MISSIONARY
New Zealand, discovered by Captain
Cook in 1769, lay derelict for half a century, and
like others of our Colonies it came very near to passing
under the rule of France. From this it was saved
in 1840 by the foresight and energy of Gibbon Wakefield,
who forced the hand of our reluctant Government; and
its steady progress was secured by the sagacity of
Sir George Grey, one of our greatest empire-builders
in Australia, South Africa, and New Zealand.
Thanks to them and to others, there has arisen in
the Southern Pacific a state which, more than any
other, seems to resemble the mother country with its
sea-girt islands, its temperate climate, its mountains
and its plains. A population almost entirely
British, living in these conditions, might be expected
to repeat the history of their ancestors. In
politics and social questions its sons show the same
independence of spirit and even greater enterprise.
The names of two other men deserve
recognition here for the part they played in the history
of these islands. In 1814, before they became
a British possession, Samuel Marsden came from Australia
to carry the Gospel to their inhabitants, and formed
settlements in the Northern districts, in days when
the lives of settlers were in constant peril from
the Maoris. But nothing could daunt his courage;
and whenever they came into personal contact with
him, these childlike savages felt his power and responded
to his influence, and he was able to lay a good foundation.
In 1841 the English Church sent out George Augustus
Selwyn as first Missionary Bishop of New Zealand,
giving him a wide province and no less wide discretion.
He was the pioneer who, from his base in New Zealand,
was to spread Christian and British influences even
farther afield in the vast stretches of the Pacific
Ocean.
Selwyn was educated at Eton and King’s
College, Cambridge, and these famous foundations have
never sent forth a man better fitted to render services
to his country. In a small sphere, as curate of
Windsor, he had already, by his energy, patience,
and practical sagacity, achieved remarkable results;
and it was providential that, in the strength of early
manhood, he was selected for a responsible post which
afforded scope for the exercise of his powers.
In the old country he might have been hampered by
routine and tradition; in a new land he could mark
out his own path. The constitution of the New
Zealand Church became a model for other diocèses
and other lands, and his wisdom has stood the test
of time.
What sort of man he was can best be
shown by quoting a story from his biography. When
the Maori War broke out he joined the troops as chaplain
and shared their perils in the field. Against
the enterprising native fighters these were not slight,
especially as the British troops were few and badly
led. He was travelling without escort over routes
infested by Maoris, refusing to have any special care
taken of his own person, and his chief security lay
in rapid motion. Yet twice he dismounted on the
way, at peril of his life, once under an impulse of
humanity, once from sheer public spirit. The first
time it was to pull into the shade a drunken soldier
asleep on duty and in danger of sunstroke; the second
to fill up the ruts in a sandy road, where it seemed
possible that the transport wagons which were following
might be upset. Many other incidents could be
quoted which show his unconventional ways and his
habitual disregard for his own comfort, dignity, or
safety. In New Zealand he found plenty of people
to appreciate these qualities in a bishop.
Though Selwyn was the master and perhaps
the greater man, yet a peculiar fame has attached
to his disciple John Coleridge Patteson, owing to the
sweetness of his disposition, the singleness of his
aim, and the consummation of his work by a martyr’s
death. Born in London in 1827, he was more truly
a son of Devon, to which he was attached by many links.
His mother’s brother, Justice Coleridge, and
many other relatives, lived close round the old town
of Ottery St. Mary; and his father, an able lawyer
who was raised to the Bench in 1830, bought an estate
at Feniton and came to live in the same district before
the boy was fifteen years old. It was at Ottery,
where the name of Coleridge was so familiar, that
the earliest school-days of ‘Coley’ Patteson
were passed; but before he was eleven years old he
was sent to the boarding-house of another Coleridge,
his uncle, who was a master at Eton. Here he spent
seven happy years working in rather desultory fashion,
so that he had his share of success and failure.
His chief distinctions were won at cricket, where
he rose to be captain of the XI; but with all whose
good opinion was worth having he won favour by his
cheerful, frank, independent spirit. If he was
idle at one time, at another he could develop plenty
of energy; if he was one of the most popular boys in
the school, he was not afraid to risk his popularity
by protesting strongly against moral laxity or abuses
which others tolerated. It is well to remember
this, which is attested by his school-fellows, when
reading his letters, in which at times he blames himself
for caring too much for the good opinion of others.
His interest in the distant seas where
he was to win fame was first aroused in 1841.
Bishop Selwyn was a friend of his family, and coming
to say good-bye to the Pattesons before sailing for
New Zealand, he said, half sportively, to the boy’s
mother, ‘Will you give me “Coley"?’
