attention of this community. Publications of this character, which we now have, and certainly they are not few, were not written -for' our community, and of course cannot be expected to be fully adapted to interest and inform it. These, and other considerations, which -I need not mention, have induced me to concur very cordially in some suggestions, which Brother Edson has made, and concerning which he has, I presume, ere this written you. " Whether you would be disposed to regard such meetings as important, and whether, if you did, you would think it proper to start them by calling a Convocation of the clel'gy, which might assemble on their way to the approaching Dio- cesan Convention ; are questions, which I regard' with much interest, and which I would respectfully submit to your con- sideration. I am, Rt. Rev. and dear Sir, Most faithfully^ yOurs, A. Potter." The Right Rev. Alexander V. Gbiswold. I insert this letter here, not because this is the proper place for ^ the history of a development, which" subsequently be- came of some importance, but to shew the date of its first manifestaMon, so far as I am enabled to trace it back. With the Bishop's views on the subject, and with the results, which .grew out of the first movements in 'relation to it, we shall hereafter become better acquainted. The Annual Convention, to which Mr. Potter alludes, met in September, at Bellow's Falls, Vt. ' The Bishop's address was, as usual, full of interest ; and in particular contained one suggestion, to which we must trace a series of efforts, afterwards made, on the subject of Theological education for the Eastern Diocese. After \yhat has already been said, the reader heeds not to be informed, that the great want felt, from the first, in the Diocese, was that of a competent sup- ply of faithful, well qualified clergy. To one of the difficul- THEOLOGICAI^, SCHOOL SUGGESTED. 341 ties, which tended to obstruct such a supply, the Bishop thus alludes : "The General Theological Seminary is an Institution wise and useful. I was among the first to bring forward the motion for its establishment ; and hope, while I live, to be among its supporters. But, as must have been expected, it diminishes the number of our candidates, and causes a loss to this Diocese of some of its most promising young men. The advantages of such a Seminary must, of course, be far greatest to the Diocese, in which it is located. But we ought to banish from our minds- all local prejudices, and party feehngs, to view the Church as one, and to rejoice that it prospers in any place. Yet, we are allowed to love ourselves as well as we love our neighbors ; and we must not neglect those, who come under our more immediate care. Whether a Seminary for instructing our candidates in this Diocese be practicable, or, all things considered, expedient, I shall not venture even to give an opinion : but it is our duty, so far as it may be in our power, in some way to in- duce more of the young men, whom we bring forward to the ministry, to labor in this Diocese." That the suggestion, contained in this extract, was fol- lowed by -action on the subject of a Seminary for the Eastern Diocese, is evident from the following paragraph in a letter from Mr. Potter," written ten months later: ^ " Boston, July 28th, 1829. " Right Rev. and dear Sir,: — On recurring, since my re- turn, to your last letter, I have apprehended, (and the appre- hension has been strengthened by the suggestion of a' friend,^ that you might have misconceived an observation, which I have once or twice made in your presence. When speaking of the measures to be taken respecting a Theological School, I believe I have remarked that, before any thing defmite vi^s done, we- ought to converse with Bishop Hobart. Nothing was further from my intention, in this remark, than to intimate, that it was necessary to look for Episcopal advice beyond our own Diocese ; or that Bishop H. had any right FF* 342 MEMOIR, Stc. \ to dictate what particular measures shouM be adopted on this subject. I merely meant to express the desirableness of so conducting our pperations, thp,t they should not be misun- derstood or opposed abroad, and should not therefore occasion any grounds of di^|ention. In order to do this, it appeared to me necessary to advise' with, and if possible secure the good will .of, the friends of the General Seminary'; and among these, I knew of no one, who could more properly be regarded as their organ and representative than Bishop H. I was the more anxiOus fo'r this, as I knew of individuals among ourselves, who could not be induced to unite in the measure proposed, unless it had the good will of the General Seminary ; of whieh, by the wayj I think there can be no doubt, if we .take the proper measutes«.to secure it." * * What the measure first proposed on this subjiect was, it does not appear. It does appear, however, that some measure had been proposed ; and there can be no; doubt that it was in consequence of the suggestion made by the Bishop in his Annual Addres%. To the progress of this, or some similar measure, I shall hereafter have occasion to recur. . There are some other things in the address for this J^ar^ 1828, which throw light upon the history of the Eastern Dio- cese, and upon the views of its Bishop, andito whifch, there- fore, I give a place on these pages. It is, I believe, generally supposed that the Eastern Dio- cese was a sort of hot-Jjed for the production of Tax prin- ciples and of loose attachments, on the subject of our Church and her instilutl'ons. Whatevfer may have been the state of facts in this respect, 6e/bre the organization of the Diocese, the supposition does great injustice to its tendencies after that organization, tod its subjection tp the influence of Bishop Griswold. To shew the injustice of the supposition was evidently his object in the following remarks. Prom speaking of the general progress of " God's king- dom in this sinful world," he comes down to the history of his own Diocese, and adds :■ "When, eighteen years since, it was organized, true CHURCH PRINCn-LES AND RESPONSIBILITIES. 343 Church principles, (with a few exceptions) were far less re- gardecf.' The doctrines of the Reformation were not so generally and suitably enforced : and it is certain- that the authority of the Church and our General Convention were held in much less estimation. How great, since, has been the change in the increase of our numbers, the union of our Churches, and the correctness of our principles! If we bring into view, (what, to judge accurately, we must do) the comparative increase of papulation in the different States, our increase in the number of our cler^, Churches and communicants has been greater than in dny other of the northern or middle States. The union of our Churches with- out interruption has been, and still is increasing ; party dis- tinctions are happily scarce known among us ; and they should be considered as our enemies, who would introduce them. The true principles of the Protestant Episcopal Church can, I verily believe, in no part of this world, be found in greater perfection than in this Diocese. It is de- lightful to see the reverence, which our clergy and people noyj generally have for the order and worship of the Church, and for tjie General Convention. I cannot sufficiently ex- press my thanks to the Father of mercies, and the Head of the Church, that especially we have in this Diocese a body of clei^gy, so decidedly attached to the Episcopal Church, and so zealous in support of its distinctive prin- ciples; without 'any leaning to Popery, or abandonment of Protestant principles, or neglect of fevangelical truth." Had he a sort pf prophet's eye wh«n'he wrote these last lines ; and was he striving to gird up the loins of the clerical mind around him against a coming d-ay of evil ? What follows is in his usual style. He seldom touched the point of our Ecciesiastic&l superiority without adding a salutary suggestion of our corresponding responsibilities. " But, while we offer the just tribute of praise to God for so great a blessing, let us not deceive ourselves in a vain confidence of boasting ; nor, because in these things we are much better than intimes past, suppose we are all which we ought to be. We of the Episcopal Church are indeed too 344 MEMOIR, &C. much given to commend ourselves ; and we may eren.fear, that the cant of sectarism is growing upon us. ' A hatit of eopiplacency in thinking and speaking of our orthodoxy, and the superior excellence of our Ecclesiastical system, natu- rally leads us to put too much confidence in our profession, and to be so satisfied with ourselves as to make less improve- ment. Let us not forget, who it is that makes us to differ fi-om others ; and that, for all which God gives us, we are accountable to Him. If, in religious privileges, we are in- deed more blessed than other Christians, we are also more sinful and more to be condemned than other Christians, if we do not also as much excel them in the fruits of the Spirit and a zeal for God. We cannot be the best friends to Teligion, except we are the most willing and most for- ward in promoting its general interests ; nor the best fiiends of the Church," if we are not the most active in doing that, which will best increase the number, faith and piety of its members. Our Lord's rule is ; — ' By their fruits ye shall know them.' Truly to love Him, is to beheve His Word and to do his work." .;-_ At that period, there was no Tittle' rivalry betw:een Do- mestic and Foreign in our Missionary organization. The friends of each field were contending for its peculiar claims, as though they were exclusive of each other, or did not be- long to the same cause ; thus endangering, by llieir rivalry, the stability of our General Missionary Society. Alludiftg to this state of things, and recommending his clergf to sup- port the organization as it was, and to patronize our Mission- ary Work on hoth of its fields, he gives, among other things, the following keen rebuke to the spirit of contenti6n and of eagerness for exclusive contrgl in matters of the Church. " Let us, as we love reUgionand love the Church, keep clear of that spirit of selfishness and jealousy, which is dis- gracfeful to humanity and inconsistent with our religion. ' The love of power,' which }s generally thought to be the fault of Episcopalians, is certainly the fault of our nature. They, who indulge it, would rule in every thing, however minute : they would forUd those, who walk not with them,, INTERESTING EXTRACTS, &C. 345 even to cast out devils in the name of Christ. Tbey 're- joice' not that ' ' Christ is preached,' though ever so ' sin- cerely,' if the preacher do not, in the minutest things, agree with their peculiar notions. Some, we may fear, who pass for pious, zealous Christians,{had rather that m.ankind should remain in their sins, than that those, whom they disUke, should be the instruments of changing their hearts, find bringing them to Christ." The following paragraphs have a special interest at the preseilt time, and express the Bishop's views on two points, ' which now particularly engross the attention of our Church. The former of these points touches our relations to other Christian bodies ; — the latter relates to a -movement among ourselves. In a-passage distinctly expressive of the neces- sity, which constrains us to differ from many Protestants on some important points, he still says : — " Even different sects should riot view each other as rivals, still less as opponents ; but as all laboring in the same good work, each,_ according to his knowledge, faith "ajid sense of duty." * * * : * * * " The great evils to be feared, and what should most re- ligiously be' avoided, . are, the animosities, sectarism and party spirit, which, divisions so naturally produce. We can easily see the Divine Wisdom in permitting the Church to be divided into sects ; to counteract the still worse evils of formalism. Ecclesiastical tyranny, infidelity, love of the world, and coldness towards God, which in times past have so deplorably prevailed." In another passage, alluding to tendencies, within our- selves ; he remarks : — "There are other two extremes, in which wl naturally and too often §rr, injurious to piety and peace. The one is, undue rfeliance upon religious rites, or ascribing too much efficacy to the outward, regular ministration of the Christian ordinances, independent of the faith and piety of those who perform, or receive them. The other is, too little reverence for the sacraments and oth.er institutions of Christ and his Apostles ; placing undue rehance upon inward feelings, and 346 MEMOIK, &C. what is (not very properly) called* experience. These are lihe" Scylla and Charyhdis of religious life. Thousands and millions thus turn to the right hand, or to the left. They are perils, to which we, of the Episcopal Church, with all our best intentions to steer a middle course, are much exposed." During the year 1829, occurred a movement in Boston, which led to the organization of. a new and, as it has since proved^, very important parish, that of Grace Church. The Rev. Mr. Sabine, previously an orthodox Congregatidnalist, conformed to the Episcopal Churcli ; and the house of wor- ship, in which he preached, being encumbered with debt, the elements of an Episcopal parish 'gathered round him ; and it was /or a time proposed- that they, should become the possessors and occupants of the edifice, in which he had been laboring. " Ultimately, however, these elements of the new parish- decided on a different course j disconnected themselves from the encumbered property ; and after spme y^ars of quiet growth, erected a new Gothic Church, and became one of the most flourishing and active of our city parishes. This year also, the ancient and wealthy parish of Trinity Church, Boston, completed their new and magnificent Gothic stone Church ; of the consecration of which on the 11th of November, the Bishop says, in a letter to Mrs. Griswold ; — " We had very interesting services at the Consecration to- day. The congregation .was immense." At the time of the Convention of the Church in Massa- chusetts held this year in Boston, the clergy present had an informal meeting, on the subject of the Bishop's removal from Bristol to Salem. The following document imbodies their action on the case : — - " At a meeting of the subscribers, clergymen of the Pro- testant Episcopal Church of the State of Massachusetts, held at St. Paul's Vestry, June 17th, 1829, the following resolution was unanimously adopted : — ' " Whereas, we have been informed that the congregatian of St. Peter's CKurch,^ Salem, have applied, or are about to REMOVAL TO SALEM. 347 apply, to our beloved and Right Rev. Diocesan to assume the -pastoral care of that Church, therefore ; " Voted', as the sense of this meeting, that such arrange- ment would conduce materially to the interests of the Dio- cese, and is, to 'them personally, very desirable." Signed by nineteen of the Clergy of Massachusetts. This communication was, 'during the summer and autumn, followed by others of a private characterj shewing such an increased strength of public sentiment in the Church in favor of the removal, and urging it on such strong grounds, that the Bishop at length yielded ; and, before the close of the year, iresigned the charge of his parish in Bristol-, amidst the affectionate regrets, though with the unmurmuring acquies- cerice, of a people, whom he had so long and so faithfully served in the Gospel. The communication of the Wardens and Vestry, on that occasion, expressed both their attach- ment to his ministry, and their regard for his person, in warm and gratiQfing terms. i " Bristol, Dec. 15th, 1829. " At a meeting of the Wardens and Vestry of St. Mi- chael's Church, the following resolution was passed :• — "Whereas, the Right^Rev. Alexander V. Griswold, for more than twenty-fiire years past the Rector of this Church, has communicated his intention to resign his said office, it is therefore unanimously " Resolved ; — that his communication is received with the most unfeigned regret ; — that it is beheved to have pro- ceeded from no feeling of indifference to the particular inte- rests of this parish, but from a sense of paramount duty as Bishop of the Diocese ; that we cherish a deep sense of the ability, zeal and faithfulness, with which he has so long and so usefully filled the office now proposed to be resigned, and a hope that the light of his past instructions will long beam upon the Scriptures read, the prayers offered, and other religious services performed, in this Church, causing still further accessions to the hitherto abundant fruit of his labors : — and that our best wishes for hig health, happiness, 848 MEMOIR, &C. prosperity and usefulness will accompany and remain Avith him, wherever he may reside, or exercise the duties of his high and important office, L. C. Richmond, Secretaryl" Between this date and the ensuing spring his removal to Salem took place ; and the vacant Rectorship in Bristol was filled by his able and worthy successor, tlie Rev. Mr. Bristed. j . Meanwhile, however, God was saddening, still more deeply than ever, that portion of his days, which he spent in Bristol. Death was to have one more victim from his family circlej before he left the dwelling, which had shelter- ed him' in his many .sorrows, as. well as in his many joys'. His son George, ■vyho had. for several years been actively en- gaged in the ministry, with much of his father's character and virtues, and with bright prospects of usefulness and of happiness before him, having returned from a second visit to Cuba for his health, and learned the death of his wife and child just before his arrival in New York, made his way to Bristol amidst longings after heaven, and a readiness to depart and be with Christ. The evidently near close of his illness prevented his father from attending the Annual Convention of the Diocese ; and he therefore prepared and forwarded to the Secretary of that body his Annual Address to be read after the opening of its session. It began thus : " Prevented, beloved friends and brethren, by the deeply afflictive' dispensation of a wise and righteous God, from being with you in Convention, I send you the Address^ which has been prepared for the occasion." And thus the message ended ; — " Since the above was written, my son, the Rev. George Griswold, after a long and distressing illness, has departed this life. His short career, and earthly sorrows ceased . yesterday, the 27th. Brethren, pray for me !" It was all that_ the mourning parent had time to say. And it was enough. The response, which he received DEATH OF KEY. GEO. GRISWOLD. 349 from his beloyed brethren, shewed that he was in their hearts, and that his announcement had awakened their most earnest prayers in his behalf. Not only did they send Mim their affectionate official condolence through their Secretary, but the Secretary himself, expressing the common senti- ments of his brethren, and his own private and personal re- gards for the deceased, whom he had known from a School- boy, thus closes a letter full of beautiful and tender sym- pathy. * * * " These recollections, revived and dee'pened by the solemn dispensation of his early re- moval, I earnestly hope may be instrumental, through Di- vine grace, of spiritual awakening and improvement ; while they serve to add much interest to the precious exercise of prayer to God on your behalf under the trials, with which, in flis holy pleasure and unabated tenderness, He sees fit. to visit you. May He, who is able to turn darkness into light, and make of sorrow a blessing, visit you with the very richest and choicest consolations of His heavenly grace, in this season of affliction and trial. Very respectfully and affectionately, Your friend and servant, Theodore Edson, Sec'y of Conv'n." After this pause in recurrence to the incidents of the last few years, I proceed in the memoir. The year 1830 opens with the announcement of the Bishop's Volume of Sermons, as ready to issue from the press. It was a volume, which he was induced to publish at the solici- tation of his friends. It consists of discourses, prepared, originally, not for the press, but for the pulpit, and printed, with little or no alteration, from their original manuscripts. He did not, of course, expect either pecuniary emolument or literary fame, from the publication. They were plain^ useful sermons, on some of the most important doctrines and duties of our religion ; full of deep, and sound views, written in excellent style, and evincive of the thoroughly evangelical character of their author. They were soon favorably noticed, both in this country and in England ; and GG 350 MEMOIH, &C. deservedly -won for him the reputation of a sound and 'thorough Divine, and of a writer ctt once devout, perspicuous and chaste. They are well worthy of study both by the pri- vate' Christian, seeking the cultivation of his religious affec- tions ; and by the theolpgian, seeking deep and Scriptural views of truth. " The great value of these sermons," says the Editor of the Philadelphia Recorder, in a private letter to the Bishop, *' and the great good they are doing, cannot be overestimated." His correspondence for this year shews him abundant in labors, but perhaps even increasingly hindered by the usual lack of faithful and abiding laborers in the ministiy under him. From the letters of the Hon. Simon Greenleaf es- pecially, it seems that the parishes in Maine were from this cause deep sufferers. In that distant and thinly settled por- tion of the Diocese, it was even more difficult than it was in other parts, to keep the small and scattered parishes steadily supplied. Where there were hut few clergy of any kind, it was at least natural, perhaps it was unavoid- able, that the nearest, largest and most important stations should engross the best, if not all of them. Still, with all allowances, there was, perhaps, some ground for Mr. Green- leaf's intimation that our lack of faithful and self-sacrificing ministers had some deeper cause than any, which lay on the surface of things. Pleading for the Saco parish, which ap- peared to be then on the verge of extinction, Mr. G. says, under date of June 10th, — " All we want is a man of true piety and zeal, and of competent talents. Canriot such a man be had ? We have money ; this has never been lack- ing ; and other denominations abound with, ministers. Is our Church alone destitute ? Is its soil too cold to raise laborers for Christ in His vineyard ?" . That our soil had been too "cold the Bishop had abundant cause to feel. Why it ha^ been so, the past history of the Eastern Diocese and of the early condition of Episcopacy in our Eastern States, furnishes, I apprehend, sufficient reasons ; while neittier the Bishop, nor his estimable corres- pondent, belonged lo that class, who seemed to think that THE bishop's punctuality, &c. 351 the best way to remedy the evil was, to spread over our ecclesiastical soil the cold light of a false praise. They were evidently of- opinion that it was wiser to lay that soil naked, that it might be reached by a better light; — warm light from the Sun of Righteousness, shed on the toils of a faithful, and, if need called, a severe and painful culture. I have alluded to the abundance of the Bishop's labors. On a tour in the month of June, this year, occurred an incident which forcibly illustrates a trait in his character, as connected with those labors ; — I mean, — his invariable punctuality in meeting all his appointments for Episcopal visitations. His unfailing success in this particular, thus far, seems to have rendered him almost too punctilious ; and ev^en to have wrought in him a presentiment, or at least a desire, of being able to say, at the close of his ministry ; — " I have never failed of keeping my engagements, amidst all the perils and changes of a variously-checkered life of toil." At any rate, for the sake of punctuality to his ap- pointments, he often hazarded health, and sometimes life itself. The tour, which I have mentioned, led him through a part of Massachusetts into Rhode Island ; and having reach- ed Newport before the 10th of June, it became necessary to cross Narraganset Bay, in order to keep an appointment, which he had made at Wickford, in the old St. Paul's, or Narraganset Church. But, a violent gale, which had pre- vented an outward bound vessel from sailing for Cuba, was still raging, and had kept the regular ferry-packet from com- ing over on that day from Wickford to Newport. Here, indeed, was a difficulty, which would have kept most men housed. The swelling Narraganset, bowing its thousand waves before the strong blast of a still powerful wind and ' tempest, lay, eight miles broad, between him andihis place of destination. Yet, he could not give up, without an effort, his purpose of being punctual to his engagement. By the offer of an extra reward, he induced a strong boat- man, in an open sail-craft, to attempt the passage. They set forth together on the dangerous essay. But, by the time 352 MEMOIR, &C. they were midway on the water, the boatman felt the pesil to be too great for farther progress. Addressinghis passen- ger, therefore, he said; "Bishop, I dare go no farther against such a wind as this !" The announcement was full of import. Still, the Bishop was undismayed. He did not, indeed, emulate the moral sublime of the ancient con- queror, in the inquiry ; " Quid times ? Csesarem vehis." " Why fearest thou ? Thou carriest Caesar." But rising above, into the higher sublime -of a calm trust in Him, who holdeth the waters in the hollow of his hand, he sim- ply asked, — " Why ? What is the matter ?" " The craft has not ballast enough on her bottom ;" was the quick reply. " If she carried more ballast there, she might peAaps live through the Bay." " Would it help her," asked the Bishop, "if I were to lie down in the boat?" " No jjetter ballast than that could she^ have;" said the Boatman. The sug- gestion was.no sooner made than adopted. Casting himself at full length upon his face into the bottom of the boat, with the weight of a strong frame much heavier than that of coinmon men, the little vessel evidently felt the favor. She braced herself more strongly to the blast ; and though in hourly peril of going down, yet, after long toiling, she reached Wickford harbor, and the Bishop stepped thankfully upon the firm land. Yet, so wet and incrusted had his hat and garments become under the gray brine, which had been splashed over him, that the inhabitants of the village were scarcely able to recognize in him their old and well known visiter. But, upon reaching the house of the Rector of the parish, in season for the service, which he had appointed, he found that he had not been expected, and that therefore the Chttrch had not been opened. The violence of the storm kept every one at home. The Rector himself was in utter amazement at his arrival, and exclaimed, " Why, Bishop, I would not have crossed the Narraganset, such a day as this, for a warranty deed of the whole Narraganset country!" Nor would the Bishop, for such an inducement as that. But under a sense of duty, he was ready to dare what no THE bishop's punctuality, &c. 353 pecuniary consideration could have bribed him to attempt. " I had made my appointments," said he, calmly, " and was not willing that the people should be disappointed through my fault." A similar illustration, though involving less of peril, oc- curred when on a visit, once, to one of the parishes in Massachusetts. -A sudden freshet had carried oS'the bridge, which crossed a stream near the village. The stage-coach reached the crossing a short time before the hour of service ; but, though the freshet had in a measure subsided, and though the driver was strongly urged to ford the stream, yet he refused to go forward. Leaving the stage-coach, therefore, with the remark that he " must not disappoint the good people, who were expecting him," the Bishop" pulled off his boots and stockings, and, with his bundle, or vaHse, under his arm, waded the stream, walked forward to the village, and- was thus enabled to keep the appointment, which he had made. It was scarcely an uncommon thing for him to arrive at the place, where he was engaged to officiate, just in time for service ; and, in garments soaked by the rain in which he had been riding, to go through service and sermon, rather than keep the congregation waiting while he changed his dress. And, now that I am in the way of illustrations on this pipint, I will give another instance of his punctuality, and, at the same time, of his willingness to put himself to trouble, when it was thought that good might thereby be done. He was engaged to consecrate the new Church at Bangor, Maine ; and several of his clergy had consented to accompany him. There were two ways of reaching that city of the East ; the one by steamer, and the other by stage. And, as the season of the year made travelling by land extremely tedious and uncomfortable, his clergy chose the former, as being at once comfortable, and, if wind and tide favored, expedi- tious. But, as there was an " if" on that way, and as the mail-coach was ordinarily sure of reaching its destination with punctuality, even though it were to be dragged through GG* 354 MEMOIR, &C. the rnght, as well as through the mud, the Bi^op chose this ; and the result was, that he reached Bangor in season, consecrated the Church at the hour appointed, and,'-with the departing congregation, was just leaving the Sanctuary as his more comfort-loving clergy reached the wharf of the steamer. But, to leave this subject,- and to return to the order of events ; The Convention of the Diocese met this year, 1830, in Trinity Church, Boston, arid the Bishop had tlie sad duty of announcing the decease of not only the respected Rector ofthat Church, but also two of our most prominent Bishops, Ravenscroft of North Carolina, and Hobart of New York. The tribute, which he paid to the memory of the honored dead was at once just and impressive ;— ^while that from the body of the Convention constituted the principal as weU as the most affecting business of the session. The only other business transacted, that was of any importance, consisted in the appointment of a Committee on that part of the Bishop's Address, which ' had reference to the subject of Theological education in the' Eastern Diocese. From a part of the Bishop's corrfespondence, at the open- ing of the year 1831, in a letter from one of his brethren on the Episcopal bench, written in answer to one from him- self, — it appears that, not long before, there had been enter- tained the* design, with some actual arrangements for effect- ing it, of introducing among the Bishops of our Church the official distinction of a Primus. Both the letter, whith he had written, and that, which he now received, contained ex- pressions of thankfulness that the design and arrajigeinents had been providentially overruled, and that thus our Church had been saved from a dangerous innovation on the Scrip- tural simplicity of its Episcopacy ; an innovation, which, had it not been thus prevented, might have riveii our ecclesiastical system in sunder. ; As the year 1831 grew old, the Eastern Diocese began to enter on those movements, in which its already conflict- ing elements had for several years been preparing to imbody themselves. Just before the Convention of our Church in OPENING MOVEMENTS IN 1831. 355 Massachusetts, in the month of June, the Bishop received a letter fropi the Rev. Mr. Doane, who, since the decease of his predecessor. Dr. Gardiner, had been elected Rector of Trinity Church, Boston ; — informing him that the parish were about to be favored with the services of the Rev. Mr. Hopkins, as assistant minister ; and intimating that one of the considerations, which might induce Mr. H. to accept such appointment, would be, an assurance that he should at once enter on the duties of the proposed Theological school in the vicinity of Boston. With this plan, it appears from other letters, was - connected • another for the dissolution of the Eastern Djocese and for the retention of Bishop Gris- wold in the supervision of Massachusetts alone. Accordingly, upon the opening of the Massachusetts Con- vention for 1831, two Committees were apointed ; the one, to consider and report, before the close of the session, "on the expediency and propriety of that State's withdrawing from the Eastern, Diocese, and having a Bishop exclusively to itself:" and the other, " to consider the subject of Theo- logical education, and report a plan to the" then " present .Convention." The former Committee was moved byE. A, Newton, Esq. ; and the latter by E. H. Robbins, Esq. , The latter Committee made its report first; recommended the establishment, forthwith, of a Theological School at Cam- bridge ; and presented its plan for the constitution and government of such school; all, with special reference to the immediate employment of Mr. Hopkins, (who had now accepted his appointment in Trinity Church,) as one of its professors. Soon after, the former Committee also presented its report ; in which it recommended the withdrawment of Massachusetts from the Eastern Diocese, provided such a movement could be made with the consent of all the other States composing the Diocese, and on condition that the Episcopal jurisdiction of Bishop Griswold be retained in the State proposing to withdraw. In proceeding to act on these reports, the Convention, after debate, resolved on the organization of the proposed Theo- 356 MEMOIR, &C. logical School, and took the first step in that organization by the appointment of a board of Trustees. After similar de- bate, it also resolved, on the conditions specified, that Massa- chusetts withdraw from the Eastern Diocese ; and that their Secretary communicate the report, on which this resolution was based, to the Standing Committees of Rhode Island, Vermont, New Hampshire and Maine, for their considera- tion. Massachusetts having thus taken her stand, let us now pass to the doings of the Eastern Diocese and its Conven- tion, which met, as usual, in September, and at Salem, Mass. In his Annual Address, the Bishop referred to the action of Massachusetts on both the forenamed subjects ; commend- ed the establishment of the Theological School ; and pro- fessed his willingness to acquiesce in any decision, which the Convention might be pleased to make, on the question of the proposed dissolution of the Eastern Diocese. The organization of the Theological School, of course re- ceived the sanction and commendation of the Convention ; for it had long been a favorite object with the Bishop and with many of his clergy. But the proposal to dissolve the' Diocese was new, and it is natural to suppose that the Con- vention would have rejected it, had it not been for the pre- vious action of Massachusetts, and the communication which it now received from the Convention in Vermont. This latter body had received and acted on the resolutions from Massachusetts ; and it now addressed to the Convention of the Diocese a document, imbodying, among other matters, the following resolutions : " That this Conventidn fully concur with the Convention of Massachusetts in the conviction that it is expedient and desirable that, as soon as circumstances permit, arrangements be made for dividing the Eastern Diocese into smaller Epis- copal jurisdictions :" and ■" That the Secretary of this -Convention be, and hereby is, directed to make ajf{)lication to the next Diocesan Con- vention, and to the several State Conventions in the Eastern MOVEMENTS IN 1831. 357 Diocese, for permission to erect this State into a separate Piocese, as soon as such separation can be regularly efiected." Meanwhile, it was understood that the Church in New Hampshire, having called a special Convention, was op- posed to the withdrawment of Massachusetts ; and therefore, without waiting for the action of Rhode Island and Maine, the Convention of the Eastern Diocese contented itself with some merely conditional and preparatory action. It ap- proved of the course, which Massachusetts and Vermont had signified their wish to pursue ; and proposed moreover two alterations in its own constitution ; the one, that whenever a vacancy occurred in its Episcopacy, the Diocese should, by that event, be dissolved ; and the other, allowing any one of the five States to withdraw, without the consent of the re- maining four, by simply obtaining that of the Bishop. The subsequent result from all this action was ; that these proposed .alterations were rejected ; that Vermont received the permission, which it had asked from the other States, and thereupon withdrew and organized itself into a separate Diocese ; and that Massachusetts, without' further action, remained in connexion with Rhode Island, New Hampshire and Maine; these four States constituting henceforth the Eastern Diocese, till the year 1838, when it began to be still further diminished by the nominal withdrawment of New Hampshire and Maine. All this action of the various Conventions appears very quiet, as its surface lies spread out on the pages of the printed Jour- nals. Nevertheless, it was accompanied with a deep and strong under-current of feeling. To those engaged in the transac- tions, and observant of the motion of things, it was obvious that the elements of the Church, which had for some time been under the action of influences not altogether harmonious, were fast working themselves up to a development not alto-, gether peacefiil. To this state of facts, the Bishop evident- ly alludes in a letter to one of his correspondents, dated, June 22d, 1831. 358 MEMOIR, &C. "The Massachusetts Convention," he observes, "have determined on dividing the Diocese. Probably it will soon be in four or five ; and who are to be the Bishops is a ques- tion of high importance, and, I fear, the subject of some intrigue. May the Lord direct." To the same state of facts, he also alludes in another letter to a different correspondent, and at the later date of Dec. 15th, 1831. " The Churches in this Diocese," he writes, " have now for twenty years been remarkably united, and little has been said among -us of high or low Church. To which side indi- viduals of our clergy incline, I have known but little, and cared less. I have endeavored to maintain a perfect impar- tiality among them. But I have recently observed, and with, no litde concern, that a spirit of such party distinction is shewing itself among us. Should it increase, I shall think it. the greatest evil, that has happened to our Churches." He was doubtless aware of the existence, origin and growth of this spirit ; but probably hoped that it would be prevented, by the prevalence of general harmony, from burst- ing forth into open expression. Afflicted man ! He was most sadly disappointed. In truth, there was no part of our Church, in the whole United States, so strongly exposed to the party distinxitions, which he names, as the Diocese, over which he presided. Embracing the elements of five distinct future Dioceses, under a Bishop, now rapidly travelling down into the vale of yeai's, whose influence, however impartially, was yet steadily tending to overspread his whole extended charge with his own peculiarly evangelical views ; it is easy to see tliat its condition presented, to those, both within and with- out the Diocese, who disliked his views, a most powerful invitation to attempt the early dissolution of the union under his jurisdiction; and thus to prevent, as fai- as might be, (what was, doubtless in all honesty, contemplated by some as a calamity,) the almost certain erection, after his decease, of five independent Dioceses, with each its own evangelical MOYEMENTS IN 1831. 359 Bishop. It is als6 easy to see that this whole state of things presented a subject, which it was morally impossible to ap- proach, and touch with the hand of meditated change, with- out producing the strongest excitement of feeling, and the most dangerous conflict of influences. While the truth of a remark, formerly made, becomes more than ever manifest, that had Bishop Griswold been other than he was, a wisely meek, prudent, and peace-loving man, it would have been impossible to prevent a shock to the- interests of rehgion and the Church almost infinitely more disastrous thcin that, which was subsequently given. The question, whether the -pro- posed Theological School should arise under one kind of in- fluence, or another ; — and the question, whether any one of the five States should withdraw from the Diocese under one set of auspices, or another, were evidently both complicated with the difficulties arising out of the state of things,, to which I have adverted. And there can be no doubt, that while both these questions tended to produce excitement, this very excitement made action on those questions much slower and less productive than it would otherwise have been. As soon as action in either direction was attempted, the silent consciousness, that it might not be entirely satisfac- tory to a venerated Diocesan, seemed to throw incertitude and indecision into the movement, and thus to keep practi- cal results within narrow limits. . Vermont, it is true, soon withdrew from the other States by general consent ; but this was before any particular development of the tendencies, which were rising within the Diocese. The Theological .School, also, was organized, and one professor entered on the instruction of a class of pupils. But, the moment this pro- fessor was removed into the new Episcopate of Vermont, that school became a mere organization on paper. Excitement, meanwhile, rose to itsheightin 1832; subsided ; and then rose again in 1838 ; but it led to no available action; and the Eastern Diocese continued, without either Theological School, or a dissolution into its primitive elements, until that dissolution was brought on, in the appointed way, by the demise of its Bishop. Some time before that event, indeed, in the years 360 MEMOIR, &C. 1838 and 1839, New Hampshire and Maine, nommally -withr drew from the Diocese ; yet they elected no Bishop, but re- mained subject to the jurisdiction of Bishop Griswold till the period of his death. It is also true that, at the same time, Rhode Island, by a vote of its Convention, resolved to with- draw ; and permission to withdraw was given by the other States. But this action was the occasion of intense excite- ment, and, .amidst this excitement, was rescinded by the vote of a subsequent Cdnvention ; and so Rhode Island continued an integral portion of the Diocese during th^ remainder of the Bishop's life. Thus long and deeply was the Eastern Diocese agitated by the movements, which reaUy had their first organized ac- tion in the events, which I have been recording in the year 1831. And yet, thus ineffectual was this agitation to the practical dissolution of the Diocese during the life-time of him, with whose Episcopate it began. And the nearer he drew to the termination of his course, the stronger waxed the feeling of unwillingness to disturb the order of things, over which he had so long presided. It was. in the year 1831, amidst the first open risings of this protracted agitation, that " The Banner of the Church,^'' a new religious periodical, was started, on " the individual responsibility" of its editor; and that the Rev. Mr. Potter, equally to the surprise and regret of all, retired from the rectorship of St. Paul's Church, Boston. Amidst the excite- iiig and exhausting duties, which pressed upon him, his health failed, and he found it necessary to resign his charge. His generous parishioners offered him the means of foreign travel for the benefit of his health ; but as his difficulties affected mainly his organs of speech, he chose to return to Schenectady and to resume -his duties as one of the Faculty of Union College. Probably no clergyman, the Bishop ex- cepted, ever acquired a wider or a more salutary influence in the Eastern Diocese than he. Certainly, none ever re- tired from it amidst expressions of more general and heart- felt sorrow from those, whom he left behind. Before entering upon some notice of the events, which CORRESPONDENCE WITH MR. BRISTED. 361 reiidered the year 1832 memorable in tiie' history of the Eastern Diocese, I will give a portion of the Bishop's cor- respondence for that year, on a subject not connected with those events, yet of' some interest by itself. The letters, which I introduce, will explain themselves. "Bristol, R. I., March 2, 1832. " Right Reverend and dear Sir, — * * * * ****** For some months past, the Congregational minister of Bristol ias, from time to time, pressed me to exchange pulpits with him. I have hitherto waived it. At length, this morning, the minister with one of his deacons, came to me, as a committee, appointed at a church-meeting, to propose an interchange of pulpits, or to receive and report to the Congregationalists the reason, why I would not exchange. Finding it placed in this official, for- mal manner, ' I told the Committee that I should lay the proposal before you, as Bishop ; and whatever was deemed right and proper, in the premises, I should do it. The Com- mittee then proposed that our societies," (congregations.) ""should unite in the monthly conceits for prayer to promote missionary efforts. I answered that I would write to you respecting this also. Be so obliging, when you have leisure, as to direct me what to do in both these cases. * * With perfect respect, Your obedient servant, John Bristed." Right Rev. Bishop Guiswold. "Salem, March 15th, 1832. " Rev. and dear Sir, — Yours of the 2d has been some days received. I should have answered you sooner but for ill health, with which I have been confined for almost two weeks. " For what reason the Congregational minister of Bristol is so desirous, as you state, to exchange pulpits with you, I HH 362 MEMOIR, &C. do not see. I can see no good, and I can foresee some €vil, which will be likely to result from it. 'Tis well known that our Church is liberal. I think none more so, in the true sense of the word. And it has ever been particularly my wish to cultivate love ahd harmony among all Christian peo- ple, and to do nothing to increase and perpetuate the di- visions, which unhappily exist. And Christians are now universally convinced that (to use a common vulgar phrase) we should agree to differ ; that each denomination should worship in their own way and according to what they think most agreeable to God's, will. Generally, the Congrega- tionalists dislike our worship more than bur people do theirs. If you take ours into their meeting-house, they will not be so well pleased, or edified as with their own ; for they would not enter into the spirit of it: and our congregation will not be so well edifiied with theirs. Both congregations will be losers by the exchange, in regard to their prayer of faith. And cer.tainly, neither of you two ministers will be willing^ everi for one day, to lay aside (to please men) the prayers, which he believes to be more acceptable to God, for others, which he belie.ves to be less so. ^ " If it be said, that the object is to promote brotherly affec- tion, that object is certainly excellent; but it may, I think, be better attained in other ways, which will be attended with no inconvenience. If any of your people desire occa- sionally to attend their worship, we have no rule against it. Dr. W . and myself formerly had a union, which I think answered all the good purposes, which you intend, without any of the evil consequences, which may be feared : that is ; he officiated one Sunday evening in his own house, and in his own way ; and I, the, next, in mine, alternately ; leaving all the people of both congregations free to attend either or both places as they pleased; Each house was then sufficient- ly large to accommodate all who attended the exercises. So far as my knowledge extends, attempts at union, where there is any thing unnatural, or incongruous, have not pros- pered ; they have rather tended to jealousy and disunion. CORKESPONDENCE WITH MR. BRISTED. 363 Congregatibnalists, Methodists and Baptists may,, ■with less unfitness, interchange ; for their worship is very similar : but ours is radically different. ." What is proposed in the other union of a monthly con- cert, I know not. I think it probable they will not give up their -way and conform to yours. Without a mutual con- formity, I see not how it can be truly called a union. I can only say generally, that I would have Episcopalians unite with all Christians, so far as they can do it without departing from their own principles. For the truth's sake give up every thing but the • truth. But, above all, if Christians would unite, ' let love be without dissimulation ;' banish from the heart all sectarian prejudices and evil surmisings ; let there be no underhand-plotting, nor secret devices : and most of all, let Christians take heed how they speak against each other; how they misrepresent the -doctrines" or the principles of others. Cultivate that charity, which thinketh no evil, and which rejoiceth in the truth. " Should it be said, that our unwUlingness to intermingle with others,^ as now proposed, is from ilUberaUty, or sec-; tarism, it would be imtrue, and of course uncharitable and wicked. We decline the union from a sense of propriety, from adherence to principle, cind to avoid evil. "I might have added what is well known, and ought to be well considered, that the Congregationalists have rejected from their system some things, which were universally held by Christians through the first fifteen centuries, and which we fully believe to be essential parts of Christianity. We have no wish to judge them ; they have full right to embrace what they think to be the truth : but we must take heed to ourselves, and walk according to what we undoubtingly be- lieve to be the truth. " But I shall not enter into this point ; though it is the most essential in the question above considered. * * Very afiectionately, yours, Alexander V. Griswold." The Rev. John Bristed. 