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* * * * * * *
THE LIFE OF ADAM CLARKE
By J. W. Etheridge
Of The University Of Heidelberg,
And Member Of The Asiatic Society Of Paris
"Amabat vehementer quod docebat, docebat argute quod amabat;
utrumque gignit in eo qui scriptis illius propius intendit animum."
-- Erasmus
London:
John Mason, 14, City-Road;
Sold At 66, Paternoster-Row.
1858
* * * * * * *
Digital Edition 09/04/95
By Holiness Data Ministry
* * * * * * *
PREFACE
It has been long felt that the communion of which the eminent person to whose
memory these pages are dedicated was a devoted minister, should have its own
record of his exemplary life; and the Committee charged with the literary
affairs of the Methodist Connection have the happiness of stating that, by an
arrangement with his surviving representatives, by which the copyright of many
inedited papers has come into their possession, they are enabled to meet such a
demand. Several years have passed since the publication of any biography of Dr.
Clarke; and we believe that the time is now come when a new volume on the
subject, written on a plan altogether different from any already pursued, may be
offered without disparagement to the interests of preceding authors.
The ample materials placed at our disposal are sufficient for the creation of a
work as voluminous as some of our largest English biographies; those, for
example, of Chalmers or of Wilberforce: but the object of the Committee, to
offer a memoir which shall be accessible to readers in general, would thereby
have been defeated. A book of such dimensions, like the Leviathan ship, is not
always easily launched. As it is, we have the satisfaction of believing that the
present work will be found to present the memorabilia of Dr. Adam Clarke's life
and character in such a clear and true light as shall render it an acceptable
gift to those who knew him, and a means of pleasure and profit to many others,
who, now becoming acquainted with his excellencies, will begin to love him too.
It will not be deemed at all disrespectful to the Doctor's name, that we have
recounted the annals of his life without overloading our recital with a cumbrous
mass of particulars, which, important as they may have been in their own hour,
do not extend a sufficient influence on after-time to demand a record on the
page of history. This principle has been adopted as the right one in all the
ages of literature; and, therefore, some of the choicest and most classic
biographies, both ancient and modern, are distinguished by their comparative
brevity.
We have to express our respectful sense of obligation to Mrs. Richard Smith, the
daughter and first biographer of Dr. Clarke, for the kindness with which she has
afforded every facility for the completion of this new Life of her honored
father; and, also, our best thanks to Messrs. W. Tegg and Co., the proprietors
of the Doctor's voluminous works, for their permission to re-publish the
excellent portrait which gives an embellishment to the present volume.
March, 1858
* * * * * * *
A CLIPPING FOUND IN THE CLARKE BIOGRAPHY
(Author Unknown)
[Transcriber Note: This clipping was found in the volume from which the
electronic version of of this book was scanned. Since it relates to the subject
of the book, it was decided to include it with the the book files.]
Question. Was Adam Clarke, the commentator, confirmed in the Church of England
some years after he became a Methodist preacher?
Answer. He was. The reasons he gave were that it was a solemnizing act, and a
rite unobjectionable and calculated to strengthen his faith. It must be
remembered that the relations between the Church of England and the Wesleyans at
that time were much closer than they afterward became. Wesley himself never left
the Church of England, and had that Church pursued a proper course, as they now
see, Wesleyan Methodism would have been a reviving and quickening influence in
that body; and from the point of view of Mr. Wesley there would have been no
occasion for the formation of a separate denomination. But whatever bearing that
has upon English Wesleyanism, when the Revolutionary War ended, the Church of
England, like the government of England, lost its power over these colonies, and
It was necessary for the Methodists to form themselves at once into a Church. to
prevent the scatterIng of all the work that had been done.
* * * * * * *
SKETCH OF ADAM CLARKE
(Taped in front of Etheridge book -- author not shown)
Dr. Clarke was born at Moybeg, Ireland, In 1760 or 1762. His father was a
classical scholar and a member of the Church of England. His mother was of
Scotch origin, and was a Presbyterian. When he was seventeen he came in contact
with a couple of Methodist preachers, united with the Methodist church, and
became a class-leader and preacher. He became a man of studious habits and gave
especial attention to the oriental languages. The greatest work of his life was
the preparation of his commentary, which is, even at this late day, consulted by
the most learned biblical scholars. He worked on this commentary twenty-five
years before it went to the publishers, and fifteen years were consumed in
bringing it from the press, so that the work represents forty years of
unremitting toil. As a divine, antiquarian, and oriental scholar, he was without
a peer in his day. He was thrice elected president of the British conference. He
died of cholera in London Aug. 26, 1832.