This idea was not pursued at the time; but the name
of Selwyn was kept before him in his school-days,
as the Bishop had left many friends at Eton and Windsor,
and Edward Coleridge employed his nephew to copy out
Selwyn’s letters from his diocese in order to
enlist the sympathy of a wider audience. But
this connexion dropped out of sight for many years
and seems to have had little influence on Patteson’s
life at Oxford, where he spent four years at Balliol.
He went up in 1845 as a commoner, and this fact caused
him some disquietude. He felt that he ought to
have won a scholarship, and, conscious of his failure,
he took to more steady reading. He was also practising
self-discipline, giving up his cricket to secure more
hours for study. He did not scorn the game.
He was as fond as ever of Eton, and of his school
memories. But his life was shaping in another
direction, and the new interests, deepening in strength,
inevitably crowded out the old.
After taking his degree he made a
tour of the great cities of Italy and wrote enthusiastically
of the famous pictures in her galleries. He also
paid more than one visit to Germany, and when he had
gained a fair knowledge of the German language, he
went on to the more difficult task of learning Hebrew
and Arabic. This pursuit was due partly to his
growing interest in Biblical study, partly to the delight
he took in his own linguistic powers. He had
an ear of great delicacy; he caught up sounds as by
instinct; and his retentive memory fixed the impression.
Later he applied the reasoning of the philologist,
classified and tabulated his results, and thus was
able, when drawn into fields unexplored by science,
to do original work and to produce results of great
value to other students. But he was not the man
to make a display of his power; in fact he apologizes,
when writing to his father from Dresden, for making
a secret of his pursuit, regarding it rather as a
matter of self-indulgence which needed excuse.
Bishop Selwyn could have told him that he need have
no such fears, and that in developing his linguistic
gifts he was going exactly the right way to fit himself
for service in Melanesia.
Patteson’s appointment to a
fellowship at Merton College, which involved residence
in Oxford for a year, brought no great change into
his life. Rather he used what leisure he had
for strengthening his knowledge of the subjects which
seemed to him to matter, especially the interpretation
of the Bible. He returned to Greek and Latin,
which he had neglected at school, and found a new
interest in them. History and geography filled
up what time he could spare from his chief studies.
Resuming his cricket for a while, he mixed in the life
of the undergraduates and made friends among them.
At College meetings, for all his innate conservatism,
he found himself on the side of the reformers in questions
affecting the University; but he had not time to make
his influence felt. At the end of the year he
was ordained and took a curacy at Alphington, a hamlet
between Feniton and Ottery. His mother had died
in 1842, and his object was to be near his father,
who was growing infirm and found his chief pleasure
in ‘Coley’s’ presence and talk.
His interest in foreign missions was alive again,
but at this time his first duty seemed to be to his
family; and in a parish endeared to him by old associations
he quickly won the affection of his flock. He
was happy in the work and his parishioners hoped to
keep him for many years; but this was not to be.
In 1854 Bishop Selwyn and his wife were in England
pleading for support for their Church, and their visit
to Feniton brought matters to a crisis. Patteson
was thrilled at the idea of seeing his hero again,
and he at once seized the opportunity for serving under
him. There was no need for the Bishop to urge
him; rather he had to assure himself that he could
fairly accept the offer. To the young man there
was no thought of sacrifice; that fell to the father’s
lot, and he bore it nobly. His first words to
the Bishop were, ‘I can’t let him go’;
but a moment later he repented and cried, ’God
forbid that I should stop him’; and at parting
he faced the consequences unflinchingly. ‘Mind!’
he said, ‘I give him wholly, not with any thought
of seeing him again.’
In the following March, the young
curate, leaving his home and his parish where he was
almost idolized, where he was never to be seen again,
set his face towards the South Seas. Once the
offer had been made and accepted, he felt no more
excitement. It was not the spiritual exaltation
of a moment, but a deliberate applying of the lessons
which he had been learning year by year. He had
put his hand to the plough and would not look back.
The first things which he set himself
to learn, on board ship, were the Maori language and
the art of navigation. The first he studied with
a native teacher, the second he learnt from the Bishop,
and he proved an apt pupil in both. In a few
months he became qualified to act as master of the
Mission ship, and the speaking of a new language was
to him only a matter of weeks. His earliest letters
show how quickly he came to understand the natives.
He was ready to meet any and every demand made upon
him, and to fulfil duties as different from one another
as those of teacher, skipper, and storekeeper.
His head-quarters, during his early months in New
Zealand, were either on board ship or else at St. John’s
College, five miles from Auckland. But, before
he had completed a year, he was called to accompany
the Bishop on his tour to the Islands and to make
acquaintance with the scene of his future labours.