364 MEMOIR, &C. From this correspondence it is not to be inferred, on the one hand, that Mr. Bristed desired the interchange requested ; he was plainly enough opposed to it : while, on the other hand, it is evident that the Bishop was writing more for the Com- mittee, who had waited on Mr. Bristed, than for Mr. Bristed himself. His letter is' a specimen of his manner of dealing with questions like those proposed. He might have said at once, and in an offensive way ;, " our fundamental principlcj as Episcopalians, forbids such exchanges." But he chose to shew that, on other grounds of abundantly sufficient strength, such exchanges are undesirable ; will, ordinarily,' lead to more evil , than good ; and are therefore to be dis- couraged from a regard to the peace and harmony of "all classes concerned. This, if his letter were shewn to them, the Congregatiohalists of Bristol must have seen ; while the Christian spirit, in which it was told them, must have com- mended the Bishop's views to their entire approbation. In- deed, the reasons against the proposed exchanges, inde- pendently of that, to which the Bishop merely aHudesan the •eonclusion of his letter, are so clear and satisfactory, that, whoever considers them attentively, must, I should suppose, see that a refusal to exchange pulpits in the way suggested, springs from a wise, and not from an uncharitable spirit. "In Diocesan affairs, the elements of disunion, which we have seen in action during the year 1831, received increased activity from an incident, which occurred in the spring of 1832. The great want of the Church, especially in the Eastern Diocese,' was, as we have seen, a want of clergy to occupy the various stations, which were becoming vacant, or rising as new posts of ministerial labor. Originally the term, during which students in divinity were required to stand candidates for orders, was one year. But, in 1826, the General Convention increased that term to three years, in accordance with the term of study required in the General Theological Seminary; giving, however, to the Bishops, with the consent of the clerical member.s of their Standing Committees, the power of dispensing with any portion of that term not greater than two years. After iiie enactment OPENING MOVEMENTS IN 1832. 365 of that canon, this dispensing power was frequen.tly exer- cised. Under the pressing exigences of the case,at had been exercised in the Eastern Diocese, perhaps, more frequently than in others. Whenever the Bishop, judging in view of the , circumstances around him, recommended, its exercise, the clerical members of the Standing Committee had uni- formly consented. But, now that a Theological School had been opened in the vicinity of Boston, the term of study in which was to be, like' that in the General Seminary, three years ; the Standing Cpmmittee in Massachusetts thought it best to restrict the exercise, of the dispensing power in all but the most special cases of necessity, or the most constrain- ing cases of expediency. An opportunity for action soon arose. Three ■ divinity students^ who had been candidates for the necessary canonical term of one year, presented them- selves before that Standing Committee for recommendation to Deacon's orders ; accompanying their apphcation with the. Bishop's official advice, that the dispensing power under the canon be exercised in their favor. The Standing Committee refused their consent; and sent their.' reasons for so doing to the Bishop in the form of a " resolution." The' wisdom of this refusal it is not my province to discuss. It is sufficient to say, that, admitting its wisdom, there was enough in all the past, and especially in the then present state of things in the Diocescj to render it, as it proved, an occasion of in- creased excitement through our Eastern Church. The act of the Standing Committee gave great dissatisfaction ; and the feeling instantly prepared to imbody and express itself, at the approaching Convention of the Church in Massachu- setts, in the election of a new set of members to the Stand- ing Committee, and of delegates to the General Convention. While this excitement was agitating the Church in Mas- sachusetts, the Church in Vermont was engaged in the ex- citing, but not agitating work of completing its separation from the Eastern Diocese, by electing its firsf Bishop. This election having been made, the, Convention followed it with a parting address to Bishop Griswold, which, as it is of high 366 MEMOIR, &C. interest,'! here insert. It belongs to the history of him, of •whom I write. " The Cont^ention of the Protestant Episcopal Church in the State of Vermont, " To the Right Reverend Alexander V. Griswold, Bishop of the Eastern Diocese ; "In assuming the station of a distinct and independent Diocese, we are reminded, at every step of our measures, of the relation, which our Church, during the period of twenty years, has sustained towards you. Amidst the interest at- tending this great and affecting crisis in our ecclesiastical concerns, our ' hearts are bowed as the heart of one man' at the thought of taking leave of him, whose hand«, after the manner of the holy Apostles, have been laid on us and on our children, blessing, confirming and ordaining in God's name. When we look back to the period Qf your first visi- tations, and consider that we were then ' the fewest of all people,' we feel thankfully sensible of that Providence, which set you over us in the Lord, and' which enabled you, by ex- ample, counsel and doctrine, to contribute much towards the revival of .His work among us. And now, in the very fact of our separation, we nlake it manifest that the good hand of our God has hitherto rested on us, multiplying and strength- ening us under your ministry ; and at length granting us such possessions and prospects both spiritual and temporal, as seem to make it plain that we ought to ask of the great Head of the Church the entire services of a Bishop. This crisis has indeed been delayed through an extreme unwillingness to deprive ourselves of the ministrations of a Bishop, whom we so truly revere and love. And we come to our present measures only under the conviction, that our Churches need a degree of attention, which no man can possibly render, whose field of duty, and weight of burdens are so great as yours. It may be truly said that the Lord has so multiplied the seed sown under your ministry, that the fruits have be- come more than you can gather. In compliance, therefore, with a suggestion often repeated by yourseK, we are at length PARTING LETTER FROM VERMONT, &C. 367 constrained tp invite ' another to enter into your labors,' in the full belief, ' that both he that hath sowed, and he that .shall reap, will tejoice together.' " And now, Reverend Father, while with grateful and affectionate hearts we take leave of you, ' sorrowing most of all that we shall see your face no more,' suffer, us, as the children of your prayers and labors of love, to beg an in- terest in your remenibrance and in yoitr daily supplications before the throne of grace; And be assured that, towards you, we shall never cease to cherish a filial regard ; nor will it .cease to be our hearts' desire, that the Lord will have you in His holy and special keeping ; sealing your office and ministry with abundant effusions of His Holy Spirit, and thus multiplying your ' crowns of rejoicing in the "day of the Lord Jesiis.'" Middlehury, May 31s<, 1832. This appropriate and touching tribute was signed by the thirteen clerical, and thirty-one lay members of the Con- vention, which acted in taking leave of one Bishop and in electing another. The feelings which it awakened in the bosom of the former can be more easily conceived than ex- pressed. He thus briefly responded to it in his Annual Ad- dress for 1833. " As the Churches in Vermont were, till lately, a part, of this Diocese, and met with us in this Con- vention, we should cherish towards them a greater degree of brotherly affection ; and you must feel some interest in knowing, what I understand to be the fact, that affairs in that Diocese continue very prosperous. Those beloved Churches, * among whom I have gone preaching the Qospel' for many years, and which probably in this world I shall see no more, will have a place daily in my remembrance, and not be forgotten in my prayers. We shall, I trust, soon meet in a Convention never to be separated." But, the principal incidents of this year, in their, power to move the Church, remain to be noticed. The present writer, having been elected to the vacant Rectorship of St. Paul's Church, Boston, entered on the duties of that parish. 368 MEMOIR, &C. early in the month of June, almost wholly ignorant of the ecclesiastical condition of things around him. The Con- vention of the Church in Massachusetts, however, which opened on the 20th of that month, revealed to hiin, the whole. He then found that he had approached a mountain, which, from a distance, had seemed quiet and beautiful, only to be covered with a somewhat large proportion of the lava and ashes, thrown up byitssudden, volcanic explosion. Could he, from that distance, have heard its low, premoniti^ry rumbling, or seen the heavy cloud, which was gathering so threateningly above it, this, to say the least, would have much increased the hesitation, which, even in his ignor^ce of the true state of things, had well nigh prevented his en- trance upon so important a sphere of duty. This incident, or train of incidents, is mentioned, not for the purpose of introducing a minute account of its par- ticulars, — but to give an idea of the condition of the Dio- cese at this period. It is too early in the day .to write the history of the Massachusetts Convention of 1832, anyfiirther than that history may be found in the documents, which have already been published to the world. There is indeed, a mass of materials, from which much additional light might be thrown on the subject. But, even if it should ever be deemed expedient to write more than has been written, this is not the time, and doubtlesp many wiH agree in saying, that the present writer is not the historian, for giving to the public more than the public already knows. Probably, what is here to be added will be deemed a sufficient notice of a series of events, the actors in which are soon to pass away, and of which the religious results alone will then be of any abiding importance. When the Convention of Massachusetts in 1832 came together, it was fo^nd that, without any previous concert, other than that of common sympathy in the events, which had transpired, and in the feelings, which, for years past, those events had been awakening, a majority, voting in the customary way, were prepared to elect a new Standing Com- mittee and a new delegation to the approaching General Con- MASSACHUSETTS MOVEMENTS IN 1832. 369 vention. Some of the old members in each of these bodies were indeed retained ; but the new members elected chang- ed the character of both. The result, when announced, threw the Convention into a high state of excitement ;' and an attempt was very soon made to . declare the elections null and void, on the ground, that they had not been made in strict conformity to the letter of the Constitution of the Church in Massachusetts. The debate, which ensued, was spirited ; but the attempt, which led to it, was not success- ful. It was opposed, especially by the Bishop, on the ground that, if these elections were null and void, so had been all the elections, which had been made under the constitution' for the last twenty years ; and that, as these elections had been made in the cu'stomary way, if their result had been in favor of all the former members of the Committee and Delegation, those, who now sought to set them aside, would questionless have been abundantly satis- fied with their constitutionality. But, although the attempt to set; aside the elections did not succeed, yet it was sufficient to uncap a laboring volcano and to kindle the flames of disunion into their fiercest glow. All the other States in the Diocese were heated bythem. They flashed up through the weekly religious, and through the daily secular, papers ; and scorching, even in their descent, were the mixed elements, which they cast abroad through the air. Other, and more distant Dioceses felt the shock of the commotion from the Trimountain city. Its wavy and heaving agitations rolled troublously through even the General Convention, which assembled the ensuing October. :And, had it not been for the auspicious results of that Convention, it is impossible to conjecture what would have been the effect of the whole on the remaining history and destinies of the Eastern Diocese. The true cause of all this commotion was to be found, I conceive, not merely in the infirmities of poor human na- ture, (infirm, however it may array itself on the one side, or on the other, of ecclesiastical questions) but in the great importance of these Massachusetts elections. They threaten- 370 BIEMOIR, &C. ed, if sustained', a new action in the ecclesiastical influences of that important member of the Eastern Diocese ; and the coming General Convention, before which was to be brought for decision one of the most profoundly serious and" agitat- ing questions, that had ever shaken the whole frame of our Ecclesiastical union, was to be the scene, in which this new action of Massachusetts influence was first to be felt. Bishop Chase of Ohio, amidst the troubles brought upon him by the affairs of Kenyon College, had recently resigned, not only the Presidency of that Institution, but also, as as- sociated with it by the Charter of the College, the Episco- pal jurisdiction of his Diocese ; and the Rev. .C. P. Mcll- vaine of Brooklyn, New York, had been forthwith elected his successor. Thus, before the General Convention of this year was to be brought the question ; — whether a Bishop in our Church could resign his Episcopal jurisdiction, and be left a Bishop at large ? Upon the decision of this question rested that of the proposed consecration of Mr. Mcllvaine ; and upon this hung dubiously the question whether any of the three candidates for consecration,* who • had recently been elected, would, at that time, be admitted to the higher ministry before them .-' The debate upon the leading ques- tion in this series was unusually protracted', eminently able, and painfully affecting. The honorable President Duer, of Columbia CoUege, New York, at the close of an argument, which lasted for several days, in favor of accepting Bishop Chase's resignation, and of consecrating his successor, could not .restrain his tears as he adverted, in dismissing his subject, to the probable effect on the Church at large of a refusal to ^consummate the action of Ohio. Our whole Church felt profoundly the solemnity of her position. The ground beneath her seemed in motion ; and awful apprehen- sion was alive, that it might cleave asunder, and leave the Church in two divisions on opposite sides of the chasm! * The present Bishops, Hopkins of Vermont, Mcllvaine of Ohio, and Smith of Kentucky. To these a, fourth Candidate was afterwards added, in the election of the Rev. Mr. Doane of Trinity Church, Boston, to the Episcopate of New Jersey, just on the eve of the General Convention. GENERAL CONTENTION OF 1832. 371 This whole attitude and movement of our general eccle- siastical affairs was rendered more afflictively troublous, than it would otherwise have been, by the painM position, in which the new delegation from Massachusetts were placed. They at least felt that the scenes, through which they were passing, were alive with prophecies of future weal or wo to the Church. Without following this allusion further, it will be enough to say, that, when the General Convention came to act on the principal question before it, the vote in the house of Delegates being taken iy States, there was but a ma- jority of one in favor of accepting the resignation of Bishop Chase and of proceeding to consummate the action of Ohio ; and that, had the election in Massachusetts resulted other- wise than it did, our whole Church would inevitably, have been precipitated upon a catastrophe, the disastrous conse- quences of which Omniscience alone could foresee, and Omnipotence alone, avert. Such was the position of our general affairs, in view of which the elections in Massachusetts were made ; and, al- though the whole importance and solemnity of this position was not, and could not have been, apparent at the time of those elections, yet, as " coming' events" often " cast their shadows before," it was from their evidently profound depths that those elections drew most of their power to disturb the Eastern Diocese, and to make our most troubled General Convention still more deeply troublous. But, " after the storm comes a calm." And so it proved in Massachusetts, — as well as in other parts of the Church. Her Theological school became suddenly extinct, by the consecration of Bishop Hopkins for Vermont. By that of Bishop Doane for New Jersey, her Standing Committee was left to act as it had been accustomed to act, in harmony with the Bishop's advice. The question, also, of a divisioh of the Eastern Diocese subsided, and for years afterwards was unfelt. And even " The Episcopal Missionary So- ciety" of the State fell into dormancy- after a period of use- 372 MEMOIR, &C. fill, but troubled activity : and thus the whole body of the Church there was left, after a few months, in a compara- tively motionless state. The pressure., on the feelings of Bishop Griswold, of all this period of agitation and change, may, after the views already given of his character, be easily conceived. He suffered deeply, but calmly. His spirit was afilictedj but his constancy was unmoved. His decisions and ac- tion were assailed, and he defended himself; but it was in his own way, without criminating others, and with a simple statement of his own principles of conduct, and of the facts, in view of which he had acted. In one of his letters of self-defence, the original-of which lies before me, and which was written at a time when one side accused •f ■ him of acting too much, and another of not acting enough, in the scenes, which .were passing, (a fact, which shews that, in what he did, he acted by himself, and for himself, and just so far as his own judgment prompted,) he makes the following remarks ; which, as they relate to himself alone, may, with propriety, be inserted here. " I am well aware -how much I am accused of want of energy and decision. I know, too, as well as those, who remind me of it, that had a clergyman under the jurisdiction of , done such a thing," (he alludes here to a certain article, which had just been published,) " he would soon have experienced the fate of , , &c. But I am not yet persuaded that the mild (and I trust impartial) manner, with which I have executed the office of a Bishop, is not according to the spirit of the Gospel, and the .example of its adorable author. So far as my conduct has been ac- cording to God's Word, I am satisfied with it. If a Bishop will become the head of a party, or strenuously enforce the views and promote the interests of one designation of religionists, by them of course he wiU be highly extolled. Such was the merit of many saints of old. I covet no such fame ; and will never be either the head or the tool of a party. Whether I am called High-church, or Low-church, MASSACHUSETTS MOVEMENTS IN 1832. 373 I am totally indifferent ; for I cannot easily decide which I most dislike. The former, it is well known, are the most impatient of control, the least willing to be governed. The canting language, a few years since so much used in Pennsylvania, about the Bishop's frknds, and the Bishop's enemies, was, in my view, very contemptible ; and my prayer is never to hear it in this Diocese. It is well known, that, in seasons of excitement, and when party spirit pre- dominates, to be impartial satisfies neither side ; — but I had rather be censured for doing right, than praised for doing wrong. One thing I will say (call it boasting if you will) in defiance of all proof to the contrary, that I have uniformly avoided cabals, and intrigue, and have endeavor- ed in some degree to follow the example of Him, who ever spake openly, and in secret said nothing. My opinion, when proper to express it, I have been ready to give openly, and, I trust, without the fear of man." To those, who were with the Bishop through all the agi- tating events, at which I have glanced, and who observed the meekly calm and subdued, yet intensely solicitous and watchful spirit, with which he passed through this period of trial, the above remarks will appear a fit imbodying of his mind ; committed to none, striving to do right by all ; beaij- ing reproach meekly, yet, while standing under it, exclaim- ing manfully; " Strike, hut hear me." Just before the great General Convention in October of this year, he met the Convention of the Eastern Diocese in Boston. In his Annual Address, having recently resigned his jurisdiction of the State of Vermont, as one of the origi- nal integral parts of the Diocese, and knowing that the case of Bishop Chase would soon bring up before the General Convention the question whether such resignations were admissible in our Church, he took occasion ta state his views on the general principle involved. His statement is brief ; but it embraces, nevertheless, the substance of what was afterwards said, on the affirmative, in that great ten days' II 374 MEMOIR, &C. debate, to whicli I hare alluded in speaking of the General Convention of this year. " As I have resigned the jurisdiction of Vermont," he observes, " and that state is now become a separate Dio- cese, it will be sufficient to state, and I am happy to have it in my power truly to state, that I leave it in great prosperity. Eighteen years ago they had but one, or at most two offi- ciating clergymen : now they have twelve or more. They then had not one Church edifice properly their own ; now they have twelve new ones, which are consecrated, and five or six more, which are built,- or in building. Then^ if I recollect aright, they had three organized parishes : in their late Convention, twenty-four were represented. Thousands of dollars they have in that time expended in obtaining possession of the lands, which belong to this Church : now, as we hope, the business is settled, and those expensive litigations at an end. " From ourpublicjournalsit appears tobe made a question, whether a Bishop can, consistently with his duty and the nature of his office, relinquish the jurisdiction of Churches, which have been under his Episcopal care ; and it will of course be proper that I should express my views upT)n this point. The question with me is one of principle only, not of party feeling, or of respect to a particular case ; and I know not, from the Scriptures, or the nature of the office, from the Canons or the usages of the Church, any objec- tion to a Bishop's resigning his Diocese, which does not, in principle, also apply to a Rector's leaving his charge. Should it be said that the evil, in the former case, might be greater ; it must be allowed, that it so rarely happens, that the evil in the latter case is, in fact, far greater ; and were it thought expedient to legislate upon the subject, a Canon forbidding presbyters to leave 1heir parishes would seem far the most necessary. Very few instances, in modern times especially, if even one, can-be found, in which the Church has actually suffered by a Bishop's voluntarily resigning his jurisdiction. The sacredness of the office cannot with more reason be REASONS FOR EPISCOPAL RESIGNATIONS. 375 urged in the one case, than in the other ; — indeed, it cannot be reasonably nrged in either case ; because the office is not resigned. " If it be said that a Bishop is ordained with a view to his having a particular jurisdictional the same is true of a pres- bjrter. We do not ordain one, except he has a title ; some particular cure, or ministry for -which he is appointed. A Bishop has pecuUar duties, and a more extensive jurisdic- tion : but the Elder is a Bishop or Overseer in his parish, and so styled in the Scriptures. And though the election to a particular Diocese is mentioned in the ordination ser- vice, yet the authority given is general ; it is, ' The office and work of a Bishop in the Church of God,' without re- striction or regard to any particular jurisdiction. According- ly, it is a common thing, in England, for a Bishop to resign his jurisdiction of one Diocese, and take charge of another : which shews clearly that, in the view of the Church, from which we emanated, there is nothing in the connection be- tween a Bishop and his Diocese too sacred to be dissolved. And we have already had an instance, in the largest Dio- cese of. our country, of a Bishop's resigning his jurisdiction, and not being allowed to resume it, though it was what he afterwards attempted. His successor, during his life, acted and was recognized as principal Bishop, and as such had a seat in the General Convention. And while Bishop Pro- voost was still hving, Bishop Hobart was an assistant, not to him but to Bishop Moore ; and with his pen he ably de- fended the right of a Bishop to resign his jurisdiction. And our General Convention, by admitting Bishops Moore and Hobart, for many years, under these circumstEmces, to take their seats and act as members of its body, has virtually re- cognised the r.esignation of Bishop Provoost. That body has the Conventional power, and perhaps the right, to make a law, forbidding in future such resignations : but, besides the unfitness of attempting to compel one to execute an office against his inclination, and possibly against the con- victions of his conscience, it is easy to conceive of several 376 MEMOIR, &C. we may turn ' to the right hand,' as well as ' to the left ;' be too tenacious of old habits, or too much inclined to change. In many cases, if a minister of Christ see but little fruit of his labors, he will do wisely to vary, or to increase them. If his preaching and exhortation ' in season' will not induce the people to ' endure sound doctrine,' let him do it ' out of season.' The same God, who has ordained, that the fruits of the earth shall be obtained by cultivating the soil, has also appointed, that the teaching and prayers, and other prudent and zealous efforts of his people, of his ministers especially, shall be the means of producing repentance and faith, and holiness of life : and as in the one case, so /in the other^ the THE BISHOP ON CLERICAL ASSOCIATIONS. 387 fruit will generally be in proportion to the labor.rightly be- stowed. At our ordination, it is most solemnly enjoined, and the, oath of God is upon us, ' never to cease our labor, our care and diligence, until we have done all, that lieth in us, according to our boutiden duty, to bring all such as are, or shall be committed to our charge, unto that agreement in the faith and the knowledge of God, and to that ripeness and perfectness of age in Christ, that there be no place among us either for error in religion or for viciousness of life.' Though there may be, among us, some difference of opinion respecting the expediency ofwhat are called clerical associa- tions, this would be no good reason, why they, who believe them to be useful, and they especially', who have found them to be so, should not so associate. In this, as in many other things, we should follow the Scriptural rule of charity ; ' Let not him, who eateth, despise him, that eateth not : and let not him, who eateth not, judge him, that eateth. Let every one be persuaded in his own mind,' and do what he believes will best promote the glory of God and the -salva- tion of men, without judging or censuring those, who, from like honest conviction, conduct differently. Where there is not this spirit of forbearance, there will be no peace. That spirit, which sets us to stretch, or to cut all to our own length, is the spirit of persecution, and the enemy of Christ. That they, who are equally and strongly attached to our Church, should in some things differ respecting what wiU best pro- mote its prosperity, and the salvation of men, is what must be expected, and should give' no offence. And permit me to repeat what, some years since, I once observed, that, to make for ourselves, or for our party, exclusive' claims to Churchmanship, is quite as arrogant, uncharitable and wicked, as tO' say of religious professors, that they are not Christians ; or of ministers of Christ, that they do not preach the Gospel, We cannot be too cautious how we thus judge our brethren: ■* to their own master let them stand or fall.' " Set forth upon the surrounding waters under favor of such a breeze of 'charity, the new Convocation pursued its way, hoping for a calm career of usefulness, but prepared for any 388 MEMOIR, '&C. roughening of the -weather, which might arise. It was, as I have said, in effect, a voluntary Missionary Society. No one was compelled to join it ; yet all were at liberty to join, who approved its objects and its measures. It had its written constitution and by-laws, with its annual elections of Presi- dent, Secretary and Treasurer. Its objects were, the reviv- ing of decayed and feeble parishes, and , the building up of new ones ; the cultivation of religious affections, especially of brotherly love, among the clergy; and theincreaseof true religion and of Christian benevolence, among the people of their respective parishes. And its measures were, social prayer and religious conversation, at the time of its meetings for business ; preaching and exhortation to the people of the parishes, in which its meetings were held ; and the raising of missionary fiincls for the support of its missionaries, both in old parishes and in new. Its members were clergy of various shades of opinion on mere Church questions, though harmo- nious in their advocacy of the objects and measures of the Convocation ; and. its missionaries wer£ selected, not be- cause they were either high, or low, in their Church views, but because they were faithful and useful preachers of the Gospel, as well as truly attached to the Church, in which they ministered. Its meetings were, for the most part, month- ly ; and its labors, from parish to parish, truly abundant in amount and fruitful in results. Under its patronage sprang up, during the few years of its operation, the six new and important parishes of our Church in New Bedford, Roxbury, Fall-River, Andoyer, Springield and Lynn ; with attempts, which, for the time, indeed, were unsuccessfiil, in Wor- cester, Webster and Ipswich ; besides the aid, which it ex- tended in reviving and sustaining two or three of the feeble parishes, already in existence. It was, also, under its coun- tenance and pecuniary support, that the present religious paper of that State, " The Christian Witness and Church Advocate," was started oh the principles of the Convoca- tion itself, excluding controyersy, and devoting itself to the maintenance, on their own broad base, of the Gospel and-the Church; principles, which, it is but just to say, were most NOTICE OF MASSACHUSETTS CONVOCATION. 389 strictly observed, while the Convocation was in existence, and even for several years afterwards ; and which have, in some measure, continued to govern it even to the present day at the opening of its tenth year. While the Convocation was thus in action, the old Massa- chusetts Episcopal Missionary Society continued to languish, notwithstanding repeated attempts to remodel and revive. it; till finally, at the close of the year 1836, the new Massachu- setts Episcopal " Board of Missions" having arisen as the accredited agent of the Convention itself, that Society sur- rendered its charter into the hands of the Legislature of the State, transferred its little effects and debts to the Board of Missions, and expired. Meantime, the Convocation, having eSected much of the objects, for which it was organized ; having restored activity even beyond itself to the almost paralyzed body of the Church in Massachusetts, and having added greatly to the strength of that Church, both in the num- ber of its flourishing parishes and in the power of its religious life, as well as in the salvation of inany souls, the fruits of its ministrations, — prepared to close its missionary labors, and to merge that part of its system in the more general organiza- tion of the Board of Missions for the State. This measure was, indeed, strongly opposed by several of its members, on the ground that it was, in itself, the best of domestic mission- ary organizations, as well as the best of discretionary means for promoting the growth of pure religion in the Church. Still, the desire of giving unity to the missionary operations of the Church throughout' the State prevailed with the majority; and the Convocation therefore voluntarily trans- ferred to the new Board both its missions and its missionaries, soon after the surrender of its charter by the old Missionary Society. Nevertheless, the spirit of the Convocation lived on. It was not a thing to die but with those, who had cherished it. For several years afterwards, it continued to meet under its original name ; and even since that was dropped, its form has partially survived in the several smaller clerical associations, which have sprung up on its former field of labor. Its missionary work passed into the 390 MEMOIR, &C. hands of the Board in connexion with the Convention; but its meetings for social prayer and conversation among the clergy, and for preaching and exhortation to the people, are, ■with some modifications, perpetuated in the associations, which have been named^ and which continue their meetings and their labors to the present day. I have said that, in its progress, the Convocation realized some of its worst fears, as well as many of its best hopes. It met with opposition from the moment of its fifst public ac- tion, and continued to meet it till the day of its last delibera- tive motion. As it might have been expected, however, this opposition was most violent in its earliest stages. No sooner was the organization known than its members .were charged with entertaining party designs ; and this charge was reiterated, though with less and less confidence, as they passed quietly on towards the close of their labors. On this subject. the present writer feels qualified to speak ; and he speaks but, what he knows, when he says, that the charge thus urged was without any reasonable ground. If, indeed, by party designs in the Convocation, be meant a tendency to make its members of one mind in faith and affec- tion ; or to unite tb em in the pursuit of one object, the salva- tion of souls and the growth of the Church ; or to prepare them for acting in peace, and possibly, though not certainly, ill sympathy, whenever ^ny of tlie great interests of the Church should demand their action ; the charge may be said to have been just. In this sense, the Church itself, so far as it is filled with the true Gospel, and administered in a right spirit, may be called a party. It has a tendency to maintain and increase the party, of which Christ is the head, in dis- tinction from that, which is governed by " the god of this world." But, if, by party designs in the Convocation, be meant, plan? and measures, conceived of forethought and carried out with afler-thought, for the promotion of individu- als in the Church, or for the advancement of any interests, separate or diverse from the general welfare of the Church ; no charge was ever more unfounded. Of all such designs, directly or indirectly entertained, the Convocation, fi:om its NOTICE OF MASSACHUSETTS CONVOCATION. 391 first thought and its fi?st step, to its last breath and its last act, stood wholly guiltless. Never, it is believed, did any body of Christian ministers labor with a more single aim for one object, the growth of religion in their own hearts and in the hearts of their people. Never was any such body less justly chargeable with a design of promoting any mere party interests in the Church. At its meetings was often heard rising the prayer, which drew all hearts into one before a Father's throne. Silent tears often fell there at the thought of a Saviour's love for sinful men. The hand was often opened there to give of the httle, which it held, to the holy work of missions. Plans were often devised there, and labors projected, for planting the Church on Some hitherto neglected spot, or for rebuilding it in some of its waste places. Congregations were often gathered there, from amid the toils of the week, to listen solemnly to the word of life, as it sounded forth in the tones of love, and as it called to the work of repentance and faith, and to the labors of charity and zeal. And ministers of Christ often separated thence, blessing God that He Jiad awakened them to new sympathy in His cause, and to new evidence of their sonship with Christ ; or that He had given them fresh experience of the blessedness of brotherly love, and fresh proofs of the luxury of at least striving to do good. All these things, and many others like them, were heard and seen at the meetings of the Convocation ; but never once the whisper of party intrigue and cabal ; the plot and the counterplot, the mining and the counter-mining of an ecclesiastical campaign ; the canvass- ing of claims in party leaders, and the discussion of questions in party strife. 'AH these things, and whatever else was like them, would have sounded and seemed but as the gibberish and the glidings of an unbidden ghost, to every member of the Convocation ; and the breath of prayer would instantly have laid the apparition beyond all power of rising again. Sweet is the memory of those days, on which ministers of Christ used to meet together upon that field of labor, some- times with their Bishop in the midst of them, and always with an assurance that his prayers were rising in their behaU"; 392 MEMOIR, &C. days full of the blessedness of brotherly love, and familiar with the peaceful and elevating power of a consciousness, that they were praying, and laboring, and sacrificing for that one object, which brought their Saviour down to earth, the salvation of sinful' men. The fruits of the Convocation are ripening yet ; and, it may be hoped, will multiply with^i their^ ripening, 'till the great harvest day shall gather them all. Nor is this said with a wish to depreciate the valuable labors of its prede- cessor, the Massachusetts Episcopal Missionary Society. This body, till the occurrence of those events in l831 — -2, of which I have given a sketch, and which led to its ex- tinction, was both active and useful ; many of its meetings were pervaded with, a beautiful and blessed spirit; and the good, which it didj will remain to testify that it neither hved nor labored in vain. But, the close of its day was stormy ; and the storm, in which it passed away, moved over the whole course of the Convocation itsel£ The rising of the Board of Missions was hailed, by many, as a bow of promise, foretokening the approach of a calih ; and many a prayer has doubtless gon^ up, ta the end, that, gathering to itself all the brightness and heavenliness of its predecessors, while it leaves below whatever in them was dark and earthly, it may long stand, both to collect and to radiate the life and the charities of our Massachusetts Church. In leaving, now, this sketch of the Massachusetts Con- vocation and its times, I must go back for the purpose of gathering up the few unconnected incidents which lie along the way, already passed over. So far as they relate to the Bishop, however, they will be but few. He was almost in- cessantly engaged in travelling and laboring through his now growing Diocese. His Annual Address for 1834 shews an uncommon amount of duty thus performed. The separation of Vermont had narrowed somewhat the drcuit of his travels ; but it did not diminish the number of his journeys, or the amount of his labors. On the contrary, the growth of the Church in the other parts of his Diocese ORATORIOS m THE CHURCH. 393 quickly compensated for the portion, which had been cut off; and the calls for his services were kept steadily on the increase. Such, indeed, continued to be the case even to the close of his life. His last days were crowded full, if not fullest, of these abounding toils. In the year 1834, 1 find a little item of correspondence, on a subject not withoutinterest in itself, and made specially interesting in its connexion by the opinion on it, which was elicited from the Bishop. A highly respected Layman, in one of the distant parishes of his Diocese, was induced by circumstances to address to the Bishop, and some others of the Clergy, the following queries ; dated, "January 21, 1834. " Will you obligingly favor me with your opinion on the following points ? " 1 Are Oratorios of Sacred Music a proper entertain- ment for Christian people ? "2. Would you allow the performance of them in your Church for the ostensible object of raising money for the poor ; admittance of course to be purchased only with money .' " 3. Do you think that the use of holy Scripture in such Music, not for the avowed purpose of worship, is an irreve- rent use of it, though the persons using it may be of a good moral character ? " 4. Admitting that you answer the first two in the affirmative, should you consider it wise to allow such per- formances in an Episcopal Church, recently established in a neighborhood, where it is only beginning to be popular ; that neighborhood being composed, in a great degree, of serious, or professing Christians of other denominations ? I am,&c. E. A. N." To these inquiries, the Bishop returned the following replies : "Salem, January 28th, 1834. " Dear Sir,— Your esteemed favor of the 21st is received ; 394 MEMOIR, &C. and I proceed to answer, according to the wisdom given me, the important questions, which you propose. " In answer to the first, whether oratorios are a 'proper amusement for Christian people ; though being pleased or entertained by music is not, that I know, imsuitable to the Christian character, when but moderately indulged, yet, I have ever thought that using the Sacred Words and momen- tous truths 6i the Scriptures for mere entertainment is very improper. If Christian? are present> at such entertainments, they should continually reverence the solemn truths uttered, however others may disregard them. " The second question, whether I would allow of such in my Church, to raise money for a charitable purpose ; is not so easily decided. 'AH things,, which are lawful, are not expedient ;' but under what circumstances things unlawful* may be expedient, is one of the inost difficiilt questions in practical religion. St; Paul, in 'becoming aU thing^ to aU men:' went, in some few instances, farther than I should dare to go ; though undoubtedly he did right. I should certainly regret to have such an exhibition in my Church ; but still, I can easily conceive of circumstances being such as to render it, in its probable consequences, the less of two evils. Such cases excepted, I should not willingly consent to have them in my Church. " The fliird question, I have virtually answered under the first. I think with the Rev. John Newton respecting it. I have often wished that, even in singing schools^ which are supposed to be a preparation for worshipping God, such use of soleron Scriptural language could be dispensed with. It involves, however, much the same questions, as reading the Scriptures in common schools ; respecting which Chris- tians think differently. Worldly people will do what they please ; religion carinot control them. Christians, in my judgment, should never use God's Word, or his house, but with suitable reverence and devotion. " The fourth question, I have answered under the second. * He apparently means, things about which there is no law. ORATOEIOS IN THE CHURCH. 395 I do not consider it wise to allow of that, or of any use of a Church, which has no respect to God's holy worship; ex- cept in cases, wherein a refusal will be likely to produce greater evils to the Church and to religion. Many such cases I have known ; and you can easily imagine them. In things of this sort, the greater danger, no doubt, is of being too lax : but, in things not absolutely essential, we may be too rigid : and, in deciding the right course, we need to ' be wise as serpents and harmless as doves.' * * Your very affectionate friend, Alex. V. Griswold." In the queries here answered, there are really but two main points. The one touches the use of Scriptural lan- guage in Oratorios got up for amusement ; the other touches the use of our Churches for such Oratorios. Whether the Bishop has answered this latter to the satisfaction of all, all concerned must be left to judge. He appears to stand on the middle ground between those, who think, that the con- secration of a Church edifice has no effect, in rendering a secular use of it improper.;, and those, who think, that such a consecration almost imparts a moral holiness to its mate- rials. But whatever may be thought of his position in this particular, few serious Christians, I apprehend, will deny the justness of his remarks in reply to the former of the two points involved in the queries. The thoughtless use of Scriptural language in our fashionable Oratorios by those, who would shrink, with something like loathing, from the worship, which that language really implies, is an evidently gross impropriety. But, as the Bishop observes ; '• Worldly people will do what they please : religion cannot control them." In their entertainments, they mean to' celebrate, not* Messiah, but the Master, who has set him to music ; and we must even give them the bold liberty, which they demand. " Man praises man. Desert in arts or arms 396 MEMOIR, &C. Wins public honor ; and ten thousand sit , Patiently present at a sacred song. Commemoration-mad; cofitent to hear (O wonderftd effect of music's power !) Messiah's eulogy for Handel's sake." . During the year 1835, the Bishop was induced, by the growing pressure of circumstances, to relinquish the charge of a parish, and devote himself wholly to the care of his Diocese. ' After having been, therefore, for fortyj years, a laborious parish minister, twenty-four of which were spent in the double duties of parish and Diocese, he resigned his Rectorship of- St. Peter's Church, Salem, and removed to the city of Boston, where he spent the reniainder of his days ; provision having heen made, by the Diocese and by individuals, to supply the lack of a parochial salary. The circumstances, which rendered this step expedient were, the great increase of his Diocesan duties, and the gentle admoni- tiohs, which came from advancing years ; standing, as he then was, on the verge of three score and ten. This removal was the occasion of a very painful private correspondence ■wfith one of the leading members of Trinity Church, Boston ; in which he was called to vindicate his course in the troubles of 1825 between Dr. Jarvis and St. Paul's, and in £hose of the memorfeible 1832 ; as well as in several other passages of his Episcopal life. This corres- pondence was one of intense ■ interest. But, as^I have al- ready "remarked, it is too early in the day to give the private history of those trying periods. Too many of the actors survive, and too many materials yet remain to be kindled into a blaze by the dropping of any spark of indiscretion, to render the doing even of full justice to the Bishop a safe and salutary measure. It is enough to say that, in this particular correspondence, he enters with his usual meek- ness, though with even more than his usual point, into the duly of self-defence ; shewing the groundlessness of nume- rous and gross misrepresentations of his conduct, and prov- ing that, throughout the troubles, which hadbeset him, he had done nothing but what had been required by the Canons of ANNUAL ADDRESS FOR 1835. 