* * * * * * *
INTRODUCTORY
The most ancient book in the possession of mankind, the Genesis of Moses, has
enregistered for all time a series of biographical memoirs. The Spirit of God,
in dictating those recitals by His own inspiration, has thus given a Divine and
eternal signature to the lawfulness and utility of a description of writing
which perpetuates the names of the great and good, re-echoes the words of the
silent dead, and preserves, in imperishable fragrance, the sanctities of their
ended life. The same principle is inculcated throughout the Bible. "The memory
of the just is blessed." "The righteous shall be in everlasting remembrance."
Upon the Christian church the duty is enjoined by an express command, to
"remember them who have spoken to us the word of God," -and to imitate their
faith. May he then who now writes, and they who shall read, the words of this
record, be stirred up to follow the high example of him to whose memory these
pages are consecrated; remembering "the end of his conversation, Jesus Christ,
the same, yesterday, and today and for ever."
A quarter of a century has already passed since this eminent servant of God
descended to the grave: yet, not for a day in this long interval has he ceased
to preach among the living the truths which it was the labor of his life to
illustrate and practice. And while some of his contemporaries, who, in their
day, made a considerable figure, have already disappeared in oblivion, time, the
great prover of all things, has, for the name of Adam Clarke, authenticated a
title to immortality. The worth of his character, his massive and consecrated
learning, the high motives of his laborious life, and the enduring beneficence
of its results, have all been verified by a scrutinizing world.
The retrospect of such a career will strengthen the best aspirations of the
heart, and show us the way to attain their objects. Adam Clarke uplifts his
eyes, at the outset, to the true standard of human effort, -- the glory and
approval of the Most High God. With this great ideal he holds such habitual
converse, as greatly to think, and feel, and live, till at length his character
brightens into a deathless grandeur, and he "stands in his lot" with those
nobles of the universe who are "a kind of first-fruits" of the creatures of God.
Few ministers of the Gospel in the present age, by the integrity of their
character, the splendor of their learning, and the sterling merit of their
works, have acquired more largely the veneration of enlightened and impartial
men in all parts of Christendom, than Dr. Clarke: and, if so many of the good
and great in every branch of the catholic church have learned to esteem his
memory, it well becomes that particular communion of which he was a conspicuous
ornament, and in the most intimate fellowship with which he lived and died, to
enshrine his name in her heart, and to teach it to her children. "He was a
burning and shining light;" and we, who, while he was yet personally with us,
rejoiced in the benefit of his luminous ministration, should give some worthy
attestation of our grateful estimate of his labors and his love, and of our
desire that those who follow us may profit, to distant ages, by the unfading
reflections of his wisdom, and the inspirations of his great example.
Nor is there any need that this sacred tribute should be spoiled of its moral
effect by the use of exaggerated eulogy, or the pompous imbecilities of
laborious panegyric. No man requires this at our hand. We do not ask that the
name of Adam Clarke should be canonized, nor seek for him a niche in the
pantheon of imaginary saints, around whose heads a paganized Romanism has traced
the aureole of unearthly perfection. It is our aim to fulfill the far more
difficult but more fruitful task of portraying the actual life of a sincere
Christian, a diligent inquirer after truth, and a hard-working and effective
servant of God, and of man, in the diffusion of it, -- clad, all the while, in
the everyday habiliments of suffering humanity.
And, if the most sun-like of characters have had their spots, and no mere man,
however great, has ever appeared without some imperfections and littlenesses,
the subject of our memoir will not be depreciated, if we find that in opinion he
was sometimes in error, or that in any of the partialities or prejudices of the
heart he gave evidence of being a fellow-creature, of like passions with
ourselves. But, after all, it will, I believe, be a common conclusion, that he
was more free from these inevitable blemishes than most men; while, on the other
hand, few instances may be adduced, in which a nobler model has been offered to
the study and imitation of the aspirant after real excellence. The lessons of
his life teach those who are asking after the way of salvation the secret of
attaining true repose for the conscience, and purification for the heart; the
heroic enterprises of his intellect animate the student to press into those
regions of knowledge into which he went as a pioneer, and where there remains so
much land to be possessed; the evangelist will be stirred up to seek the needed
and promised gifts of the Spirit, with whose uncreated flame this great doctor
of the church was so richly baptized; and, even with regard to secular
interests, in his advancement from the humblest circumstances to an elevation in
which he became the recognized teacher of teachers, and the familiar friend of
the prelate and the prince, young men may learn how, in a country and age like
ours, integrity and diligence in one's allotted sphere will not fail of their
recompense of reward. In a word, in the progress of his career, the living may
learn how to live; and in its consummation, the dying, how to die.