Bishop Selwyn had wisely limited his
mission to those islands which the Gospel had not
reached. The counsels of St. Paul and his own
sagacity warned him against exposing his Church to
the danger of jealous rivalry. So long as Christ
was preached in an island or group of islands, he was
content; he would leave them to the ministry of those
who were first in the field. Many of the Polynesian
groups had been visited by French and English missionaries
and stations had been established in Samoa, Tahiti,
and elsewhere; but north of New Zealand there was a
large tract of the Pacific, including the New Hebrides
and the Solomon Islands, where the natives had never
heard the Gospel message. These groups were known
collectively as Melanesia, a name hardly justified
by facts, as the inhabitants were by no means
uniform in colour. If the Solomon Islanders had
almost black skins, those who lived in the Banks Islands,
which Patteson came to know so well, were of a warm
brown hue such as may be seen in India or even in
the south of Europe. Writing in the very last
month of his life, Patteson tells his sisters how the
colour of the people in Mota ’is just what Titian
and the Venetian painters delighted in, the colour
of their own weather-beaten boatmen’.
Selwyn had visited these islands intermittently
since 1849, and had thought out a plan for spreading
Christianity among them. With only a small staff
of helpers and many other demands on his time, he could
not hope to get into direct contact with a large population,
so widely scattered. His work must be done through
natives selected by himself, and these must be trained
while they were young and open to impressions, while
their character was still in the making. So every
year he brought back with him from his cruise a certain
number of Melanesian boys to spend the warmer months
of the New Zealand year under the charge of the missionaries,
and restored them to their homes at the beginning of
the next cruise. At Auckland, with its soldiers,
sailors, and merchants, the boys became familiar with
other sides of European life beyond the walls of the
Mission School; and their interest was stimulated by
a close view of the strength to be drawn from European
civilization. By this system Selwyn hoped that
they on their return would spread among the islanders
a certain knowledge of European ways, and that their
relatives, seeing how the boys had been kindly treated,
would feel confidence in the missionaries and would
give them a hearing. This policy commended itself
to Patteson by its practical efficacy; and though he
modified it in details, he remained all his life a
convinced adherent of the principle. Slow progress
through a few pupils, selected when young, and carefully
taught, was worth more than mere numbers, though too
often in Missionary reports success is gauged by figures
and statistics.
These cruises furnished the adventurous
part of the life. Readers of Stevenson and Conrad
can picture to themselves to-day the colour, the mystery,
and the magic of the South Seas. Patteson, with
his reserved nature and his dread of seeming to throw
a false glamour over his practical duties, wrote but
sparingly of such sights; but he was by no means insensitive
to natural beauty and his letters give glimpses of
coral reefs and lagoons, of palms and coco-nut trees,
of creepers 100 feet long trailing over lofty crags
to the clear water below.
He enjoyed being on board ship, with
his books at hand and some leisure to read them, with
the Bishop at his side to counsel him, and generally
some of his pupils to need his help. They had
many delightful days when they received friendly greeting
on the islands and found that they were making real
progress among the natives. But the elements of
discomfort, disappointment, and danger were rarely
absent for long. For a large part of each voyage
they had some forty or fifty Melanesian boys on board,
on their way to school or returning to their homes.
The schooner built for the purpose was as airy and
convenient as it could be made; yet there was little
space for privacy. The natives were constitutionally
weak; and when illness broke out, no trained nurses
were at hand and Patteson would give up his own quarters
to the sick and spend hours at their bedsides.
Sometimes they found, on revisiting an island, that
their old scholars had fallen away and that they had
to begin again from the start. Sometimes they
had to abstain from landing at all, because the behaviour
of the natives was menacing, or because news had reached
the Mission of some recent quarrel which had roused
bitter feeling. The traditions of the Melanesians
inclined them to go on the war-path only too readily,
and both Selwyn and Patteson had an instinctive perception
of the native temperament and its danger.
However lightly Patteson might treat
these perils in his letters home, there was never
complete security. To reassure his sisters he
tells them of 81 landings and only two arrows fired
at them in one cruise; and yet one poisoned arrow
might be the cause of death accompanied by indescribable
agony. Even when a landing had been effected and
friendly trading and talk had given confidence to
the visitors, it might be that an arrow was discharged
at them by some irresponsible native as they made
for their boats.
These voyages needed unconventional
qualities in the missioner; few of the subscribers
in quiet English parishes had an idea how the Melanesian
islanders made their first acquaintance with their
Bishop. When the boat came near the shore, the
Bishop, arrayed in some of his oldest clothes, would
jump into the sea and swim to land, sometimes being
roughly handled by the breakers which guarded the
coral bank. It was desirable not to expose their
precious boat to the cupidity of the natives or to
the risk of it being dashed to pieces in the surf,
so the Bishop risked his own person instead.