397 the Church, and the duties of his office ; and that, even in this, he had done as little, and done that little as kindly, as a faithful conscience and a meek spirit could either allow, or prompt. His Annual Address for this year, besides shewing the usual amount of Episcopal. duties performed, brings forward once more the subject of a Diocesan Theological Seminary, and urges it upon the consideration of his clergy and people. It also dwells at large on the expediency and probability of a dissolution of the Eastern Diocese, and the election of a Bishop for each of the four States, of which it was com- posed. The General Convention of this year had just closed its important session at Philadelphia, after having remodelled our General Doifiestic and Foreign Missionary Society. That Convention had been characterized by an unusual ap- pearance of union, brotherly love, and evangelical zeal; insomuch, that many looked upon it as the dawning of a new era in our Church ; an era, from, which was to date the universal reign of harmony, and of sound evangehcal and Episcopal views, over the length and breadth of our commu- nion. In this feeling, our Bishop was disposed largely to sympathize. Hence his touching allusion to the subject, when speaking of tiie General Convention in this.Annual Address. " Piety, and of course, love and a zeal for the spirituaUty of religion, are evidently increasing • among our people. That system of evangehcal truth, and of the doctrines of eternal life, which has long appeared to me the most essen- tial to the Gospel of our .blessed Saviour, is now received in our Churches more generally than, twenty years ago, I had any hope of living to see ; and the sight of it incUnes me to- say with Simeon in the Gospel ; ' Lord, now lettest thou thy servant depart in peaCe.' " Alas ! had he been gifted with a prophet's vision ; could he, from that high point of observation, have looked for- ward and seen 'the tide of error, which was, even then, be- ginning to set westward across the Atlantic ; could he have 5 n. 398 MEMOIR, &C. foreseen, what his own eyes, before he finally slept with his fathers, beheld of the approach of this tide and of its setting up into the channels of our Church ; — he might indeed, have sighed to " depart," but his hope of departing " in peace" would have given place to heavy forebodings of evil to come ! While the Bishop, in his Addresses to the Convention of the Diocese in 1835 and 1836, was reintroducing- and re- commending anew and earnestly the subject of establishing an Episcopal Theological Seminary, the members of the Church in Massachusetts and Rhode Island were practically engaged in a renewed attempt to effect so desirable an ob- ject. *rln the former state, application was made to the legis- lature, by a Committee appointed on the subject, for an act of incoipo'ration ; and in the latter, a resolution was adopted in .Convention to raise $25,000 as an endowment for one of the professorships in the proposed institution. At the same time, the Rev- Mr. Vaughan, of St. Peter's Churcli, Salem, was appointed an agent, by the Massachu- setts Committee, for the collection of other funds through the Diocese in aid of the general objects of' the Seminary. Ac- cordingly, when the Convention of the Church in Massa- chusetts met in the year 1836, the Bishop, as chairman of its Committee,'presented a Report, which ^ewed that a deep and lively zeal was felt, and that some encouraging progress had been made, in the contemplated work, v Be- sides the $25,000 jpledged from Rhode Island, the agent had obtained conditional subscriptions to the general fund of upwards of $22,000 ; while the several towns of Lowell, Worcester, Newbuiyport, Taunton, Northampton and Pitts- field, besides places not named, vied with each other in the liberality of their offers of land, as a gift for the site of the Seminary buildings. Definite offers from the three first named towns were made, each of which was estimated at the value of $10,000. The Committeej in their reports, stated that an act of in- corporation for the institution had been passed by the Legislature of the State ;— but, as the bill afforded no THEOLOGICAL SCHOOL. 399 security, that the funds raised should be applied, exclusively and perpetually, to education fpr the ministry of the, Pro- testant Episcopal Church ; and was, moreover, made repeal- able, without cause or forfeiture, at the ^pleasure of the Legislature ; they recommended, that the biU be returned to the Secretary's office .with their non-acceptance respect- filUy annexed ; preferring an un-incorporated institution, to one incorporated on such a base. The Committee also reported that, although the sum of $200,000, as recommended in a resolution, passed at a highly respectable meeting on the subject in the city of Boston, was desirable as an ultimate endowment of the Seminary, yet it was expedient to open the institution for the reception of students, so soon as the sum of $100,000 should be secured ; — and that it was desirable to endow three professorships, before expending any thing in the erection of buildings. Such, with a plan for the Seminary, being the principal points touched in the Report, the Convention in Massachu- setts, proceeded to appoint a Board of Trustees, for the proposed institution, and to take measures for the increase of the funds to the amount required. And as the subscrip- tions, which had been obtained by the agent, Mr. Vaughan, were made on the condition that $50,000 be secured with- in a year from his appointment ; the Convention, estimating the amount already subscribed at $26,000, voted to assume, and make itself responsible for, the sum of $25,000 ; in the hope that, although this could not be considered as a legally binding subscription, yet those, who had already subscribed, would feel so much of confidence in the ability and fideUty of the Convention, as would render them willing to pay their own subscriptions, and thereby placfe the full endow- ment of the institution, at no distant day, beyond reason- able doubt. At the same time, the respective parishes in the state were called on to name the sum, which they would be willing to pay annually, for five years, towards raising the 400 MEMOIR, &C. actual endowment to the required amount of $100,000 ; as the result of which it was found that the further sum of $28,750 was, in this informal way, pledged. Thus the prospects of an endowment stood, at the close of this Convention, as follows : Estimated amount subscribed to the agent, $26,000 Amount assumed by the Convention, - 25,000 Amount offered from Rhode Island, - 25,000 Amount promised by the parishes of Massachu- setts, say, - - " - - - - 28,000 Total, $104,000 But, though these sums might with ease have been raised, had there been but one mind on thesubject, and that mind as thoroughly energized and prepared for action as a large portion, of the Church was found to be, yet the movement here came to a stand. The pledge of the Convention was not deemed sufficient by those, who had conditionally sub- scribed to the agent ; their subscriptions, therefore, except in a few small sums, remained unpaid ; the subsequent meetings of the Board of Trustees were unproductive of results ; the Annual Convention in Massachusetts, for 1837, made a feeble attempt to revive interest in the subject ; and then the whole work was once more silently abandoned. • It is true, that one reason, why this really spirited effort, (for such in truth was its original character) proved thus in- effectual, was found in the -discovery, that the Rev. Dr. Potter, who had. been looked to as a principal Professor in the proposed Seminary, could not be induced to return to Massachusetts, for the purpose of entering on the duties of the institution. Still, it is believed, that the failure had other and deeper reasons. The causes, which acted so powerfully in 1832, were yet in hidden, though effective operation. In their counter&ting influence alone can be found a full explanation of the fact, that, notwithstanding the very deep interest in a Theological Seminary for the Eastern Diocese, which had been awakened in the minds SENIOR BJSHOP. 401 not only of a large portion of the clergy, but also of a cor- responding portion of the laity ; and notwithstanding the amount of promising effort for its endowment, which was actually made ; the whole work was thus brought to a si- lent but immovable standj and what may be termed the favorite object of the Bishop left to slumber for the rest of his life. I say, to slumber ; for it is believed that, so far "as endowed schools for theological learning shall be approved by the cool, second thought of the present and the coming age, the demand for such a school in the Eastern States still exists, and must ultimately enforce effectually its claims, and wake up effectually the plans and measures, which have fallen asleep. Whether such endowed schools mil be ap- proved by that second thought, is a different ^ question, — and one, which need not here be agitated. It will be enough to say, that thebest theological Seminary, which the Eastern Diocese ever had, — perhaps the best, that any Diocese will ever have, — was found by his students in Bishop Griswold's own house and parish at Bristol. TJiere are many reasons why such practical theology, as was taught there, will ever, in the main, be found better than that, which is,, to so great an extent, taught amidst the dreamy speculations and the- scholastic subtleties of' most, if not all, of the endowed institutions of Theological learn-, ing, whether in our own, or in other lands. On the 17th of July, 1836, occurred the lamented de- cease of Bishop White; in consequence of which Bishop tjriswold became the senior on our Episcopal bench, and thp presiding officer in the house of Bishops. Upon the announcement, of the event in Boston, a meeting of clergy was called at the house of Bishop Griswold, at which were passed truly appropriate resolutions, expressive -of the sense, which the members of the meeting entertained of the great worth of the deceased, and of the bereavement sustained by his immediate family, by his Diocese, and by the Church at large ; and recommending the clergy of the Eastern Diocese to take suitable notice of the affliction in • LL* 402 MEMOIR, &C. their ' sermons on some one of the Sundays during the month of August. At the same time, a form of prayer was set forth by the Bishop to be used on the occasion, whenever such commemorative sermons should -be preached. From what has already been said on thi-s subject, it will easily be conceived that it was with extreme reluctance, and only after earnest solicitation, that Bishop Griswold con- sented to act' as presiding Bishop, after the decease of Bishops Hobart and White. When once invested with office, properly so termed, its duties he"would perform, what- ever their performance might cost him. But wh^n the question was, whether he should take office, or eveil assume a new post for the discharge of its functions, every manifes- tation of his character, which we have thus far seen, is luminous with this truth, that he was one of the last men on>^arth to appear where he hid any reason for believing, that he was not wanted, or was not welcome. It is true, that, by a rule of the House of Bishops, adopted in 1832, he now becaine the presiding member in that House, when- ever he should be present in General Convention ; that it wis his place to preside at all future consecrations, which he might attend ; and that he was expected to perform cer- tain bther duties under the Canons. But, then, he questioned the propriety of that rule ; and, considering that, it was a mere rule, and might at any moment in' General Convfention be abolished, he did not look upon its existence, at that time', as any good reason why, under the peculiar circum- stances of his case, h^ should consent to take the place flius assigned him. Soon after/ the decease of Bishop White, he received a friendly letter from Bishop Onderdonk of New York, touch- ing this whole subject. This letter has not been preserved : but the original-- draft of his r^ply is in my hands ; and as it illustrates his feelings at this period of his life, I insert it, with the exception of that part, in which he speaks of the |)ecM/iar ground of his reluctance to take the plhce assigned him by the ruk of the House of Bishops. Of this ground f LETTER TO BISHOP ONDEEDONK. 403 enough was said when transcribing from his Auto-biography the account of his consecration. His reply to BishOp On- derdonk is dated : "Bostonj December 22d,1836. " Right Rey. and Dear Sir, — Your kind favor of the 7th inst. was in due time and thankfully receiyed. Other en- gagements have caused some delay in the answer. " I doubt the wisddhi of making the oldest of our body the presiding Bishop. It is true, that his pecuhar duties are noi many, nor very important ; but they are something ; and by this rule they will frequently, as in the present in- stance, fall upon one, who resides far from the centre ; ren- dering the discharge of them less convenient to him and to the Churches generally. I would prefer that he should be the Bishop of New York, or of Philadelphia. And, (as in the present case also,) these duties wiU often, if not always, fall upon one, who, by reason of old age, is least capable of performing them. My labors, too, in visiting Churches scattered over four States, once at least each year, occupy allthe time, that I can well devote to journeying." * " But we mnst take things as they are. Whatever may be my feelings, I desire, far as I am able, to perform every duty, which may not as well, or better, be done by another person. The question; on which your letter now calls for my decision, is, whether, under existing circumstances, I ought to be present ai the meetings on the 7th and the 30th of June, as you propose, and also preach the ordination ser- mon." (These meetings were those of the Board of Mis- sions in Baltimore,' and of the Trustees of the General Theological Seminary in New York.) "I am very sure that.others can perform all the duties proposed better and more acceptably than I can : but I would pay due regard to the request- of the Domestic Committee, and to your friend- ly invitation ; and it would certainly give me much plea-^ sure to be present and act with my respected brethren on all those occasions. Besides the difficulties intimated above, I have three Churches to consecrate in three extreme parts 404 MEMOIR, &C. of this Diocese, which will require three journeys in the, Spring. And if in June I journey to the South, I must also be absent from the Conventions of Massachusetts, Rhod& Island and Maine, all of which I ought, if practicable, and it has been my intention, to attend. I may perhaps be at New'' York on the 30th, if not at Baltimore on the 7th. What I would now propose, and all perhaps that I ought at present to engage,-, is, to consult with the clergy and others of this Diocese ; and if they approve, or consent to my ab- sence from it, at a time, when I shall be most needed in it, I will, the Lord permitting, comply with all that you pro- pose ; of which I will endeavor to give seasonable informa- tion. But, considering the circumstances, above stated, and my very advanced age, it will -be well that a substitute should be seasonably appointed, to preach the Missionary sermon, and also to deliver the Address to the students- at the Seminary commencement. " There is another subject, of not less importance, which it seems proper now to mention. A Pastoral Letter is to be prepared. -For many years this has been done by one, in whom we all confided, but whose face we shall see no more. This, surely, will not henceforth be considered as the duty, ex offido, of the Senior Bishop. For several good reasons I should decline it. Probably the House of Bishops will ap- point some of their members as a Committee for that purpose. But previous to our meeting, something must be done ; and it is my desire and request, that you and others of our Epis- copal brethren, who often, have the opportunity of meeting, will consider of this subject, and some tWo, or more of you consent to prepare the Pastoral Letter for 1838. Should.my life be prolonged till that time, I doubt not but I shall hearti- ly acquiesce in what shall be presented. " Accept of my thanks for your kind letter, and be assured that I continue, . With sentiments of respect and esteem. Your friend, and brother, Alexander V. Griswold." The Rt. Rev. B. T. Ondekdonk. DISSOLUTION OF THE DIOCESE AGAIK PKOPOSED. 405 Whether the Bishop actually attended the meetings, to ■which he was thus urged, I have not at hand the means of ascertaining. I have, indeed, a manuscript copy of an Address, ■which he dehvered before the students of the General Theological Seminary ; but whether it was dehvered in 1837, or in 1841, 1 am uncertain. In consequence of the action of the General Convention in 1835, allowing ^mall Dioceses to request the House of Bishops to nominate, and the House of Clerical and Lay^ Deputies to elect. Bishops for them, before they were entitled by canon to elect for themselves ; Bishop Griswold suggested to the Convention of the Eastern Diocese in 1835, the ex- pediency of once more entertaining the question of a dis- solution of that body; since, now, the Dioceses of New Hampshire and Maine, though with less than six settled pres- byters in each, would yet be able to obtain separate Episco- pal supervision. In pursuance of this suggestion, a " Com- mittee on the state of the Diocese" was appointed, who reported a resolution, to be acted on at the Convention in 1836, recommending a dissolution. Accordingly, in his Address for 1836, the Bishop thus recurs to this topic : " The motion to dissolve this Diocese, made in our last Convention, and to be -acted on in this, will, of course, occupy your very serious attention. It will, I hope and trust, be examined with caution and coolness, and decided in unanimity apd peace. If the proposed measure be adopted, the effect, as I understand the question, will be, that the constitution of this Eastern Diocese will cease to be binding on any one ; and that this Convention will meet no more. In whatever shall be your decision, I shall acquiesce. I know not of any material inconvenience, that vdll result from the dissolution. My Episcopal supervision is not, as I con- ceive, involved in this motion. Whether the four States, or Dioceses, shall hereafter be under one Bishop, or two, or more, are separate questions, which you can consider, or not, as shall be tiiought expedient. Should you determine on the dissolution, and the separate Dioceses continue under the same Episcopal jurisdiction, I would advise that their several 406 MEMOIR, & Committee." The Rt. Rev. Alex. V. Griswold. A reply they did soon receive ; and, as it reveals the true state of the case with sufficient clearness, and shews how far they were practically governed by their expressed desire, neither to add to what our Church enjoins, nor to omit what she prescribes, I shall insert it without other comment here, than that it is, as usual, but " the rough draught", of what was sent, and that it seems to want some sentence, or sen- tences at its conclusion. It is doubtless, however, the body of his answer. "Boston, Not. , 1842. " Gentlemen, — I have just received yours of the 2^th', complaining somewhat severely of some remarks in my last two addresses to our Conventions ; and will endeavor briefly to give such answer as you require. " And first, in regard to the alterations, of which I ex- pressed a disapprobation, I supposed, and indeed then had no doubt, that they were made at the suggestion, and through 442 MEMOIR, &C. the influence of the Rev. Mr. ; and I thought,, and still think, that I had good reasons for supposing it ; and, so far as I know, it is the opinion of all of our clergy, is^rho hare, in the last year or two, officiated in your Church. But I am told in your letter that they are such as the * whole pa- rish, with few or no exceptions,' approve of. If so, I regret my having ascribed them- to Mr. 's influence. You certainly have a right to make any alterations, that you ■ please, in your own building. Had they, (as I and all others, whom I have heard speak on the subject, supposed,) been made in compliance with the wishes , of a young man in Deacon's orders, who did not belong to this Diocese, andi?' was officiating in violation of our Canon, he merited more reproof than my letter to him contained. The reason for my refraining so long in silence, I gave him. " I am well aware that there is a new sect lately sprung up among us, called Puseyites, or Low Papists, who have, chiefly in England, written, and preached, and pubhshed much against the Reformation, and are endeavoring to bring back into the Church of England many of those supersti- tious mummeries, and idolatrous practices, for protesting against which so many of her pious Bishops and other min- isters have been burnt at the stake. The High Papists and Low Protestants are both rejoicing at this threatened division in the Episcopal Church, hoping to profit, and the Papists have already profited, by our dissentions. The cry of Popery against us has hitherto caused our Church to' be small in this country. This prejudice was fast being re- moved, when a really backward tendency towards Popery arose, and is now likely tor evive and strengthen it. But, I trust in God, that a large majority of our people will remain steadfast to the great principles, and to the simple usages of the Reformation, and of our own Protestant Episcopal Church. " What you mean by saying that you were not ' know- ingly, or wilfully guilty of the wickedness imputed,' I do not understand ; as I have not ' knowingly or wilfully' imputed wickedness to any one. Should you make your CRITIQUE ON CHURCH EDIFICES, 443 Church -wholly Popish, which you have a good right to do, I should not ascribe it to any wicked motive, but charitably believe that you were actuated by good intentions. I think, too, that I have a right to express my opinion of the altera- tions made, without being justly accused of cruelty, or of ascribing evil motives to those, who have made them. . " You tell me that a part has been done to render the chancel more conformable to my views. Is it not somewhat strange that you should do this without being at any pains to ascertain, as you very easily might have done, what my views were ? Or did I ever complain of the chancel as your former minister left it ? On the contrary, did I not view it, and praise it, with much pleasure ? There was then a very convenient reading-desk, and such a one is among the " greatest conveniences in the performance of divine service. Since that time, I have observed that it is all torn away, and I believe cut to pieces ; though this I will not affirm. Then, also, there was a communionrtable, very suitable and in sight of the whole congregation. SincCj I have seen instead an edifice, like a Popish altar, above a flight of many steps, very inconvenient for ministrations at the Lord's table ; and there were too evidently indications of idolatrous reverence paid to it. I saw also a picture standing at the back of the altar, such as the Papists avow- edly and very much worship. Pictures were introduced into Churches about the 7th and 8th centuries. The more pious Christians opposed it strenuously, and foretold, what soon happened, that they would be worshiped. Before the Madonna, and on what should be the communion-table, I saw flowers strewn ; — and there too stood candles in the day time : whether they are ever lighted in the day time, I did not inquire. These, too, are among ' the superstitious fooleries of the dark ages.' Formerly, the railing" of the chancel was clear for many, to kneel at communion and confirmation ; but, in my last visit it was exceedingly en- cumbered. The stool, or place for the minister in preaching, is far the most awkward and inconvenient that I ever be- held. That, and something like a reading-desk, and a 444 MEMOIR, &C. bridge or platform, leading from the chancel to a place •where baptism was performed, occupied so much of the chancel that (I confidently repeat,) ' the convenience for ad- ministering confirmation and the other Christian ordinances is rery much diminished.' " Your minister wore such a dress as I had never before seen ; and some of the trappings and otlier parade, I have reason to beUevej were omitted on that occasion. But I saw enough to justify, in my own mind, what I have said on the subject. And never before did I see a minister go without the railings of the chancel io administer baptism. " Now, all these changes and, what to me are, ' derange- ments,' do, actually and in feet, 'render the whole more conformable to' (what almost aU Protestants deem) ' the superstitious fooleries of (what are usually called) ' the dark ages of the Church.' But, if I am to understand you, gen- tlemen, as saying that these changes were not made in com- pliance with the wishes of Mr. , and that, in making them, you had no intention ' of rendering the whole more conformable' to what was practiced in the Romish Church from the 8th century to the Reformation, then I am bound to believe, and shall be ready to acknowledge, that, in regard to the intenpion, I was mistaken. But that such a coinci- dence should have been wnintentional is a wonder indeed." After this View of the case, to which the strictures in the Addresses applied, (and it is weU understood that the view even falls within the limits of the innovations actually made,) it is not difficult to see that there was abundant ground for the Bishop's animadversions. The reason, why he chose to treat the case in this official way, and not by earlier and private admonition, is evident. The young clergyman in Deacon's orders, under whose ministry these changes were taking place, belonged not to Bishop Griswold's jurisdiction. He had not transferred, nor by any considerations, which were presented to him, could he ~be induced to transfer, his canonical residence from the Diocese, to whichhe belonged, to that, in which, for so long a time, he had been laboring as the regularly employed minister of a parish. - Notvdthstand- CONVENTION OF 1842. 445 ing his position, there, was in contrayention of one of our Canons, he still held that position, and, while amenable only to another Bishop, persisted in carrying out his views and effectuating his changes in one of the parishes of Bishop Griswold's Diocese. For a long time, the Bishop forebore official notice ; doubtless, in the hope, either that the young minister would, at length, transfer his canonical residence, and thus become, like his other clergy, amenable to himself; or that the force of public opinion would induce him to con- form to general usage, and thus render any notice of the case unnecessary. But, when he found all hope disappoint- ed, and the increasing innovations, adopted, rendering the case an offence to almost every portion of the Diocese/he forebore no longer ; and as the young minister chose to render no account of hig j matters to the Bishop, in whose Diocese he was laboring, so the Bishop chose to admin- ister reproof in his own form and manner, without ask- ing the subject of it how he would like the apphcation. The idea, thrown out in the letter of the Committee, that the publicity, which the Bishop thus gave to the case, was " affixing a stigma, in some degree, upon the whole" Church, was not calculated to affect very deeply his mind. If there were a serious disease in any part of the body, he was not the physician, who would keep it concealed till it became incurable, He thought it better to uncover, and probe, and if possible effect a timely cure of the evil. And the publicity, which has already been given to the case, must be, in part, my apology for recording it in the present work. While I have felt it due to the Bishop to give his own defence of his course, I have felt the more free in doing so from the fact, that that publicity is not, by this re- cord, in reality increased. We are now among the latest official acts in the life of the revered subject of these memoirs. The Convention of the Eastern Diocese in Charlestown, at which he delivered the Address, last quoted, was the latest, which he ever at- tended ; and probably it was the happiest, at which he pp 446 MEMOIR, &C. was ever present. The period, to which I formerly advert- ed, had arrived ; the period, when the fires of disunion, so far at least as any visible manifestation was concerned, had burnt out, and when a sweet and sacred calm seemed spread, almost every where, over the face of things under his charge. His parishes were almost all prosperous ; and with but here and there an unimportant exception, every thing conspired to draw all hearts towai^ds each other, as though a gracious spirit had been, in uncommon measure, poured forth upon all. This state of things he hailed as a blessed harbinger of coming good to his beloved flock, amidst the dangers, which were besetting the Church at large, from those extensive inroads of error, to which he could ndt close his eye. It was but natulral, therefore, that he should allude, in his Address, to wliat was so peculiarly gratifying to his feelings, both as a Christian and as a Bishop. " In viewing the state of oiir Churches," says he, " there are several things, which rejoice my heart, and increase, I trust, my thankfulness to God. One is, that our parishes are now nearly all supplied, and, we may believe, well supplied, with oificiating ministers. Another, and a very pleasing circumstance, is the spirit of love, and harmony, and brotherly kindness, which so happily prevails, and seems to increase, among the clergy of this Diocese. And, I may add, that, so far as I can judge, our clergy are be- coming more and more convinced of the importance of preaching the doctrines of the Cross, and the evangelical truths of God's holy Word. It seems to be a confirmation of the words of the prophet Isaiah : ' When the enemy shall come in like a' flood, the Spirit of the Lord shall lift up a standard against him.' The faithful preaching of Christ is a standard, and the only standard, that is sufficient to repel every spiritual foe, and ' to quench all the fieiy darts of the wicked.' " After going through with the ordinary enumeration of •Episcopal duties during the year, which was ending, he particularized, near the close of his Address, several ex- ELECTION OF ASSISTANT BISHOP. 447 tremely interesting and important topics, upon which it had been his intention to enlarge, but which the length, already- reached by his remarks, compelled him to pass with a mere mention ; and then, as though God were preparing him, by an unseen influence, to say his last words aright, he added, standing amidst the future work, which he had laid out for himself; — ' Perhaps time and opportunity may hereafter be given me to address you on these subjects; if Tiot, the Lord's will be done.' But, one of the most cheering incidents, which he had to lay before this Convention, and that, with a record of which he brought his Address to a close, was, the very recent, and most harmonious election, by the Convention of Mas- sachusetts, of an assistant Bishop. Measures, preparatory to this election, had, for some months, been in train. And now they had just been brought to a happy issue. The Massachusetts Convention closed its session the day before that, on which he was then speaking ; and the Address, which he delivered to that body, had come over the minds of his clergy almost like a Pentecbstal spirit of grace. It ought to be inserted here in full, and should be, had not these memoirs been already extended much beyond their originally contemplated limits. For the present, it must be sufficient to refer the reader to the whole Journal of that special Convention, before which this document was de- livered, as the best means of setting him feelingly amidst the happy influences, which presided over those important doings of our Massachusetts Church. As a valuable sub- stitute, however, for his Address before that body, I add, here, the brief closing paragraph, io which I have already adverted, in his Address, of the next day, before the Con- vention of the Eastern Diocese in Charlestown ; — the last words,^ which he ever uttered to the assembled body of his clergy and laity : — " Yesterday, as you all, no doubt, well know, the State Convention of Massachusetts had a special session in Trinity Church, Boston, for the very important purpose of electing one to be an assistant Bishop in that State. And 448 MEMOIR, &C. if any thing can cause us to thank God and take courage, His merciful gbodness, vouchsafed to us on the occasion, must have that effect. Though Christian love and brotherly affection have been so remarkable, and, for years so evident- ly increasing among us, yet, on an occasion so very inte- resting to all and so exciting, it was reasonable to appre- hend some conflict of opinions and diversity of judgment "Who, then, does not perceive the hand of God, and his answer to our united prayers, in the perfect union, and wonderful harmony, which, through the whole transaction, prevailed ? Such entire unanimity, on a like occasion, has never^ we may venture to say, been before witnessed in our country. It is inost comforting proof that the Spirit, which was in our Saviour Christ, is with us ; and may He give us aU grace thcinkfuUy to cherish it. • " The person elected, you also know, is, the Rev. Man- ton Eastburn, D. D., of New York. And a caU, in which the hand of an overruling Providence is so visible, he wiU, we trust, think it his duty to accept. May the Lord give us hearts to be duly thankful for all His mercies, and grace to show our thankfulness, by making a right use of them." The importance of the event, here recorded, can scarcely be appreciated, save by those, who are famili ar with what may be termed the domestic history of our Church in Massachusetts. This importance arises not only from the fact, that the election took place while Bishop Gris- wold was living, and while his heart's long continued prayers were receiving their answer, in the restored reign of almost perfect harmony ; but also from the additional fact, that it was made with the understanding that, the moment Dr. Eastburn signified his acceptance of the Bishopric, and the event of his consecration was rendered certain, Trinity Church, Boston, stood ready to elect him their Rector. The circumstance, that this ancient and noble parish were, through their Vestry, Trustees of a fund for the support of an assistant minister, had long made it evident, that the future Bishop of Massachusetts ought to be also Rector of Trinity Church ; at least until such time as the Episcopal IMPORTANCE OF THIS ELECTION. 449 Fund, in that State, should become sufficient for the sup- port of a Bishop without the aid of a parish salary. In their previous elections of a Rector, therefore, it was ever a question of the highest importance, — whether they distinctly proposed this question to themselves, or not ; — " Can the man of our choice be also elected Bishop of the Church in Massachusetts, without running the hazard of an ecclesiasti- cal convulsion ?" Hence, after the origin of the Eastern Diocese, every election of a Rector for that parish, in which this qufestion could .not be answered in the affirmative, had Leen followed, sooner or later, by excitement. The very fact, too, that any clergyma|i accepted that Rectorship with a supposed view to the future Bishopric of Massachusetts, rendered the tendency to excitement, .and the danger of it, still more intense. But, the aspect of the question was essentially changed with a change in its order. When it came to be inquired ; " Will the Bishop, whom we of the Diocese may elect, be acceptable, as a Rector, to Trinity Church?" — it cast no odium, by anticipation, on the can- didate in view. So soon, therefore, as it was ascertained, that the election of Dr. Eastburn, as Bishop, would insure his election, as Rector alsQ, every element in the Diocese settled down into profound harmony and satisfaction ', and oiitof the stillness went up a thousand thanksgivings to God for so graciously inchning the hearts of all, and especially of the parish conceriied, in favor of one so worthy of the two- fold place, which awaited him. While matters were in train preparatory to the consecra- tion of Dr. Eastburn, Bishop Griswold was soHcited, and very cheerfully yielded to the solicitation, to visit Richmond, Virginia, for the purpose of presiding at the consecration of Dr. Johns, who had, the previous spring, been elected as- sistant Bishop in that Diocese. When Bishop Gadsden, of South Carolina, was consecrated in the summer of 1840, the season being unfavorable to a visit so far South as Charleston, the candidate journeyed to Boston, and his con- secration took place in Trinity Church. But now, the sea- son being favorable to a southern journey, Bishop Griswold, 450 MEMOIR, &C. although conscious, by monitions within, of his special lia- bility to sudden death, yet felt pleasure in yielding to the strong wish, which was expressed, that the consecration of Dr. Johns might take place in the city of his future resi- dence. This wish was not indeed, unreasonably urged. Says the good Bishop Meade, (as whose assistant Dr. Johns had been elected,) in one of his letters on the occasion ;-^ " Much gratified as we all would certainly be to have you with us on the interesting occasion mentioned in our corres- pondence, yet we certainly would not wish it, if it is to be a source of risk or pain to you. Much rather, I am sure, would we all come to you ; although it would be gratifying ■ to many in Virginia to have the consecration in Richmond. Still, however, we will cherish tibe hope that God may strengthen you, so that you may perform the journey with- out injury." * * * * "I can truly sym- pathize with you in the infirmity, of which you complain ; as it is the same, which atHicts myself, and makes me to feel that ' in the midst of life, I am in death.' " Thus kindly and considerately solicited, he with readiness complied ; feeling that he was in God's hands ; and that, if sudden death were appointed him, it was a question of small moment where it happened,^so be that it found him ready and in the midst of duty. As it fell out, his journey was without injury, though not without accident. On lus way, and while in the cars for New York, he was dexte- rously robbed of his pocket-book and money ; and, on his return, was tediously detained in that city by his required attendance at Court, and in a vain endeavor to bring to jus- tice the detected perpetrator of the theft. He recovered the money, of which he had been pilfered ; but, through the arts of cunning roguery, the pilferer escaped the retri- bution, which he deserved. The consecration of Dr. Johns took place on the 13th of October, 1842, and in " the Monumental Church" in Rich- mond. It was a solemn scene. On the spot, where once the merciless flames devoured the thronged attendants of the Theatre, now stood the consecrated house of prayer; and, MEASURES FOR DR. EASTBUKN's CONSECRATION. 451 in that house, stood holy men, commissioning one of the diief ministers of the Lord of life ; and, as they imposed the ordaining hand, two of them, at least, felt that, even mider the shelter of that fane, they were, in a special sense, but in the niiidst of death. The arrangements preparatory to the consecration of Dr. Eastburn being now complete, that last ordaining act in the life of Bishop Griswold took place on the 29th of December, 1842, and in Trinity Church, Boston. That, also, was a solemn scene. But, its deep interest sprung from different causes. To feel, as multitudes felt on that high day to our Massachusetts Church, we must take a glance at what, for many years, had been transpiring. When Bishop Griswold entered on his duties, as ecclesi- astical head of the Eastern Diocese, difficulties, as we have seen, of various name, thronged his way into the future. These difficulties, as we have also seen, continued to meet him, in some of their ever changing forms, till almost the last day of his Ufe. And yet, such had proved the strength and firmness of his character, the high consistency and blamelessness of his life, the sweet peacefulness and concilia- tory tone of his counsels, the unquestionable piety of his heart, and the unimpeachable orthodoxy of his doctrines, that, from the beginning to the close of his Episcopate, the Church, on the whole, amidst many dark days, indeed, was always prosperous under his care ; growing quietly in num- bers and in spirituality, and gaining steadily, especially towards the close, both in union and in resources. Before him, hostile prejudice stood self-disarmed ; and in him, the sons of the Pilgrims learned to respect, and, in the case of very many, to love, the Church, against which their fathers had reared the standard of unyielding opposition. For some time before the period, which we have now reached, the main source of anxiety to him lay, in the un- usually uncertain tenure, by which he held his mortal life ; an uncertainty, growing out of a disease of the heart ; consist- ent, it is true, with ordinarily great strength and comfort of body, yet suggesting the constant apprehension of sudden 452 MEMOIR, &C. death. This apprehension distressed him, not because he feared to die, (for, in this respect, he stood continually on the "watch" and in " readiness to depart,") but, — ^because, in case of his sudden decease, the Church of his afi'ections and his care, might become distracied in. the choice of his successor, and thus the ripening fruits of his toils and hi? prayers, take detriment. All other sources of trial, peculiar to his own Diocese, had, at length, disappeared ; and his way lay, otherwise, smooth before him on his descent to the resting-place of the faithful. But this circumstance con- tinued to give him sensible disquiet, and mingled whatever of bitterness he tasted in the residuum of his life. Even this, however, was now kindly remov.ed ; and thus the peacefulness of his evening days was left complete. The little band of clergy, whom he found,, sixteen in number, and thinly scattered over almost the whole of New England, with scarce strength to stand erect under the pressure of their difficulties, had been multiplied • to more than an hundred, confident in the esteem of a multitude of hearts, and strong in the resources of thousands of hands. And now, as one of the latest smiles on him of approving heaven, their main body in Massachusetts were found ready to unite, with one heart, upon one man, whom he might set over them in the Lord, and to whom, after his departure, they might look, as the object of their one choice, and of their many prayers, to go before them, under God's guidance, in the Church, and to carry forward, by God's help, the great good work of his life. In this graciously ordered result, the aged Bishop found rest indeed; and the day, when, with the Bishops, whp joined him, he consecrated his successor in Massachusetts, was to him the beginning of his best days of earthly peace, So far as we may speak thus of human lot, he then began to walk joyfully, and with unmingled satisfaction, amidst his great household of spiritual children, and on through the still bright shadows of his eventide. Such were the circumstances, which, drawing their power from the depths of thirty-two past years, conspired to in- BISHOP GRISWOLD STILL LABORS. 453 crease the interest of the scene, which presented itself in Trinity Church, Boston, on the 29th of December, 1842. His own clergy, and others from different States, were there in long array. The spacious Church was crowded with many of the elite of intelligent New England. And amidst the whole stood the aged man ; his form still erect ; his head white with the snows of almost four score years; and his face, lifted towards heaven, overspread with the radiance of a holy smile. Nor were there any present, (familiar with the inner secret of that smile,) who failed to sympathise with him in the high experience of that hour. To multitudes, the scene and the emotion, which it awakened, are still vividly present. They still see the venerable Bishop, as he stood before thousands in the house of prayer, and as, amidst solemn rite and sublime ceremonial, he laid his aged hands on the head of one, whom his sons in the Church had bidden among them, to be their future shepherd under Christ. They hear him yet, as he lifted his trembling voice in accompany- ing prayer for the Spirit of Grace to descend on the bending subject of his intercessions, and endow him richly for his high and holy work. And then, as the rite was done, amidst solemn bursts of harmony and the closing seal of Sacrament, they see him still, as he went his way with thankful heart, blessing God for His goodness, and rejoicing that, at length, the Lord was with them, of a truth, in the counsels of peace, in the power of unity, and in the fulness of the Gospel, But, although Bishop Griswold was thus relieved of the last source of anxiety, so far as his own Diocese was con- cerned, and in a way, which furnished him with a compara- tively youthful and a well-furnished assistant in his labors ; yet it must not be inferred that he sunk into indifference to the general welfare of the Church, or even into inactivity in that portion of it, over which he had so long watched. In regard to the latter, (his own Diocese,) his favorite Scriptural motto, " wewillgive ourselves continually toprayer and the ministry of the word;" together with his emphatic quotation from Jewel, " * Bishop shall die preaching; still governed his actions ; and he went about as usual, doing 454 MEMOIR, &e. the work of an Evangelist, and strengthening the Churches, insomuch that, in little or nothing, were his customary activi- ties diminished. The, secret monition within, it is true, made him walk thoughtfully; but to common, observation without, he appeared ■ to walk firmly. His figure was as erect as ever ; his limbs were remarkably \'igorous ; and his general health seemed to be even better than usual. He was, in fact, the laborious Bishop still, abounding in thoughts, prayers and labors for the- spiritual welfare of his charge. And, in regard to the former, (the general welfare of the Church,) he felt, as he had for some time been feeling, even increasing solicitude. After what has already been written, it is almost needless to add here, that Bishop Griswold was too thoroughly a Protestant to look, without growing apprehen- sion, upon the theological tendencies of certain portions of our Church, both in England Eind in America. He had been too good a student of the Bible, and, it may be added, of antiquity too, to feel a moment's hesitation on the question, what stand he ought to talce in a controversy so pregnant with influences on our future religious and ecclesiastical destiny,? He descried our coming dangers in this contro- versy more clearly than the mass of his own clergy and peo- ple ; or than the mass of our clergy and people in general. To some, he even seemed, in the course, which he took, if not a false prophet of evil daySj at least needlessly alarmed at the approach of perils, which probably looked much bigger in their shadows, as they fell forward on the imagina- tion, than they, would prove in their substance, when they should come to be handled in experience. He was evident- ly somewhat disappointed at the immediate result of a course of labors, in which he had felt it his duty to engage, and which. he did but close, on what proved one of the last days of his life. For a long time, he had been addressing, through the columns of "■ the Christian Witness and Church Advocate," a series of Pastoral Letters to his. clergy and people on a variety of important topics. But, at length, the progress of the Oxford Tract movement induced him to con- THE bishop's protestantism. 