The providence and grace of God have, from age to age, raised up men whose lives
should be a beacon of hope to them who come after. "A true intellect stands like
a watchtower upon the shore." The waves thunder against it, and vanish in spray.
Its clear and steady lamp burns in the storm; a consolation and a guide, over
the dark sea, to the haven of glory.
* * * * * * *
ARCHAIC ENGLISH, LATIN, GREEK, AND OTHER FOREIGN LANGUAGE SPELLINGS IN THIS
ELECTRONIC EDITION
[Transcriber Note: SPELLING CHANGES: Various ARCHAIC spellings have been changed
in the electronic version of this Clarke biography -- most involving the use of
the letter "u" such as: "neighbour - to - neighbor," "labour - to - labor,"
"favour - to - favor," etc. Other changed spellings include: "to-day - to -
today," to-night - to - tonight," and "to-morrow - to - tomorrow." FOREIGN
LANGUAGE SPELLINGS: I tried to make sure that the Latin words were spelled
correctly, and I tried to type out the phonetic sound of the Greek words in the
text. I did not take Latin, German, or French in school, and it has been over 30
years since I took Greek. My apologies to those scholars who find errors
involving the foreign languages in the text. Should any feel inclined to send us
the correction[s] of any spelling error[s] in the text, please feel free to do
so. -- D.V.M.]
* * * * * * *
REARRANGEMENT OF THE TABLE OF CONTENTS
The electronic version of the this book has been divided into into 30
consecutive divisions -- including the 29 total book chapters and the final
supplement. Therefore, the original table of contents has been altered to show
these 30 divisions.
* * * * * * *
CONTENTS
INTRODUCTORY
BOOK I -- THE MORNING OF LIFE
DIV. 1 -- CHAPTER 1 His Parentage and Childhood
DIV. 2 -- CHAPTER 2 Regenerate
DIV. 3 -- CHAPTER 3 First Essays in the Service of Christ
DIV. 4 -- CHAPTER 4 The opened Road rough at the Outset
DIV. 5 -- CHAPTER 5 The Evangelist
DIV. 6 -- CHAPTER 6 The Evangelist -- (Continued)
DIV. 7 -- CHAPTER 7 The Missionary
DIV. 8 -- CHAPTER 8 The Circuit Minister
DIV. 9 -- CHAPTER 9 The Circuit Minister -- (Continued)
BOOK II -- MERIDIAN
DIV. 10 -- CHAPTER 1 The Preacher
DIV. 11 -- CHAPTER 2 The Pastor
DIV. 12 -- CHAPTER 3 The Preacher and Pastor -- (Continued)
DIV. 13 -- CHAPTER 4 The Preacher and Pastor -- (Continued)
DIV. 14 -- CHAPTER 5 The President
DIV. 15 -- CHAPTER 6 Itinerancy
DIV. 16 -- CHAPTER 7 Itinerancy -- (Continued)
DIV. 17 -- CHAPTER 8 The Student and Scholar
DIV. 18 -- CHAPTER 9 The Student -- (Continued)
DIV. 19 -- CHAPTER 10 The Author
DIV. 20 -- CHAPTER 11 The Literary Servant of the State
DIV. 21 -- CHAPTER 12 The Coadjutor of the Bible Society
DIV. 22 -- CHAPTER 13 The Commentator
BOOK III -- EVENING
DIV. 23 -- CHAPTER 1 The Elder revered in the Church
DIV. 24 -- CHAPTER 2 Honored by the Great and Good
DIV. 25 -- CHAPTER 3 The Philanthropist
DIV. 26 -- CHAPTER 4 The Friend
DIV. 27 -- CHAPTER 5 The Husband
DIV. 28 -- CHAPTER 6 The Father
DIV. 29 -- CHAPTER 7 The Saint, -- in Life and Death
DIV. 30 -- SUPPLEMENT of Illustrative Passages
from Dr. Clarke's Correspondence
* * * * * * *
TOPICAL INDEX
Abstain from Wine, Clarke's Resolve to -- (Division 29)
Alchemy, Experience with -- (Division 18)
Alderney Missionary Success -- (Division 7)
Ancestry of Adam Clarke from cousin Boyd Clarke -- (Division 15)
Andrew Coleman, a Friend of Clarke's in Young Manhood -- (Division 26)
Archaeological Mystery Solved by Clarke -- (Division 17)
Autobiography mentioned -- (Division 30)
Away From Home, Clarke Never as Content -- (Divisions 14, 16)
Benevolent Work of Clarke -- (Division 8)
Benson Funeral, Message by Clarke -- (Division 23)
Birth and Childhood of Adam Clarke -- (Division 1)
Birth date -- (Division 30) Birth from Above -- (Division 30)
Bond Between Mary and Adam Clarke -- (Division 27)
Boyhood School, its Pleasant Prospect -- (Division 17)
Brevity in Public Prayers, Need of Seen by Clarke -- (Division 8)
Budleigh-Salterton Chapel -- (Division 30)
Cause of Christ Has the First Claim -- (Division 30)
Ceylonese Priests, conversion, stay with Clarke -- (Division 23)