He would then with all possible coolness walk into
a gathering of savages, catch up any familiar words
which seemed to occur in the new dialect, or, failing
any linguistic help, try to convey his peaceful intentions
by gesture or facial expression. When an island
had been visited before, there was less reason to be
on guard; but sometimes the Bishop had to break to
relatives the sad news that one of the boys committed
to his care had fallen a victim to the more rigorous
climate of New Zealand or to one of the diseases to
which these tribes were so liable. Then it was
only the personal ascendancy won by previous visits
that could secure him against a violent impulse to
revenge.
All practical measures were tried
to establish friendly relations with the islanders;
and when people at home might fancy the Bishop preaching
impressively to a decorous circle of listeners, he
was really engaged in lively talk and barter, receiving
yams and other articles of food in return for the
produce of Birmingham and Sheffield, axe-heads which
he presented to the old, and fish-hooks with which
he won the favour of the young. But such brief
visits as could be made at a score of islands in a
busy tour did not carry matters far, and the memory
of a visit would be growing dim before another chance
came of renewing intercourse with the same tribe.
Selwyn felt it was most desirable that he should have
sufficient staff to leave a missionary here and there
to spend unbroken winter months in a single station,
where he could reach more of the people and exercise
a more continuous influence upon them. Patteson’s
first experience of this was in 1858, when he spent
three months at Lifu in the Loyalty Islands, a group
which was later to be annexed by the French.
A sojourn which was to bear more permanent
fruit was that which he made at Mota in 1860.
This was one of the Banks Islands lying north of the
New Hebrides, in 14 deg. South Latitude.
The inhabitants of this group showed unusual capacity
for learning from the missionaries, and sufficient
stability of character to promise lasting success for
the work carried on among them. Mota, owing to
the line of cliffs which formed its coast, was a difficult
place for landing; so it escaped the visits of white
traders who could not emulate the swimming feats of
Selwyn and Patteson, and was free from many of the
troubles which such visitors brought with them.
Once the island was reached, it proved to be one of
the most attractive, with rich soil, plenty of water,
and a kindly docile population. Here, on a site
duly purchased for the mission, under the shade of
a gigantic banyan tree, on a slope where bread-fruit
and coco-nuts (and, later, pine-apples and other importations)
flourished, the first habitation was built, with a
boarded floor, walls of bamboo canes, and a roof of
coco-nut leaves woven together after the native fashion
so as to be waterproof. Here, in the next ten
years, Patteson was to spend many happy weeks, taking
school, reading and writing when the curiosity of
the natives left him any peace, but in general patiently
conversing with all and sundry who came up, with the
twofold object of gathering knowledge of their dialect
and making friends with individuals. While he
showed instinctive tact in knowing how far it was
wise to go in opposing the native way of life, he
was willing to face risks whenever real progress could
be made. After he had been some days in Mota
a special initiation in a degrading rite was held
outside the village. Patteson exercised all his
influence to prevent one of his converts from being
drawn in; and when an old man came up and terrorized
his pupils by planting a symbolic tree outside the
Mission hut, Patteson argued with him at length and
persuaded him to withdraw his threatening symbol.
But apart from idolatry, from internecine warfare,
and from such horrors as cannibalism, prevalent in
many islands, he was studious not to attack old traditions.
He wanted a good Melanesian standard of conduct, not
a feeble imitation of European culture. He was
prepared to build upon the foundation which time had
already prepared and not to invert the order of nature.
In writing home of his life in the
island Patteson regularly depreciates his own hardships,
saying how unworthy he feels himself to be ranked
with the pioneers in African work. But the discomforts
must often have been considerable to a man naturally
fastidious and brought up as he had been.
Food was most monotonous. Meat
was out of the question except where the missioners
themselves imported live stock and kept a farm of their
own; variety of fruit depended also on their own exertions.
The staple diet was the yam, a tuber reaching at times
in good soil a weight far in excess of the potato.
This was supplied readily by the natives in return
for European goods, and could be cooked in different
ways; but after many weeks’ sojourn it was apt
to pall. Also the climate was relaxing, and apt
sooner or later to tell injuriously on Europeans working
there. Dirt, disease, and danger can be faced
cheerfully when a man is in good health himself; but
a solitary European suffering from ill-health in such
conditions is indeed put to an heroic test. Perhaps
the greatest discomfort of all was the perpetual living
in public. The natives became so fond of Patteson
that they flocked round him at all times. His
reading was interrupted by a stream of questions; when
writing he would find boys standing close to his elbow,
following his every movement with attention.
The mere writing of letters seems to have been a relief
to him, though they could not be answered for so long.