455 fine "himself to one subject, that of the Protestant Refdrmation. On this, he was for many months engaged in writing that valuable series of essays, which have since been collected and republished, in a large Tract, by Mr. Dow, of Boston. By this series, without directly entering the lists with the Tract writers, he still hoped to awaken apprehension of the dangerous tendency of their writings, and to furnish the means of counteracting that tendency, both in his own Dio- cese and in other parts. The immediate effect of his writings, as I have remarked, appeared to disappoint him. He saw the tendency in question, and the danger of that tendency, most plainly; and so deeply did the sight affect his oivn mind, that he looked for stronger and quicker sympathy in his views from others than he actually received. There were quarters, it is true, in which his writings were duly appre- ciated, and where they excited a deep interest. But, in general, what he wrote' evidently met with the feeling, to which I have adverted, an unwillingness to see and feel the reality of the peril, against which he sought to warn the Church. He wrote, however, for a day, which he lived not to see. Facts are already investing his tract on the Refor- mation with its true importance ; and shewing that, as he looked into the future, he looked, not with the eye of false alarm, but with the vision of a clear and deep foresight. This is a Tract of uncommon value. From notes, left in my possession, it is manifest that, though the volume, in its col- lected form, is but small, it was yet the result of very varied, minute and careful reading. Small though it be, it is never- theless a rich storehouse of facts, and of arguments on the vastly important subject of which it treats. It is not a history of the Reformation ; 'but a summary of reasons for the Refor- mation ; and such a summary as few minds but that of its author could have produced, whether we regard the appro- priateness of its style, or the luminousness of its point ; the fertile range of topics, or the wondrous power of condensa- tion, which it exhibits. This little book brings out an interesting feature in jSishop •Griswold's religious character and views. While he loved 456 MEMOIR, &C. the Church as truly Catholic, it may be said he loved her most for that great principle, on which, under Protestapi auspices, she based herself at the Reformation ; the suflEiciency of the Holy Scriptures, as the sole rule of faith, and the only infallible, guide in practice, to every man that honestly and earnestly seeks for the salvation, which is in Christ Jesus. He often urged the study of the Bible upon every man, as being full of the Spirit of God ; as evincing their own sufEciency, through the teachings of that Spirit, to guide the inquiring mind to the Saviour ; and as demonstrating thus its Divine Author's intention, that it should be put, unsealed, into the hands of every one, — His own rich, free gift to the world. He held that these inspired Scriptures were God's storehouse of spiritual food for the life and health of the hu- man family; and, like our ordinary food, to be kept accessi- ble to every human soul. He rejected the dogma of an in- spired Oral Traditidn, co-Qrdinate in authority with the written Word, necessary to the true interpretation of that Word, and of right binding its interpretation on the con- science of every member of the Church. He did not, indeed, reject aids to the interpretation of the Bible, whether those aids were ancient or modern ; but, he did refuse to consider any thing neceSsary as its infallible interpreter, save its own self-iaterpreting light, jind the teachings of that Holy One, by whom it was dictated. He taught that the Bible alone, of all things now accessible, "is given by inspiration of God ;" that its curses lie on every one, who adds to it, or takes from it ; and that, when read by the honest mind, with the prayer of a devout heart, it is, in itself and to the full of all human needs, " profitable for doctrine, for reproof, for correction and for instruction in righteousness ; that the man of God," be he preacher, or be he reader, " may be perfect, thoroughly furnished unto all good works." Taking this view, as fundamental to the true system of Theology, as going before all right views of ■particular doe- trines, he held it at the opening of his ministry, and on through all his subsequent ministrations. And yet, towards the close of his labors, he gave it even a marked prbminence. CLOSING TIEW. 457 When he saw the Church of his affections, in this covintry as well as in England, drawn into peril by the labors of a School, who were avowedly seeking to un-protestantize her, by leading her back, through the labyrinth of Tradition, first, to sacramental justification ; then to the miracle-working powers of a sacrificing priesthood ; and finally, to other pro- digies of, a night of superstition : when he contemplated changes, like these, the effect of which, when reached, will be, to put Christ once more into awfiil distance, instead of keeping him near, the loved friend,^ the only, the unassocia- ted Saviour of the lost ; and, at length, to conceal him again, as to all practical purposes, behind a dense cloud of saints canonized by man, of shrines glittering with the offerings of wealth, or of shews awfill amidst the display of pomp : when he looked upon a system, which, in its fuller developments, does little more than make the Church one of the kingdoms of this world ; while it leaves the sinner to perish in his blindness, hugging a delusion, ."yet thinking it salvation : when he saw the fruits of the Reformation put amidst the peril of a return even towards such a system as this, unsavory to his tastes as was the work of controversy, he hesitated not to step forth in the service of our Church, and, as one of her chief ministers, to do what he could for her safety. Though, when he begun the series of essays, to which I have referred, he, had many other things in hand, yet, ere he finished it, it became his last work : arid well did he achieve the task, which it imposed. His tract on the Reformation, written in his own clear style, full of the light of the Bible, and evinc- ing the yet undimmed powers of his mind, demonstrates irrefutably the necessity and the glory of the great Reforma- tion ; and shews'incontestibly that our Church can never recede from the stand, which at that period, she assumed, without proving at once false to herself and faithless to her Saviour. In these labors, not a few watched his course with the deepest interest. And even now, it is a stirring sight, to look back and see the aged watchman, as he stood at his post, and descried the danger, which was beginning to lower 458 MEMOIR, &C. heavily over our Zion ; and to observe how, with a firm and vigorous hand, he seized his heavenly armor; put it on like a true and thoroughly furnished man of God ; walked valiant- ly forth to the support of a periled cause ; stood firmly and contended manfully, by the side of her, whom he loved ; and finally finished his course, defending the Protestantism of the Church, and the Bible on which it is based, in an age, when faith once more verges so strongly towards superstition, and taste runs again so eagerly after ceremony ! With this last labor of Bishop Griswold, the Eastern Dio- cese ceased to be ; leaving its name only and its history, in- separably blended with those of the man, with whose Epis- copate they began, continued, Etnd ended. When his work was done, the niche of this Diocese in our ecclesiastical temple was filled. Its purpose being served, nothing re- mains but the fruits, which it has borne, and the lessons, which it has taiight. As a mother of Dioceses, its name will be honored, and its monument be hung, with ever fresh memorials. And as a nurse of sound Episcopal principles and of true evangelical doctrines, its influence wiU be felt with a salutary power, over ' wide regions of earth, and through long tracts of time. It has furnished incidents, which have helped to shape or to fix both our canon law and our ecclesiastical polity ; and it has probably solved, in its course, one of the great problems, which aros^, almost necessarily, out of the early weakness of our Church after the war of the Revolution, and out of our geographical divisions, as drawn under Colonial and settled under State organizations. It is jiot likely, after the experience of the Eastern Diocese, as unfolded in the sketch, which is now closed, that any further attempt will be made at the organization of a complex Dio- cese. However necessary that union may have appeared, at the time when its constitution was adopted, facts have demonstrated, that its organization was, at best, but a necessary evil; while, at the same time, they have led to the discovery and adoption of other modes of fostering owr Institutions, both in the wealaiess of their infancy, and in the sparseness of their materials. The Missionary Bishop CLOSING VIEW. 459 and the Missionary Diocese have arisen ; and under their manifest advantages, it may be considered certain, that the pattern set us in the early East, when our experience was young, will never be copied, either in the great West, or in those broad westerly realms, with which, as with wings, our country lies out-spread, both towards the North and towards the South. 460 MEMOIK OF THE EXTBACTS, &C., PKOM PRIVATE JOURNALS, AND FROM PRIVATE LETTERS, DURING THE EPISCOPATE OF BISHOP GRISWOLD. The plan of these memoirs, thus far, has been, to give the early private life and character of their subject ; to trace the development of his religious views in his earliest ministerial labors and successes, till the period of his consecration to the E|)iscopate of the Eastern Diocese ; and then, dropping the thread of what was mainly private and personal, to give an account of the - organization of that Diocese ; to exhibit its own true genius and the real position of its Bishopj in rela- tion to other Dibceses and to other Bishops ; and ^nally, to sketch, in its principal incidents, a history both of the Dio- cese itself ^nd of the public life of Bishop Griswold, as there- with connected. Having accomplished this last part of my design, I feel that the work would be incomplete were I not now to go back, and, taking up the thread, which has been dropped, to follow it to its end, as it run's through the vaove. private life of this beloved man of God. In thus going back, however, I find that the thread which I have to resume, divides itself into three strands. Ih^fird runs, in numerous circlings, through |iis large Diocese, and shews us who it was, that was journeying, and with what feelings he journeyed, for so many years, over mountain and valley, through floods and tempests, in health and sickness, in the vigor of firm manhood, and under the burthens of growing age. The second runs through his parish ministry, so far as that ministry falls within his Episcopal life ; and shews us what he did in these more retired labors of his course, and what tokens he had from God that his labors were not in vain. And the • third runs through his family ; and shews us how he daily walked with God, and through LIFE OF BISHOP GRISWOLD. 461 what scenes^ unlooked-on of the world, God led him home to Himself. In entering on this part'of the work, it is evident that the best materials for it will be found in- the Bishop's private journals and correspondence. Of the former, unhappily, but few remain, and these few but in fragments. Of their value, could they be all recovered, we may jadge from the follow- ing, which I find on a loose slip of paper among his writings : " Dr. Johnson says that he had attempted, twelve or four- teen times, to keep a journal of his life, but could never per- severe. I can say the same of myself. I have attempted it more than twelve or fourteen times. We have many thoughts, which we never publish, never communicate in conversation, which might afterwards be useful, at least to ourselves, but which, if not written, are soon lost. Many things mso, very interesting at the time, are, if not recorded, forgotten ; which, if remembered, would in after life be very pleasing, if not useful. "The great thing to be recorded" (says Dr. J.) "is the state of your own mind. You should write down every thing that you remember ; fouyou cannot judge what is good, or .bad ; and write it immediately while the impression is fresh, for it will not be the same a week aifterwards." " My journals have been almost wholly lost, or destroyed. From the few, which remain, the following is extracted." The above-«eems to have been intended as a sort of pre- face to an attempt to preserve the most valuable portions of the Journals, which still remained in the Bishop's possession. Of even his extracts, however, I have been able to find noth- ing. I have, nevertheless, recovered some fragments of old journals, which he had either- given away, or supposed to be lost ; and. from these shall be able very much to enrich the following pages. From these, even, we shall be able to judge what a-treasure we should have had, could the whole have been preserved. A few of his numerous private letters, also, have been kindly furnished me ; and from these still further additions will be made to the interest of the remain- 462 MEMOIR OF THE ing portion of his memoir. The. extracts, which I am to give, will not, of course, furnish a connected series of facts, or events ; but they will reveal feelings, which were .evident- ly habitual, and which the, good man carried with him, wherever he went, through his Diocese, his parish, and his home. . We are to follow him, first, through his Diocese. . What his private life must have been, after tte< period of his consecration, we haje already seen, by no questionable signs, as we passed over the series oi public events, in which he was engaged. We are now, however, to take a nearer, a more distinct, and a more prplonged ;view of his-iimer man. The earliest recovered fragment, from which I am able to quote, dates in 1818, seven years after his consecration. " June 23d. Journeyed to Boston, with a view to many important duties. But, except the Lord build the house, we labor in vain." "August ,25th. They who write an a,ccount of their own lives, may learn from the history their own worthlessness, and to how little purpose they live. How should it humble us! 'Pride was not made for man.' A month has noW passed away, and how few of its incidents are worth record- ing! Thy mercies, Lord, , are ever worthy of record. ' They are new every morning.' Their number, and their richness surpass 'the power of language, speech and thou^t.' Preparing for a journey ; but how negligent and unprepared for a journey, from which there is no return !" "August 30th. I am now on another tour through this Diocese. But how insufficient for the momentous duties, how unworthy the most solemn and- interesting administra- tions, to which I am called ! We can do all things, Christ helping us. May thy help, blessed Lord, be my hope and my comfort. May tby grace attend the means, and thy mercy forgive the unworthiness of him, who is appointed to administer them. " This tour evidently lay through those parts of Rhode Island and Massachusetts, which border on Connecticut; and he diverged from it, so far as to visit Simsbury : for his next entry, three days later, is as follows : LIFE OF BISHOP GEISWOLD. 463 " September 2d. Visited the place of my nativity. Here Vrere the scenes of my youthful vanities, of my early studies, and of my first religious hopes. Here rest the bones of my ancestors. Here I- ineet with the surviving remnant of iby youthful associates. A remnant, alas! how small J Where, now, are , and -, and .' Where, now, is ? I have come to visit a sick mother. What reflections stir, on the decay, the infirmities, of a relation so near, so interest- ing! The few, whom I meet, of my former friends, how changed from what they were ! how cheering the hope, that there is a world, which will not decay ! that this corrup- tible shall put on incorruption, and this mortal be clothed with immortality !" " September 3d. This day I am to meet with a few of my once youthful acquaintance ; to preach to them, and to pray with them. What pensive thoughts, what pleasing melan- choly, fill my soul ! No power of language can express the reflections, which agitate my mind. Lord ! is there not too much of the world in this ? Is there not too little trust, too little hope in thee ? Forgetting the things that are be- hind, may I press forward to the things that are before. What fruit have I in those things, whereof I am^ow ashamed ? For the end of too many of those things is death." In the year 1819, he had occasion to journey to Brooklyn, Connecticut. Upon this journey he makes the following note : " August 19th. Went to Brooklyn, Ct., and returned the 21st. In this short journey, which proved unusually fatigii- ing, and was attended with some disappointments and mourn- ful reflectio;is, was called to think deeply on the evils of life, and resolved to hope less than ever from its joys. Looked with deep humiliation to Him, who can give songs of joy in the darkest night of sorrow." This same month he started on one of his northern tours. The following are extracts from the journal then kept : " August 30th. Cfommenced another tour. Health ill. Prospect discouraging. Mournful tidings of several valua- ble friends, and very useful, promising clergy, declining in 464 MEMOIR OF THE health. O Lord, how deep are the counsels of thy Proyi- dence ! How often, how continually, are we admonished to trust in none but Thee !" / " September 3d, Providence, E,. I. Ordination of three to the order of Deacons, and of two to the order of the Priest- hood. How interesting the ceremony ! The Lord be praised that laborers are still sent into his vineyard ; that so many are aHded to the work of the ministry.' May the Spirit of the Lord be with them, and strengthen their hands to M'ar, and their fingets to fight. May the Word spoken by their moutli never be spoken in vain." " September 4th. Assisted in the interesting ceremony of laying the corner-stone of St. Paul's Church in Boston. Interesting, indeed, to the pious, reflecting mind ! Who knoweth, Lord, but Thyself, through what successive years and generations. Thy Word and Thy mercies shall be here dispensed .'' What souls may be awakened to right- eousness in this happy Bethel ! What thousands may here be strengthened with the bread of life ! What gracious seals of God's mercy,' and what memorials of his love, may here be vouchsafed ! Prosper, Lord, our -Work ; O prosper thou our handy-work." " September 6th. To Concord, N. H. Weather hot. Health worse. Alarming symptoms of decline. Yet why should death alai-m ? thou good and gracious God and Saviour, shaltthou call us to Thyself, and we be un- ready ?" 7th. After preaching to a small congregation, and com- forting himself with the promise made to " two or three gathered in the name of Christ," he adds ;■ — " Health still worse, and life doubtful : but Thy promise, Lord, is sure, and Thy mercy endureth forever. May I say with the Apostle ; — ' To liv6 is Christ, and to die is gain.' '' " 8th — 10th. Journey to Holderness, and back. Health better. God be praised. If my life is to be prolonged, may it not be useless. While I live, O Lord, may I live to Thee." LIFE OF BISHOP GEISWOLD. 465 " 11th — ^13th. Weather fihe. Health improving, and all the faster for the kindness of friends." This tour ended in time for his Address to the Conven- tion of 1819. It appears from other records that it was a journey prosecuted at the imminent peril of his life. In May, 1821, he entered on one of his^lpng, and, as it proved, one of his most interesting tours. It was that, during which he held the services in the " Maple grove," at Berkshire, on the northern lines of Vermont, of which he gave such a graphic description in the letter, formerly in- serted, to one of his Bristol correspondents. His journal Will furnish us with several additional extracts, illustrative, not only of his habits of daily communion with God, but also of his lively sensibility to the beauties and the grtodeur of nature. ' " Monday, 28th May, 1821. Went' to Providence in the Stage : the weather fine, and the season promising. How abundant are God's mercies, both temporal and spiritual ! Wherever the eye is -turned, His goodness smiles. But how ungratefully do' I partake of His goodness! Amidst His mercies and the comforts of His salvation, why is the mind sometimes sadj and the hcarlrftiint ? 'Why art thou SO full of heavhiess, O my soul ; and why art thou so dis- quieted within me ? Put thy trust in God.' O may I ever trust in thee, who art ever good and faithful. May I call to mind thy rnercies of old, the years of thy right hand. I vnll yiet give Him thanks for the help of His countenance." Diverging from his westward route through Massachu- setts, he paid a visit to Hartford, Connectid^t, passing over a mountainous region. On this part of his tour, he has the following reflections. " Tuesday, 29th. Life is a journey. We are toss6d and shaken on its rugged road, and oft in perils. Some- times we pass along the smooth and level plain, with little change or variety, from month to month, and from year to year. But, generally, life's journey is more like ours to- day. Frequently, through the Lord's indulgent goodnfess, We ascend the hill of fortune. Some of His favorite chil- 466 MEMOIK OF THE dren does prosperity raise to the mountain's summit, whence we view the beauties of nature, the kingdoms of the earth and their glory. But, the loftiest hill must have its descent. With greater precipitancy are we hurried down to the valley. How steep, and often how perilous the movement! In many unhappy cases, how dreadful has been the down- fall ! " Riding in the stage, leads to many reflections on our company, our fellow-passengers on the journey of life. How much its happiness depends on their character and their benevolence. Could we always choose our companions, and had we wisdom always to make the best choice, how different would be this dreary pilgrimage ! But, God does all .things right. Our duty is, to act well the part, which He assigns us. If we cannot receive good at all tiines, we can do it : and if men do ill, we may give them better ex- amples. Remember who has said ; ' It is more blessed to give than to receive.' " Among the passengers was Mrs. , and her two daughters, dea/'and dumh. In the course of, the day, I have had many thoughts and reflections on these inlets, of knowledge, of -liapplncoa txncl of pain, to the SOUl — the senses ; on the remarkable effects of losing one or more of them ; and 'on the possibility and the consequencie of still more being added ;* also, on that spiritual deafness, and its effects, which are the great obstacles to our ministry and so often render our preaching in vain. These persons, de- prived of hearing, seem very happy in the thought that, by * In one of tlfe Bishop's memoraiK^um books, I find the following thoughts, evidently pursuing somewhat fiirther what was thus started in his mind. - " Of the senses, such were given to man as were necessary to his pre- sent wants and happiness. It is very possible, and may be supposed, that more might have been added ; and that, if added, they would open new wonders, new elements, new worlds, as we may say, to our view, of ■which now we cannot possibly conceive.' In the case of a man born blind, if one were to tell him of light, he would never dream of the real character of that element. One -blind person conceived that green was like the sound of a drum j and that scarlet was like that of a trumpet." LIFE OF BISHOP GRISWOLD. 467 two years of hard study, they may, in some little degree, remedy the dreadful defect occasioned by their dea&ess. How many thousands and millions in the full enjoyment of aZ^ their senses, have passed this same day without^one grateful thought on such a blessing ! How very much are our senses abused, and made the instruments of sinning against the author of all benefits ?" " 31st. Seemed -as a day lost. My mind was depressed with melancholy thoughts. how weak is our faith ! How blessed to live in constant communion with God ! " June 1st. At two in the. morning took the stage, and at two in the afternoon, arrived in Great Harrington. " In order to understand what follows under this date, we must remember that the Bishop's brother had been Rector of the Church .iji this place ; and that the course, which this brother had seen fit to pursue, had forced a separation both between himself and his parish, and between himself and his Bishop.- The position, in which things were at present standing, was this. His connexion with the parish had been declared, by the proper ecclesiastical authority, at an end' ; and yet he refused to resign his right to the Church edifice, and attempted- to prevent the clergyman, who had been invited temporarily to labor in his stead, from occu- pying the pulpit ; while his enmity against his brother, as his private letters shew, had been carried to a gross and re- volting extreme. The Bishop's hope, in visiting the parish at this time, was, that he should be able to put an end to the unpleasant state of existing relations. Upon reaching Great Barrington, he thus writes : " Found there brothers Humphrey and Burt. Preached. Found the Churchlhere still in a divided, unhappy state ; and had some painful trials, which produced an unfavorable effect upon my health. Few trials of our temper and our Christian fortitude are greater than being considered and treated as enemies by those whom we love, and whom we have faithfully labored to assist and to benefit. ' Thou, Lord, knowest tny simpleness, and from thee my faults are not hid.' Search and try my heart; if mischief be there, 468 MEMOIR OF THE however painful the operation, may it be . remoyed. I am worthless : my honor, my fame, is nothing. But, for the glory of thy great name, preserve this Church ; restore them to unity and peace ; inspire them with a holy zeal ; give them prosperity, and open their mouth again in songS' of gratitude , and praise . " All who are acquainted with the circumstances, which lie concealed under this extract, will join me in saying, that seldom, if ever, is a more affecting record to he met with, of the workings of a true Christian heart, than that, which I have just copied. Proceeding on his way through Lenox and Lanesborough, in which latter place he met again, at his sister Deborah's, their agpd and now almost helpless mother, he was kindly assisted by Mr. Newton of Pittsfield, in passing through Williamstown into Vermont. On this part of his journey, he writes thus : ■ " 4th. Entering Williamstown, I have many thoughts on what I here formerly witnessed ; soldiers kept such by compulsion, the cruelty of their officers, and the. mournful death of one poor fellow. * * « * Thoughts busy on entering Vermont. A great change in this country during the last fifty years. Calling at an inn in Pownal, I noticed with concern the very great number of SherifPs sales, and advertisements of Vendues of property taken for debt. Was told, that most of the inhabitants of this town have lately failed, in consequence of borrowing money from banks, (and they might have added, from the use of ardent spirits;) and that 300 of them are now in jail at Bennington. Reflections arose on banks and intempe- rance. ' that they were wise ; — that they understood this !' " Arrive at Bennington ; meet with Mr. Bronson ; per- form Divine service and preach, probably to little good pur- pose. People here are prejudiced against the Church. Yet, why should we suppose that our preaching, if it be Jn sin- cerity and according to God's Word and will, is ever with- out use ? Can we see as the Lord seelh ? Will He not prosper it in that, for which He sends it ? When we speak in His name and by His authority, shall it ever return void ? LIFE OF BISHOP GRISWOLD. 469 thou Divine Saviour ! teach me to know and ever to con- sider that nothing, done according to thy will, is done in vain. Teach me, above all things, to know thy truth, to obey thy commands, and to trust in thy grace. " Mr. S^ and family, as usual, very kind and hospita- ble ; every want for the body is here anticipated, or provi- ded for. They were ' cumbered with much (too much) serving.' God grant that, of the one thing most needful, they may never be destitute. " Met, here, with Miss C , of Middlebury. She has been residing in New York, where the Lord has blessed to her conversion the preaching of that faithful minister of Christ, Dr. M r. She is a sensible young woman, pos- sessed of beauty and of all that is amiable in nature and by education ; truly pious ; her whole soul devoted to her Sa- viour. She reminds me of the celestial inhabitants : she seems but ' a little lower than the angels.' What mortal state can imagination pourtray, so nearly resembling that of those pure intelligences, as the character and life of a pious young female ?" These last extracts illustrate three very strong traits in the Bishop's character; — his peculiarity as a close observer and a careful student of men and of society, in all those si- lent signs of their condition, which are hung out to the passing traveller (for he seldom even suffered the stage to stop without reading minutely every advertisement, with which the walls of the inn were adorned) : his painful un- willingness to be the object of an extra amount of attention, which might be burthensome to the Idboring members of a family : — and his keen, delicate sensibility to the refining and elevating power of high female character and influence. How beautifully is this last trait brought out in the above extract ! An intelligent and interesting female could always -most easily draw him out from his customary taciturnity, and make hinn display his really fine powers of conversation ; and he was always sensibly gratified by the attentions, which RR 470 MEMOIR OF THE from such he receiTed. I remember an amusing anecdote in this connexion. During one of the sessions of our General Convention, he was invited to pass an evening at a sort of clerical party, given to the members pf the Convention. A lady present noticed him, as he sat silently by himself in one comer of the room ; and, being acquainted, made her way towards him. The Bishop was at once on his feet, and engaged in free and animated conversation. As soon, however, as the colloquy closed, his first impulse was, to resume his seat. But, amid the bustle and movenjent, which filled the room, his seat had been pushed aside, and he fell heavily upon the floor. Instantly, however, he was upon his feet again, and surrounded by the ladies, who expressed their " hopes that he was not seriously hurt." " No," replied he, blush- ing with mortification ; " I've hurt nothing but my pride." Proceeding on his tour, he was next day at Arlington, and wrote as follows : — " June 5th. The people of Vermont are this day gene- rally engaged in training the militia, and in military parade. To my disappointment there were no religious exercises. The still, small voice of the Saviour's Gospel is drowned by martial music and the din of arms. ' The weapons of our warfare are not carnal.' Blessed Lord Jesus, when wilt thou beat these swords into plough-shares? When shall sinful, guilty, dying mortals cease to~ hurry each other into the eternal world ? When shall we follow thy blessed ex- ample, and labor to save life, and not destroy it ?" On the 6th of June, after having preached to a congrega- tion, " part of whom had come ten or fifteen miles to hear the Word and to enjoy the comfort of Christian fellowship and of the Saviour's ordinances," he thus humbly and self-searchingly writes : " may they not have come in vain ! Blessed are they, who have ears to hear. Am I, O Lord God, faithful to teach thy truth ? Did I keep back nothing that was profita- ble .' Have I not been careless and languid, when tiie sal- LIFE OF BISHOP GRISWOLD. 471 vatien of hundreds may have depended on their receiving the words, I spake ? Have I not regarded this world, when I should have been about my Master's business ? Have I not, in executing the duties of my office, had respect to my own glory? Have I never aimed to please the fancies of men, ' When sent with God's commission to their hearts V If it was necessary that St. Paul should have ' a Aom in the flesh,' how wise and good is God in removing from me temptation to boasting and vanity. Had he bestowed on me great and excellent gifts ; did I possess eloquence and other eminent talents ; if I had made great attainments in knowledge, and stood high in the ranks of literary fame ; how perilous must have been my state, inclined, as by na- ture I so much am, to think more highly of myself than I ought to think !" The last part of this extract brings to mind an incident, which I lately learned from one of the Bishop's foritier Massachusetts clergy. ' Having labored fatiguingly all day, during a visit to the parish in Dedham, he was urged to ride several miles on a cold, uncomfortable Sunday evening, for the purpose of holding a third service at Quincy. Being seated in the chaise, he remarked to his Rev. companion ; " Brother C , this is rather hard, to ride so far, at my time of life, on such an evening as this, and after a day's labor so fa- tiguing, for the purpose of preaching to a small congregation, and without any special ability to interest them." " How- ever," he added, —7-" it is a good way to mortify pride, and to keep the body in subjection. This is my way of attain- ing these important ends ; and I think it a better way for me than wearing a hair shirt, or enduring extraordinary fasts. I have, by this means, learned to throw away regret at my want of talents as a popular preacher. It has led me to reflect much on the case of those, who become the idols of popular applause. And from this study, and accompany- ing observation on men, I have learned enough of the phi- 472 MEMOIR OF THE losophy of our nature to be even thankful, that God never saw fit to make me what is usually called a popular preacher. I have noticed that the peculiar excitability of temperament, which seems necessary in acquiring that kind of reputation, with the flatteries and caresses, which follow it, has often led to deep and awful falls from Christian character." But, to proceed with the journal : — " June 7th. Performed service and preached at Man- chester. The court, which was in session, from politeness, or, we may hope, a still better motive, adjourned to attend the ser- vice. May we all be duly reminded of that Court, infinitely higher and more just, before which we must all soon stand. How desperate, how hopeless would be our case, were it not, blessed Lord Jesus ! that thou wilt be our ' Advocate with the Father ;' that thy righteousness we may plead, and in thy menishe justified. ' Thanks be to God for his unspeak^ able gift.' " To Rutland. In order to save trouble to my friends, take a seat in a wagon, going by night. May I ever imi- tate St. Paul, and, as far as is practicable, avoid being bur- thensome to the Churches, and the giving of pain, trouble or expense to any people." Passing by stage to Middlebury, he spent Sunday there. His labors during the day he thus records : " June^ 10th, Whitsunday. The weather very warm, and my duties, not hard, (God' forbid that I should so deem them,) but — many. • Preached three times, and administer- ed Baptism, Confirmation^ the Lord's Supper, and mar- riage." The Methodist Bishop George was then preaching in Middlebury, and there was "an awakened attention to religious things; especially, and -most happily, among the students in the College." " How immensely important," he adds, " that they, who are destined to be teachers, should first, and early in life, be taught of God !^that all professional men, and such as are distinguished by office, or wealth, or honors, or learning, should know the true God, and Jesus Christ, whom he has LIFE OF BISHOP GRISWOLD. 473 sent ! Of such, it may reasonably be expected, will be a large proportion of those, who are educated in our Colleges ; and pleasing is the promise, when the Lord calls them to a knowledge of His grace and faith in Him." " June 13th. This morning, at the time we intended to set off, there was a shower of rain, with much lightning and thunder. Pfospects for the journey very discouraging. But what should discourage those, whose trust is in that God, who will make all things work together for their good .? I found on this, as on a thousand occasions, that the Lord will not forsake us. The storm soon subsided; a bright morning followed ; and riding was the more plea- sant for the rain. " After this clouded, stormy night of hfe is past, how bright, how joyful will be the resurrection morn! The bright scenes of this morning ; the joyful countenance of the busy world ; the cheerful notes of the feathered choir ; the smiling face of nature, clothed in verdure and rejoicing in the more than common vigor of youthful summer ; all these give but a faint idea of that glorious Day of the Lord Jesus Christ, when saints and angels shall unite in an uni- versal chorus ; when the Sun of Righteousness shall shine in immortal glory ; and the universe shall resound with the Redeemer's praise." Between the 13th and the 18th of the month occurred the interesting services in "the Maple Grove," of which I have spoken ; with others similar in their neighborhood. Passing thence across the mountains to the Eastern side of the State, his attention was arrested by the frequent recurrence of that beautiful tree, his thoughts on which he thus' penned : " Great abundance of Sugar Maple. Most beautiful orchard of the trees on a part of Mr. B.'s farm. On the whole of it were made, the last season, two tons of sugar, which was uncommonly good. In my present tour through this State, I have been led to reflect on the value and im- portance of this excellent tree. Perhaps none, that grows from the earth, is equally useful. For Juel it is scarce ex- ceeded by any wood. For cabinet work much of it is equa 1 RK* 474 MEMOIR OF THE in beauty, and will soon be in value, to mahogany. For sugar, also, its value is great. It affords the pleasantest sweet in nature. Making the sugar requires little expense but labor; and that, in a season of the year, when the fermer has little else to do. It requires no slaves in its manufacture, nor even ^ny additional laborers. The same laborers, who must necessarily be employed to manage the farm, are sufficient. Though much sugar is now made, and the inhabitants are becoming more sensible of the value of this tree, yet it is painful to observe how many of them are careles&ly destroyed, and how much of it is heedlessly burnt and otherwise, lost, which, for a great variety of uses, would be exceedingly valuable. This tree should be saved and cherished, especially by being transplanted where it may conveniently grow." . . They passed the Western range, or spur, of the Green Mountains at Waterbury, where the Onion River finds its way from Montpelier towards Lake Champlain. At " Water- bury," the Bishop writes : " Stop to view the natural bridge; a curiosity worth a journey of many. miles. The river, here, has forced its passage through the mountain. The re- maining rocks, in frightful precipices, project on either side. Immense masses of solid stone, loosened by time and the continual action of the water, have fallen down and filled the channel ; and the river, in finding its passage under thera, is, in one place, wholly lost to the eye ; and where it issues below, "its whole volume of waters is compressed into the narrow breadth of a very few feet. The beholder is astonished, and can scarce believe this tw small stream is contained within such scanty limits. Above these falls, the river is remarkably tranquil ; flowing along with an easy and almost imperceptible motion. Riding upon its banks, and reflecting how soon these waters are to be dashed over the precipice and agitated with the utmost commotion, I am re- minded of the deceptions and the vicissitudes of human life. In prosperous days, when life flows pleasantly along the cur- rent of time, we know not, and we are little inclined to the consideration, how soon and how suddenly, the scene may LIFE OF BISHOP GRISWOLD. 475 be changed ! What disappointments, what sorrows, what distresses, a day or an hour may bring forth ! To our moral and rehgious state, the apphcation is serious, as it is just. Myriads of souls are lulled into a fatal security by the smiles of fortune, worldly joys, and present ease. To such, death is indeed a dreadful cataract ; the fall is sudden from tem- poral hope to utter despair. How ought the preacher to be faithful, whether.men will hear, or whether they will forbear ! How should we take heed not to ' cry peace, where there is no peace !' And hath not God himself said, ' There is no peace to the wicked?' " The scenery on Onion River from Burlington to Mont- pelier is exceedingly interesting. The eye is never weary of seeing. It is continually entertained with a pleasing variety of rich meadows, and delightful intervale ; now ex- panding into a broad surface, and now contracted into nar- row limits ; as though the very hills were eager to view the romantic scenery, and delighted with witnessing the strug- gles of the waters to force their way through all obstructions. These hills are seen swelling into infinite variety of size and shape ; so that every new turn of the way presents some new combination of forms and colors, reminding one, of the wondrous changes of the Kaleidoscope. Some of the scenery is inexpressibly bold and sublime. In short, while moving along this extended pass, the observant traveller feels as though he were moving through JYature's Cabinet ; one long gallery of the rich, the beautiful and the grand of her un- matched forms." From the I8th to the 25th of the month, he was occupied in passing the main body of the Green Mountains, and the Connecticut River, and in visiting the parishes, which lay on his route. Upon leaving Olaremontj N. H., he has the following note in his Journal : " June 25th. Parting reluctantly with friends more kind than I deserve, we hurry on to Drewsville. * * * Arrive in season for the services ; and find friends more obliging, were that possible, tlian those we leave behind. What am I, Lord God,. that these honors should be shewn 476 MEMOm OF THE to me, ■whilst others, infinitely more worthy, pass through life neglected ? Remember, my soul, that thou, in thy life time, art receiving good things, and they, evil things. May not these good things be my only portion ? Blessed Lord Jesus, let me rather be as Lazarus, or as Job, than receire my portion in this world." From Drewsyille, he journied through Charleston, N. H. ; re-crossed the Connecticut River; attended the Convention of Vermont, at Bellows Falls ; thence, re-entered Massachu- setts ; and, visiting his parishes on the way, reached home early in July. Such was this interesting tour* I have given, of course, but a part of his journal ; yet enough to shew the habits of mind, with which he journeyed ; his power of observation, his readiness at turning every thing to some good account, his love of, nature, his humility, vhi? fear of giving trouble, his frequency in severe self-examination, and his daily walk of close communion with God. More or less of this character belonged to all his journeyings, from year to year, around his Diocese ; and it is believed that seldom, if ever, is there a Christian found more constantly engaged in wearying, or exciting duties, yet more conscientiously and sacredly on his guard against the dissipating effects, on personal piety and habits of devotion, of such incessant toils and of such a life of journeys. I add here some extracts from another journal of this same year, 1821, kept on his way through New Hampshire, the southern part of Vermont, and a portion of the State of New York, to the special General Convention, which was about to meet in Philadelphia. The first extract is a meditation and prayer, on setting out. " October 2d, 1821. Through the Lord's goodness, com- menced another journey. Almost 1800 years have passed away since the Apostles of Jesus Christ were first sent forth on this gracious message of mercy and salvation. Blessed, indeed, would it be, if I had their spirit and their zeal. It is comforting that we have the same Lord, who chaiiges not, and the same promises, which cannot fail. LIFE OF BISHOP GRISWOLD. 477 " blessed God and Saviour, grant that, like them, I may be faithful; and that, like theirs, may be my success in laboring to build up thy kingdom and extend the knowledge of thy salvation to my fellow sinners. If Moses shrunk from the tremendous duty of declaring thy message to a rebellious people, what am I, that ? But thy power is sometimes manifested in human weakness. O may thy Divine Spirit be my companion : awaken my zeal, give me wisdom frqm above, and preserve me from perils both of soul and body. O visit not upon this people the sins and unworthiness of their Pastor ; but, for thy goodness sake, and according to thy manifold and great mercies, stretch forth thy right hand to save. Amen." In parsing through Bradford, Mass., he again encountered a military parade, his reflections on which, though in some points like those on the former occasion, are yet worthy of preservation. " October 5th. Found in Bradford an immense multitude, ' young men and maidens, old men and children,' collected to witness the training of two regiments of militia. From ' whence come wars and fightings ?' An Apostle has given the correct answer. The propensity of mankind to be de- lighted with military parade, and to honor those who shine in arms, is an evidence that they want a ' peace which the world cannot give.' ' Not as the world giveth' peace, (says the Prince of peace) ' give I unto you.' may this peace be more and more extended, till all shall strive, not to destroy men's lives, but to save them. How happy would it be, were men as interested, as engaged, in ' fighting the good fight of faith ;' and if, instead of these carnal weapons, they would ' put on the whole armor of God !' According to the wisdom of the world, to teach men to fight, to train them to arms, to inspire them with a martial spirit, to inflame their souls with the love of military fame, is the surest way to keep them in peace ! The wisdom, which is fi-om above, teaches us, that, to preach the Gospel of the Redeemer's kingdom, to subdue those ' lusts, which war in our mem- bers,' and to inculcate heavenly love, will be more effectual. 478 MEMOIR OF THE On this message, O Blessed Jesus, we, thine unworthy minis- ters, are passing, with some difficulty, and without notice, through this crowd. How infinitely greater' shall be the assembly, how changed the views and feelings of all, when the archangel's trump shall summon the, numerous tribes of Adam's race to attend thy dread tribunal !" Having reached Concord, the capitol of the State, h. diverged, far northwards, from his main route, for the pur- pose of visiting the little parish of Holderness, on Squam Lake, among the approaches to the White Hills. His object accomplished, he returned to Concord and resumed his journey. On this episode, he has cin interesting note. " October 10th. Measure back my way to Concord. How very much of our small portion of time is consumed, not to say, lost, in travelling, in mere loco-motion ! Much of what is almost lost might be made far more profitable. Conversa- tion is not always, nor generally, the best and most useful. Perhaps, however, in nothing is more time wasted than in thinking- nothing, or that which is Worse, or at best of but little use. Meditation and observation are two of the five sources of knowledge ; and they have this peculiar advan- tage^ that they are always accessible. Whenever we are awake, and have the use of reason, we may meditate ; nor can we well conceive of a situation, in which something can- not be learned by observation from the circumstances and objects," which surround us. We naturally incline to indo- lence ; and trifling thoughts are ever intrusive. Our cogita- tions, scarce less than our actions, may be and should be imder the control of reason, and subject to our will. " The traveller is naturally impatient. The mind stretches forward to the next stage, or the journey's end, while the body drags heavily along. May we not hope that the time is approaching, when the soul shall be no longer thus im- prisoned in a tenement of clay ? Clothed with her celesticd body, she may, not improbably, be able to range, swift as her own thoughts, through immeasurable regions of the universe, and visit worlds with infinitely more facility than now we pass from town to town." - LIFE OF BISHOP GRISWOLD. 479 From Concord, he proceeded, on the llthjbyHopkinton, and thence, onwards, to Bradford, N. H. His note at this place, Uke several others, shews the influence of his early law-studies on his habits of illustrating religious truth. " This day, at Amherst, was found guilty of a most horrid and barbarous murther, and sentenced to suffer death. May the Lord have mercy on his soul. Didst thou, Blessed Redeemer, shed thy blood for such un-v(forthy, such sinful creatures ? Hast thou, indeed, such mercy for those, who have none for each other? How awful the thought that this atrocious wretch is soon to be sent from an earthly tribunal to the Supreme Court of the universe. Yet, who knows^but the terrors of his situation may bring him to himself, and cause him to flee from the wrath to come? may he know, and seasonably avail himself of, that prevailing ' Advocate with the Father,' who can plead as never man pleaded j and who is sure to procure the acquittal and justification of those, who duly commit their cause to His management. This suit may be defended ' without money and without price.' No fees are required, but the tears, which flow from a penitent heart. No plea can prevail but that of guilty. No argu- ment for mercy is needed, but that of faith in Christ ; and no evidence, on our part, is called for, but the following of His counsel, and living to him in holiness." At Bradford, he thus notices an awful tempest, which had recently swept between the Sunapee and Kearsarge Moun- tains, and across the Sunapee Lake. " Within four or five miles of our road, and parallel with it, passed but a few days since the most tremendous, and perhaps, the most destructive tornado ever known in these States. Its effects almost exceed credibility. Houses, which stood in its way, were demolished almost as suddenly as by an explosion of gunpowder. Within five or six seconds after striking a building, the air was filled with its fragments. Of the whole furniture of one house, it is said, one chair only could be found. Six or eight persons were killed ; many more wounded ; and the escape of several was little short of miraculous. How awful are the terrors of Him, who ' rides 480 MEMOIR OF THE on the whirlwind and directs the storm ;' of Him, who can, in a moment, make the very air, which we breathe, the in- strument of our destruction ! Across Sunapee Lake a child of four years old was carried and dashed upon the opposite shore. Such is the security of human life ! Such the stabili- ty of earthly hopes !" From Bradford, his way lay by Claremont, across the Con- necticut river to Bellows Falls, and so over the Green Moun- tains to Manchester, Vt. At this last place, he records a truly remarkable fact. " October 16th. In this place, and near where the new Church stands, was the supposed murder of Russell Colvin. A most extraordinary case. Two men, brothers of his wife, were tried for murdering him. The examination was long and very critical : the evidence against them so clear and full, that nobody doubted their guilt ; and, what is still more remarkable, they themselves confessed it, and acknowledged the justice of their condemnation. And yet, Providentially, a short time before the day appointed for their execution, it was discovered that Colvin was alive and well !" Two days later, he thus writes : " October 19th. Take leave of brethren, Eind ' friends no less than brethren dear ;' journey to the westward, and enter the State of New York. ***** Passing the summit of a hill in Cambridge, (Washington Co.) the view was interesting, and my mind filled with many reflec- tions. To the eastward was a beautiful and extensive inter- vale, surrounded with gently rising grounds and swelling hills, beyond which the mountains of Vermont reared their loftier summits. In the deepening vale, and on the sides of the rising hills are seen an immense number of fields and farms and cottages. Over the meadows and pastures, yet verdant, numerous flocks and herds are seen grazing. Peace reigns and plenty and prosperity abound. But, it was not ever thus. Only forty-four years have passed away since, over these happy retreats, bloody war shook his angry visage. Through these regions, Col. Baum led his troops towards Bennington ; beyond those hills, which are in view, ^as he LIFE OF BISHOP GRISWOLD. 