Charles Fox, Literary Friend of Clarke -- (Division 26)
Children of Clarkes -- 12, and 6 died in Childhood -- (Division 28)
Children, Clarke's love for his -- (Division 28)
Church and Sunday-School Begun at Millbrook -- (Division 23)
Clarity, Consistency, of Methodist Doctrine Unique -- (Division 18)
Clarke Revisits His Childhood Home -- (Division 15)
Clarke Visits Boyhood Church, Cemetery in 1822 -- (Division 23)
Clarke's Character Never Questioned -- (Division 30)
Coin Found -- Used to Buy a Hebrew Grammar -- (Division 4)
Coke, and Methodist Missionary Endeavors -- (Division 16)
Commentary, its Production -- (Division 22)
Communion with His Family when Commentary Completed -- (Division 28)
Compassion for The Poor -- (Division 25)
Conference President, Elected Third Time -- (Division 23)
Contrary Winds Miraculously Changed -- (Division 7)
Conversion and Assurance -- (Division 2)
Conversion Made Learning Easier -- (Division 17)
Conversion of Clarke's In-Laws, the Butterworths -- (Division 12)
Conversion of a Would-Be Persecutor -- (Division 6)
Converts at Cock-road, from the Vilest of the Vile -- (Division 12)
Conviction For Sin As A Child -- (Division 2)
Counsels to the Zetland Missionaries -- (Division 30)
Crowds Attending Clarke's Preaching at Brandon -- (Division 23)
Dancing, Its Evil Effect on Clarke -- (Division 2)
Death of Clarke's Mother -- (Division 15)
Death of Adam Clarke, from Cholera in 1832 -- (Division 29)
Death of Methodists, Impressively Peaceful -- (Division 11)
Death of Adam Clarke's Father, John Clarke -- (Division 12)
Death of Tracy, Clarke's Brother -- (Division 13)
Death of Clarke's Daughter, Agnes -- (Division 13)
Degrees Conferred Upon Clarke -- (Division 24)
Devoted and Unctionized Service Near Clarke's End -- (Division 29)
Dines With King's Father -- (Division 24)
Dishonesty in Business Condemned by Clarke -- (Division 11)
Doctrine Taught of God -- (Division 22)
Education of Clarke's Children -- (Division 28)
Elaphantine Amens! -- (Division 12)
Elected President of the Conference, By Force! -- (Division 14)
Entering Reverently Into God's House -- (Division 14)
Entire Sanctification, Promotion of at Manchester -- (Division 9)
Entire Sanctification, Clarke's Experience -- (Division 7)
Expositorial, Biblical Preaching of Clarke -- (Division 10)
Exposure to Cholera at Liverpool Conference -- (Division 30)
Exposure to Cholera on way from Conference -- (Division 30)
Exposure to Cholera Earlier, Testimony
Extemporaneous Preaching by Clarke -- (Division 10)
Far North -- (Division 30)
Feast of Reason -- (Division 30)
First Preaching and Divine Call -- (Division 3)
Freezing to Death, Saved From -- (Division 7)
Friends, Precious to, Perpetuated by Clarke -- (Division 26)
Genius of Clarke Awakened by Crude Remarks -- (Division 1)
Grandeur of Preaching, Not From Polished Oratory -- (Division )
Great Crowds Heard Clarke on a Visit to Ireland -- (Division 15)
Hair-Cuts and Long Sleeves, Shoestrings Outlawed -- (Division 12)
Haydon Hall, His Last Earthly Residence -- (Division )
Henry Moore, Friend who preached Clarke's Funeral -- (Division 26)
Honored By Multitudes -- (Division )
Immense Crowds Hear Clarke Liverpool, Drogheda -- (Division 16)
Inner Experience of Clarke, Assessment of -- (Division 29)
Irish Education -- (Division 30)
James Creighton, His Dying Testimony to Clarke -- (Division 26)
John Wesley (J. W.) Clarke, Clarke's Eldest Son -- (Division 28)
John Edward Clarke, Nephew -- (Division 28)
John Advised Academically and Spiritually -- (Division 30)
John Pawson, His Closeness to Clarke -- (Division 26)
Joined Methodist Church at about age 18 -- (Division 2)
Joseph B. B. Clarke, Clarke's Son -- (Divisions 19, 28)
Joseph Carne, another Clarke Friend -- (Division 26)
Joseph's Observations just before Clarke's Death -- (Division 30)
Judged Harshly by a Legalistic Preacher -- (Division 5)
Land's End -- (Division 30)
List of Clarke's Literary Works -- (Division 19)
London Circuit Walking by Clarke -- (Division 12)
Love and Discipline of Children to be United -- (Division 28)
Love of God, Clarke's Moving Expositions of -- (Division 10)