His journal, into which he poured freely all his hopes
and fears, all his daily anxieties over the Mission,
was destined for his family. But he had other
correspondents to whom he wrote more or less regularly,
especially at Eton and Winchester. At Eton his
uncle was one of his most ardent supporters and much
of the money which supported the Mission funds came
to Patteson through the Eton Association. Near
Winchester was living his cousin Charlotte Yonge,
the well-known authoress, who afterwards wrote his
Life, and through her he established friendly communications
with Keble at Hursley and Bishop Moberly, then Head
Master of Winchester College. To them he could
write sympathetically of Church questions at home,
in which he maintained his interest.
During the summer months also, spent
near Auckland, Patteson suffered from the want of
privacy. At Kohimarana, a small bay facing the
entrance to the harbour, to which the school was moved
in 1859, he had a tiny room of his own, ten feet square;
but the door stood open all day long in fine weather,
and he was seldom alone. And when there was sickness
among the boys, his own bedroom was sure to be given
up to an invalid. But these demands upon his
time and comfort he never grudged, while he talks
with vexation, and even with asperity, of the people
from the town who came out to pay calls and to satisfy
their curiosity with a sight of his school. His
real friends were few and were partners in his work.
The two chief among them were unquestionably Bishop
Selwyn, too rarely seen owing to the many claims upon
him, and Sir Richard Martin, who had been Chief Justice
of the Colony. The latter shared Patteson’s
taste for philology, and had a wide knowledge of Melanesian
dialects.
By the middle of 1860, when Patteson
had been five years at work, he became aware that
the question of his consecration could not be long
delayed. New Zealand was taxing the Primate’s
strength and he wished to constitute Melanesia a separate
diocese. He believed that in Patteson, with his
single-minded zeal and special gifts, he had found
the ideal man for the post, and in February 1861 the
consecration took place. The three bishops who
laid hands upon him were, like the Bishop-elect, Etonians;
and thus Eton has played a very special part in founding
the Melanesian Church. What Patteson thought and
felt on this solemn occasion may be seen from the
letters which he wrote to his father. The old
judge, still living with his daughters at Feniton,
had been stricken with a fatal disease, and in the
last months of his life he rejoiced to know that his
son was counted worthy of his high calling. He
died in June 1861 and the news reached his son when
cruising at sea a few months later. They had
kept up a close correspondence all these years, which
he now continued with his sisters; nothing shows better
his simple affectionate nature. They are filled
mostly with details of his mission life. It was
this of which his sisters wanted to hear, and it was
this which filled almost entirely his thoughts:
though he loved his family and his home, he had put
aside all idea of a voyage to England as incompatible
with the call to work. To the Mission he gave
his time, his strength, his money. Eton supplied
him with regular subscriptions, Australia responded
to appeals which he made in person and which furnished
the only occasions of his leaving the diocese; but,
without his devotion of the income coming from his
Merton fellowship and from his family inheritance,
it would have been impossible for him to carry on
the work in the islands.
In his letters written just about
the time of his consecration there are abundant references
to the qualities which he desired to see in Englishmen
who should offer to serve with him. He did not
want young men carried away by violent excitement
for the moment, eager to make what they called the
sacrifice of their lives. The conventional phrases
about ‘sacrifices’ he disliked as much
as he did the sensational appeals to which the public
had been habituated in missionary meetings. He
asked for men of common sense, men who would take
trouble over learning languages, men cheerful and
healthy in their outlook, ‘gentlemen’ who
could rise above distinctions of class and colour and
treat Melanesians as they treated their own friends.
Above all, he wanted men who would whole-heartedly
accept the system devised by Selwyn, and approved by
himself. He could not have the harmony of the
Mission upset by people who were eager to originate
methods before they had served their apprenticeship.
If he could not get the right recruits from England,
he says more than once, he would rather depend on
the materials existing on the spot: young men
from New Zealand would adapt themselves better to
the life and he himself would try to remedy any defects
in their education. Ultimately he hoped that
by careful education and training he would draw his
most efficient help from his converts in the islands,
and to train them he spared no pains through the remaining
ten years of his service.
His way of life was not greatly altered
by his consecration. He continued to divide his
year between New Zealand and his ocean cruise.
He had no body of clergy to space out over his vast
diocese or to meet the urgent demands of the islands.
In 1863 he received two valuable recruits one
the Rev. R. Codrington, a Fellow of Wadham College,
Oxford, who shared the Bishop’s literary tastes
and proved a valued counsellor; the other a naval
man, Lieut. Tilly, who volunteered to take charge
of the new schooner called the Southern Cross,
just sent out to him from England. Till then
his staff consisted of three men in holy orders and
two younger men who were to be ordained later.