481 met and defeated by the Vermont militia ; and there yet lie mouldering to earth the bones of hundreds, slain in deadly strife.* " To the westward, the eye extends to the heights of Sara- toga, where, on the next day, the whole of the British army, after a bloody contest, surrendered. These are events, of which America boasts, and long will boast, with glory and exultation. This, however, is the wisdom of the world. Religion views these scenes with a different eye, and with far other feelings. She knows ' whence come wars and fightings ;' and weeps over these dire effects of human de- pravity. In how many things may it be said of men ; their ' glory is their shame !' How different are the lessons taught us by Him, who came, not to destroy men's lives but to save them ! He teaches us • to be hiimble, to love our neighbor as ourselves, and even to prefer his honor to our own. What pride and selfishness blind our eyes ! Of the capture of General BurgOyne we are never weary. But when do we speak of the surrender of General Hull ? "With what detes- tation is frequent mention made of the British soldier's kill- ing a woman in New Jersey. But how rarely, if ever, do we hear of the barbarity of Col. F., who^ in the battle of * The two battles, fought by General Stark, at Bennington, on the 16th October, 1776, were among the most brilliant affairs of our Revolutionary Bfruggle. Col. Baum, being despatched by General Buigoyne with 1500 Hessian troops and 100 savages, to capture the American military storen at Bennington, was met by General Stark with 1400 militia ; and though the former was entrenched, he was yet totally defeated, and his whole fbroe captured, with all their spoils of war. This victory, however, was scarcely won, when CoL Breyman arrived on the field of action with 1000 addi- tional regulars, as a reinforcement from General Burgoyne, to succor the troops, which had just laid down their arms. Meanwhile, General Stark had been joined by a fresh regiment of militia ; with which, and his pre- viously weary and hungry men, he assaulted the reinforcement, and, before the day closed, put them also to an utter route. The loss of the enemy was nearly 1000 men; that of the Americans, not more than 100. The events of this day at Bennington contributed largely to those of the next at Sara- toga. Thus did " bloody war shake his angry visage over those happy re- treats," on which our traveller's eye was then resting. SS 482 MEMOIR OF THE Bennington, deliberately aimed at, shot througli the breast, and instantly killed, the wife of a British officer !" Arrived in Troy, he spent several days with the Warren family, and in visits to interesting objects in the vicinity. This was so unusual a pause in his labors, that it seems to have affected him even to sadness. Hence he notes on his journal for October 20th ; " Experience some depression of spirits. - Seem as wasting my time, or neglecting my own proper business." During this pause, he visited Albany, and its Legislature, Lansingburgh, Waterford, and the falls of the Mohawk. " The scenery" here, he says, " was in- teresting and sublime, much beyond my expectation. A little south of the Cahoes, pass the place, where the two great Canals, northern and western, are to unite. Had many reflections on these stupendous structures, which promise to be so much to the honor, and eventually, no doubt, to the interest, of this large and rising State." On the 23d, after "making some farewell calls," and re- cording, as " not to be forgotten," the " kindness of friends in Troy," he proceeded on his way towards the Gener,al Convention. On his way, he examined the United States Arsenal between Troy and Albany : " a curiosity," he writes, " worth visiting. Yet, it is melancholy," he adds, " to re- flect what labor and expense are bestowed in preparing in- struments to destroy men's lives. The common maxim, that preparing for war preserves peace, is at least doubtful, if nqt certainly false. To preserve peace, it is most necessary to subdue ' the lusts, which war in our members.' , Provid- ing the means of warfare will increase the desire to use them. Is life more safe for putting swords in the hands of mad- men ? Which policy, in the event, best preserved peace with the natives of this country ; that of the Puritans in New England, or that of the Quakers in Pennsylvania ? Had we an Arsenal, in which might be deposited, in an unused, inactive state, all our pride, selfishness and ambition, peace would indeed be lasting. But, what buildings are sufficient- ly capacious to contain mcA a deposit ?" LIFE OF BISHOP GRISWOLD. 483 But his reflections, during this tour, were not all upon torna- does, murders and wars. His observations' on what he saw in the State of New York set his thoughts on a different range. A brief, but interesting sketch of their movements he has preserved in his journal: " How wonderful that so fine a country as this should have continued, for so many centuries, perhaps ever since the creation of the world, without civilized inhabitants! That so much of its fine soil should be uncultivated ; and that so many of its resources and advantages should remain unoccupied and unenjoyed! The more wonderful is all this, on reflecting how evidently Dijdne Providence has designed all these things for the use of man. How wonderful, the Salt Springs in the Western part of this State ; how needed there ; how productive and how useful ! Where it might have been expected an article so heavy in transportation would, with great difficulty and expense, be obtained, there is likely to be a supply for a large part of the United States. The late discovery of a water-cement in digging the canal, when and where it is so needed, is an additional source of wonder and of gratitude to the Father of mercies." Here the journal of the present tour ends. Either it was not continued, or its continuation is lost. Enough, however, has been given to show us a good specimen of a Christian traveller. All his journals seem written on the principle, which he quotes from Dr. Johnson, (with him, rather a favorite author) that " it is the great excellence of a writer to put into his book as much as his book will hold." His diaries are all full of incident and thoughti; and to ,a careful reader, it will be seen that many of his reflections contain the seeds of valuable theological arguments. To give an example of this latter remark ; when he notices the wonderful fact that this great continent, with its boundless resources, divinely intended for the benefit of man, continued for so many thousands of years without civilized inhabitants, capable of discovering those resources, and of turning them to use ; he is not expressing a mere idle man's wonder, but, in his own peculiar way, answering the objector against revelation, who 484 MEMOIR OF THE inquires ; "if Christianity be arevelationfrom God, disclosing the only way of salvation, why was it withheld from the race for 4000 years ; and. why, when finally .given, was it suflered to become the privilege of , but a little handful of men?" The Bishop^s answer to this cavil is, virtually; that the reason for this fact is God's, not man's ; and that the fad itself no more disproves God's authorship in revelation, than the effect, which he .was recording, disproved God's agency in creation. * I have a few journals, written on subsequent tours ; but, with one exception,, they are mostly filled with details of Episcopal services, accompanied with very brief reflections as usual, shewing his habits of daily and hourly communion with God, but furnishing little that can add to the idea, which we, already have, of his eminent piety. I give, how- ever, a few additional extracts, writteil on more special jOC- casions, and worthy of preservation. The following shews him at one of the annual commencements in Brown Univer- sity, while acting as Chancellor of,that Institution. " September 3d, 1822. Went to Providence. After some difficulty, commenced the examination of ^he candidates for orders, A. , J. -, and C . Had many serious and some painful thoughts and reflections, on the inconsidera- tion, or thoughtlessness, with which, too generally, men take upon themselves the solemn vows, and, the awfully responr sible office of the Christian ministry. How dreadful is the judgment-denounced upon unfaithfulness! How tremendous the thought, that the salvation, the eternal well-being of many immortal souls may depend, God only knows in what degree, on our diligence and fidelity ! and that some may for- ever perish through our neglect !" " September 4th. Attend the business and exercises of the commencement. Fatiguing to body and mind. How much do we add to the burthen of life in order to support useless parade and a vain shew ! ■ Such, however, is the imperfec- tion of our nature, the corruption of our hearts, and the limi- tation of our faculties, that much of our formality is a necessary evil. Thousands crowd together, with much eagerness,. to LIFE OF BISHOP GRISWOLD. 485 behold the exercises, which, \,o the few graduates, are indeed interesting. And yet, how very unconcerned are the most of this immense assembly about that commencemmt, that be- ginning of a never ending state, which, is sure soon to come, and in which all are equally and infinitely concerned ! Here, we are pursuing, or ought to be pursuing, the course of our preparatory exercises. How alarming is the thought that, for idleness and misconduct, we may be expelled ! These young men think it of vast importance that their appearance, for a few minutes, on this stage and before this brilliant assembly, should be favorable ; and for four years they will labor, in severe and patient study, to obtain one of the first parts. Can the same individuals, then, with myriads of others, be unconcerned how they shall appear before unnum- bered hosts of men and angels ; beforp the most splendid concourse of the assembled world ? Have they no anxiety what part shall be allotted them for eternity ? "Immediately after the collegiate exercises, we again prosecute the examinations. How changed the scene ! But a few minutes since, we were surrounded by thousands, gay and thoughtless of their souls, and eagerly grasping after worldly pleasures. Here, are but a very few ; grave, serious and retired ; and surrounded with ponderous volumes, which contain the concentrated wisdom of ages, on subjects truly the most interesting and important. Here, that wisdom, which is from above, is the subject of conversation ; and our inquiries are, how men may eScape the fascinating snares of worldly vanities ; how they may be arrested in their sinful courses ; and how their hearts may be fumed to God .'' We are listening to the progress, which young men have made in spiritual things, and with what motives and qualifications and prospects of success, they resolve to leave the'world and devote their whole time and talents, and the whole energies of their souls to God. We seem as in another world. The former things are passed away : all things here are new." " September 5th. Was occupied in the morning with the Corporation in the business of the University. In the after- noon, continue the examinations ; attend the meeting of the 486 MEMOIR OF THE Bible Society ; and then return, still again, to the important business of preparing a few to preach the Bible, and to per- suade men to live according to its holy doctrines." In November of this year, 1822, he commenced another tour round his Diocese. On the 16th, v?hile on his way from Walpole, N. H., to Windsor, Vt., with fifteen grown persons in the stage, his " baggage, through the driver's fault, was injured. God be praised," he writes, " that I was not provoked to anger, nor disposed to render' evil for evil." He left home on the 11th, and seems to have spent a week in business and journeying before he reached the first place, at which he had made an .,appointment. Hence the following entry in his Journal. " Never before journeyed so long in .the Diocese without performing any public services. Blessed' Lord, has this week, now so soon to be numbered ' with the years, before the flood,' been spent according to thy will ? Might I not . have done some good, which I have neglected? In the weekj now soon to commence, I am, (by appointment,) to be engaged in many arduous and important duties. At the end of it, should I see its end, I may be less satisfied than I am with the one now closing., It is better to do nothing than it is to do ill. Thou Father of hghts. Thou God o{ grace ! did ever creature of thine so need thy aid ? Do Thou, who heardest the grayer of Solomon, ' give me wis- dom and knowledge, that I may go out and come in before this great people.' Let thy strength be manifest in my weak- ness. And, as thine is the kingdom and the power,' so thine shzdl be 'the glory forevet. Amen.' " One of the arduous and important duties, which lay thus nearly before him, was the trial of one of his clergy, on charges, which had been preferred against him. It was a duty, upon which he always entered with the deepest reluc- tance, and which ever drove him most pleadingly to God for wisdom and grace. It was doubtless, the approach of this trial, which made him feel that, at the close of the coming week, he might, if left to himself, feel less satisfied than he LIFE OF BISHOP GEISWOLD. 487 was after a week of what he considered idleness ; that it was better to pass a week doing nothing, than* to spend a day doing wrong to an accused brother clergyman. The trial, in the present case, resulted in the adquittal of the accused ; after which and the performance of many other duties, the Bishop reached home the last day of autumn, with the song in his heart ; " glory be to Thee, Lord." On the 9th of September, 1823, he started on another long tour; " not knowing," he writes, " the things that shall be- fall me ;" " and not forgettiijg the kind protecting hand, which has hitherto sustained me." By the first of October he was " preaching in a meeting-house, on a hill" in the northern parts of Vermont ; whence, " many miles to the South, Mansfield mountain reared its lofty summit, white with snow ; while in the north, the pinnacle of St. Armand's, in Canada, towered upwards, scarce less majestic." Passing on stiU nearer to Canada, on the 3d of October, he " crossed Trout- Brook, in which was drowned, Mr. Grey," one of his valued friends in those, northern regions, and a most efficient and pious supporter of our infant Churches there. " I passed by the grave," he^ adds, " where rest his earthly remains. ' Blessed are the dead, who die in the Lord : for they rest from their labors, and their works do follow them.' * * * In all these parts his death is much and generally lamented :" and he might have added ; " by none more sincerely than myself." As he advanced in years, the loss of every friend affected him with a peculiar sadness. " The young," he used to remark, " can better afford to part with friends ; for they have time to gain others. But to the aged, their loss is as the falling of autumn leaves. Every one, that drops, but strips the tree more nearly naked. It is to the rising, not to the setting sun, that men pay their homage;" The follow- ing note on the same day, October 3d, is full of beauty : " The weather continues uncommonly fine. The forests have assumed their autumnal beauties ; and no beauties in nature can exceed those, which now clothe the mountains in these northern parts of Vermont. The richness and variety 488 MEMOIR OF THE of the colors surpass any thing that can well be conceived. ' Solomon in all his glory was not arrayed Hke one of these' mountains at the present moment. As we were journeying this afternoon from Montgomery to Sheldon, the sun, decli- ning towards the western horizon, shed its very mildest and purest rays, and gave a brilliancy io the scenery, which is well worth a journey of 300 miles." How like, that scene, to the autumn of the Bishop's own life! In Swanton, near St. Albans, he records his official duties on the 6th, with the remark ; " Here four denominations of Christians have united in building a house for public wor- ship : a union, which may too naturally lead to dis-union. May the Lord, in His mercy, prevent it." Jle now "began to move towards the South, and on the 10th, was in Rutland. There he found an aged friend " fast sinking under the weight of years and cares. In each of these tours," he proceeds, " I look in vedn for many, whom I had before seen. Six weeks since, I left home. Then, the forests retained their verdure ; and nature smiled in ripened beauties. Now, the' leaves are falling, the forests are fast fading, and the lofty trees are laying their honors in the dust. Such, emphatically, are my cotempo- raries. ' We do fade as a leaf.' ' All flesh is grass, and the glory thereof as the flower of the field.' Three days since, the autumnal livery of the groves was inexpressibly beautiful. Just now, a severe frost has suddenly and mournfully changed their hue. So man, in the autumn of life, often shines in the most splendid glories ; often, too, they fall and fade as suddenly as th& leaves. Why is he thus fond of ' walking in a vain shew ?' " StiU journeying South amidst his labors, he entered Mas- sachusetts, and reached Lanesborough, the residence of his sister Deborah. Since his last visit to this place, his aged mother had died ; she, to whose tuition and discipline, his early mind had been so much indebted. On the 16th of October, he penned the following brief, but touching para- graph: LIFE OF BISHOP GEISWOLD. 489 " Visited my mother's grave. Merciful God ! What thoughts it suggests, what recollections it calls to mind! What pen can describe, what tongue can utter, the pensive sadness of my soul ? Yet, why sad ? Why not, Lord, rejoice in all thy works ? Why not perfectly confide in the wisdom and goodness of all thy providences ? What more can faith desire than that thy will shall, be done ? Dread- ful, indeed, was the sentence, ' Dust thou art, and unto dust shalt thou return ?' But, how animating the promise of Him, who is ' the resurrection and the life ;' — ' The dead shall hear the voice ofthe Son of God ; and they that hear, shall live !' '' From Lanesborough, he passed down through the county of Berkshire, and on the 20th of the month in Great Bar- rington, attended the funeral of one of the most active and influential of the female members of the parish there ; after which, as' though his heart could bear no more toil amidst the saddening influences of such an autumn, and such a series of incidents, he hurried home, reaching Bristol on the 23d ; the strain still sounding, with which he left Great Barrington ; " God's holy name be praised for all his saints, departed this life in his faith and fear." May he " give us grace to follow their good examples." The year 1824 has left us brief journals of no less than seven Episcopal tours, some of them of considerable extent, and one in particular of great length. But they contain little of special interest, abounding mainly in details of offi- cial labors. Preaching in Marblehead to a very full audience, he writes, on the 24th of February. " How affecting the thought that they may, and they may not, meet in heaven ! When we recollect that one perished in his sins on a cross, by the side of a penitent fellow-sufferer, and of a bleeding Saviour; — how must we fear and tremble for those, to whom we preach !" On the 29th of this month, he preach- ed three times in Boston, at Trinity, St. Paul's, and Christ Church ; confirming upwards of fifty each time ; and closing the labors of the day with the devoutest ascription of praise 490 MEMOIR OF THE for the " patient goodness of God" in continuing his life, and giving him strength for such arduous duties. There is one journal of a long tour in 1825 ; but this also is brief, and adds little of interest to what we already know of his private life while thUs employed. ^ In 1826, besides a sketch of a brief journey into Massa- chusetts, he has left a much more extended ' account of a joutaey, which he was induced to take into Canada. The object of this journey, one of the longest, that he ever made, >seems to have been twofold. Through the Rev. Mr. Bristed, who was then laboring in Vermont, he had received a very kind invitation fron^ Bishop Stuart, of Quebec, to visit hinf, for the purpose of mutual conference on the best interests of their adjacent Dioceses ; while sthe power of domestic afflictions at home, which threatened, for a time, to crush even his energies bofh of body and of mind, rendered' such an excursion peculiarly desirable, as a means, under God, of diverting his thpughts, and of throwing off the weight, which was pressing on his spirit. The blessing, "which he sought, was, in some measure, found. His journey was made in company with two of his female friends, and with other interesting travelling associates ; was, as usual, fiUed with incidents ; and ended in restoring him to his family in the enjoyment of renovated health ; though with a spirit still suffering deeply under sorrow. It was begun the 12ih of June, and ended the 18th of -July. The journal, which he kept, is unusually full, and' even interesting. But its descriptions are of objects so often de- scribed ; and I have already drawn so near the limits of this work, that I must reluctantly omit it from these pages. It must be sufficient to say, that he visited, on his way, St. John's, Montreal, and Quebep ; Lake George, the Springs, and Albany ; — that he was most kindly received and enter- tained by Bishop Stuart ; that, as he records, his titles were for once of some use to him by procuring him admission to an unusually free and full examination ' of the Convent of the Ursuline Nuns in Quebec ; that his journal is enlivened LIFE OF BISHOP GRISWOLD. 491 by narrations of personal incidents, and -historical recollec- tions ; by descriptions of nature and of art ; and by reflec- tions, which, as usual, breathe forth the habitual derotion of his spirit, and shew the true man of God wherever he went and with whomsoever he mingled. It is only, how- ever, at its close that it even alludes to the mournful visita- tion, which had, in part, prompted the excursion. As he drew near his saddened ' home, thoughts of the recent past mshed again into his mind, and he could not refrain from giving them one brief record in his page. ^ With this record, I close my present reference to this painfully pleasing ex- cursion. " My thoughts," he says, " during this last day's ride were much agitated, and my spirits much depressed, by re- flection on the changes in my family, and among my friends. Just art thou, God, who hast called me to sorrow and mourning ; and righteous art thou in all thy dealings. Shall we receive good at thy hand," and shall we not receive evil ? ' Lover and friends hast thou put far from me, and mine ac- quaintance out of my sight.' Thou hast indeed stricken me ; but have I grieved ? Have I not despised thy chastening, by neglecting duly to humble my soul in penitence and sorrow ? forbid that thy corrections should be in vain. ' Make me a, clean heart, O God, and renew a right spirit within me. Cast me not away from thy presence ; and take not Thy Holy Spirit from me. give me the comfort of thy help again, and stablish me with thy free Spirit. Then, shall I teach thy ways unto the wicked ; and sinners shall be converted unto thee.' " It cannot be necessary, after the extracts, which have thus been given from what remains to us of his private journals, to attempt a summary of those traits of personal, of Chris- tian, and of ministerial character, which they reveal, or illustrate. They are simple, and speak for themselves. They shew him, not elaborating great things, as though he expected the world to read and applaud him ; but pouring out his own secret and sacred thoughts and feelings, as though he expected none but God, himself, and perhaps 492 MEMOIE OF THE some nearest friend, would ever see the unstudied lines, ■which he traced. But this makes them, for our purpose, all the more valuable, as they open to us the man, not his ac- quisitions ; his heart, and not his learning. We see him just as he is — simple and sincere with God — and living only to his glory in the salvation of men. In continuing, now, to trace the thread of the Bishop's private life around his Diocese, my resort will be to the few letters, which have come into my hand, and which date onwards from the year 1826. His Canadian tour this year was begun in the midst of a very severe drought. In one of his letters, written on the way, he alludes to this fact, in a style already familiar to the reader's mind. In seeing and habitually acknowledging GOD in every thing, he was more hke one of the Old and New Testament saints than any modem Christian, with whom it has been my lot to be acquainted. "Greenfield, June 18th, 1826. " Dear E , — Through the Divine goodness, we are conducted in safety to this time and to this place. * * * The exceedingly dry weather, and of course, the dust from the roads, have been not a little annoying. * * « * The effects of the drought in all the country, through which we have yet passed, are mournful and alarming. But, the sins of the people, which, we may believe, are the cause of this visitation, are more so. At the present day, an un- common hardness of heart seems generally to prevail in our country. Even corrections, which are the last remedy em- ployed by Divine Providence, to reclaim us from sin and awaken us to righteousness, are ineffectual. It was former- ly the case, in this country, under such calamities, that the people were reminded, ' The Lord rules ;' and that, under the admonition, they humbled themselves in penitence and prayer. Christians cannot be too sensible, nor think too much, of an overruling Providence. This doctrine, that all things are under the superintendence of the Divine Be- ing, ought, indeed, in every trial, and under the most dis- LIFE OF BISHOP GRISWOLD. 493 couraging prospects, to teach us to put our trust in Him, and be assured that He, who is wise jind good and omnipotent, will order all things for the best. But, when we are called to suffer,, our very first consideration should be, whether the evil be not a chastisement. Our sins should be called to remembrance. That people are in the worst spiritual state, of whom it may be said ; the Lord hath stricken them, and they have not motimed." * * * * " I have nothing so particularly interesting as to be worth communicating to you, except perhaps, that, during one part of the afternoon on Sunday, we (all the Church congregation) went to a Congregational meeting house, and heard Mr. Brigham, who has made a long visit and tour in South America, give an account of the state of religion in that part of the world. It was not only gratify- ing to curiosity, but well calculated to make us more thank- ful for our religious privileges. I find, in many places, pressing calls for Missionary labors ; — and among the va- rious and weighty cares, which burthen my mind and weigh my spirits down, it is not the least to hear the people cry for bread, while I have none to give them. " Called as I am, by a just and wise Providence, to sor- row and mourning, the delightful scenes, through which I am passing, have less charms for me, and are less likely to restore my health, &c. Your affectionate friend, Alex. V. Griswold." Mies E. McC . The almost numberless journeys, which Bishop Griswold made round his Diocese, were accompanied with firequent exhausting toils, and exposures not only of health, but also of life. Yet he always travelled without accident, and seemed sometimes to wear out disease by the counter-irri- tant of motion and toil. Writing to Miss McC , on one of his tours in 1827, under date of July 13th — ^he says ; " My journey hither has been so fatiguiog on account of hot weather, the tediousness of the stages, bad health and TT 494 MEMOIR OF THE low spirits, that I have rarely felt less disposition to any manner of exertion; and I am now as little inclined to write as I usually am to conrersation. By this lassiftide, however, you are not likely to be a loser ; for I have no- thing to write : and thankful I ought to be that I have no- thing; that is, — considering that I have passed through some perils, and some exposure, and what reason I had to fear, last evening especially, that I should be quite sick, I ought to be thankful that I have no accident or mishap to relate, and that I am now as well at least as when I left home." Again, to the same, on the 8th of the following October, at St. Albans, Vt., he says : — " After the long services at Fairfield, yesterday, I came here, six or eight miles, over a road worse than you can well conceive, to preach a third sermon last evening. On Saturday, from riding in the rain, I took some cold, which again affected my throat. Conse- quently, my speaking yesterday was laborious ; and speaking so much, dangerous . The consequence is precisely what it was, the Sunday before I left home. My hoarseness this morn- ing, considering how much I shall have to • speak, for a week to come, causes some increase of anxiety. But I endeavor to consider myself in the hands of God, who will dispose of me according to his own unerring wisdom. If He has further work for me. He will enable me to per- form it. I call to mind His mercies of old, and in how many instances, dark clouds of difficulty and despondence have been wonderfully dispersed, and the brighter beams of His merciful goodness have broken forth to my view. "When I commenced my first sermon after leaving you, it seemed scarce possible that I could go through with it ; and yet I did it with ease, and my voice from that time continued to grow better." * * * * * After writing an account of his many labors on this tour, he adds ; — " To some of my friends perhaps, to my family at least, it may be gratifying to learn how I am occupied in my journey. But I have reached that age, when our friends, like our faculties, decline and gradually fail us. Men worship the LIFE OF BISHOP GRISWOLD. 495 rising sun. Whether mine is to set in a serene sky is known to God only ; and his will be done. I have long endeavored to anticipate, and be prepared for, all the-evils attendant on declining years." * * * * * I have already alluded to the Bishop's views of slavery, when speaking of the will of his deceased son, Alexander H. Griswold. The following extract firom a letter to Miss McC ■, while she was resident for a season in Maryland, and dated March 19th, 1828, will shew that, however little he was disposed to become a partizan in political abo- litionism, he had the true northern feeling on the subject of slavery itself, " In regard to cruelty to slaves, they are not, it is said, treated as beasts, this side of the Carolinas ; and as to their being happy, we cannot say that slaves are not as happy as their masters. Their happiness, however, arises from their ignorance and freedom from mental cares ; and also consists in the sensual enjoyments, which they have in common with the brutes. That we should boast so much of being ajree people, while such myriads of our population are in the most abject state of slavery, is one of the striking in- stances of that blindness and absurdity, to which our fallen nature is prone. We can best judge how great the evil is, by supposing it our own case ; that our friends, and chil- dren and other relatives, or that we ourselves, were seized by force and carried to Africa. This would be equally just, and no greater hardship than that, which we inflict. Indeed, there have been instances of such captivity. Several of our countrymen have, in former years, been captured and made slaves by the Algerines, and treated as well, we have reason to believe, as we treat the Africans. But, how were our feelings excited by their captivity ! And with what abhorrence did we view their slavery ! Such selfish creatures we are !" The following extract from a letter to Mrs. Griswold, Feb. 27th, 1829, will give an idea of some of his many winter-travels. On a northeastern tour, he was caught at Boston by an almost unprecedentedly furious snow storm, which detained him two days. " Monday morning," he 496 MEMOIR OF THE writes, " I took a seat in the first stage, that ventured to set ofl' for the Eastward ; and we were ■ travelling hard till nearly 10 o'clock in the evening, to reach Newbuiyport;" (less than thirty miles) " and what a day it was, I could not well give you an adequate idea. Though I have never more wished for your company for my comfort and assist- ance, yet I felt thankful, that day, that you were not with me ; so great must have been your sufierings." The following will shew amidst what sickness, as well as storms, he often urged his way, in order to prevent failure in the appointments, which he had made. It is from a letter to Mrs. G. while he was on a northern tour, in 1834 ; dated Claremont, July 19th. " My dear wife, — through the Lord's goodness, I am thus far on my journey. My health, tiU Wednesday last, was about the same as when I left home. That day, one of the hottest we have had this summer, I went in a chaiste, accompanied by Mr. C, fifty miles, over a very hilly country, to Judge Livermore's in Campden. It was, of course, too much for one horse in such weather ; and, to favor him, we walked up eJI the hills. The next day, after the services, I grew' unwell, and had a sleepless, distressing night. I was unwilling to stop and fail in my appointments ; so, Friday we returned by the same way, though the weather was cooler. I went to bed immediately, and had a physician ; took powerful medi- cines, and was distressed by their operation. Every one, the doctor especially, urged the imprudence of continuing my journey. But you, my dear, know how necessary it was, and what has been my practice in such cases. I rose at day break, to be ready for the stsfge to this place ; where, after riding above forty miles further, very rapidly and over a rough road, I am far from being well." It is only by the event that we are able to justify such repeated exposures of his health and life. He had the strongest feeling of the truth, that he " was in God's hands ; and that if the Lord had fiirther work for him to do, He would supply the strength to do it :" and so, he often pushed forward, though as if treading on the heels of death, LIFE OF BISHOP GKISWOLD. 497 and about to overtake him at the grave. The resvlt has, per- haps, shewn that he was thus in the way of duly ; though no one could have charged him with a neglect of duty, had he, in numerous instances, remained under his physician's hands, instead of persevering in fulfilment of his appoint- ments. No frame, however, of less iron hardiness than his, could, with any safety, have hazarded the perils of his frequent extreme exposure. As he advanced in life, he felt increasingly sensible to the loss of domestic comforts, of which his frequent jour- neys were the occasion ; particularly, as that loss consisted in protracted absences from his wife and children, and in a consequent inability to do for them what his heart desired. "My separation from you," — he writes to Mrs. G., June 19th, 1835, while attending, at Pittsfield, one of the most absorbingly interesting Conventions he had ever known, — " my separation from you for so great a portion of my time, is a very great diminution of my happiness. But I ought to be, and I trust am, thankful to God, that I have the com- fort of your society many' weeks in the year ; and that, while I am separated from you by these visitations, you are caring for our household, and nurturing our dear little ones. I think much, and perhaps with too much anxiety, of the time, when they must be left wholly to your care. I ought, and I endeavor, fully to trust and believe that He, who hath given them to us, will aid you in bringing them up in His nurture and admonition. Should they prove to be good, and conduct themselves well, it will be what I chiefly de- sire respecting them. What shall be their state and occu- pation in life, is, with me, a matter of less concern. Gene- rally speaking, parents are too desirous to see their children shine in the world, and occupy the most honorable stations. As regards their immortal well-being, such stations are, perhaps, of all most perilous." His sense of loneliness in his travels was also an increas- ing feeling, and often made him send home yearnings after that social life, which he really so much enjoyed. " Travel- 498 MEMOIR OF THE ling so much alone" says he in a letter to Mrs. G., Sept. 4th, 1836, " and over the same roads, where nothing new is to be expected, is duU and irksome. The hope that I am performing my duty, and may be the instrument of some good to the Churches, is what alone reconciles me to such labor. When absent, I think much how happy I should be with you and our dear family. And yet,, when I am enjoy- ing that blessing, there are many cares and some sorrows to diminish it. Our hopes of earthly enjoyment are seldom fully realized.- This should teach us, and, I doubt notf is designed to teach us, to look for a home and happiness be- yond this world." Towards this home and happiness, indeed, he felt grow- ing attractions, especially with the growth of the feeling, by which he was too much affected, that his labours could be of little further use in the Church. Writing from Green- field, June 27th, 1838, shortl;^ after the loss of the Steamer Pulaski, he says to Mrs. G. ; — " From all that I can learn, our friends, Mr. Woart and his wife, must have perished in that dreadful disaster to the Steamer Pulaski. * * * While such events are continually occurring, and thousands of our young and vigorous are suddenly cut down in the midst of their usefulness, how long and how wonderfully have I been preserved ' in perils by land and perils by wa- ter !' The Lord give me grace to be duly thankful for his goodness. I have now arrived at that age, when ' friends are few," and the world becomes tired of us. It is chiefly, my dear love, for your sake, and for the sake of our dear children, that I desire life to be prolonged, and feel thankfiil for every day, which is added to its protracted span. I may yet benefit my family ; perhaps, even to my grandchildren I may be of some little service. To the rest of the world, and to the Church even, I can be of but very little further use." The Mr. Woart, to whom in the above extract he alludes, was the Rev. J. Loring Woart, formerly of the Eastern Diocese, and a native of Newburyport, a most estimable LIFE OF BISHOP GRISWOLD. 499 and promising young clergyman, who, with his amiable wife, and their just bom babe, perished in the terrible dis- aster, to which he refers. A few days after the letter, from which the above ex- tract is made, we find the Bishop travelling through the county of Berkshire, stnd get an idea of the manner, in which he generally spent his time in the stage and on the way, when he had no other travelling companions than strangers. Writing from Stockbridge, July 3d, 1838, he says ; — " To-morrow I hope to reach Great Barrington ; but expect to find it a wearisome day. I move forward very slowly, and lose, or seem to lose, much time on the way. I have, however, employed it almost wholly in read- ing the JVew Testament in French: and surely this time I ought not to think lost J' This extract reminds me of an incident, which illustrates not only his manner of improving time while travelling, but also his manner' of reproving vice and improprieties of con- duct. One day, while pursuing his customary route through Massachusetts, he was much annoyed by two young English- men, who, with himself, were the only passengers in the stage. Without noticing him, as he sat quietly in the corner of the vehicle, engaged in the perusal of a book, they took the liberty of feeling that they might do what they pleased. They spent their time, therefore, in smoking cigars, and in very profane and offensive conversation. Upon arriving at a stage-house, however, where one of the proprietors of the line resided, after the usual halt they were informed that they must not resume their seats. Upon demanding the reason, the proprietor replied ; " I understand, young gentle- men, that you have allowed yourselves to behave very rude- ly in the presence of your fellow passenger. The Bishop is so good a customer of ours, that we cannot allow him to be uncivilly treated in any of our carriages." " The Bishop .'" rejoined they : " we had no suspicion of his being a Bishop. Pray allow us to proceed. We promise to make amends for the past by shewing, that we know how to treat a Bishop 500 MEMOIR OF THE with proper respect. Accordingly, being allowed to resume their seats, a respectful silence was for a time observed. At length, they ventured to address to him some civil inquiries, evidently with a view to draw him into conversation. A civil "yes," or "no," as the case required, was, however, all that they could elicit. One of them, therefore, entered on a direct apology. " I believe Sir," he observed, "that through ignorance of your character and station, we have allowed ourselves in very unbecoming liberties in your presence. We beg your pardon, Sir, and hope that you will not refuse us forgiveness." " Were /the only being whom you have offended," said the Bishop, quietly raising his eyes from his book, " the offence would be a matter of very little consequence." The, young men were silent, and the rest of their journey together was passed without further breach of decorum. The time was now arrived, when he had been compelled to suffer an appointment to pass unkept. A recurrence of the necessity was the occasion of the following letter to Mrs. G. ; dated, " Concord, July 27, 1838. " What we had both so much reason to fear respecting my health, has been realized. It was with much difficulty and distress, that, on the day I left you, I reached this place, quite exhausted and unable longer to sit up. In the course of the evening, I was visited three times by a physician ; had watchers through the night, and took much medicine. Before morning, I had some relief, and have since been gradually recovering. For this, I have much reason to be thankful to Him, who has so often saved, and so long pre- served my life. But here, I still am, again unable to keep my appointment at Holderness. Their disappointment wiU again be great, and their reliance on my future engagements still more diminished. * * * Weak as I am, I would yesterday have attempLed to reach them, had it not appeared to my friends that the attempt would be madness. I regret, however, that I did not make it, * * * Perhaps a fatal relapse might have been the consequence. ■» * * But I should at least have given proof of my willingness to do all LIFE OF BISHOP GEISWOLD. 501 in my power. * * » • I begin cautiously to take food ; my strength is increasing ; and I may hope, through the blessing of God, soon to regain my usual health. My voice and my sight were yesterday much weakened ; but to-day they are some better. You will not, I hope, be disappointed, or displeased, that I write nothing but about myself. * • * * That the blessing of God may be with you and ours ; and that we may happily meet again, is still the prayer of Your affectionate husband, A. V. Geiswold." From this time, he became, with increasing frequency, the subject of very dangerous attacks of illness, during his jour- neyings; attacks, not originating in, that chronic affection of the heart, which subsequently kept him in daily thoughts of death, but brought on by the effect of travel and exposure upon his constitution, and producing ordinarily a very violent inflammation of the bowels. Under these circumstances, it is easy to see, that every year, added to his already extended life, must have sensibly increased the soberness, not to say sadness, of his spirit amidst his still unslackened movements ; and made him long, with ever intenser yearnings, for that repose, which the undisturbed home of old age can alone secure. In a letter to his wife, dated Stockbridge, July 6th, 1840, he thus expresses himself: " It gives me much pleasure to hear from you, though the contents of your letter are, in part, of a painful nature. The concern, which you so kindly ex- press for my welfare and the continuance of my life, is truly grateful to my feelings. You have, indeed, reason to be concerned on my account ; for such is my state in regard to health, that you may reasonably live in continual expecta- tion of my sudden decease. Your company in these joumey- ings would be a great comfort to me ; and all the greater were you yourself in a perfect state of health." * * • " My nights are lonely and wakeful, and filled with much thinking of you and home." 502 MEMOIR OF THE On the 19th of April, 1842, he wrote to Mrs. G. from East Greenwich, R. I., just after having, with a bleeding heart, buried his second George ; one of the bright and Ibyely " little one$," whom he had thought so much of leaving in the sole care of a widowed mother. Immediately after the funeral, he set out on an appointed tour through Rhode Island. But Oh ! with what a stricken spirit did he journey ! What I shall soon have to add will put a deep meaning into the few words, which I here quote from his letter. " My journey, as you will suppose, is so far a mournful one. My heart is oppressed with sorrow. The thoughts of our dear George, almost continually night and day, occupy my mind. But, in connexion^ I think of you also, and our dear Mary. * * * I intend, if practicable to get home on Friday ; but this is yet doubtful. My health is not good: I am threatened with some new and distressing complcdnts. I have reason to wonder and be thankful, that my case is not still worse. How the Lord will dispose of us is known to Him only. That He will give us grace in all things to sub- mit to His will, is the prayer of your affectionate husband, A. V. GaiswoLD." Notwithstanding, however, the load, that was now bur- thening his spirit, and the presages of disease, which were gathering upon his body, he did not long remain atthe home, to which he soon returned. With unwearied pace he still kept on his perilous path. On the 5th of May, before setting out again, we find him writing thus, from Boston : " Boston, May 5th, 1842. "Rev. and dear Sir, — When I reperuse your letter of March 28th, it reminds me forcibly of the infirmities of age, of which forgetfulness is among the chief. I was surprised, and am still much mortified, that, for so long a time, I should have neglected visiting your parish ; ^for certainly, there is no one Church in the Diocese that I would less willingly neglect. If I mistake not, there is already an understanding between us when I am next to be with you ; but, to prevent all mistake, I write now to mention Sunday, the 26th of LIFE OF BISHOP GRISWOLD. 