Marriage of Clarke and Mary Cooke -- (Division 7)
Mary Ann, Clarke's Daughter -- (Division 28)
Mary Clarke, A Book About -- (Division 27)
Mary Clarke a Diligent wife -- (Division 27)
Mary Clarke's Assistance to Adam in various ways -- (Division 27)
Mary Clarke's Affectionate Letters to Adam Clarke -- (Division 27)
Memorial To Wesley Etched in Glass at Manchester -- (Division 9)
Methodism Fears no Foe -- (Division 30)
Methodism Forever, Statement by Clarke -- (Division 23)
Methodism, Clarke's attachment to very strong -- (Division 29)
Ministerial Training versus Illiterate Piety -- (Division 13)
Miserable Living Quarters at Manchester -- (Division 9)
Missionary Anniversary -- (Division 30)
Modern Science -- (Division 30)
Music in Worship, Clarke's Distaste For, and Why -- (Division 6)
Nearly Killed By A Stone Thrower -- (Division 9)
No Account Left of Clarke's Inner Spiritual Life -- (Division 29)
Not to Give Offence, or Slight, Clarke's Concern -- (Division 26)
Old Friends Precede Him to the Grave -- (Division 30)
One of the Last Letters -- (Division 30)
Opening of Eastbrook Chapel -- (Division 30)
Opposition, Persecution, Divine Protection -- (Division 7)
Ordination and Sacrament Question -- (Division 30)
Oriental Languages, Clarke's Knowledge of -- (Division 17)
Pleasant Voyage to Ireland -- (Division 30)
Portable Library -- (Division 18)
Portrait of Clarke Done at Bristol -- (Division 8)
Practiced What He Preached -- (Division 10)
Preaching That is Worthwhile -- (Division 10)
Preaching of Clarke Assessed by Etheridge -- (Division 10)
Preaching Style of Clarke Described -- (Division 10)
Princess Charlotte -- (Division 30)
Put On Politeness, Clarke's Experience with -- (Division 15)
Quotations From Corrupt Sources Unwise -- (Division 11)
Rash Vow Renounced by Clarke -- (Division 7)
Rejoices in a Worthy son -- (Division 30)
Religious Experience on Bradford Circuit -- (Division 30)
Repeated Messages Not Clarke's Style -- (Division 10)
Repents of His Rash Vow -- (Division 17)
Resolutions -- (Division 30)
Restitution by one on his Death Bed -- (Division 11)
Retreat into the Country to Prolong Clarke's Life -- (Division 23)
Reverence For Things Sacred, Clarke's -- (Division 29)
Revival In London Circuit -- (Division 12)
Richard Maybn, another Friend of Clarke -- (Division 26)
River of God's Pleasure, one who was Thirsty for -- (Division 12)
Roving Commission Near the End -- (Division 29)
Royalty Visits Clarke at Haydon Hall -- (Division )
Samuel Drew, His Friendship with Clarke -- (Division 26)
Sanctifying Grace In Clarke, Alluded -- (Division 26)
Schools Begun -- (Division 25)
Scope of Clarke's Ministry -- (Division 10)
Sense and Sound, Discerning the Difference -- (Division 13)
Senses Eternity Is Near For Him At Frome -- (Division 29)
Sermons That Are Good -- (Division 10)
Slow Mental Development Of Clarke -- (Division 1)
Spared From Drowning -- (Division 1)
Speculation With Church Funds Rejected -- (Division 12)
St. Austel Chapel -- (Division 30)
Stuart Boyd, Relative & Friend of Clarke -- (Division 26)
Successful Efforts -- (Division 30)
Sudden Change to Intellectual Rigor Discussed -- (Division 17)
Sunday-Schools in 1805 -- (Division 13)
Tenant of the Cavern -- (Division 30)
Testimony about 2 Years Before Clarke's Death -- (Division 29)
Testimony 7 Weeks before His Death
The Singular Purpose Of Clarke's Study -- (Division 17)
The Royal Friend -- (Division 30)
Theodoret Samuel Clarke, son printed Commentary -- (Division 28)
Theodoret, Clarke's Son Mentioned -- (Division 14)
Thirst For Knowledge, From a Native Curiosity -- (Division 18)
Thomas Exley, a Friend of Clarke -- (Division 26)
Three Witnesses -- (Division 30)
Time Keeping Rash Vow made Profitable -- (Division 17)
To Obtain Relief in Depression -- (Division 30)
Tobacco, Pamphlet Against -- (Division 30)
Tracy, Clarke's Brother, a Liverpool Physician -- (Division 6)
Twice President of the English Conference -- (Division 23)
Two Books That Inspired Clarke To Preach -- (Division 17)
Unearned Income, Clarke Loathe to Receive -- (Division 16)
Use and Abuse of Tobacco -- (Division 19)
Useful Sermon -- (Division 30)