One of these, Joseph Atkin, a native of Auckland,
proved himself of unique value to the Mission before
he was called to share his leader’s death.
But the Bishop still took upon himself the most dangerous
work, the landing at villages where the English were
unknown or where the goodwill of the natives seemed
to be doubtful. This he accepted as a matter of
course, remarking casually in his letters that the
others are not good enough swimmers to take his place.
But caution was necessary long after the time when
friendship had begun. In the interval between
visits anything might have happened to render the
natives suspicious or revengeful; and it is evident
that, month after month, the Bishop carried his life
in his hand.
The secret of his power can be found
in his letters, which are quite free from heroics.
His religion was based on faith, simple and sincere;
and he never hesitated to put it into practice.
From the Bible, and especially from the New Testament,
he learned the central lessons, the love of God and
the love of man. Nothing was allowed to come between
him and his duty; and to it he devoted the faculties
which he had trained. His instinct often stood
him in good stead, bidding him to practise caution
and to keep at a distance from treacherous snares;
but there were times when he felt that, to advance
his work, he must show absolute confidence in the
natives whatever he suspected, and move freely among
them. In such cases he seemed to rise superior
to all nervousness or fear. At one time he would
find his path back to the boat cut off by natives
who did not themselves know whether they intended violence
or not. At another he would sit quietly alone
in a circle of gigantic Tikopians, some of whom, as
he writes, were clutching at his ’little weak
arms and shoulders’. ‘Yet it is not’,
he continued, ’a sense of fear, but simply of
powerlessness.’ No amount of experience
could render him safe when he was perpetually trying
to open new fields for mission work and when his converts
themselves were so liable to unaccountable waves of
feeling.
This was proved by his terrible experience
at Santa Cruz. He had visited these islands (which
lie north of the New Hebrides) successfully in 1862,
landing at seven places and seeing over a thousand
natives, and he had no reason to expect a different
reception when he revisited it in 1864. But on
this occasion, after he had swum to land three times
and walked freely to and fro among the people, a crowd
came down to the water and began shooting at those
in the boat from fifteen yards away, while others
attacked in canoes. Before the boat could be pulled
out of reach, three of its occupants were hit with
poisoned arrows, and a few days later two of them
showed signs of tetanus, which was almost invariably
the result of such wounds. They were young natives
of Norfolk Island, for whom the Bishop had conceived
a special affection, and their deaths, which were
painful to witness, were a very bitter grief to him.
The reason for the attack remained unknown. The
traditions of Melanesia in the matter of blood-feuds
were like those of most savage nations; and under
the spur of fear or revenge the islanders were capable
of directing their anger blindly against their truest
friends.
The most notable development in the
first year of Patteson’s episcopate was the
forming of a solid centre of work in the Banks Islands.
Every year, while the Mission ship was cruising, some
member of the Mission, often the Bishop himself, would
be working steadily in Mota for a succession of months.
For visitors there was not much to see. At the
beginning, hours were given up to desultory talking
with the natives, but perseverance was rewarded.
Those who came to talk would return to take lessons,
and some impression was gradually made even on the
older men attached to their idolatrous rites.
Many years after Patteson’s death it was still
the most civilized of the islands with a population
almost entirely Christian.
A greater change was effected in 1867
when the Bishop boldly cut adrift from New Zealand
and made his base for summer work at Norfolk Island,
lying 800 miles north-east of Sydney. The advantages
which it possessed over Auckland were two. Firstly,
it was so many hundred miles nearer the centre of
the Mission work; secondly, it had a climate much
more akin to that of the Melanesian islands and it
would be possible to keep pupils here for a longer
spell without running such risks to their health.
Another point, which to many would seem a drawback,
but to Patteson was an additional advantage, was the
absence of all distraction. At Auckland the clergy
implored him to preach, society importuned him to
take part in its gatherings; and if he would not come
to the town, they pursued him to his retreat.
He was always busy and grudged the loss of his time.
A contemporary tells us that he worked from 5 a.m.
to 10 p.m. and later; and besides his philological
interests, he needed time for his own study of the
Bible. In the former he was a pioneer and had
to mark out his own path; in the latter he welcomed
the guidance of the best scholars whenever he could
procure their books. He spoke with delight of
his first acquaintance with Lightfoot’s edition
of St. Paul’s Epistles; he wrote home for such
new books as would be useful to him, and he read Hebrew
daily whenever he could find time. Into this
part of his life he put more conscientious effort
the older he grew, and was always trying to learn.
It may have seemed to many a dull routine to be followed
year after year by a man who might have filled high
place and moved in brilliant society at home; but
from his letters it is clear that he was satisfied
with his life and that no thought of regret assailed
him.