503 June next, as the time when I hope, the Lord permitting, to unite with you in the services at St. Mary's. I find myself so oppressed with years and cares and sorrows, that I look forward with much of doubt and hesitation to future appoint- ments. My purpose is, to labor while the Lord shall give me any strength ; praying, with our Saviour, that it may be not as I will, but as He wills. With kindest regards to your family. Your affectionate friend and brother, Alexander V. Griswold." The Rev. A. L. Bauky. This letter belongs rather to his public than to his private correspondence ; but it grows so directly out of his recent domestic afflictions, and is so much in the style of his private letters, that I have thought this a sufficiently suitable place for its insertion. On the 15th of May, after again setting forth on his journeys, he writes as follows, from Claremont, N. H. " My dear wife, — I sit down to write what I fear it will give you pain to read. Thursday, the day I left you, I arrived, well as usual, at Concord, where we had service. Early Friday morning, I went to Hopkinton, where, about noon, I was taken ill. I preached, however, in the after- noon, and again in the evening ; though too ill to sit up. The night following was one of the most distressing that I ever experienced. Prudence dictated that I should then re- turn home ; and had you been with me, I should no doubt have done so. But, being exceedingly desirous, if possible, to fulfil my appointments, I yesterday morning, (Saturday) set off at half past six to ride forty miles over a rough road, in a chaise and directly against a very cold and very strong northwest wind. I had a littie, and but a little, hope, that riding would give me some ease : but it gave me none. I arrived here just before 5, P. M., where a large congrega- tion were collected to hear me preach. But that was im- possible. It was with difficulty that I could stand upon my 504 MEMOIR OF THE feet. I sent immediately for a physician, who has visited me once in a few hours ever since. I was drenched with medicine, which has operated very slowly. The latter part of the night, and thus far to-day, I have been apparently some better. My case was very perilous ; and I had deter- mined, if no better to-day, to send some one for you ; though I thought much of the length and tediousness to you of such a journey, and how you might, like the friends of Bishop Moore, meet the corpse on your way. The people are, of course, much disappointed by my inability to attend the services to-day ; and I have relinquished aU thought of going to Plainfield to-morrow. What will be on the morrow, I ■know not. I shall not finish this letter, till I better know how it will go with me. Do you be cotfiposed, my dear, and prepared for every event of God's Providence. You know well, that we must soon part ; and He best knows what time for parting will be best. " Monday 16th, P. M. I wrote the above, my dear, yester- day ; fearing I might be worse to-day, and unable to write at all. But, through the Lord's goodness, I am, it is hoped, slowly recovering. This morning, I preached and had con- firmation, though exceedingly weak ; and shall attempt, after this day, to fulfil my appointments, as you may see them on my memorandum. I have a fever yet, and no appetite at all for food. My flesh is already wasting. Saturday night, it seemed doubtful whether I should be to-day among the living. ***** " Tuesday morning, 11th. I have broken open this letter, my dear, to tell you that, soon after sealing it, I was sudden- ly taken worse. After a sick night, I am better this morn- ing ; but have relinquished the hope of preaching any more on this journey. * . * * * * I hope we shall meet again in this world. If not, I trust we shall in that better, whither many dear friends are gone before us. * * * * May God's blessing be with you all. Your affectionate husband, Alexander V. Griswold." Mrs. Amelia Griswold. LIFE OF BISHOP GRISWOLD. 505 On the 19th he wrote again ; and it appears by his letter^ that he gained strength enough to pursue his journey, though he performed little or no duty. " During the last two days," he writes, I have had no distressing pain, and am, I hope^ ■ sdowly regaining my strength. I begin to take solid food, this morning especially, in considerable quantity; though feeling some concern what will be its effect. I have lost much flesh, for the short time of my illness. My face is shriveled and much changed ; but sltfluld I be able against© take my usual quantity of food, I may hope soon to regain, perhaps, even my usual appearance. " For your sake, my dear, I intend to be careful of my health ;*"*** and, as giving me opportunity to set my house in order, I am thankful for every day that is added to my span. ***** Yot the first time in my life my mouth is a little sore from the calomel, which I took. The physician treated me very much as, Dr. Stephens did, when, in 1832, we were at Mr. Johnson's in Brooklyn. * * * Had it pleased the Lord to preserve your health, you might aid me much in these journeyings. But, let us. still say ; ' His will be done.' This lingering along, as I do, from day to day, unable to do any good, and my great dis- appointment in not being able to perform the duties, for which this,visitation was undertaken, cause me, perhapsj too much anxiety. If so, may God forgive me." * • * His hopes of possible recovery from this dangerous attack were realized ; and he was soon again moving around his Diocese, looking quite as fresh, and walking quite as briskly as usual. Just before the election of his Assistant, Dr. East- burn, in September, 1842, he made a tour to the West of Massachusetts, during which he wrote from Pittsfield the last letter to his wife, which has fallen into my hands. It was dated, FittsMd, August 25th, 1843. " My dear wife, — I write, as usual, a few lines to inform you how I get, along in my journey. Thus far, it has been as well as could in reason be expected. 'The weather has tJU 506 MEMOIR OF THE been umformly fine. My ride, the first day^ for one so long, . ■was unusually pleasant, and I was continually Avishing that you could have enjoyed it with me. After arriving at Mr. Bright's" (the husband of that niece, to whose kindness these memoirs have been indebted,) " my regrets at your absence were so great as to diminish the enjoyment of my visit. Their situation" (near Northampton) " is, in my judg- ment, much better than Mr. Gardiner's in Maine. The view from the east front of the house is delightful, beyond what you can imagine without seeing it ; which I hope, sometime, you may. They seem to be exceedingly desirous that you should visit them, and were not a little disappointed that you were not with me. They have fruits, in great abundance and variety. Excellent early apples they have had for a long time, and had then gathered many Isushels more than they could use. They will have twenty or thirty biishels of peaches, on one tree of which they were fully ripe. Their plums also are in great abundance. • " I did not venture to preach there but twice on Sunday ; though besides»that, I baptized one woman, confirmed ten persons, and, administered the communion. " Monday morning, Mr. and Mrs. Bright took me in their carriage to Westfield, where we dined ;' after which I parted with them, and took the rail-road cars. The scenery through the moimtains to Pittsfield is awfully sublime. So much money has been expended in cutting through rocks, making bridges, &c., that the stockholders will not soon, if ever, be remunerated. ***** The mail is about closing, and I must send this letter immediately, or it will not go to-day. Yesterday my health was bad ; but I feel better this morning. Your very affectionate husband, A. V. Griswold." Mrs. Amelia Griswold. After reading previous letters, one would hardly suppose it necessary for him to plead, as in this, that he had preached only twice on a Sunday, when, in addition to his preaching, LIFE OF BISHOP GRISWOLD. 507 he baptized, confirmed and administered the communion ; and when he had so lately taken his right foot from the brink of the grave. Yet, such was his way ; and such the consti- tution of his body, which enabled him to pursue it. His attacks were usually violent ; but when they began to yieldj he was straightway on his feet again, apparently as well as ever. His allusion in the above letter to the Rail-road cars, is the first, with which we meet, in either his journals or his letters. What months of tedious travel, in storm and flood ; over rough roads, and rugged mountains ; in piercing cold, and melting heat; by public stage, and in open wagon; with his mind stretching forwards, while his body dragged behind ; would have been saved to him, had the present ramified system of Rail-roads, which now spreads from Boston, throughout almost the whole of what was once the Eastern Diocese, been in existence and operation, when he first began his two and thirty years of perilous, and exhaust- ing journeyings! But these journeyings are done. He rests from his Jabors, and his works do follow him. When Bishop Griswold first accepted the Episcopate of the Eastern Diocese, he wrote thus to the President of its electing Convention : " Trusting in God, and in their" (the members of the Convention's) " candid indulgence and friendly counsels, I shall devote my future hours to the good and benefit of those Churches, whom the Lord shall please to put under my care ; humbly endeavoring by zeal and dili- gence to supply what, in other talents, is deficient." We have now looked at the public labors, and at the private exercises, with which he filled his whole Episcopal life ; and are therefore ready to answer the question ; did he not sacred- ly keep the vow and promise, with which he entered on his work ? Did he not honestly and literally sacrifice that young and high ambition of mere literary fame, with which he once burned ; and bring the whole of those secret energies, which before were shooting up so tall on the outside of the vine- yard, into exclusive and wholly engrossed action within the sacred enclosure; that they might there rise high indeed, 508 MEMOIR OF THE though with a hoher tendency, and bear fruit an hundred fold to the glory of God ? Did he carry a divided heart through his many labors ? Was he not wholly Christ's, in his studies and in his toils, in his secret thoughts and in his constant prayers, in his sufferings of body and in his sorrows of heart ? To such questioning we can find but one answer. If there were ever a resolution kept to the full, fi^om the moment, when it was first taken, till death settled the date, to which it ran, it was that, which he so early recorded, and which we so late have quoted. To his one work he conse- crated not merely the general course of his life, but almost literally his " hours." We can scarcely find even an hour, when he was not engaged either in devising or in doing something, which had a more or less exclusive reference to the glory of God in the good of His Church. LITE OF BISHOP GEISWOLD. 509 PAROCHIAL LIFE Or BISHOP GRIBWOLO, AFTER THE TEAR 1813. We withdraw, now, from the Diocese and the Episcopal life of the beloved subject of these memoirs. The thread of incidents and traits of character, which we here take up and prepare to follow, will conduct us only roimd the parish, in which, after his consecration, he still continued to labor. What followed in his parish in 1812, about one year after his consecration, we have already seen in the simple account, which he himself has left, of that remarkable sea- son of revived attention to the subject of religion, during the summer of that favored year. From that period, he con- tinued his pastoral labors with unabated and even increased diligence, subject, of course, to the necessary interruptions brought in by his Episcopal visitations. During those visita- tions, his place was often, if not always, supphed by the Theological Students, who were residing with or near him, and who were admitted to officiate, as lay-readers, in his desk. The communications, which I have received, and which cover this part of his life and labors, are from those, who have lived in his family, or been cormected with it by most intimate ties. The views, therefore, which these com- munications present, are from the testimony of eye and ear witnesses, and take us as nearly as possible to the subject of this portion of the memoir. And we see in them, not the distant and unapproachable prelate, but the humble, toilful, and simple parish minister ; moving among his flock, from house to house ; overlooking nothing in the minutest indi- vidual concerns ; whether among the lowly, or among those in higher estate ; whether in the chamber of sickness, or in the walks of the broken-hearted penitent ; and aspiring to nothing but the success of his labors, and an answer to his prayers, in saving the souls of those committed to his care ; whether they were the possessors of wealth, or the children ITU* 510 MEMOm OF THE of poverty ; whether they lived in the enjoyment of educated leisure, or spent their days in honored toil. His elevation to the Episcopate wrought no change from the previous charming simplicity of his life and teachings, other than that of increasing his opportunities for doing good, and of making more public his elevated views of Christian duty. No appearance of even a desire of " Lording it over God's heptage," where he exerted the most unquestioned sway, was ever observable in his conduct. His former sys- tematic arrangement of time, his customary habits of self- denial, and his usual laborious endeavors to win souls to Christ, were daily carried with him after he was called to his highest ministry in the Church of God. The tendency and power of his ministry, in leading the mind to clear and discriminating views of Christian truth and duty, may be illustrated by the case of an intelligent lady, who, more than thirty years since, was providentially brought under his influence, upon the removal of her family to Bris- tol. Being then but a child, her first feelings, on seeing the holy man, as she followed the multitude on Sunday evenings to the Episcopal Church, were those of strong but undefined and childish admiration. Exceedingly thoughtless in her youth, it was through her fondness for variety and novelty that the services of the Church first attracted her attention. This, however, brought her, as it did Roger Viets, within new influences ; and she was at once charmed, with the ap- propriateness and simplicity of our services, but especially with the devout manner, in which they were performed. This, nevertheless, was but preparatory work. It was the very interesting and enlightening sermons, to which she listened, that now rivited her attention and gave a new im- pulse to her thoughts. She no longer felt, as formerly, im- patient for the close of the sermon ; but was sweetly con- strained to acknowledge, that what she heard was the truth, and that she was personally interested in its solemn import. As her attendance at Church became more frequent, the winning and impressive appeals of the preacher were made the means, through the blessing of the Spirit, of awakening LIFE OF BISHOP GKISWOLD. 511 her feelings to a deep and settled concern for her eternal interests ; and though, for a long time, she still continued to mingle with the gay and thoughtless, she yet found it impos- sible to divest herself of the conviction, that she must come out from amxmg them and be separate. At length, the period of her indecision and of her struggle against convictions of truth and duty, was brought to an end ; and she became personally acquainted with Bishop Griswold. Then it was, that the full blessing of his influence was felt. The conceptions of childish admiration, instead of being erased from her mind, "v^ere confirmed ; and the ardor of her religious feelings, instead of being chilled, was fanned into a flame ; so charitable did she find him in his construction of her imperfect apprehensions of divine truth, so willing to im- part instruction, and so skilled in leading the inquiring mind to the Saviour. She found in him^nothing austere, nothing dictatorial ; but a most accessible teacher, who discharged his heavenly commission by simply and meekly directing the sinner \.o the only ground of hope, the " rock Christ Jesus ;" while the singular devotedness of his whole being to his sacred calling, and his constant aim to recommend the re- ligion, which he taught, by a corresponding practice, fixed her esteem for his character, and served as a sort of nearer and inviting light in guiding her along the path of a divine life. And what she found in him at first, she found in him to the last. Though her intimate acquaintance with him and his family commenced soon after his consecration, yet all she saw, till the scene of his life closed, served but to confirm, instead of weakening those impressions of his eminent holi- ness, which were engraven so indelibly on her young mind. What was here exhibited, in a particular case, is but a sample of what was exhibited in all cases, of a similar character, under the Bishop's parish ministry. His influence with individuals, as with society at large, was ever a grow- ing influence. It was never lost on long and close acquain- tance. His preaching, indeed, visslight rather than thunder ; yet it shewed itself to be the true Gospel by quietly and surely imparting true views of sin and of the Saviour, and by 512 MEMOIR OF THE leading straight forwards to high views of Christian separate- ness, and to a high standard of Christian duty. Of his more familiar labors, during the week, his ministry " out of season," an equally definite and favorable view has been furnished. During the year 1819, one of the sons of his friend. Judge Tyng, went to reside in Bristol, as a student of Theology under Bishop Griswold. Young Tyng subse- quently became the Bishop's son-in-law, by marriage with his daughter, Ann D'Wolf Griswold ; and from him, as the present eminent Rector of the Church of the Epiphany in JPhiladelphia, have been received contributions of great value to this part of the memoir. His opportunities for observa- tion and correct judgment were, of course, of the best kind. "-The veneration and affection, which I had cordially enter- tained for him," says Dr. Tyng, " upon going to reside in Bristol, were matured and confirmed. He indulged me in a more intimate acquaintance than I had dared to hope ; our subsequent family connexion brought us still more closely together; and until his death, he was to me, uniformly, a confiding and affectionate father, and allowed me to be on the most free and filial terms with him." The account, which Dr. Tyng gives, of the Bishop's familiar and social labors among his people, is interesting ; and I cannot do better than imbody the substance of it in this part of the memoir. " When I had been in Bristol about a week," says Doc- tor T., " The Bishop observed to me one day ; ^I wish you to attend a meeting with me in the country this evening ; and I will call for you after tea.' He came accordingly ; and we walked about a mile to a neighborhood, called ' The Neck;' where the rooms of a farm-house were entirely filled with people, waiting his arrival. He sat down among them at a little table, and, after singing and prayer, expounded to them a chapter in the Epistle to the Romans, in that familiar and simple manner, in which he so much excelled, and in which all, who listened to him, were deeply interested. I cannot describe tjie impressions, which this whole occasion made upon me. The condescension and meekness, with which LIFE OF BISHOP GRISWOLD. 513 he thus familiarly walked out with a youth like me ; the per- fectly unassuming manner, in which he appeared among the rustic congregation, assembled to meet him ; the simpUcity and tenderness of his discourse ; the tremulous sweetness of his voice, as he raised the tune in singing ; were all such new and striking facts to me, that I was surprised as well as delighted with the .whole occasion. It immediately obviated all the objections, which I could have imagined against meetings of this kind ; while it interested my heart in them as an important means of spiritual good. The Bishop opened this service with a selection of prayers from the Liturgy, and closed it with an extemporaneous prayer, in which duty he excelled almost all, whom I have ever heard. This, I be- lieve, was the first private meeting, which I attended with him. Subsequently, I became so much accustomed to meetings of this kind, that I had a fiill opportunity for per- ceiving all the blessings and advantages, which flowed from them to the people : and my subsequent long experience has led to an entire confirmation of opinion and judgment on this subject in coincidence with those of Bishop Griswold. " The circumstances of this first meeting, which I attend- ed with him, interested me so deeply, that I have seldom or never passed the house since without having the scene brought vividly again before my mind. His weekly meet- ings were generally of this social and private character ; and were uniformly conducted in the same manner, with that, which I have described. There were sometimes two, or more, such meetings in the week ; — and there were sea- sons, when they were increased to a still greater number. When he was at home, he attended them himself; though, even then, he required of his theological students firequent addresses and exhortations to the people assembled ; so that thus his ministry was, not only a continual example and source of instruction, but also, in the opportunity for prac- tical exercise in the duties of their future ministry, which he gave them, of the greatest service in perfecting their qualifications, and in forming their habits for fixture usefiil- ness. During his absence, on his Episcopal visitations, 514 MEMOIR OF THE these opportunities were multiplied ; for then, his candidates for orders had not only his place in these private meetings, but also his place in parochial duties, and especially in the public services of Sunday, to supply in their capacity as lay-readers ; — and, as he v^as always absent several months in the year, they were thus kept in the virtual work of the ministry for no small portion of the time, while pursuing their theological studies. " I have never seen the Bishop in a more affecting rela- tion, than in this private ministry among his own people ; meeting with their gathered assemblies, and visiting them from house to house. Here he shone pre-eminently as a man of deep and rich religious experience, holiness and love. On some of his pastoral visits, especially among the poor and the suffering of his flock, he would take one of us with him. Some of the scenes thus exhibited I sttll recall with deep satisfaction. I have walked with him through the lanes and back-streets of the town, and among the cottages and chambers of the poor ; — I have listened there to his affectionate and famiHar religious counsel and conversation, and to his deeply fervent and affecting prayers ; I have witnessed the humility of his own character, and the affection of his people for their faithful pastor, as these traits exhibited themselves under aspects of peculiar inte- rest and power; — and his whole systeni of ministry has thus inspired me with increasing reverence, and more af- fectionate confidence, every day that I spent with him. The advantages, which we, who were students, received as candidates for the ministry, may be readily understood. To me they were made the guide and standard of all the suc- ceeding labors of my life." It is undoubtedly true that.the secret of Bishop Griswold's success in his parish ministry, so far as this secret is to be found in the fitness of means to an end, resided in those traits of character and life, which we have thus seen in action ; his eminent holiness, and his manifestly entire de- votion to his work ; the spirit of true prayer, as it came out in his actions, and the light of the true Gospel, as it LIFE OF BISHOP GRISWOLD. 515- shone forth in his conyersation ; mingled, as all these were, with an uncommon humility, which let him right down to the understandings and the feelings, the artless fellowship and thie home affections, of even the lowliest of his flock. He had, undeniably, a great store of learning ; and even talents and powers of mind, which, had he chosen to put them under the life-long training of an ambition to shine and be admired, would have enabled him to achieve what the multituifeare ever ready to regard as a reputation by no means unenviable. And yet, he had not, by nature, either a faculty, or a fondness for a striking display of learn- ing, or for popular exhibitions of intellectual strength. It was not thus that God gave him his power over the sub- jects of his ministry. The secret of this power lay in his eminence as a literal follower of Jesus Christ. There was, in him and about him, that spirit of holy devotedness to his Master, and of holy separateness from the world, which, while it was not displayed, could not be concealed; and which even humility itself did but make more affectingly manifest. His manner of spending every Lord's-day in his parish was a beautiful illustration of these remarks. It is, in sub- stance, the testimony of one, who lived long under his ministry, that, on this day, the deep spirituality of his mind shone forth most conspicuous. Scrupulously avoiding every thing, that related to worldly affairs, he passed the interme- diate hours of public worship chiefly in his study. Appa- rently absorbed in divine communings, he yet never forgot the moment for public service; — was ever first to lead the way to the Sanctuary ; and while he remained within the courts of the Lord, both before and after service, would almost literally obey the divine injunction, " keep silence before Him." Distinctly is it remembered by his near friends, with what solemnity he was accustomed to speak on this subject; " deeply regretting that even professors of religion would sometimes indulge in friV^oIous conversation immediately after joining in the sacred services of the Church ; and earnestly wishing that not even a word might 516 MEMOIR OF THE be spoken until every one had left the Sanctuary." His .whole manner of spending Sunday was a living illustration of his exalted piety, and must have been a result of his clear perceptions of what constitutes a life of holiness. Nor was this illustration a weekly excrescence on the body of his piefy. " It is refreshing," says an intimate friend, " to Jook back and see him moving along the straight line of duty ; sustaining his high standard of practical religion by a consistent walk during the week ; and shewing, in his own daily life and conversation, the Uteral practicabUify of those precepts, which he enjoyed on the Sabbath." There is a page in one of his private journals, on which he records his own views and feelings on the subject of the last paragraph. During one of his visitations in 1823, he says ; " In most of the congregations, in which, during this tour, I have officiated, I have noticed with no small satis- faction, an improvement in one expression of devout feel- ing ; — a solemn pause after the benediction ; either to ofier to Gfod a private prayer, or from an unwillin^ess to disturb others in their private devotions. May not this indicate some general increase of piety, or growth in grace ? O gracious God, may 'thy kingdom come.' When, after the solemnities of public social worship, and the preaching of Christ crucified, the congregation hurry out of the Lord's house, with no apparent seriousness, no indications of a praying heart, — there can be but little hope that they have profited by the word spoken. Such people, after ' they go their way,' are likely straightway to ' fo'rget what manner of men they are.' " But I must hasten to a more particular notice of the results of his parish ministry. In one of his diaries, evidently kept at home, a single leaf of which has been preserved, are the following entries for the month of June, 1818. " 18th. The state of religion in my parish is low. Yet pubhc worship is not neglected ; and a hearing ear remains. This is a favorable symptom. For some days it has been inipressed on my mind, for which I can '^^: no particular reason, that the Lord will soon visit us with the refreshings LIFE OF BISHOP GRISWOLD. 517 of His grace. May this not be a vain hope. Visit us, O Lord, with thy salvation." " 19th. This day has been refreshing. An unexpected number of children were presented for baptism. Lord, bless and increase the piety of thy people, who desire to offer to Thee what is most dear to their own hearts. * * One adult offered herself to God. She appears to be truly awakened by His Spirit. May she prove the first fruits of a glorious harvest." " 20th. * Cumbered with much serving.' By the in- cessant intrusion of worldly cares, my mind is too much diverted from better things. How much, by nature, do we incline to any thing rather than the one thing needful." " 21st. The Lord's-day. To the Lord may it be de- voted. What wonders of Divine goodness, what unspeak- able mercies, does it recall to mind ! thou friend of hopeless, worthless sinners ! may this day and every day be thine. The services of the day have been refreshing ; and the hope brightens that the Lord will visit us with his sal- vation." One month later, on the 20th of July, of the same year, and in the same diary, appears the following : " One more humble soul, as we trust, has been received into the fold of Christ's Church. May an abundant shower follow these re- freshing droppings of Divine grace." I make the above extracts, not because the hopes, which they express, were immediately and largely realized, but because they shew the habit of the Bishop's mind in his parish ministry. They evince not only that he labored dih- gently in dependence on God, but also that he looked for a large blessing on his labors ; and that he looked for this blessing with an ardency of longing, and a carefulness of self-inspection, which might well be received as a gracious foretoken, that he would not be permitted always to labor and look and long in vain. With various success in his ministry, his parish moved forward, till the opening of the year 1820, eighteen months from the date of the above extracts ; when a somewhat WW 518 MEMOIR OF THE alarming declension from religious life was found spreading through his flock. The weekly evening meetings were thinly attended. And aged Christians were mourning over the manifest d3cay, and longing for the return of days when the Divine Spirit, in rich demonstrations of his power, had been known to rest on the ministration of the word and ordinances of God's house. It was, in this state of things, when the Bishop had been several weeks at home, after the close of his previous year's joumeyings, that he commenced a series of Wednes- day evening lectures in the Church. The meeting for social prayer and religious instruction, as already described, was then held every Thursday evening, and in a small school- room near the Church. At this meeting, the attendance was now so much reduced, that, on one occasion, but thirteen persons were present. This, to the few who came, reveal- ed the depth of the affliction, which had fallen on their pa- rish, and filled the spirit of the Bishop especially with lively grief." So keenly did aiixiety for his people pierce and wound his heart, that it evidently became, if not the sole, yet the aggravating cause of the calamity, which speedily befell him. On the succeeding Wednesday evening, his congregation assembled for a continuance of his new series of lectures. He went through the services as usual ; — ^but, in the midst of his discourse, he was suddenly seized with an illness, which compelled him to stop, leave his pul- pit, and retire to his chamber, where for weeks his life hung in imminent peril. This was the sickness, to which he refers in one of his letters to the Rev. Mr. Pratt, of the Church Missionary Society in England, and from which he was then so slowly recovering. The public services were of course closed, the moment he left his pulpit. But the congregation were deeply affected by the event, which had interrupted them. It proved the most powerful sermon that God ever sent them by his servant. The affliction, which they felt, and their consciousness that their own lukewarmness Wc.s aggravating the sufferings of their beloved pastor, were made the means of an immediate LIFE OF BISHOP GRISWOLD. 5l9 and extensive spiritual awakening. In various parts of the Church, reh^ous anxiety and alarm were instantly maaiifest. Little knots of people were seen gathered, here and there, round those who were before becoming interested in the subject of religion, and who were now awakened to mourn for sin. The voice of social prayer was heard among them; especially that of aged Christians, who, after suitable con- versation with them, were earnestly commending their case to God. It was a late hour before the people were content to re- tire ; and when they did so, it was with a very different mind from that, in which they had assembled. Subsequent evi- dence shewed that the awakening in the parish was univer- sal, even among those, who did not attend the lecture that evening. The care of the parish now devolved on the two candi- dates for orders, who were studying with the Bishop, and of whom Mr. Tyng was one. By him the facts of this narrative have been kindly communicated. The very next day brought calls from every quarter for religious instruction and aid. The Bishop also sent forth his young assistants, (especially Mr. Tyng, as having, at that period, more leisure from his studies,) to seek through the congregation for those members of the flock, who were anxious to hear their shepherd's voice. Every where, evi- dence of an awakening influence presented itself. The ensuing evening, being that of the customary weekly meet- ing for prayer and religious instruction, brought out so large a congregation, that, although they adjourned from the little school-room to a large private dwelling house, there yet was not space enough to receive them. The rooms, entries, and stair-cases were crowded ; and the area around the doors and windows was equally filled. The deepest solemnity reigned. Not a heart seemed untouched, unmoved. Tears flowed from the eyes of many present ; and though the in- strumentality of labor had fallen into youthful hands, yet was the Lord pleased to make the power of his Spirit mani- fest and effectual. 520 MEMOIK OF THE From this time, for many weeks, the subject of religion, the salvation of their souls, — engrossed the thoughts of all. There was now, no anxious and careworn minister, urging a lukewarm and reluctant people to duty ; — but an awaken- ed and anxious people calling eagerly for more labor than could be performed. For several weeks, there were two, and sometimes three meetings every day ; and all crowded with intensely interested congregations. This change in the condition of his parish greatly cheered and comforted the sick pastor. He was not only confined to his room, but utterly unable to receive even the visits of his parishioners for conversation. He could only allow his young assistants occasionally to come in and give him an account of the surprising movement around him, as one after another of those, over whom he had so earnestly watch- ed, became the happy subject of the Spirit's renewing work. In his greatest weakness, however, he continued to give di- rections and advice for the government of those, upon whom the temporary care of his parish was resting. These youthful, yet efficient helpers were occasionally aided by a visit from a neighboring clergyman ; — and after several weeks, the Bishop secured tlie services of the Rev. George Taft of North Providence, whose labors proved truly ac- ceptable, and were evidently blessed. It was at least three months before the Bishop was able to preach another sermon. Before that time, however, and as soon as he left his chamber, he collected, in his dining room, those who had beconae most decided Christians, as well as those who were most anxious to know tlae way of life ; — and there, weak as he still was, sat down in the midst of them to instruct them more perfectly in the know- ledge of that way, and to guide them more safely to the Saviour, whom they sought. These were truly most affect- ing scenes. He was still so extremely feeble that his family hardly dared to hope for his permanent recovery. Every word, therefore, which he uttered, was with an unc- tion and an influence, which few could have resisted, and LIFE OF BISHOP 6RISW0LD. 521 which none present wished to resist. And finally, when he was at length able to resume his labors in public, he had the sacred pleasure of laying his hands in confirmation on about one hundred persons, and admitting them to the Lord's table, as the fruits of this gracious shedding forth of the Holy Spirit upon his beloved flock. Among them were two of his own children. As in the former case, in 1812, the work was not confined to his own parish. The other congregations in the town were largely, perhaps equally, blessed. Such a season of all- pervading concern for the interests of the soul, says Dr. Tyng, " I have never since seen. For some days all busi- ness seemed suspended; « * » ^^jj tjjg whole aspect of the place was that of one long Sabbath. At every comer were persons gathered in religious conversa- tion. One subject of consideration seemed to occupy all minds. Few, indeed, were they, who felt no interest in it. Many now in heaven, and many still on earth are rejoicing in the blessed effects of that ' season of refreshing from the presence of the Lord.' " Upon the series of incidents, which I have now recorded, it will not be inappropriate to offer a remark. It is manifest, then, that these incidents were not the effects of inere human agency and contrivance. Amidst the influences, which then reigned, men were used, and men were afiected. But, except so far as the regular means of grace were previously employed, men were used, not in originating those influences, but merely in cherishing and receiving them, with all their happy effects. The blessing evidently came in God's own way, and according to His gracious measure. The people, indeed, had been long trained to a knowledge of the truth, and kept in a greater or less sensibility to its power. They had seen it alive in their pastor, and were prepared for large measures of its effects on their own hearts and lives. But they needed a greater quickening under its power ; and this quickening came in a way, which they least expected, and for which they were least prepared. It came in a way, which took WW* 522 MEMOIR OF THE the thoughts off from mere human agency, and which car- ried all the glory of these fruits of the Gospel, where it of right belonged, to God alone, who so graciously " shed forth that, which we have seen and heard." What, then, shall we say to such things ? Shall we say, that they were a special honor conferred on the Church, in the legitimate use of appointed means, and through a minis- try of the pure. Gospel ? Or shall we say, that such things were not designed for the Church, and are not the develop- ments to be sought in the ordinary use of means ? In op- posing such things, shall we run the risk, if peradventure God he in them, of. virtually saying to Him ; " Withhold now thine hand ; and restrain from us the living influences of thy free Spirit ?" On the contrary, is it not our wisdom, if we cannot see it to be' our duty to look and long and labor for such special fruits of our ministry, at least to hold our peace, when they come ; and leave God, in His own way and His own measure, to honor His own Church and His own faithfully administered means of grace ? " The whole circumstances of the winter, to which I have referred," says Dr. Tyng, in closing his statement of the facts, which have been narrated, " were to me most wonderful. I have always considered the labors, to which I was then . called, the very best part of my education for the ministry. There was, in the Bishop's character and labors, nothing,, that encouraged extravagances of any kind. He was extremely fond of social religious meetings among his people, and had a high opinion of their value and in- fluence. But I saw nothing, and now remember nothing in those meetings, to which any real Christian could reasonably object. Their influence was a manifest blessing. I have never seen a people more truly devoted to the welfare and institutions of our Church, than tliose of his parish. And the whole of my subsequent experience and observation has -convinced me, that, while no objections can be made against such a system of ministry as that, which Bishop Griswold adopted, the real prosperity of religion may always be expected to follow from its practice. In such peculiar LIFE OF BISHOP GRISWOLD, 523 seasons, as that, to which I have referred, some few unim- portant things may occur, which are afterwards found to be inexpedient. But these are temporary and soon pass by ; — while the real advantages of the system of labor, from which they have grown, are permanent and most valuable." Of the dangerous character of the illness, through which the Bishop was passing, while his parish was thus realizing God's blessing on his past labors, anxieties and prayers, we may judge from the statement of the friend, to whom this part of the memoir has already been indebted. " I was," says she, " on a visit to his daughters at the time ; and distinctly remember the circumstances of the dis- tressing scene, when he only appeared calm. In view of his expected departure, he was perfectly composed, and gave such directions as proved that he thought himself near his end. He ordered some packages of his sermons to be burned in his presence, decidedly resisting the solicitations of some, present, to spare them. To one of his daughters he gave directions where to find other parcels of them, which she was requested to destroy in case of his death. I can recollect no particulars of his conversation at the time ; only, in general, that he spoke freely about leaving the world. One remark is now the only exception. ' Why,' said he, as he noticed the grief of his afflicted family, — * Why should I be unwilling to go home .'" " There spoke the heart of the Bishop. Heaven was its home ; because, tenderly as it cleaved to family and to pa- rishioners on earth, its best treasures were on high. Dili- gently as he loved to labor in the Church, he yet felt that, for him, " to depart and be with Christ was far better." His manner of life among his parishioners was ever that of modest, unpretending simplicity. He delighted in rural scenes and in rural employments. His garden was cultivated by his own hands, and yielded him great pleasure. He never laid aside, in this respect, his early habits. Dr. Tyng relates an anecdote, as " a curious illustration" of this point. " A friend, in the neighborhood of Bristol, told him one day that he had a large quantity of apples, of which he should be 524 MEMOIR OF THE glad to give his pastor a load ; but that he had no means of conveying them. The Bishop answered, that he would provide for that. In a few days, he accordingly walked out to the farm, procured a yoke of oxen, yoked them to the cart, loaded it with apples, and drove them home himself." " And yet," adds Dr. Tyng, " all these things he could do with- out any affectation of singularity or parade." To relieve his female domestics, " he uniformly cleaned the shoes of his guests ; playfully remarking that he was thus washing the saints' feet." I have already spoken of the assistance, which in his parish ministry, the Bishop received from the Theological Students and candidates for orders under his immediate care. This assistance he most richly repaid in the benefits which his ministry, instructions and influence conferred on their theological attainments and on their Christian characters. This the remarks of Dr. Tyng have already made manifest. I add here a letter, the testimony of which is of peculiar value ; as it illustrates the power of the Bishop's ministry over a mind of high order, both in its native powers, and in its educational accomplishments. I refer to the late Rev. James Wallis Eastburn, brother to the present beloved Bishop of Massachusetts. Young Eastburn was a student of Divinity under Bishop Griswold some time before the winter, which has just been reviewed. And it was there, while strolling through the romantic scenery of Montaup, and along the shores of the bordering and beautiful Narraganset, and while collecting there the still lingering traditions of old Indian warfare, that he became possessed of the materials, which he and his friend, Sands, subsequently wove into that sweet poem, " Yamoyden," or, " A Tale of the wars of king Philip." This accomplished young Christian, whose open- ing ministry gave promise of so much reputation to himself, and of so much usefulness in the service of Christ, was early called to the brighter glories and the better ministries of the upper Church. And it was in the midst of the dangerous illness of the winter of 1820, probably after its most immedi- ate danger was past, that Bishop Griswold managed, not- LIFE OF BISHOP GE1SWOL0. 525 withstanding his great weakness, to write a letter of sympa- liiy to the aflSicted parents. It is to the elder Mr. Eastburn's answer to this letter that I have referred, as illustrative of the power of the Bishop's ministry. Mr. Eastburn's letter was dated, "New York, 10th February, 1820. " Rt. Rev. and dear Sir,^I had heard of your serious indisposition, and was becoming, in the midst of other severe troubles, exceedingly uneasy on account of it. Your wel- come letter has, in some degree, relieved my anxiety. Con- templating the present state of the Church, I have inwardly said ; ' It cannot spare your labors yet.' Your example, your talents, your devotion to the service of Evangelical truth, all say loudly that ' for you to live is Christ.' Yet I am checked in these reflections. The Head of the Church knows how long, and for what purposes, He needs his min- isters. Their work being accomplished, he takes them to himself, to dwell with those, who, having turned many to righteousness, shall shine as the stars forever and ever. " Your letter was received by Mrs. Eastburn and myself with emotions strong, but consolatory. Deep as our loss seems to us, we do not weep alone. To have sympathy, such as . you feel, calms a great deal of that perturbation, which agitates and affects our hearts. We realize that our loss is no common one ; but we rejoice that those qualities, which marked the character of our dear, perhaps, to us, too dear — departed child, were not confined to our solitary, partial observation. We see that he will be remembered as the servant of God, in dispensing His Sacred Word, and as the beloved friend of all, who claimed any intimacy with his retiring disposition." After mentioning his intention to collect and publish a memoir, with the literary remains of his son, and requesting Bishop Griswold to communicate any facts and observations, which might be of service in the undertaking, Mr. Eastburn proceeds : 526 MEMOIR OF THE " There is one most interesting fact, ■which James com- municated to his mother, and which I feel it my duty to mention to you. When he went to Bristol, he was, exter- nally, a Christian without reproach ; but he said, ' his heart was unchanged, and his views unsanctified.' He added : * it was under your searching ministry that light first broke in upon his mind, and was followed by an entire renewal of heart, and a consequent change in all his views.' It was this circumstance, in connexion with many others, which determined the nature, and fixed the strength of his attach- ment to you." After recurring to the subject of the proposed publication, Mr. E. thus concludes ; " Praying most earnestly that your life and health may be long preserved, to the edification of the Church of God, I remain, in great affliction, Rt. Rev. and dear Sir, Yours, most truly and sincerely, James Eastbuen." The Rt. Rev. Bishop Guiswold. How much of the true light of the Gospel has Bishop Gris- wold been the means of leaving behind him in the world, to shine on in the ministry and lives of those, whom he was the instrument of bringing out of darkness ! To the simple foun- tain of his consecrated influence may be traced unusually numerous streams of ministerial labor, which are still flowing over the earth, fuU of the waters of hfe. To go through vsdth a regular history of Bishop Griswold's parish ministry is not, of course, the object of this part of the memoir. To give a clear idea of the character and results of that ministry, and of the character and labors of the man, while executing it, is all that I have had in view. This clear idea is now, I trust, before the mind of the reader. It wiU be enough, therefore, to add, in this place, that such, as we have seen him in his. work, thus far, he continued to be till his removal to Salem. There his residence was too brief to give full scope and results to such a ministry as his ; while LIFE OF BISHOP GRISWOLD. 