Variety in Studies, Practiced, Propounded -- (Division 18)
Vast Numbers Heard Clarke Preach -- (Division 14)
Victorious Passing of John Grace -- (Division 16)
Visitation Methods Of Clarke -- (Division 11)
Visits Christchurch -- (Division 16)
Visits Lincoln College -- (Division 16)
Waiting Awaiting a Ship bearing his Family -- (Division 9)
Weather Study By Clarke -- (Division 18)
Wesleys First Met by Adam Clarke -- (Division 4)
When Last in Ireland -- (Division 30)
Wine Administered Medicinally to Pawson -- (Division 9)
Witness to His Adoption, Clarke Never Lost -- (Division 29)
Work on Commentary in 1814 -- (Division 16)
Worldly Social Compliments, Clarke Unable to Give -- (Division 16)
Zetland Isles Work Established by Clarke -- (Division 25)
* * * * * * *
DIVISION 1
BOOK I
(The Morning of Life)
CHAPTER 1
HIS PARENTAGE AND CHILDHOOD
To retrace the footsteps of Adam Clarke's early youth, we should visit some
obscure hamlets in Ireland, lying on the borders of the North Channel, in a
champaign country abounding in landscapes where a Ruysdael or a Paul Potter
would have found many a congenial subject for his pencil. The ancestors of Adam
Clarke, though of English origin, had been settled in that part of Ireland for
some generations, and were possessed of good landed property in the counties of
Antrim and Derry. The family came into Ireland some time in the seventeenth
century, and obtained a portion of what were called the "Debenture Lands." The
property thus acquired was afterwards increased by intermarriages with the
families of Strawbridge, Courtenay, Higgison, and Boyd. Dr. Clarke's
great-great-grandfather, William Clarke, held the estates of Grange, in the
county of Antrim, and was regarded with such consideration in the county, as to
be appointed to receive the Prince of Orange, when, in 1690, he came to
Carrickfergus. An anecdote of this interview is preserved, to the effect that
Mr. Clarke, though at that time a disciple of the rigid doctrines of George Fox,
mindful neither to compromise his principles as a Quaker, nor his behavior as a
gentleman, left his hat behind him, and so approached the prince bareheaded. He
addressed his future monarch in a few words of dignified simplicity, with which
the prince seemed well content, and entered upon a conversation, at the close of
which he was pleased to say, that Mr. Clarke was one of the best-bred men he had
ever met with. This William Clarke had a son named John, who married a daughter
of Mr. Horseman, mayor of Carrickfergus. They had eighteen sons and one
daughter. The ninth of these sons was William Clarke, the grandfather of our
Adam. He formed a matrimonial connection with the Boyds, a family of Scotch
extraction, who appear to have settled in Ireland about the same time with the
Clarkes. Archibald Boyd was a Presbyterian clergyman, and the first Protestant
who preached at Maghera after the Revolution. The fruit of the marriage of
William Clarke with Miss Boyd were four sons, of whom the eldest, John, was the
father of Adam.
These few details are sufficient to show that the family of the Clarkes held
rank formerly with the most substantial and respectable in that part of the
kingdom. But, like those of many other houses, their fortunes had, toward the
end of the last century, undergone a disastrous change. Their lands in the
neighborhoods of Larne and Glenarm, and on the pleasant banks of Lough Neagh,
fell, by one loss after another, into the hands of strangers. A lawsuit deprived
them of an excellent estate called "the Grange;" and, while Adam was yet a
child, the last acre of their property was gone. "I well remember," he once
said, "the time when the last farm went out of the family, and our ancient boast
was lost for ever. The weeping and wailing that morning upon which we were made
acquainted with the fact, still live in my remembrance, though I was then
scarcely seven years of age. Yet, who knows but that there was mercy in this
stroke? Had that little estate remained, men would perhaps, never have heard of
Adam Clarke. The Supreme Disposer often takes away one blessing, to make way for
a greater.