The year 1868 brought a severe loss
when Bishop Selwyn was called home to take charge
of the Diocese of Lichfield. It was he who had
drawn Patteson to the South Seas: his presence
had been an abiding strength to the younger man, however
rare their meetings; and Patteson felt his departure
as he had felt nothing since his father’s death.
But he went on unfalteringly with his work, ever ready
to look hopefully into the future. At the moment
he was intensely interested in the ordination of his
first native clergyman, George Sarawia, who had now
been a pupil for nine years and had shown sufficient
progress in knowledge and strength of character to
justify the step. Eager though he was to enrol
helpers for the work, Patteson was scrupulously careful
to ensure the fitness of his clergy, and to lay hands
hastily on no man. In little matters also he
was careful and methodical. His scholars in Norfolk
Island were expected to be punctual, his helpers to
be content with the simple life which contented him.
All were to give their work freely; between black
and white there was to be equality; no service was
to be considered degrading. He did not wish to
hurry his converts into outward observance of European
ways. More important than the wearing of clothes
was the true respect for the sanctity of marriage;
far above the question of Sunday observance was the
teaching of the love of God.
Foreign missions have come in for
plenty of criticism. It is sometimes said that
our missionaries have occasioned strife leading to
intervention and annexation by the British Government,
and have exposed us abroad to the charge of covetousness
and hypocrisy. But there are few instances in
which this charge can be maintained, least of all in
Australasian waters. A more serious charge, often
made in India, is that missioners destroy the sanctions
of morality by undermining the traditional beliefs
of the natives, and that the convert is neither a
good Asiatic nor a passable European. This depends
on the methods employed. It may be true in some
cases. Patteson fully realized the danger, as
we can see from his words, and built carefully on the
foundation of native character. He took away no
stone till he could replace it by better material.
He was never content merely to destroy.
Another set of critics are roused
by the extravagance of some missionary meetings and
societies: their taste is offended or (we are
bound to admit) their sense of humour roused.
It was time for Dickens to wield this weapon when
he heard Chadbands pouring forth their oily platitudes
and saw Mrs. Jellybys neglecting their own children
to clothe the offspring of ‘Borrioboola Gha’.
Such folly caught the critic’s eye when the
steady benevolence of others, unnoticed, was effecting
work which had a good influence equally at home and
abroad. Against the fanciful picture of Mrs.
Jellyby let us put the life-story of Charlotte Yonge,
who, while discharging every duty to her family and
her village, in a way which won their lasting affection,
was able to put aside large sums from the earnings
of her pen to supply the needs of the Melanesian Mission.
Let us remember, too, that much of
the bitterest criticism has come from those who have
a direct interest in suppressing missions, who have
made large profits in remote places by procedure which
will not bear the light of day. Patteson would
have been content to justify his work by his Master’s
bidding as quoted in the Gospel. His friends would
have been content to claim that the actual working
of the Mission should be examined. If outside
testimony to the value of his work is wanted, one
good instance will refute a large amount of idle calumny.
Sir George Grey, no sentimentalist but the most practical
ruler of New Zealand, gave his own money to get three
native boys, chosen by himself, educated at Patteson’s
school, and was fully satisfied with the result.
But this simple regular life was soon
to be perturbed by new complications, which rose from
the European settlers in Fiji. As their plantations
increased, the need for labour became urgent and the
Melanesian islands were drawn upon to supply it.
In many ways Patteson felt that it was good for the
Melanesians to be trained to agricultural work; but
the trouble was that they were being deceived over
the conditions of the undertaking. Open kidnapping
and the revival of anything like a slave trade could
hardly be practised under the British flag at this
time; nor indeed did the Fiji settlers, in most cases,
wish to do anything unfair or brutal. It was
to be a matter of contracts, voluntarily signed by
the workmen; but the Melanesian was not educated up
to the point where he could appreciate what a contract
meant. When they did begin to understand, many
were unwilling to sign for a period long enough to
be useful; many more grew quickly tired of the work,
changed their mind and broke their engagements.
As the trade grew, some islands were entirely depopulated,
and it became necessary to visit others, where the
natives refused to engage themselves. The trade
was in jeopardy; but the captains of merchant vessels,
who found it very lucrative, were determined that
the supply of hands should not run short. So
when they met with no volunteers, they used to cajole
the islanders on board ship under pretence of trade
and then kidnap them; when this procedure led to affrays,
they were not slow to shoot. The confidence of
the native in European justice was shaken, and the
work of years was undone. Security on both sides
was gone, and the missionary, who had been sure of
a welcome for ten years, might find himself in face
of a population burning with the desire to revenge
themselves on the first white man who came within
their reach.