527 the growth of his DioceSe, and the multiplication of his more public duties necessarily diminished the amount of labor, which he was able to bestow on the parish. Even there, however, his labors were richly blessed ; and he had a warm home in th6 best esteem and affections of his people. The congregation of St, Peter's rapidly increased under his minis- try ; their ancient Church edifice gave place to one of larger dimensions, more enduring materials, and more appropriate architecture ; and the best interests of religion felt an eleva- ting and an onward impulse from the blessings of God on his faithful labors and on his effectual and fervent prayers. His characteristics, bdth as a man and as a preacher, have been so long passing in practical review before us, that it is unnecessary to pause here for the purpose of either enumera- ting, or describing them. What more remains to be seen and to be said of him, will naturally come up when we pro- ceed to follow him, away from both his Diocese and his parish, through the more interior and withdrawn relations of his domestic life. 528 MEMOIR OF THE DOMESTIC LIFE AND CHARACTER OP BISHOP GEISWOLD. The last thread in the private life of Bishop Griswold, which remains to be traced, was variously colored. "What he was in his family, we can very easily conceive from what we have seen of him in all the other, relations of life ; the just man, the hospitable friend, the affectionate and faithful husband, the tender and exemplary parent, the eminently blameless and holy Christian in all his most retired and daily walks; inspiring in all, who most closely and habitually observed him, the most entire respect, and the most unques- tioning confidence. Perhaps the best human tribute, that can be paid to Christian character, is that, which a father receives from his children, when he so walks, from day to day, and from year to year, before those silent but most searching observers, as never for a moment to excite, in their inmost thoughts, a doubt of the reality and value of his religion, or of the sincerity and truth of his religious profes- sions. This tribute, I have reason to believe, was awarded by his children to the subject of this memoir. During the ■whole of his Episcopal life, his house was a sort of home~for his clergy, whenever they visited the place of his residence ; and for transient clergymen, who were seeking, through his influence, a place of settlement. His children, of course, had many opportunities for silently observing and comparing the characters of a great number of the ministers of Christ. And the respect, which they aU felt for religion, together with the fact that an unusually large proportion of them were them- selves truly religious, is, on the whole, a very valuable testi- mony to the character of those, whom they were called thus closely to observe. And yet, I once heard one of his daughters make the remark, that she had often been pained by notic- ing in the clergy, who visited the family, things not perfectly consistent with their high and holy character and office ; that LIFE OF BISHOP GRISWOLD. 529 she had never seen but one, in whom no such inconsistency was observable ; and that this was the one, whom she had known longest and observed most closely, her own revered father. Of children, the Bishop, as we have seen, was naturally and remarkably fond. And yet, after he became a Bishop, ' so numerous and engrossing were his cares, and so Uttle time had he, consequently, for his necessary studies, that he was seldom, or never, able to spend a moment in that free and endearing intercourse with his own children, in which the heart of a tender parent so much delights. He thus became, by degrees and habitually, reserved and distant in his inter- course with them. Incessant business, and study which he might not forego, made this unavoidable. Of this fact, his son, the Rev. George Griswold, takes notice in one of his letters ; attributing his father's reserve to the right cause, but mourning over its effects, in preventing that free, unbosom- ing confidence, which is ever so desirable, between parent and child. And yet, his children were never wanting in tender affection for him, or in unquestioning confidence in him. Nor did the Bishop himself ever lose his natural fond- ness for children. It is to this, as well as to his remarkable power of self-abstraction, in the midst of surrounding con- versation and business, that we may attribute the circum- stance, that the playful noises of children in the same room neyer disturbed him in the midst of even his profoundest studies. Says one of his friends, from whose commimica- tion I have already quoted : " He could, when occasion re- quired, abstract his mind in a remarkable degree, yet without becoming wholly regardless of what was passing in his presence. If, as it often happened, he was engaged in writing or other study in the same room with his family, an occasional appeal to him, while it received an immediately intelligent and appropriate reply, yet seemed no interruption to his pursuits. And I have heard him say, that the noise of children in the same room never disturbed his studies, unless it was the noise of discord." XX 530 MEMOIH OF THE A little anecdote, which has reached me, shews very beautifully how long and how livingly, he retained his natural fondness for little children. He had broken away from the confinement, the labors and the studies of his win- ter season, and gone, one sweet spring, upon a tour into Ver- mont; with all his peculiar sensibilities alive and open to the blessed influences of all-rejoicing nature; the magnifi- cence of mountain scenes, the firagrance of the fields, and the music of the groves.. At Middlebury, after the labors of the day in that place, he was sitting in his usual quiet and silent mood, enjoying the luxury of the season and the scene, when the children of his friend and hostess came romping past him in all that mirth and glee, which childhood only knows. Their mother bade them, " hush ;" lest , they should disturb the good Bishop. " Oh no !" said he, with a smile as cheer- ful and a voice as winning as theirs, "let them play: their little noises are sweeter to me than the music of the birds." The following home-sketches are, in substance, from the friend, of whom I have so often spoken. " Of his hospitality, I would fain speak ; for it was one of the most conspicuous traits of his character. It would how- ever be scarce possible to do justice to the delight, which he evinced, in obeying on this subject the divine injunction. Not merely to the clergy of his Diocese, who always found his house a home whenever they pleased ; but also the friend and stranger were alike sure to meet a welcome reception ; and his obliging manner would seem to imply that they were rather confering than receiving a favor by their visit. His natural taciturnity was perceptibly thrown off while performing the rites of hospitality. He shewed great pleasure, when even the youthful associates of his children were present to share those rites; and always encouraged a free and generous intercourse between his own and the children of all his acquaintance ; wholly disregarding in this the arbi- trary distinctions of wealth and influence. To those about him, it was a subject of admiring wonder that one so encompassed and often harassed, as he was, LIFE OF BISHOP GRISWOLD. 531 ■with public toils and cares, and so oppressed, as he some- times was, with domestic griefs and trials, should be able to meet them all with an equanimity of mind, which no circum- stances of difficulty, however perplexing, could move to the utterance of an unchristian feeling. There were no detached periods, no great occasions of his life, when his peculiar and distinguished virtues shone with a special lustre, as though they were a something put on to suit the time or the place. Th^y were a consistent whole ; the daily apparel of his soul ; and among them his Christian lowliness was, if possible, most perceptible and most habituall That his praise was in all his Churches, he well knew; that his near friends and immediate parishioners almost idolized him, he knew as well : yet all this knowledge only deepened his humility ; to such close self-examination was he habituated ; and so severely did he compare himself with the divine requirements, and not with any human standard. His accessibility to his friends and parishioners, at all times, was remarkable. A smile of pleasant recognition, peculiar to himself, was ever ready to greet them, whenever, and how often-soever, they might call. Not unfrequently, an indi- vidual would so prolong his visit, as seriously to involve the exercise of his patience, in listening to details of unimpor- tant matters, and when it would seem a waste of his precious time to be thus engrossed. But the same patient forbearance, which characterized him on other occasions, was here also exhibited, in striving to inform the ignorant, and to make them feel that they had a claim on his time and attention as their spiritual father and guide. Economy, he said, he practiced more from principle, than from necessity. He considered it the Christian's duty to be economicial, that he might have the more to " give to him thfit needeth." It was of tim£, however, that he was most economical. Rising at an early hour, he industriously pro- secuted the duties of each day, as they demanded his atten- tion ; discharging each and all with singular fidelity. In consequence of his economy of money, it is known, to the writer, that he not only saved enough to prevent the 532 MEMOIR OF THE actual suflfering of those whom he might leave behind, but afeo through life was constant in his benefactions to the suf- fering poor, and to the customary objects of Christian bene- ficence. He received with gratitude; but he gave with joy- " His self-denial was always great. As a proof that he would not indulge in self-gratification, he would never, till age and infirmity rendered such indulgence necessary, go out of his way, or prolong a journey, to visit the wonderfiil scenes of nature, of which he was nevertheless so fond. Many times," (says his friend) " he told me, his jouriieyings took him within twenty miles of the White mountains ; but he had never indulged in a nearer view of them." Though his heart longed for a sight of those stupendous works of God, he yet passed them by, simply because the pressure of his multiplied duties was so great and so constant, ftat con- science would have been more troubled by their neglect than even his natural tastes would have been gratified by indul- gence. ■ His conversational powers were exceedingly great, when- ever he would allow them to be drawn out. Occasionally, his friends enjoyed opportunities for this ; either when travel- ling with him, or when presuming to elicit his views on im- portant subjects, at home. The call of friendship {ot impor- tant information, or instruction, which he had it in his power to impart, was a key which often succeeded in unlocking his rich and varied treasures. "It is an error to suppose that Bishop Griswold, in the daily cultivation of his eminent holiness, had to contend with no opposition from within ; or that his habitually devotional spirit was the easy growth of an amiable and passive temperor- ment. Those, who are best qualified to judge, know best the falseness of this conclusion. In early life, and before the more distinct development of his Christian character, he was di-sposed to be very satirical. With naturally quick percep- tions, a discriminating mind,' and an abundance of wit ; a little reflection will suffice to shew that the indulgence of his strong propensities was not calculated to produce a devo- LIFE OF BISHOP GRISWOLD. 533 tional spirit. No : his piety was no easy growth of a facile, unresisting nature. It was God's blessing, through the powerful influences of the Spirit, on his laborious endeavor, his stirong wrestling with nature, his ever struggling resolve, to subdue his disposition, and ,to ' bring every thought into captivity to the obedience of Christ,' it was this, that gave him so perfect a victory ;, this that proved the secret of his amazing advancement in holiness of life. He was never off his guard, always at his post, in this divinely-sustained war- fare against the evil workings of nature within." , In these short sketches, the friend, who so kindly furnished them, will observe that the writer has taken some liberty in transposition, change of phraseology, and occasional addition from his other stores : but the substance of her communica- tion remains, in all its value, as the testimony of an eye and ear witness. The BishoT^^ sjiiendships were peculiarly close and cordial ; and being of a specially Christian character, were seldom or never terminated but by death. Carefully formed, he clung to them for life ; and the death of one tried friend made him cling more fondly to those who remained. He had the most delicate perception of the true nature and value oi friendship. None, better than he, understood and appreciated the mean- ing of that weighty word ;, and it is to be regreted, that the writer has succeeded in recovering so few of his private letters to those, whom he classed among tiie number of his special friends. In addition, however, to the few of this kind, which have been already interwoven with this work, I insert here two or three, as appropriate to this part. The first is in the form of a communication to the Album of a Lady, dated, " Bristol, August 7th, 1824. " Your Album, dear madam, has fallen into hands au- thorized, though unworthy, to blot its unsullied pages. Viewing them, as the symbol of a pure mind, unstained by an evil thought, capable of receiving durable impressions, good .or evil, and of containing the treasures of knowledge XX* 534 MEMOia OF THE and wisdom, I touch them with diffidence and trepidation. But, when I view this little book as destined to the very in- teresting purpose of being the repository oi friendship, I am not insensible to the favor of being numbered among those, ^whom you are pleased to honor. " Friendship, truly so called, is among the noblest virtues, of which the human soul, and perhaps any created being, is capable. It is one of the fairest branches of that charity, which is the essence and perfection of all moral goodness. On earth, it was first planted and, strange to tell, first viola- ted, in Paradise. Nothing can restore it to its primitive lustre but that infinite remedy, which Divine mercy has pro- vided for our fallen nature. There are, indeed, worldly at- tachments, dignified by the name of firiendship, which are ' enmity with God' and disgraceful to humanity. Friend- ship, which is interested and mercenary ; which is given _^w value received ; which may be bought and sold as a commodi- ty in the market ; is falsely so called. That love, which i^ supremely fixed on God, and is evinced by a general philan- thropy and a diffusive benevolence, is the only sure basis of this, as of every social virtue. Particular attachments, founded on affinity, on virtuous connexions, or on any esti- mable qualities of the person beloved, are perfectly consist- ent with the Christian duty of loving all men. Such was the friendship of our blessed Saviour for his beloved disci- ple, John. Nature requires and Christianity allows, that our affections should be stronger in proportion as our connexions are more close and interesting. Love, like attraction, in- creases as distances are diminished, and operates most power- fully when bodies are in contact. True friendship is but a modification of love : it is the source of the greatest joys of this world, and will constitute, no doubt, our greatest felici- ty in heaven. But that, which is the most pure, is the easiest sullied. A wound received in the house of a friend, un- kindness firom those, whom we love, or with whom we are nearly connected, is intolerable. A bosom friend has been aptly compared to ' the apple of an eye ;' while pure and unsullied, it is a source of extreme dehght; but the least LIFE OF BISHOP GRISWOLID. 535 mote will change its joys to insufferable pain. Where con- nexions are near and tender, mutual benevolence, and reciprocal offices of love produce exquisite sensations of pleasure; and the least unkindness, as great anguish and dis- tress. But, to you, are these things, by the happiest experience, far better known than I can express them. Blest as you are with the smiles of fortune, and with the richest endowments of nature and (we trust) of grace, and encompassed by an extensive circle of admiring and devoted friends, I have but to wish and to pray, that you may long continue a blessing to the society, which you so much adorn, and make such use of these distinguishing mercies, that immortal feUcity may be your still happier portion. A. V. GaiswoLD." The next is a letter to a Christian friend, who had written to ask his Christian counsel ; and shews him the wise coun- sellor as well as the faithful friend. "Boston,, February 22d, 1839. " My dear Miss B., — Accept my thanks for the pleasure, which I had in reading your kind favor by Mr. C. I have arrived at an age, when ' days are dark, and friends are few.' Old friends are yearly passing from the stage of life ; and new ones I can no longer expect to find. That I am not yet forgotten of one, whom I have ever and much esteemed, is no small consolation." After noticing a fruitiess attempt to see this friend, while passing through Providence, he proceeds : "I regreted it the more as I might have conversed with you on the subject of your letter much more freely and parti- cularly than I can write. Indeed, I know not what to write. If it be the case, that you have not all the comforts of reli- gious belief and practice, which you desire, or once had, it is certainly just cause of serious concern. The remedy is, generally, to strive against the evil ; and particularly, to be more frequent and more earnest in prayer, and in tlje use of 536 MEMOIR OF THE all the means of grace. Among them, the attendance on public worship, which you mention, is not of least impor- tance. In this attendance, we should endeavor that our per- sonsd esteem or dislike of individuals, with whom we wor- ship, do not disturb our devotions, nor frustrate our edifica- tion. And if a minister of Christ preaches the truth as it is in Jesus Christ, jand his life is. not materially at variance with his doctrine, we should bear with his infirmities, and not be extreme to inark what is amiss. In vain will you look for perfection in man. He, who excels in one thing, is likely to be deficient in anpfher. The less we trust in an arm of flesh, the greater will be our security. The most of us are in peril of being, in religion even, too much influenced by our partialities. " Again ; not only is the want of religious enjoyment the result of neglect on our part; but it may sometimes be in- flicted as a trial of our faith and trust in God, and an exer- cise of our patient perseverance. David, who was eminent- ly pious, Emd a ' man after God's own heart,' was often and much afflicted with such trials ; and his experience is re- corded as an ensample to Christians. In the book of Psalms, indeed, we may learn how to conduct ourselves under every trial, and in every state, to which we are called. " How far, in your case, it may be right, or expedient to change your place of worship, I am not now prepared to give an opinion. I hope, indeed, soon to see you ; when, if the Lord permit, we may converse on that suljject. That, in this and all things, the Lord will direct and bless you, is the prayer of Your very afiectionate friend, Alex. V. Griswold." The last is part of a letter to a friend, whose daughter had recently been visited with a peculiarly painful affliction. " Boston, August 21st, 1840. " My Dear Mrs. A., — On my return from a journey of a few weeks, I have the pleasure of receiving your much es- LIFE OF BISHOP GRISWOLD. 537 teemed fevoi' of the 17th. Two or three times, •within the last six weeks, I have commenced writing to you ; thinking that I had leisure to express my thankfulness for your kind- ness, and my high estimation of yourself and femily ; — prompted, I trust, by no intention of useless compliment, but by a desire to express the sincere feehngs of a grateful affection. But, it so happened that, at each time, I was in- terrupted ; and even now I am preparing to commence an- other journey. « * * * * » # * * On my last short visit, at your house, on my way to Westerly, to ordain the young Mr. Tales, of whom you make mention, and a Mr. Babcock, whom we beUeve to be not less estimable and promising, I was, of course, sorry not to see you : I was, however, very kindly received by Mr. A., and your lovely, saint-like daughter. I have witnessed but few things, in the course of a long life, that have more excited my admiration, than the calm and truly Christian resignation, with which she appears to submit to one of the greatest disappointments, and one of the most heart-rending trials, which appertain to this our state of hu- manity. How comforting is the word, which declares that ' all things work together for good to them that love God, to them, who are the called according to His purpose !' And how great is the blessing of being under the Providential care of Him, who knows, infinitely better than ourselves, what we need ! What, perhaps, we ought most to fear, is, that our sins may provoke Him to withdraw His grace ; to let us alone ; to let all things be according to our own mind. I doubt not but, hereafter, his people will rejoice and mag- nify His name for His goodness, vouchsafed in many of those afflictions, which, in this Ufe, seem almost insupport- able. With kind regards to Mr. A., and all your family. Your most sincere, and very affectionate friend, Alex. V. Gmswold." But, we must turn away from mere general sketches of domestic character and life, and from the pleasing intercourse 538 MEMOIR OF THE of private friendship, to other views of our subject. The domestic life of Bishop Griswold had its dark as well as its bright scenes. It was emphatically a life of sorrows. When he removed from Harwinton to Bristol, he took with him a beloved wife and dght beautiful and promising chil- dren. When he left Bristol for Salem, they were all, with a single exception, sleeping among the dead : and the one excepted, soon followed them ; as did three of the other six, who were born after his settlement in Bristol ; — so that, of his whole household of fourteen, but three survived the date of his own decease. But, his were peculiarly sanctified sorrows. If his emi- nent holiness was, in part, the fruit of God's blessing on his own strenuous warfare, through life, with the strong tendencies of nature within him ; it was also, in no in- considerable measure, the result otthe sanctifying influences of the Holy Spirit, as they commingled, in sweet and bless- ed power, with the deep and ever deepening stream of his griefs. With a constitutional temperament like his, so full of the workings of powerful sentiment, and so strongly in- clined to a contemplative and pensive sadness, if not to depression and even to despondency; his numerous afflic- tions, spread, as they were, at intervals over a large portion of his long life, could not but move him strongly, and leave on his nature deep and indelible traces. And yet, mingled, as these many afflictions were, with the daily exercise of a most devoutly submissive and obedient heart, they richly blessed the nature, which they so strongly moved ; and every trace, which they left on it, was a line of heavenly beauty ; adding, here a little and there a little, to the grow- ing image within his soul of his most loved and. worshiped Lord. Of the successive deaths, which occurred in his family, I have received but few special notices. His first wife died silently and almost instantaneously, while he was sleep* ing by her side, on the night of the 10th of September, 1817. They had both retired to rest in their usual health. But, in the course of the nightj he was aroused by an un- LIFE OF BISHOP GRISWOLD. 539 usual sound; and, upon speaking to her, perceived that something strange afiected her. He sprang for a light ; but, upon returning -with it to the bed-side, her spirit was not there. The lifeless body of his dear companion alone re- mained. Dark, indeed, was that night to him ; and dark, many of the nights and days, which followed it. Three of his beautiful children had already faded out of his sight ; and now he was left, without a conjugal sharer in his sor- rows, to stand alone and see the rest droop and disappear. And yet, he stood not alone ; for God was with him ; and his nights and days were not dark ; for the light of the Divine countenance was shining on his soul. Perhaps, the affliction, which most severely tried, and most nearly prostrated, his physical powers, was, the death of his daughter, Julia, in 1826. Being about nineteen years old when her mother died, and her only elder sister, who survived, being married to Mr. John D' Wolf, — she at once found herself called to the difficult and responsible position of sister-mother to the younger children of the family. In this position, she had, for eight years, been the female head of her father's household, the companion of his widowed days, and the sharer of his confidence and his cares ; and, being a woman of uncommon loveliness of na- tive and of Christian character, his heart cleaved to her with even more than the ordinary tenderness of a father for a favorite daughter. When, therefore, she also began to pale before the approach of the wan destroyer of his family, and at length lay cold under the wasting touch of a con- sumption, although his faith bore the stroke without a mur- mur, and his submission bent meekly beneath his Father's chastening, yet his natural man reeled before the shock, and seemed ready to become a broken as well as a bruised reed. The friend, whom I have so often quoted, and who was then much in his family, says ; that, " soon after his daugh- ter Julia's death, his despondency became quite alarming ; and fears were felt, that he would sink under the pressure of this peculiarly distressing visitation. He was, indeed, grateful for the kind attempts of his friends to comfort him ; 540 MEMOIR OF THE yet he justified himself in his deep mourning, on the ground that he ' was called to mourn ; that there was a cause for all the suffering, which God brought upon his people ; — and that we but carried out His purposes in bringing such trials upon us, by yielding to the impulses of our hearts in weep- ing, mourning and lamentation ; — although this would profit us nothing without the accompaniment of prayer, that the aflaiction might be sanctified.' " How he was carried through this sore bereavement, wc have seen, in the brief notice formerly taken of his journey to Canada in the summer of 1826 ; — how, during that ex- cursion in company with two dear friends, he was soothed in mind and invigorated in health, while looking abroad upon the bright and beautiful works of his Father, and ob- serving the numberless new and interesting objects, which solicited his attention along the way ; — yet how, on his re- turn, as he approached his twice lonely and desolated home, he felt the inner spring of his sorrows opened afresh, and the momentary rushing through his soul of their yet full and bitter waters. In the little Church-yard in Bristol, and just behind the chancel, is a row of eight white marble tomb-stones. It is the burial-place of that part of the Bishop's family, which he left behind, on his removal to Salem ; and the epitaphs, which he caused to be inscribed on their memorials, are peculiarly expressive of the feelings, with which he laid them successively, side by side, in their lowly sleep. Thus, when his wife was called suddenly from her midnight slumbers, — he could hear, in the startling summons, nought but the voice of God ; and so he wrote over her ; — " Not as I will, Heavenly Father, but as Thou wilt." But, when his daughter Julia faded slowly before him, although he heard that same voice still, nor murmured at its bidding, yet he heard it with the ear of a father's heart. Nature sighed, while grace submitted ; and so, he graved on her marble ; — " Ye, that pass by, behold and see, if there be any sorrow like unto my sorrow." Similarly appropriate inscriptions are read above the rest ; — and many a thought- LIFE OF BISHOP GEISWOLD. 541 fill passer-by has been reminded by them, that affliction was the furnace, in which the gold of his character was puri- fied ; and that it was " through much tribulation" that he finally " entered into the Kingdom of God." For nearly two years after the death of this daughter, the Bishop lived on in his loneliness ; — ^but at the close of the year 1827, or the opening of 1828, he entered into a second matrimonial connexion. The lady whom he mar- ried, was Mrs. Amelia Smith, Whose former husband was a brother of the present Bishop of Kentucky. In this worthy lady, he found a new soother of his days, and a new shar- er of his cares ; — and with her, as his numerous letters, some of which have been quoted, shew, he lived in happy and growing affection till the day of his death. The next breach, which was made upon his family, was in the decease of his son, the Rev. George Griswold, of which I have already made mention. He was a young clergyman of great piety and promise ; officiated for a while in Trinity Church, Boston, and, after Dr. Jarvis's resignation, in St. Paul's ; was settled, for a while, over the new parish in Northampton ; and finally became the assistant and suc- cessor of Dr. Keith, in the Rectorship of Christ Church, Alexandria. The early days of this dear youth were days df sadness ; and made him long familiar with the thought of a brief term of life ; at times, even anxious for his better home on high. A few extracts from his letters to his father may serve to engage our sympathy in the checkered experiences of his youth. Writing from Northainpton, August 7th, 1826, he says ; " I know it will afford you sincere gratification to learn that we continue to be prospered here, equally with our highest Miticipations. * * * I am indulging the hope and belief, that I have, at length, found the place, which is to be the scene of my future labors, and the test of my at- tachment to the cause, to which my life has been dedicated. Indeed, as I cannot reasonably indulge the expefctation, any more than I have the wish, that my term of life wDl be a yy 542 MEMOIR OF THE long one, I fain cherish the hope that, while, it continues, it may be usefully eniployed. That life is long enough, which has sufficed to accomplish the true object of living." Again, from the same place, on the 16th January, 1827, after his health had more seriously failed, and he found it impossible to continue the writing of two sermons a week ; while his nerves were much shattered, and he had before him the prospect of being obliged either wholly, or in part, to relinquish the ministry ; — he says : — ." You may judge from these things, that I get at times sadly out of spirits. Nothing but my reUgious hopes and principles enables me to sustain the heavy burdens of life. As it is, I sometimes almost sink under it ; and my short ex- perience has already had the effect to sicken me of its conr tinuance. Butj I endeavor to possess my soul in patience, and to follow your example in suffering affliction without murmuring. I ought not to have written in this strain to you, who are already oppressed with sorrows of your own. But, I cannot help sometimes thinking, that, if the will of God -Weie so, it would be better for me to depart, while there are so few ties to bind me to life, than to wait tiU ha- bit, or other connexions, shall have wedded me to this im- perfect existence. Indeed, unless otherwise situated, thaii at present, my troubles in this world will not probably be of long continuance." **»**« " I was in hopes that Miss McClintock would, ere this, have found time to write me. I feel more satisfaction in her sympathy than in that of any other person ; indeed, I know none like minded with her ; so willing to enter into my feelings, or so able to appreciate them." After his removal to a warmer climate in Alexandria, the flame of his life and hopes burnt up more brightly ; and he even began to be pleased with the thought of a longer pe- riod of life and usefulness. Hence he writes as follows, March 8th, 1828 : " I find my new situation thus far realizing all my antici- pations. The early period of my life has been so deeply tinged with gloom, both from what I have myself expe- LIFE OF BISHOP GRISWOLD. 543 rienced of the vanity of all earthly possessions, and from what I have seen endured by yourself and others, that my expectations of enjoyment, from any source this side heaven, are far from being sanguine. Indeed, I sometimes feel as if nothing but peculiar grace had enabled me to sustain the heavy burthen of existence, which has at times weighed me down almost to the verge of despair ; and, on a careful re- view of my. last four or five years, I can only say ; ' hitherto hath the Lord helped me.' I have sometimes thought my- self cut off from all hope of ever being of any use in the world, and on the point of being taken away as a cumberer of the ground, ^ut, present circumstances encourage the hope, that I may yet be of some service in my day and gene- ration, before I go hence and be no more seen." This period of sunshine, however, proved as brief as it was bright. After his settlement, as Dr. Keith's successor, and his . marriage with Miss Coombs of Washington, his health again sunk ; and he was induced to try a voyage to Cuba, in the hope of its .recovery, and of being still permit- ted to enjoy the new and delightful relations, into which he had so redently entered. Vain hope ! After spending the winter abroad without benefit, he returned to New York, only to learn, that both his wife and the little one, whom, during his absence, she had borne him, had just been laid together in the tomb ! With barely strength enough to support his steps, he therefore hastened home to Bristol; — ■ feeling no other wish than to embrace once more his beloved and honored parent, and there, amidst his now intensely kindled longings after heaven, to lay down his weary head and die. He survived his return three months, and was then at rest. This was, in a strong sense, a triple bereavement to Bishop Griswold ; but, like others, which preceded and followed it, while it struck away the prop, on which he had rested his hope of seeing a son and survivor in the ministry, it did but make him lean more confidingly on God, and grow strbng for the better ministry, which, in heaven, awaited both father and son. The remains of the deceased 544 MEMOIR OF THE were removed to Washington, that they might rest with those of his young wife and child. Several subsequent deaths occurred in the Bishop's family ; but none, of which I have received any account, tiU we come to the last before his own ; that of his second George, which occurred in April, 1842. This child was the " son of his old age," and worthy perhaps of being specially beloved. From Dr. Hale, the family physician, and from others, I have received some of the facts, connected with his last illness. He was a most interesting lad of twelve years of age ; a boy of high promise, both in mental and in moral endow- ments. His scholarship was of a superior order ; and his religious developments, unusual for his years. But, in the spring of 1842, he was suddenly attacked by the scarlet fever ; and so overwelming was the onset that, in forfy- eight hours, there ceased id be any ground of l^ope for his recovery. A sort of indistinct hope, indeed, was fostered by the mere fact that he stiU lived ; but, it was little better than hoping against hope. And yet, he lingered a whole week longer, though in a raving delirium, and in great ap- parent distress. For much of the time, the only evidence, that he was conscious even of the presence of his parents, was in the fact of his quiet stillness, whUe they were pray- ing with him, or reading to him the Scriptures. It was most affecting to notice the subdued agony of his fathePj as he would, from time to time, approach the bed-side of the little sufferer, — look at him, for a moment, in silent earnest- ness, — and then withdraw to his own room ; — again, and again returning and withdrawing, at intervals of a few minutes ; with a repetition of the same silent act, the same silent look, of intense, but unuttered anguish. In his with- drawn moments he was often heard engaged in prayer for the sick one ; especially that the dear child might be per- mitted, before his departure, to give some token of con^, sciousness, and of his being accepted of God. And appa- rentiy the desire was granted. For just before the dosing scene, it was announced, that Georgehad a lucid interval, and LIFE OF BISHOP GRISWOLD. 545 was engaged in prayer. Instantly, the father was kneeling at the foot of his bed, and, with a full gush of tears, listening to the simple, intelligent and fervent supplications of his dying child for his beloved parents, as well as for his own soul. After this, the little sufferer relapsed into his delirium, and soon expired.* This sickness and death, says Dr. Hale, were attended with a f most striking exhibition of the Bishop's Christian virtues. It reminded one most forcibly of the case ot David, when mourning for his sick chil(|." There was, in- deed, the same silent, and submissive, yet prostrate emd agonizing waiting upon God, while the child lived; and this was followed by a similar immediate and calm return to duty, as soon as the child was dead ; — for, the morning after the funeral, the Bishop set off, as we have seenj' for Rhode Island, in fulfilment of long-standing appointments ; suppressing his deep grief, that he might fail in no plighted duty. Thus, onwards, for a few months longer, were his days of mourning passed. In the outward cohdition of his Dio- cese, as we have seen, those days were at length overspread with the sunshine of calm prosperity. Yet this was, to him, but the breaking out of a setting sun, around which the quiet and chastened griefs of his own mind hung a softened and sober drdpery of clouds. This drapery, it is true, was all tinged and burnished with rich and glorious colors; still, those colors were but as the mellow .Ughts^ which some- • It is, perhaps, worthy of record, that this lamented youth belonged to an association of lads in Boston, about his own age, for mutual improvement ; and that it was his turn to read a composition on the Saturday evening of the week, in which he was taken ill. His essay was found after his decease; had been written the very evening before his attack; and had for its subject; '^sudden death," This topic was probably sugg^ted by a recent instance of such death, which had excited much interest among hia companions : but^it cannot be doubted, that the manner, in which he had heard the subject habitually referred to in the family, exerted a strong influence on his mind both in deterinining his choice and in giving color to his thoughts. 546 MEMOIR OF THE times come over the forehead of evening, just before he gathers airound his head the thick curtains of night. The measure of Bishop Griswold's life was, in truth, -full ; full of years, and full of usefulness ; — with no more sorrows to be added ; and with few more days for the ripen- ing of those fruits of holiness, which grow from sorrows sanctified. Even his labors, which lasted as long as his life, were speedily to terminate. For, scarcely had he, at the close of the year 1842, laid his ordaining hand on the head of his successor, and felt that there was a living song of peace and joy ascending to heaven from the heart of his Diocese, when the word went forth ; " Thy work is finished. Well done, good and faithful servant, enter thou into the joy of thy Lord." In the closing incidents of his life, there was something exceedingly peculiar. On Saturday, the 11th of February, 1843, the aged Bishop closes his essays on the Reformation ; the last sentence of which contains these words of weight to every Protestant Episcopalian ; " ' To the law and the testimony ;' use 'the liberty wherewith Christ hath made you free ;' ' Search the Scriptures,' and pray God so to en- lighten your minds, that you may truly understand them." This done, he lays down his pen, and proceeds to a neigh- boring town to meet an oflScial appointment. The morning of Wednesday, the 15th, however, finds him at home again, and girding himself for further work. At his usual early hour, he gathers his family around him, and reads the sa- cred page. The chapter in course is the first in the Epistle to the Philippians, — in which the following passage arrests a special attention : "For me to live is Christ, and to die is gain. But, if I live in the flesh, this is the fruit of my la- bor ; yet what I shall choose, I wot not ; for I am in a straight betwixt two, having a desire to depart and to be with Christ, which is far better. Nevertheless, to abide in the flesh is more needful for you." Closing the book, he now commends his household, in morning prayer, to their Father in heaven ; listens to the music of a favorite air, whose LIFE OF BISHOP GEISWOLD. 547 pensive strain is in harmony -with his spirit ; and then en- ters on the customary duties of the day. As it wears to- wards its close, one of those duties calls him to the resi- dence of Bishop Eastburn. Thither, therefore, he sets forth ; and, with his usual firm step, he approaches the house. Here, however, he finds himself, in an instant, amidst the scenes, which blend eternity with time. The last sand in the glass of his life drops. His step falters, and he falls ; — rises again, and reaches the door. It was the limit of his race. With his last step he bows his head to the threshold, and — dies. In the presence of his son in the Church, he rests at once from his labors ; and, without a sigh or a groan, feels " mortality swallowed up oflifeP So God willed. And thus, long- warned, yet at last un- warned, — this faithful servant closed his toils and laid down his commission, yielded his ready spirit, and dropped his rich mantle, at the very feet of him, who had been sent to stand up in his stead, to carry forward his work, and to ripen into his graces. The immediate cause of Bishop Griswold's death, it is admitted, was, a disease of the heart. The existence of this disease had, for some time, been made manifest by the fact, that any sudden excitement, or strong efiort, as that of rapid walking, caused pain at that seat of life, and com- pelled an instant pause from all exertion. But the length of time, during which this disease had been chronic, is pro- bably much less than is by many supposed. Some have believed that, for more than twenty years, he was subject to the disease, of which he finally died. But this belief is not borne out by the testimony of his family physician. Dr. Hale, of Boston ; a man, whose eminence in his profession justifies the strongest confidence in his medical opinions. It may not be uninteresting, and will not be inappropriate, before closing these memoirs, to insert the substance of Dr. Hale's remarks on this subject. " My first professional visit to Bishop Griswold," observes Dr. H., " was, I think, in the Spring of 1836. It was for an attack of the palsy, which proved to be slight, although, 548 ^ MEMOIR OF THE at first, it threatened to be serious. I was much struck by the strong conviction, which he expressed, that it was likely to be speedily fatal ; or, at least, that it would render him helpless, and lay him aside for the remainder of his life. There was no appearance of excitement or alarm, attei^ding this apprehension ; but a sort of quiet, submissive prepara- tion for such an event ; and this, at the very first moments after the attack ; for he perceived the paralysis, on awaking early in the morning, and I was with him a few minutes afterwards. During his convalescence, I had a conversation with him on the subject ; and remember asking, what had given him the strong impression, that that attack would be fatal ? He answered, that he had long looked forward to about that age, as the latest probable period of his life, and thought there was a probability that palsy would be, the means of its termination. He considered his bodily constitution much like that of his mother ; who died of the palsy about the same age, to which he had then attained. He had, besides, observed the failure of his voice, for some time previous ; had attributed it (perhaps justly) to a slight incipient para- lysis ; and regarded it as an indication and an admonition, that more serious attacks, of the same kind, awaited him. " I was strongly impressed, by this conversation, with the remarkable knowledge of himself, which it exhibited ; with his readiness to receive every intimation of the frailties of advancing age ; and especially, with his watchful expecta- tion of sudden death, and his habitual preparation for such an event. This last circumstance became, in all his subse- quent illnesses, a prominent feature in his exhibitions of char- acter. To such an exent did it lead him to regard every attack as likely to prove fatal, that one, who knew not the source of the impression, to which I have adverted, would have been very apt to mistakeAj* feeling for despondence, or de- pression. His constant expectation of sudden death had a strong influence on his habitual conversation, when in his usual health ; and was the chief source of his great anxiety, during the last few years of his life, for the ?ippointment of an Assistant Bishop. LIFE OF BISHOP GRISWOLD. 549 " There is a general impression, that this strong feeling arose from his knowledge of that disease of the heart, which ultimately proved fatal to his life. I am confident, that this is a mistake. I am fully persuaded, that the feeling had its origin in that watchful preparation for death, and that con- stant expectation of it, which he had long cultivated as a habit of Christian duty, without reference to any particular manner of its approach, and long before he felt any serious anxiety about the disease of the heart. He had, it is true, a slight irregularity of the pulse for many years. He occasion- ally called my attention to it, I should think earlier than the time of his paralytic attack. But, it was not such as to excite any solicitude for the time being, nor until long after. I am quite confident, it did not enter, at all, into the reasons men- tioned in the conversation, to which I have referred, of ex- pecting a sudden death at that time. " In the winter of 1837, he had a long illness, with a dis- tressing cough, attended with much sufiering. His disease, then, was chiefly, a severe catarrh, (technically, bronchitis,) of a very obstinate character. His system would never bear opiates well ; and it was therefore extremely difficult either to relieve, or to palliate his suffering. During the whole of this disease, the affection of the heart, if it existed at all, did not give him any sensible trouble. " In the winter of 1840, (I think it was) he had another similar attack; with the exception, that it began with a severe and true pneumonia. This, however, yielded in a few days, and the disease settled into a sort of catarrhal affec- tion, which proved very obstinate and distressing. During this, as in the previous attack, he suffered very little, if at all, fi-om the difficulty in the heart ; although, in the interval, it had -manifested itself with some degree of distinctness. In the course of the following year, however, 1841, the disease of the heart became more obvious ; and more so still, in 1842. Even then, however, it was as a warning of fixture danger, rather than as a cause of much present suffering, that it exhibited itself; and, inasmuch as there was httle, or no probability of reaching it beneficially with medicinal reme- 550 MEMOIR OF THE dies, I purposely, so far as I could, avoided directing his at- tention to it. " In the last few months of his life, he sufiered much more, and several times had more obvious threatenings of speedy death, from attacks of inflammation in the bowels, than from the disease of the heart. It happened, that all these attacks were during his absences from home ; when, of course, I could not see him in them. The most severe was in New Hampshire, in the course of his last visitation to that State, in the summer, or autumn of 1842. He was very ill ; and yet, the moment he obtained a little relief, he pushed his visits from station to station, suffering repeated relapses, until his life was brought into imminent peril. Late in the autumn, he had another severe, but short attack, (I think) at Worces- ter. " I have not spoken of his deportment in these several at- tacks, because there was in it nothing peculiar, as compared with his habitual ' conduct and conversation' at other times. That he was always calm, submissive and patient, would naturally be expected from the uncommon uniformity of his Christian character. He exhibited great evenness of tempera- ment, with no excitements into religious rapture, and no de- pressions into religious gloom. He had, as already explained, an habitual tendency to judge unfavorably of his prospect of recovery ; but there was not in this the least appearance of despondency in view of the result." And, why should there have been.