John, the father of Adam Clarke, has been described by the latter, as "a man
standing about five feet seven, with good shoulders, an excellent leg, a fine
hand, and every way well proportioned, and extremely active." Intended by his
parents for the Church, he had received a good classical education at school,
which was followed up by studies for the clerical profession, at the
universities of Edinburgh and Glasgow. Among his college testimonials was the
name of the eminent Hebraist, Hutchinson. At Edinburgh he gained a prize of some
distinction, and at Glasgow took his degree of Master of Arts. He then, with the
more immediate view of qualifying for episcopal orders, entered Trinity College,
Dublin, successfully competing for a sizarship, at a time when classical merit
was the only passport to that privilege. Thus far all was propitious; but a
severe fever prostrated his health, and, after his return to Dublin, a premature
marriage with one who became the deservedly-loved partner of the joys and
adversities of after-life, dissolved his connection with the university, and
gave a new direction to his career. By the stress of circumstances now unknown,
Mr. Clarke was induced to turn his views from the clerical to the scholastic
profession. His first idea was to obtain a professorship in one of the new
collegiate establishments in America; and for this adventure he turned his
patrimony into money, and took a passage in a vessel bound for that continent.
On the very eve of embarkation, his father, who earnestly deprecated the
undertaking, succeeded in dissuading him from attempting it. With some still
lingering hopes of obtaining church-preferment, the young scholar now passed an
anxious interval, during which his means of support were rapidly melting away;
and at length, as a kind of last resource, he applied for the customary license
to act as a teacher of youth, and gave up the pulpit of the clergyman for the
desk of the schoolmaster. His lot was now confirmed, and the steady, earnest,
and laborious endeavors which gave a character to his remaining life, manifest
an unswerving resolution to acquit himself of its responsibilities. The school
appears to have been generally well attended, and by the children of all ranks
in the neighborhood. The young people bent their steps in a morning to the
common place of learning, alike from the cottage, the rectory, and the hall. Dr.
Barnard, afterwards bishop of Killaloe, and of Limerick, was at that time rector
of the parish, and confided his own son to the care of Mr. Clarke; among whose
scholars there were not a few who in after-years filled the situations of
clergymen, (whether Episcopal, Popish, or Presbyterian,) medical men, lawyers,
and schoolmasters. Dr. Clarke used to say, that there were few priests,
clergymen, surgeons, or lawyers, of those resident in the north of Ireland, who
had not been educated by his father. And yet, from the extremely low charges
then
customary for education, the diligent labors of this able and conscientious
teacher yielded but a poor return for the support of his family. The highest
charge for a range of instruction which comprehended the mathematics, and the
classics, both Latin and Greek, was seven shillings per quarter; while the
primary elements of school-knowledge were rendered at the lowly price of
fourpence, twopence, and even three halfpence per week. It may be conjectured,
therefore, that the temporal concerns of the family were the reverse of
affluent. The worthy schoolmaster knew all about the res angusta domi. The mind
both of father and mother seems to have been shadowed by almost habitual care;
and the children, as Adam once expressed it, "neither fared sumptuously every
day, nor was their clothing purple and fine linen."
Mrs. Clarke was of Scotch origin, a descendant of the M'Leans of Mull, in the
Hebrides, -- a hardy race, remarkable for muscular strength. A brother of Mrs.
Clarke, the Rev. I. M'Lean, "could bend iron bars with a stroke of his arm; roll
up large pewter dishes like a scroll with his fingers ; and, when traveling
through Bovagh-wood, (a place through which his walks frequently lay,) he has
been known to pull down the top of an oak-sapling, twist it into a withe by the
mere strength of his arms and fingers, and, thus working it down in a spiral
form to the earth, leave it with its root in the ground for the astonishment of
all that might pass by."
One day, dining at an inn with two officers, who wished to be witty at the
parson's expense, he said something which had a tendency to check their
self-confidence. One of them, considering his honor affected, said, "Sir, were
it not for your cloth, I would oblige you to eat the words you have spoken." Mr.
M'Lean rose up a moment, took off his coat, rolled it up, and threw it under the
table with -- "Divinity, lie there: and, M'Lean, do for thyself." Saying it, he
seized the foremost of the heroes by the cuff of the neck and the waistband, and
threw him out of the window.