Patteson did all that he could, in
co-operation with the local officials, to regulate
the trade. There was no case for a crusade against
the Fiji planters, who were doing good work in a humane
way and were ignorant of the misdeeds practised in
Melanesia. The best method was to forbid unauthorized
vessels to pursue the trade and to put the authorized
vessels under supervision; but, to effect this in an
outlying part of the vast British Empire, it was necessary
to educate opinion and to work through Whitehall.
This he set himself to do; but meanwhile he was so
distressed to find the islanders slipping out of his
reach, that in the last months of his life he was
planning a campaign in Fiji, where he intended to
visit several of the plantations in turn and to carry
to the expatriated workers the Gospel which he had
hoped to preach to them in their homes.
But before he could redress this wrong
he was himself destined to fall a victim to the spirit
of hostility evoked. His best work was already
done when in 1870 he had a prolonged illness, and was
forced to spend some months at Auckland for convalescence.
In the judgement of his friends his exertions had
aged him considerably, and the climate had contributed
to break down his strength. Though he was back
at work again before the end of the summer he was
far more subject to weariness. His manner became
peaceful and dreamy, and his companions found that
it was difficult to rouse him in the ordinary interchange
of talk. His thoughts recurred more often to
the past; he would write of Devonshire and its charms
in spring, read over familiar passages in Wordsworth,
or fall into quiet meditation, yet he would not unbuckle
his armour or think of leaving the Mission in order
to take a holiday in England.
In April 1871, when the time came
for him to leave Norfolk Island for his annual cruise,
his energy revived. He spent seven weeks at Mota,
leaving it towards the end of August to sail for the
Santa Cruz group. On September 20, as he came
in sight of the coral reef of Nukapu, he was speaking
to his scholars of the death of St. Stephen. Next
morning he had the boat lowered and put off for shore
accompanied by Mr. Atkin and three natives. He
knew that feeling had lately become embittered in this
district over the Labour trade, but the thought of
danger did not shake his resolution. To show
his confidence and disarm suspicion he entered one
of the canoes, alone with the islanders, landed on
the beach and disappeared among the crowd. Half
an hour later, for no apparent reason, an attack was
started by men in canoes on the boat lying close off
the shore; and before the rowers could pull out of
range, Joseph Atkin and two of the natives had been
wounded by poisoned arrows which, some days later,
set up tetanus with fatal effect. They reached
the ship; but after a few hours, when their wounds
had been treated, Mr. Atkin insisted on taking the
boat in again to learn the Bishop’s fate.
This time no attack was made upon them; but a canoe
was towed out part of the way and then left to drift
towards the boat. In it was the dead body of
the Bishop tied up in a native mat. How he died
no one ever knew, but his face was calm and no anguish
seems to have troubled him in the hour of death.
’The placid smile was still on the face:
there was a palm leaf fastened over the breast, and,
when the mat was opened, there were five wounds, no
more. The strange mysterious beauty, as it may
be called, of the circumstances almost make one feel
as if this were the legend of a martyr of the Primitive
Church.’
Miss Yonge, from whom these lines
are quoted, goes on to show that the five wounds,
of which the first probably proved fatal, while the
other four were deliberately inflicted afterwards,
were to be explained by native custom. In the
long leaflets of the palm five knots had been tied.
Five men in Fiji were known to have been stolen from
this island, and there can be little doubt that the
relatives were exacting, in native fashion, their
vengeance from the first European victim who fell
into their power. The Bishop would have been the
first to make allowance for their superstitious error
and to lay the blame in the right quarter. His
surviving comrades knew this, and in reporting the
tragedy they sent a special petition that the Colonial
Office would not order a bombardment of the island.
Unfortunately, when a ship was sent on a mission of
inquiry, the natives themselves began hostilities and
bloodshed ensued. But at last the Bishop had by
his death secured what he was labouring in his life
to effect. The Imperial Parliament was stirred
to examine the Labour trade in the Pacific and regulations
were enforced which put an end to the abuse.
‘Quae caret ora cruore nostro?’
The Roman poet puts this question in his horror at
the wide extension of the civil wars which stained
with Roman blood all the seas known to the world of
his day.
Great Britain has its martyrs in a
nobler warfare yet more widely spread. Not all
have fallen by the weapons of war. Nature has
claimed many victims through disease or the rigour
of unknown climes. The death of some is a mystery
to this day. India, the Soudan, South and West
Africa, the Arctic and Antarctic regions, speak eloquently
to the men of our race of the spirit which carried
them so far afield in the nineteenth century.
Thanks to its first bishop, the Church of Melanesia
shares their fame, opening its history with a glorious
chapter enriched by heroism, self-sacrifice, and martyrdom.