LIFE OF JOHN COLERIDGE PATTESON:

MISSIONARY BISHOP OF THE MELANESIAN ISLANDS

By Charlotte Mary Yonge



Transcriber's note: This Etext of the Life of John Coleridge Patteson: Missionary Bishop of the Melanesian Islands, by Charlotte Mary Yonge was prepared by Sandra Laythorpe and others. More information about the history of the Anglican Church may be found at Project Canterbury A web page for Charlotte M Yonge may be found at www.menorot.com/cmyonge.htm.






CONTENTS

PREFACE.

CHAPTER I. CHILDHOOD AT HOME AND AT SCHOOL, 1827-1838.

CHAPTER II. BOYHOOD AT ETON. 1838—1845.

CHAPTER III. UNDERGRADUATE LIFE AT BALLIOL AND JOURNEYS ON THE CONTINENT.

CHAPTER IV. FELLOWSHIP OF MERTON. 1852—1854.

CHAPTER V. THE CURACY AT ALFINGTON. 1853-1855.

CHAPTER VI. THE VOYAGE AND FIRST YEAR. 1855-1856.

CHAPTER VII. THE MELANESIAN ISLES. 1856-1857.

CHAPTER VIII. ST. JOHN'S COLLEGE AND LIFU. 1857-1859.

CHAPTER IX. MOTA AND ST. ANDREW'S COLLEGE, KOHIMARAMA. 1859-1862.

CHAPTER X. THE EPISCOPATE AT KOHIMARAMA. 1866.

CHAPTER XI. ST. BARNABAS COLLEGE, NORFOLK ISLAND. 1867—1869.

CHAPTER XII. THE LAST EIGHTEEN MONTHS. 1870-1871.





PREFACE.

There are of course peculiar advantages as well as disadvantages in endeavouring to write the life of one recently departed. On the one hand, the remembrances connected with him are far fresher; his contemporaries can he consulted, and much can be made matter of certainty, for which a few years would have made it necessary to trust to hearsay or probable conjecture. On the other, there is necessarily much more reserve; nor are the results of the actions, nor even their comparative importance, so clearly discernible as when there has been time to ripen the fruit.

These latter drawbacks are doubled when the subject of the biography has passed away in comparatively early life: when the persons with whom his life is chiefly interwoven are still in full activity; and when he has only lived to sow his seed in many waters, and has barely gathered any portion of his harvest.

Thus what I have written of Bishop Patteson, far more what I have copied of his letters, is necessarily only partial, although his nearest relations and closest friends have most kindly permitted the full use of all that could build up a complete idea of the man as he was. Many letters relate to home and family matters, such as it would be useless and impertinent to divulge

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