-" Heaven was the home of his spirit. Earth had long been but his place of labor and of discipline. He tasted, indeed, the sweets of human loves and friendships by the way ; and delighted to travel on the high paths of human thought and learning. Still, this world was not the home of his spirit. That spirit had long been less famiUar with this world, than with that better one to come. There, was Jesus, the blessed Saviour, whom he loved supremely : There were many of the. dear friends and kindred, to whom his soul had been closely knit: and there were the treasures of life, which, by the Divine Spirit's teaching, he had long been laying up in Christ; and LIFE OF BISHOP GRISWOLD. 551 to taste of which he had such an inner and deathless long- ing. To him, therefore, death, however sudden, could be only welcome. As his daily theme of thought, he spoke of it with a cheerful calmness, which proved that, to him, the grave had lost its terrors. For him ' to live was Christ,^ and for Christ alone did he wish to live ; but, " to die was gain^'* and he felt no reluctance to realize the profit, which it was to bring him. Never were words more appropriate to charac- ter than those which he uttered more than twenty years be- fore his departure; "Why should I be unwilling to go home ?" What he met so suddenly on the 15th of February, 1843, was not so much death, as simply going home. It was not so much the pain of dying, as it was the bliss of feeling " mortality, swallowed up of life." The writer is now done with the memoirs of the life of Bishop Griswold. Whatever remains to be said, or seen of him, is referred to the short Appendix, which is to follow. In what has already been said and seen, he trusts there is internal evidende, that Bishop Grriswold himself has been before the reader's mind, and not the writer's mere imagina- tion of what he was. The conception of his character, which has been imbodied in the foregoing pages, is, in part, the result of many years' familiar acquaintance with the living man ; but, in greater part, perhaps, it is the result of what that man has left behind in his own writings, and in the re- membrances of his most bosom friends. The aim of the writer has been, honestly to present his subject to the mind of the reader in the unexaggerated lights, which have resist- lessly broke on his own ; and he believes God has kept him from giving a fancy sketch, while striving to draw a portrait from life. He honestly acknowledges, that, although he has long had lofty conceptions of Bishop Griswold, both as a scholar and as a Christian ; yet the study of that great and good man's character, to which this work has brought him, has constrained him to place his subject in a much higher niche, both as a man of intellectual power and as a man of extraordinary holiness, than even that, which, during his life, 652 MEMOIR OF THE he had assigned him. And yet he feels confident, that the springs of information, which have been opened to him, and which he has laid open before the reader, will shew, that the stream of life, seen flowing through the varied scenery of these pages, has never been artificially forced to a level, higher than that of the sources, from which it has been drawn. As to the account, which has been given, of Bishop Gris- wold's religious views, both in matters of doctrine, and on points of ecclesiastical polity, the writer thinks it no more than justice to himself to say ; that it has been his steady purpose to leave the Bishop, as much as possible, to speak for himself, in his own words and through his own acts ; and that, whenever the author has paused to offer a remark of his own, it has been for (as he trusts) the allowable pur- pose of fixing attention upon the Bishop's proper thoughts and meaning, and not upon any fiction of thought or mean- ing, which the writer has been anxious to propagate under the sanction of so venerable a name. That, on most points, he agrees in faith and opinion with the sainted man, whose life and character he has drawn, he is by no means disposed to conceal ; and that he feels desirous of spreading both the churchmanship and the holiness, which in that saint were imbodied, he is not at all anxious to deny. He has, there- fore, taken an occasional liberty, not inconsistent, he hopes, with propriety, in adding the strong assent of the biographer to the teachings of the life, which he has written, and the earnest comment of the historian to the lessons of the history, which he has penned. On the whole, while the memoir, now closing, shews an unusual variety and a rare combination of beautiful traits and high excellences in the character and views of its subject ; it will, he doubts not, be admitted, that it gives special pro- minence to three points. It shews that there was, in Bishop Griswold, vastly more of true genius, tender sentiment, and power for high mental effort and attainment, than was ordinarily accorded to him even by those, who thought they knew him well ; and that, LIFE OF BISHOP GRISWOLD. 553 had not his Christian conscience put these things under bonds not to encroach on the time, which he had vowed to keep literally sacred to his toils in the service of Christ and his Church, he might have impressed himself with a very difie- rent, though not with a more salutary power on the character and movements of his age. It shews, also, that his churchmanship was of the soundr est, most unquestionable order ; that, if he eschewed, what, in partisan language, has been termed, High Churchmanship, he also held no communion with, what, in the same phrase- ology, has been termed. Low Churchmanship; and that the main feature of his theory on this point, as distinguished from that of some, consisted in embracing the Church, as she pre- sents herself, refusing to push certain inferences from the fact of Episcopacy on the consciences of his clergy and people, and against the convictions, or the prejudices, of Christians of other denominations. If this stand constitute a Low Churchman, then he was a Low Churchman. Yet was he free from all party-spirit, and eschewed all mere party-aims ; and his best designation, on this point, is ; that he was a thoroughly sound Protestant Churchman ; laboring for the UNITY as well as for the purity of the Church ; and basing her claims on the high ground of Scripture, as weU as on the broad foundj^tion of history. It shews, finally, and most conspicuously, that he was a CHRISTIAN ; that, to him, CHRIST was the living, near, all-glorious object of his soul's adoration and love ; not set away in unfelt, un-minded distance beyond a thick, obscur- ing cloud of inferior mediators, and more than half- worshiped intercessors, but, brought out, unveiled, the warm-beaming Sun of life to the believing soul ; .the one, only Mediator and Intercessor with the Father ; the one, only shedder forth of the Spirit from both the Father and the Son : and that, with him, Christ stood supreme, as well as near ; not virtually sub- ordinate to external things, not hidden in dark reserve, or kept for an. occasional pomp, behind a Church, whose ob- trusive and gorgeous visibility presents the main attraction to thought and imagination, but revealed, in all-effused light zz « 554 MEMOIR OF THE LIFE OF BISHOP GRISWOLD. and glory, above, around, within the Church ; the great Son of God, holding the Church herself in his right hand, and using her for the conversion of a world. • In practice, as -well as in theory, Bishop Griswold, was a great Christian. He loved Christ ; and he loved to walk, as Christ walked. I have met with more burning ardor, with more rapturous devotion, than he ever manifested ; but after a careful study of his life, I feel constrained to say, that I have never met with one, who, more literally than he, took Christ as his pattern in judging, acting and living in the world; with one, who, more literally than he, took the standard of ministerial fidelity and self-sacrifice, which was set up in Christ and his Apostles, and endeavored daily and actucJly to imitate it in his own life and labors ; or with one, in whom, more than in him, that crowning grace of Christ's own character, humility, shone bijt in all its unaffected, uncounterfeit, and unintermitted radiance of soft and holy light. It was his humility, which, during his life, kept him prac- tically low, and made him less observed of the world than many of far less ability and of far less worth. But the veil behind which life hid him, has beensteken off' by death ; and the world may now look on him in his true character, and see him on his true elevation. Unintentional, yet practical injustice, in the estimate of his powers and attainments, he will, it is believed, no longer suffer. Certainly, he will not, if the effort, which in the present work has been made, shallhave succeeded, to any tolerable extent, in effecting its purpose. The epitaph, so long since written by Sir William Cooper, in memory of his "spiritual father," the great author of the Ecclesiastical Polity, has in it so much, that is appropriate to the subject of these reflections, that the author knows not how to close his work better than with the last few lines of that quaint, but expressive eulogy. " Yet, he that lay so long obscurely low, Doth now preferred to higher honors go. Aiiihitious men, learn hence to be more wise; Humility is the true way to rise : And God in me this lesson did inspire, To bid this humble man. Friend, sit up higher." THE END. APPENDIX I. The following short collection of original thoughts, hints to subjects, &c., is made from a much larger mass of similar materials, found chiefly on loose slips of paper, in Bishop Griswold's hand, and in the drawers of his secretary. It is inserted here for three principal reasons. 1. These thoughts ^ew the character of the Bishop's mind, as at work within itself. 2. They illustrate his mode of preparing subjects for fuller discussion. 3. They are of intrinsic beauty and valiie, and therefore worthy of this special preservation. Many of them have probably been wrought into the texture of some of his various discourses, and addresses. But, even if those discourses and addresses should ever be given to the public in a collected form,' that would not destroy either the beauty, or the value of what is here preserved. THOTTGHTS, IN THE FORM OF SIMILE. Uninterrupted prosperity, like continual sunshine, parches the soil even of a godly heart. Clouds of sorrow, and storms of adversity are necessary to purify the moral atmosphere, to water our Christian graces, and to make the heart fruitful. You may as well think to silence an echo by strength of voice, as to convince a prejudiced disputant by strong argu- ment. As, in the former, the echo will but grow the louder, and still have the last word ; so, in the latter, the stronger your argument, the fiercer will his answers be, and the more certainly will he have the last word in the controversy. The errors and faults of a true Christian are like a line drawn by a trembling hand, which, though rough and ragged, yet tends towards the right point. While those of the wicked are like a line drawn in a wrong direction, which, even where smoothest, is often most fatally out of the way. 556 APPENDIX. In'serving God, or obeying his commandments, let us, like the poor -widow in the Gospel, shew our good wiU, though we must, by the very littleness of the offering, be- tray our deep poverty. Ardor, excited not by conviction, but by passion, by yield- ing to sentiment more than to reason, is as the glow pro- duced by the stimulus of spirituous liquors ; often irregular and immediately injurious, and always sure to end in in- creased languor and weakness. As the true nourishment for the body is that, which strengthens the parts, rather than stimulates the spirits ; so the true nurture for the mind is that, which invigorates its powers, rather than stimulates its pas- sions ; that which increases knowledge and enlightens the understanding. In religion, fervor thus excited will be imi- form, permanent, and fruitful in righteousness. The soul, fed with such food, will grow to the perfect man, to the measure of the stature of the fulness of Christ. The raging passions, the stormy wrath, of men is like the foaming billows of the sea, which beat fiercely against the solid land, and then retire humble and calm. Vices are like weeds ; natural to the soil, and increasing without cultivation : virtues are like plants, which are exotic and, in order to perfection, require careful culture. And, as weeds increase most where the soil is rich and cultivation imperfect, so, in Christian countries, sin is exceeding sinful. Those, who have the Gospel, yet walk not by its precepts, are worse than those, who have never known the way of righteousness. Early genius is like fruit prematurely ripe. It has at first a brighter hue and a richer fragrance ; but decays sooner and falls earlier, than the rest. A hypocrite is like a heathen temple ; splendid and beauti- ful without ; but within, what is most prominent and most adored is some deformed image, or some hideous monster. They, who, in contesting trivial and unessential points, break the bond of charity, are like some ancient idolaters, who, in worshiping ?^jly, would sacrifice an ox. In theology, deep investigation is like digging ore from the APPENDIX. 557 mine ; while practical preaching is like fashioning the metal for use. History tells of a Philosopher, who said ; " strike, but hear ?ne." So may Christ's ministers say. If we can but be heard, if our doctrine is but received, if men will but heed the truths, which we bring them, it is of httle comparative importance how we fare in this world. Christians should use ancient literature and human learn- ing as the Israelites did the gold, which they brought out of Egypt ; not when they fashioned it into a molten calf and worshiped it, but when they applied it to beautify the tem- ple, and adorn the worship of God. The obscurities of the Scripture may well be compared to the spots on the sun; which obscure indeed a few of his rays, yet leave enough to light the world. We may as well say that the world wants natural light, as that men, who have the Bible, have not enough spiritual light to shew them the doctrines and duties necessary to their salvation. Searching too inquisitively into the deep xmrevealed things of God is like looking directly into the sun. It rather im- pairs the mental sight than leads to any discovery of truth. Religious controversy on abstruse and unessential points of Theology is like climbing steep and craggy precipices. If, with much difficulty, their pinnacle be gained, they but leave us standing on barren rocks, with the comfortless prospect of other cliffs on cliffs, and of mountains still above and inaccessible. An eminent man without religion, is, in some respects, like a barren mountain ; which encumbers the gTound with its bulk, presses the world by its weight, and chills the at- mosphere with its coldness. Those Christians, who are most strenuous in things of little importance, are Hke the Pharisees of old ; most likely to fail in the weightier matters of the law. It is those, who are yielding in non-essentials, who are most apt to be stable in fundamental principles. The willow will bend to the blast, yet keep its root in the gTound ; while the sturdy pine, zz* 558 APPENDIX. proudly opposing its unbending trunk to the storm, fails often at the root and is overthrown. In temporal things, as men extract poison from the most wholesome food, as, from bread-corn they distil those spirits, which inflame the blood, intoxicate the brain, and destroy the body which God designed them to support; so, in spiritual things, they often pervert the doctrines of Christ, those truths of the Gospel, which are designed to minister to salvation ; originating from them pernicious errors, and wrest- ing them to the destruction of their own souls. As a wise physician, in administering a remedy, will care- fully consider whether, though powerful to remove the malady of his patient, it may not have an impairing effect on th^^eneral constitution ; so the wise Christian, in adopting measures for the removal of vice and the cure of the diseases which effect society, will consider whether, though powerful in one direction for good, they may not be more powerful in another for evil ; whether they do not tend to the needless exposure of the faults and errors of Christians, or to the en- gendering of long-lived animosities and enduring, unchari- tableness. As a wise physician endeavors to render his medicine palatable by the addition of harmless ingredients, yet will admit of no admixture, which can, in any way, neutralize its effect ; so only will the faithful minister endeavor to be- come all things to all men in administering the medicine of those saving truths, which the natural mind so strongly dis- tastes. The life of man is like the track of a vessel through the ocean : for a short time, it is full of motion and of sparkles ; but it is soon still again and vanishes from view. Christians are often like the builders on the second temple ; obliged to hold a sword in one hand while they build with the other. MISCELI,A.NEOUS MORAL AND RELIGIOUS THOUGHTS. A single thought often outlives an empire. APPENDIX. 559 In the practice of virtue, as in other things, mankind are prone to look chiefly at occasions of great and glorious actions, to the neglect of those smaller duties, which ought to be constant, which chiefly mark the character of men, and which contribute most to bless society. In theory, we fancy, that we could die Tnartyrs ; when, in practice, we have not fortitude to bear a slight provocation. The world often misjudges the advantages of a life well spent. Many men, though without religion, are privileged to depart this world with applause ; while devoted Christians are sometimes hissed off" the stage of life. Ministers often prematurely administer comfort to the troubled conscience. A skilful physician would be cautious of extinguishing z fever, which was but an effort of nature to throw off" some morbific agent from the system. If, indeed, the fever were so violent as of itself to threaten life, he would then treat it as a malady ; otherwise, he would aim chiefly at the removal of its cause. So should we treat the awaken- ed sinner. If his troubled mind be driving him to despond- ence, and to distrust of God's mercy, it is diseased and should be treated accordingly. But short of this, let the terrors of the law and the probe of conscience find the bot- tom of his wound, and effect a radical and permanent cure of his corrupt nature. Nature and grace are full of beautiful analogies. Thus, Faith is the root, Hope the stem. Charity the branches, and good works \he fruit, of a Christian tree. I Naturally, even Christian people are more inclined to dis- Ipute about things, of which they are ignorant, or which are / of doubtful utility, than to practice those, which are well / known and of the highest importance. " Pruritus disputandi scabies ecclesiae." I Hypocrisy and Fanaticism. They, who affect to be al- iways looking upward, are less likely to be careful how they 'walk ielow. It is the coward that talks loudest of his courage ; the j hypocrite, of his zeal ; the bigot, of his liberality ; the parti- 560 APPENDIX. I zan, of his candor ; and the selfish man, of his disinterest^- ness. A departure from what God's word really teaches is heresy ; a violation of what the Church lawfully requires is schism. In relation to the Jewish Church, the Samaritans were schismatics ;'*and yet, it is a remarkable fact that Christ's ministry was often more successful with them than with the orthodox Jews. If we are bom but once, we shall die twice ; but if we are born twice, we shall die but once. God now saves by means, not by miracles. He, who has too much learning to study the Scriptures, has too much wisdom to be taught of God ; and he, who is too much of a gentleman to be religious, is either above or below the character of a Christian. Technical terms are often a cloak for ignorance : and of all ignorance, that which is learned is most contemptible. No reading is more profitable than that, which teaches us how and what to read : nor can time be better spent than in learning hmu to spend it rightly. Submission to God is^not enough: we must add approval of His dispensations. When religion is fashionable, the cause of true piety is most in danger. Dr. Buchanan well observes ; " I find that the most useful preaching, which draws aside the cloak of profession, and discloses what is under it. There is great danger of flattering our people in their sins. ' In our preaching, we should neither praisp ourselves, nor decry others ; we should never quiet our hearers by dwelling unduly on the excellences of our own Church, or by ex- posing needlessly the faults of other denominations : we should rather seek for faults in ourselves, and for virtues in them. In conversation, I am more solicitous to hear the opinions of others, than to propagate my own. I would exercise much caution in drawing others to my belief, lest peradven- APPENDIX. 561 ture I should draw them into error ; but, in correcting my own notions, I cannot be too much concerned. From early youth, I have been convinced that ' the end of the commandment is charity ;" and have therefore, through life, made it my constant aim, to attain this summit. In • religious experience, few things have given me more pain/ than the apparent want of charity among Christians. . My sermons have had some good effect on myself, if not on others. My endeavor has been first to preach them to myself; and like Herod, I have at least done many things in consequence. How almost uniformly do clergymen disregard the direc- tion of St. James, to say ; " If the Lord will, we shall live and do this or that !" and this, too, in God's house, and in his service ! If they as often neglected the Rubrics, they would be condemned by general consent. " This ought ye to do, and not leave the other undone. But, if either must be disregarded, let it not be God^s Word." A slow, drawling manner in service evinces the want of ardor and earnestness. It is not, as some seem to imagine, solemnity, but dullness. All men speak earnestly when they feel. We should avoid all manner of ostentation, especially in prayer. If it be a fault to offer prayer without serious thought either before, or after ; — it is no less so to make a display of those thoughts. Eefore service, and sermon, some seem to study conspicuousness, that the congregation may know they are praying in private. The true doctrines of grace are most apt to be expressed in prayer. Says Luther; "In affection and practice, men are different from what they are in disputation and argu- ment." This is because reason is more corrupt and oftener erroneous than conscience. Hence, in prayer, all power and goodness are usually ascribed to God ; all impotence and evil, to man. Great care should be bestowed on the religious education of the young ; — the world, they live in, is a school of infi- 562 APPENDIX. delity and sin ; — and in this school, at least, the young are apt learners. To have warm friends, we must t6o often be the adro- i cates of a party, or of a sect. He, who is impartial to all, ; is not likely much to interest any. To obtain promotion and i feme, we must push ourselves forward, and court especially 1 the dominant party. This, however, is at the risk of evil. ; A Christian's duty is — ^to go straight forward, leave events i with God, and hope only " to have praise of Him." We ought not to reject what is good because practiced by those whom we dislike. This proceeds from pridie, and is contrary to the q)irit of Christianity. While Christians act on such a principle, the Church can never be united. It is a principle, which has ever been one of the causes of her divisions. That Christian dresses most as he ought, whose apparel attracts least attention, either by its finery, or by its plain; ness. Heretofore, the Jews have been inclined to reject the Book of Daniel ; and Christians that of Bevelation. Now, both begin to be respected ; — a proof that the time of their main prophecies is at hand, and a fact, from which useftil reflections may be deduced. Before the Netherland-wars in the reign of Elizabeth, the English are said to have been moderate drinkers : but there, they learned, by drinking others' health, to impair their own. The fact, that, in ancient times, the stars were worshiped as divinities, easily accounts for the early prevalence of astrology, and for the high veneration, in which this science was so long held. For, if men once believed the stars to be gods, they would of course beUeve in their influence on human affairs. Enthusiasm is commended in every thing but religion. " In science, it is genius : in vice, it is spirit : but in re- ligion, it is madness." Religion alone, as most men judge, is what we are to treat with apathy and indifierence. APPENDIX. 563 It is with propriety, that the Bible applies to the Divine Being terms, which are intelligible to our imperfect nature, though not accurately descriptive of His; as when it speaks of Him as having parts, hand, eye, ear, and the like : or when it represents him as having passions, anger^ jealously, repentings, &c. The infinite distance between God and ourselves renders thig, necessary. The language of philosophy, and the thoughts, to which some men can soar, would be unsuitable in revelation. Religion is for all, especially for the poor, the common people. We cannot possibly mount up to God : therefore. He condescends to come down to us and to commune with us here on earth and in our own language. There are some absurdities, even among Christians. « Of these may be mentioned : 1. The Assembly's Catechism taught to children, as though adapted to their capacities; yet studied by the highest class in some Colleges, as being, what in fact, it is, difficult for men to understand. 2. Humility, acknowledged to be a great and fundamen- tal virtue ; while yet children are taught in our schools to seek their own honor, and to prefer themselves to others. 3. Acknowledging ourselves, in prayer, to be superla- tively wicked, depraved and guilty of all kinds of sin ; when, at the same time, if a neighbor were to suggest to us that we were faulty in any one thing, we should feel highly affronted. j In man, the animal and angelic natures are united, and called human. In Jesus, the human and the divine are ( united, and called Immanuel. In worldly things, our thoughts and cares are confined to ffurselves ; — in spiritual, chiefly to our neighior. THOTTGHTS ON PREACHEKS AND PREACHING. Though, with Dr. Watts, I must say that I cannot imagine any connection between the swinging of a man's arms, and the truths of Christianity, yet I have nothing to say against gesticulation in the dehvery of sermons ; for public opinion 564 APPENDIX. would probably be against me. What is natural, indeed, involuntary and unobserved by the speaker, is certainly pro- per. But every thing of the kind, which is studied, affect- ed and artificial, has, and is intended to have, the effect of drawing attention to the speaker ; and, the more this is done, the less good is effected. This may well ac- count for what is so commonly seen ; that preachers, re- markable for a studied gracefulness in their delivery, and much admired as fine speakers, produced but little effect in changing the heart and converting their hearers to the truth of God. A preacher, to do his best and be most successful, /^ould forget himself, and have in his mind his subject only and a purpose of persuading his hearers to believe what he teaches, and to live accordingly. His great object should be to carry his point. The more suitable and perfect the style and manner of a preacher, the less wiU this, style and manner be either praised, or thought of. A congregation wiU perceive and feel the difference between a preacher's " reciting something before them, and his saying something to them." Of M , (a popular preacher of that time,) I have nothing to say. But, one of the most common, and most perilous evils in the effect of popular preaching, is the mis- taking of carnal affection for religious feeling. People are in danger of supposing that they love the doctrines of life, when it is the. manner of teaching them, that pleases. They are not, as they suppose, attracted by the Saviour, but only enamored of his ministers. When a preacher is pos- sessed of those qualifications, which naturally please, re- ligion itself, we are ready to beheve, is delightful ; as a child loves physic, enclosed in sugar. It should be better remembered, that it is not, in such case, the physic, that is loved, nor the sugar, that restores health. When a young preacher, of a good person, fine voice, pleasing address, lively imagination, and graceful eloquence, is very popular, — in estimating the religious effect of his preaching, the impression made on females, under forty, is APPENDIX. 565 not at all to be considered ; and a very large deduction must be made in the case of the remainder of his hearers. . Such is our nature, that it is scarce possible we should not love popularity. There are very few, who, if it were in their power, would not acquire it. The love of fame is justly styled " the universal passion." Folly consists rather in the rendering, than in the desiring, of popularity. The love of praise is as justifiable as the love of money. But, neither should be indulged, except to the extent, in which it is justly due. It may reasonably be questioned, whether Christians can, with propriety, unite in rendering such ex- treme homage to a popular idol, as we sometimes witness. It is not to be supposed, that any man can be so infinitely more deserving than all his fellow creatures, as to be jujstly so caressed, while thousands of good and faithful Christians Eire comparatively neglected. Among other evil eflfects of this, it operates as a great discouragement to those, who possess not popular attractions. When the Christian preacher speaks to best effect, the hearers think least of him. It is an evidence of our faith- fulness, when the congregation retire from the Lord's house silent and thoughtful ; when they " salute no man by the way ;" and when their minds are deeply impressed with the truths, which they have heard, without thinking any thing at aU of the preacher. There is no sin, which more easily, or more often, besets the ministers of Christ, those especially, who are young, than the desire to preach themselves rather than Christ ; to seek their own glory ; — to put themselves forward to view, while the Saviour is kept in the back ground ; to seek ad- miration and popular applause. If the preacher's aim be — to honor himself, by a display of his learning, or eloquence, or taste, or fine imagination, or even of his piety and zeal, he is an unfaithful preacher ; though, in word, he preaches the truth, and, th^only. This vain glory often causes preachers to devote an undue proportion of time to the pre- AAA 566 APPENDIX. paration of fine sermons, and to the polishing of their pe- riods, to the neglect of other duties. Let our eye be single, and our whole body will be full of light. There is no other preaching, that will be so successful in changing the heart and turning men to God, as preaching ■ the word in plainness and sincerity ; because this is the or- dinance, which God has appointed for that purpose. We know that " preaching the Cross of Christ is, to them that perish, foolishness ;" — but, it " pleases God by such fool- ishness to save them that believe." The profaneness of scoffers, the boldness of infidelity are best and oftenest sub- dued by preaching the Cross of Christ. Though the Ark be'ijshaken, yet we need not fear, but go forward as the Lord directs. He shews the foolishness of human wisdom by " choosing the weak things of the world to confound the mighty, and the foolish things of the world to confound the wise." The preacher's business and duty are, — not to please the imagination, — ^but to mend the heart, and reform the lives of his hearers ; not so much to invent new things, as to en- force the practice of old truths, long established and often taught. In works of taste, designed chiefly for pleasure, many things may be valued merely because they are new. Religious discourses are profitable only for doctrine, reproof, correction, and instruction in righteousness. If a man were hungry, would he object to wholesome food because he had before fed on the same dish ? Doctrines, which have often been taught, and duties which have been frequently urged, may still be necessary for spiritual sustenance. The ex- cellence of this spiritual food consists not in its novelty, nor in the elegant style in which it is served up, but in its whole- some nature and solid nourishment. He is no true shepherd, who delights to be at the feast of sheep-shearing, but sets others to feedjj^e flock. How im- portant that we, who daily teach others to renounce the APPENDIX. 567 world, should set the example ! We admit none to baptism but on this condition ; and shall we take on ourselves the sacred office of spiritual shepherds and guides, while yet we cherish a love of the world in our hearts and exhibit a conformity to the world in our lives ? We ought to speak of those faults, to which our hearers are most subject ; the " sins, which most easily beset them." For a preacher to dwell on those faults, which his auditors are not, at present, likely to commit, is as though a physi- cian should prescribe for a patient, in a burning fever, no- thing but some directions how to avoid taking a cold. Thus, it is not unfrequently the case, that a congregation, inclined to lukewarmness, are earnestly warned against enthusiasm. Spiritual sleep has no waking hours. It is like that of Lazarus, — the sleep of death ! The soul cannot, will not, of itself awake. The preacher's voice must be heard be- fore Lazarus will " come forth." Few things, of equal importance, are less considered than the force of prejudice upon the human mind. In nothing is it more conspicuous than in the effects, which the preach- ing and ministry of Jesus Christ had upon his various hearers. Behold a numerous multitude, all listening to the same discourse ; all pressed with the same reason and argu- ments ; all favored with the same evidence [and proof, the same law and testimony ; and all exhorted by the same in- teresting and awakening considerations : yet, how various and widely different are the effects produced on their minds ! Some admire the wisdom of the speaker : some are smitten to the heart and convicted, and henceforth cleave to him : some are chiefly desirous to hear him solve curious and diffi- cult questions : in the opinion of some, he speaks by inspi- ration of God : while others exclaim, — " He hath a devil, and is mad ; why hear ye him ?" Some are convinced by the force of his arguments ; and others are grieved to hear their favorite tenets confuted : at the sight of his miracles. 568 APPENDIX. many adore the power of God ; and many ascribe them to the power of Beelzebub. How weighty, then, is the admo- nition of Jesus ; " Take heed how ye hear !" Men are too often totally heedless in this important respect. They hear for pleasure, rather than for profit ; from curiosity, rather than for improvement. They inquire, not so much for information and knowledge, as for the confirmation of their present opinions. It is, therefore, necessary that the mind should be prepared for the reception of truth. "No man," saith Jesus, " can come unto me except the Father draw him." He, indeed, who seeks, will find ; " He that hath ears to hear, let him hear," for by hearing he will profit, " Where there is no appetite, the sweetest meat will lose its'"savor. Where there is no ear for music, the most per- fect harmony is undelightful. And, to the blind, there is no manner of beauty in the finest prospect," nor variety in all the brightest colors. Even thus, "the natural man, receiveth not the things of the Spirit of God, — for they are spiritually discerned." Speculative writers have, indeed, said fine things of credibility, and of the nature, force, and degree of evidence ; as if we had scales for weighing truth to a single grain ; whereas, in fact, man, with all his boasted balancings and reasoning, can resist a proof at which even devils tremble. So impossible is it, by fair and honest means, to please every one, that our Lord says to his Apostles ; " Wo unto you, when all men shall speak well of you." What one expects and requires of a preacher, another wiU condemn. The spiritual state of those, who hear, is various. Some need to be alarmed from thoughtlessness and carelessness : others need to be encouraged and strengthened under doubts and despondency. Some are fearful when there is nothing to fear : others walk with confidence on the verge of destruc- tion. Some believe not the Gospel ; and so require reason- ing and argument : others believe without doubting ; and so find reasoning and argument unedifying j,'to them this seems like lighting a candle to shew the sun. Some have many APPENDIX. 569 difficulties in understanding the Scriptjires, or the doctrines of the Gospel : others find them in the main clear and intel- ligible. To the former, explanation, and elucidation are valuable ; while, to the latter they are comparatively useless. Many imbibe false doctrines, or wrong notions of religion ; and many have very imperfect ideas of the Church : hence, it is often necessary to explain the nature of both ; though to some these explanations may prove tiresome. Mankind have also diverse tastes, tempers and turns of mind respect- ing religion. Some wish for nothing from the pulpit but particular or favorite doctrines : others can relish nothing but discourses on moral virtue : while others, again, are best en- tertained with historical information, or with philosophical disquisitions. Every one, therefore, should consider these things, and re- member that the Gospel was to be preached "to every creature ;" and that the preacher must have regard to the spiritual wants of all classes of hearers. There is vast importance in a union of praying with preaching ; the one for obtaining help from God, without whom we can do nothing ; the other for imparting the know- ledge of Phrist, without which there is no converting and saving the souls of men. The Apostles would " give them- selves continually to prayer and to the ministry of the Word." How different the conduct of those dignitaries of the Church, in some parts of the world, who, when they have reached the Apostleship, and when they ought to be the " servants of all" instead of giving themselves continually to prayer and the ministry of the Word, neglect both : employing chaplains to pray for them, and settling curates to preach ! Well might Jewel say ; " A Bishop should die pr easing." Preaching was unduly extolled in Puritan days, and un- duly degraded after the Restoration. Some jyho contend for prayer as opposed to preaching, do, so far as we can judge, pray the least of any Christians. Few things appcE^less reasonable than the words, which have been wasted to shew that praying is more important AAA* 570 APPENDIX. than •preaching. "WSe certainly should consider the fruit, in itself, as more valuable than the labor, which produces it. Yet, the importance of the labor will be in proportion to the value of the fruit. Men may plant and water ; but .God giveth the increase : and the question is, whether he will give it, if the husbandman neglect to labor ? The labor may be unsuccessful ; for the Lord may withhold the increase : generally, however, the labor, if wise and faithful, will be blest. So, when the spiritual sower casts forth the seed of God's Word, some of it, as Christ says, may fall by the way-side, and some on stony ground, and other some among thorns; yet, some will fall on good ground, and bring forth abundant firuit. ^uppose, then, a thousand souls, for several years, hear the preaching of a faithful minister of Christ : if one hundred of them are truly converted to God, then a hundred praying people are the fruit of one man's preaching ; and they will not only pray, not only " call Him Lord," but become " doers of the Word," fruitful in all good works. But, had he neglected to preach, and spent all his religious hours in p-ay- irig, would that fruit have been produced? "How shall they call on Him, of whom they have not heard? And how shall they hear without a preacher ?" Besides, no men pray less, but more, in consequence of . preaching. This is the ordinance, which God, in his wisdom, hath ordained for gathering mankind into the fold of His Church ; and the gathering will not come without the use of the ordinance. A preacher should be learned, especially in Divinity. Without this, other learning is little worth. To what pur- pose shall we know every thing else, if ignorant of what we are to teach and practice? He should also endeavor to make bis learning itse/wZ to others ; otherwise, he is learned in vain. Our duty is, to do good; not to live to ourselves, nor to spend time in acquiring what is useless to^mankind. Polite learning is more admired and applauded than more useful science. The eye is charmed) mlli those, who walk the flower-garden of literature and nature, bedizzened with APPENDIX. 571 its fading treasures, though they poison the hreath of life with their noxious exhalations. But, the servant, who brings us those fruits, which nourish and invigorate our Same, though despised, yea covered with the dust of his labors, is yet more deserving of our thanks, and even of our admira- tion than they. When a minister, by elegant composition, and other means, seeks the reputation of a fine scholar, or aims at his own glory and interest ; the people are, so far, under no obli- gations for his services. But, when he disregards his own fame and temporal advantage, and is earnestly engaged in seeking their spiritual welfare, the salvation of their souls ; they are hound to provide for him, and they vnll provide for him. They will feel grateful to such an one ; they will see that such a laborer is " worthy of his hire ;" worthy even of " double honor. ''^ Why is it less inconsistent with our devotion to God and the souls of men, to pursue literature for either honor or pleasure, than it is, with the same views, to pursue riches .-' N. B. The following hints and references, noted on slips of paper, and pinned together with an article in the Episco- pal Recorder, on " Tlie Descent into hell," will illustrate the Bishop's manner of preparing subjects, in connexion with his ordinary course of reading. " Descended into hell." See Episcopal Recorder for Dec. 15th, 1838. 1. From the parable of Dives and Lazarus, it appears that the dead do not all go to the same place of intermediate ex- istence ; but, to two places, between which is an impassable gulf. To which of the two did Christ go ? If to both, should it not be said, in our discretionary part of the Creed ; " He went into the places of departed spuits .-'" Does not this article tend more to doubt and controversy, than to the uniting of Christians in any one precise point of belief .-' And 572 APPENDIX. is not this tendency iiifcreased by the discretionary substi- tute ? 2. Christ did not visit both of the places of departed spirits ; for, in the parable, he tells us there is no possibility of pass- ing from the one to the other. Is the meaning, then, that "he went to one of the places of departed spirits?" If an article be necessary to express our belief in an intermediate state, why should it not rather be expressed in words more intelligible, and more directly to the purpose ? (See Charles- ton Gospel Messenger, for September, 1839.) 3. If it be said, there is but one place of departed spirits ; then, did not both of the thieves, crucified with Christ, go to that one place } And if so, what proof have we, from Christ's words to the penitent, that he was saved rather than the other.!' 4. That there will be an 'intermediate state between death and the final judgment, seems, from the Scriptures, to be more than probable : but we may well doubt whether that state be so clearly revealed as that it should become an arti- cle of faith, NECESSARY TO BAPTISM. M., by the way, notices the too common fault of being wise beyond what is written, to the neglect of what is clearly revealed. " Secret things belong to God" &c. (This, by careful study, might be improved.) 5. The place of departed spirits is not revealed to us so as to be of anj practical tendency. It is, of course, of little use as an article of faith. And that our Church so views it, is evident from the permission to omit it in saying the Creed. 6. Our Church, by directing that this article may be omitted, has apparently manifested a doubt as to the expe- diency of using it. 7. Our Church, by permitting such omission, has mani- fested her conviction that repeating this article, if expedient, is not essential. (See, King on the, Greed.) 8. Is the doctrine, or fact, of an intermediate state so clearly revealed, as to make it an essential article in a Creed, which yet omits such doctrines as those ot^^t^entance, justifir cation by faith, &c. ? APPENDIX. 573 9. The passage in the 16th Psalm, " Thou wilt not leave my soul in hell," is twice cited by the Apostles ; and, in both places, to prove a resurrection only. 10. In the passage ; " Thou wUt not leave my soul in hell ; neither wilt thou suffer thine Holy One to see corrup- tion ;" the latter clause seems to be, according to the genius of Hebrew Poetry, a repetition of the former, a varied ex- pression of the same meaning. (Examine this. See, Lowth, Hebrew Poetry.) 11. After the most careful inquiry, and the different views, which have been given by learned and pious Christians, there is still great uncertainty resting on this subject. 12. There is danger in founding important doctrines on one or two texts of doubtful meaning. Heresies and schisms are generally grounded on such passages. This danger may be exemplified by a reference to the words ; " This is my Body ;" as used in instituting the Lord's Supper ; and to the passage ; " Thou wilt not leave my soul in heU ; neither wilt thou suffer thine Holy One to see corruption." From a strained interpretation of the one has been derived the mon- strous doctrine of Transvbstantiation ; and from the other, the pernicious deception of Purgatory. THOUGHTS ON CHURCH MATTERS. It is often said that our Articles are good and Scriptural ; but that our people depart from them. Is there no ground for this reproach ? It cannot be denied that some of our people, our clergy especially, contend earnestly for things of little importance ; while they say httle, or speak lightly of the .Articles, which are the life, the vitals, of the Church. They, that would judge him to be no Churchman, who neglects to wear a sur- plice, or, in some mere ceremony, deviates from a rubric ; while yet they themselves receive the Articles with mental reservaSons, or construe them differently from their obvious sense, and evident meaning ; in the language of our blessed Saviour, " strain at a gnat, and swallow a camel." To be true and consistent friends of the Church, we must maintain 574 ' APPENDIX. (dl its standards, and*tiTDser^re all its institutions, and contted most earnestly for things of most importance : and nothing can be of more importance than the faith, by which alone we can hope to be justified, and the doctrines of £ternal life, which we are to preach to mankind. In the Apostle's Creed, we have sotm Articles, expressed in general terms. The Articles contain hoth Creeds, and many other things, no less important to be received and taught : such as the faU of man ; the corruption of our nature ; justification by faith ; the necessity of repentance, and of the aid of the Holy Spirit to renew the heart, and to help us to will and to do what is acceptable to God ; the doctrine of the Church, its ministry and sacraments ; with other things, which might be added, but which are, none of them, explicitly taught in the Apos- tle's Creed. And yet, they are no less essential thaii the articles, which that Creed does contain. It is a remarkable instance, or proof, of the liberality of our Church, that she exacts, as necessary to her communion, only those few arti- cles, to which almost all Christians, of any denomination, may subscribe. Let us, in all our intercourse with other Christians, imbibe her spirit of liberality ; but, in our teach- ing, and in our own helief, let us faithfully declare all the counsel of God, which we have admirably summed up and briefly expressed, in the Articles of the Church, and in the Homilies, which are a comment upon the Articles. We have here the principles of the Reformation, the belief of Protestants, the pure doctrines of the Holy Scriptures ; and it is remarkable, that, so evidently, do they express the most essential truths of the Bible, that almost all pious Protestants acknowledge their correctness. In proportion as other Christians see that we have among us the faith of Christ,; and the love of God ; as we labor faithfully in the Lord's work ; as we manifest a sincere desire to promote the general interests of pure and undefiled religion ; as we avoid bigotry and sectarism ; aii