The great-grandfather of Mrs. Clarke, Laughlin M'Lean, was chief of his clan,
and laird of Dowart. Dr. Clarke ever cherished a tender veneration for his
mother. According to his description, she was not a beauty, but a sensible
woman; something above the average height, graceful in moving, and remarkably
erect even in old age. What was better, she was as upright in principle; a woman
who feared God, and whom His Holy Spirit failed not, as we shall see, to lead at
length into the liberty of His children. Mrs. Clarke, at the time of her
marriage, was a decided Presbyterian; her husband, with equal strength of
principle, an Episcopalian. It redounds not a little to their honor, that these
differences never interfered with the charm of that holy love which tempered and
sanctified the hardships of their self-denying life. Their eldest son, named
Tracy, after his relative, the Rev. John Tracy, rector of Kilchronaghan, was
bred to the medical profession. Some passages in his remarkable history will be
noticed further on. Of their daughters, the eldest married the Rev. W. M.
Johnson, LL.D., rector of St. Perrans Uthnoe, in Cornwall; and another became
the wife of Thomas Exley, Esq., M.A., of Bristol.
Adam Clarke, the subject of our memoir, was born at Moybeg, in the parish of
Kilchronaghan, county Londonderry. The year of his birth was either 1760 or
1762. He was always uncertain upon this point, but inclined to the first date.
Though he was baptized by his uncle Tracy, no register of the baptism was
preserved; and Mrs. Clarke herself could give him no decisive information, her
own recollection on the matter being somewhat confused. This is not an
unexampled instance of maternal forgetfulness. The mother of Dr. Martin Luther
could not certify the year of his birth. Melancthon, who questioned her about
it, records that she recollected the day and the hour perfectly, but had
forgotten the year. *[1] Mrs. Clarke's prevailing sentiment was, that her son
was born in 1760. He received the Christian name of Adam at the request of his
grandparents, in memory of a beloved son of their own whom they had lost in
early life. The old people wished to adopt him as their own child, and his first
years were passed under their charge. Adam was a remarkably hardy child; at
eight months on his feet, and a month later walking about alone; at three years
old sitting in the snow in winter, and in the summer wandering among the lanes
and fields, and often taking his stand by a draw-well, peering curiously into
its depths, as if searching to know the mysteries beneath. When, at five years,
he took the smallpox, the child disdained the then customary regimen of covering
up the patient in a closely-shut room, left his bed on every opportunity, and
ran away naked in the open air. He had, also, uncommon strength for his age,
which his father seemed proud of showing, setting the child to roll large stones
when visitors came to the house.
He appears to have returned to his father's care on the removal of the family
from Moybeg to Maghera, a village in the county of Derry, sixteen miles south of
Coleraine. This was when Adam was six years old. Two years later we find another
removal to Garva, or Grove, a hamlet some ten miles distant. Here they resided
till about his twelfth year; when their unsettled domestic history shows another
exodus, to a place called Ballyaherton, in the parish of Agherton, some little
space from Coleraine. It was in the first of these transient resting-places that
the future commentator on the Bible became, though with sore trials to the flesh
and spirit, acquainted with the contents of the primer. Unlike his bodily
powers, the mental faculties of the child were but slowly developed. He has told
us that "he found it very difficult to acquire even the knowledge of the
alphabet;" and that his father, who had set his heart upon his becoming a
scholar, strove to awaken his intellect with harsh words and unseasonable
chastisement. "But this," says the doctor, "so far from eliciting genius, rather
produced an increase of habitude; so that himself began to despair of ever being
able to acquire any knowledge by means of letters. When, however, he was about
eight years of age, he was led to entertain hopes of future improvement from the
following circumstance:-- A neighboring schoolmaster, calling at the school
where Adam was then endeavoring to put vowels and consonants together, was
desired by the teacher to assist in hearing a few of the lads their lessons.
Adam was the last that went up, not a little ashamed of his deficiency: he,
however, hobbled through his lesson, though in a very indifferent manner; and
the teacher apologized to the stranger, and remarked, that that lad was a
grievous dunce. The assistant, clapping young Clarke on the head, said, 'Never
fear, sir; this lad will make a good scholar yet.' This was the first thing that
checked his own despair of learning, and gave him hope. I give this in his own
words, for the sake of the useful reflection which follows them: "How
injudicious is the general mode of dealing with those who are called dull boys!
To every child learning must be a task; and as no young person is able to
comprehend the maxim, that the acquisition of learning will compensate the toil,
encouragement and kind words from the teacher are indispensably necessary to
induce the learner to undergo the toil of those gymnastic exercises. Willful
idleness and neglect should be reprehended and punished; but where genius has
not yet been unfolded, nor reason acquired its proper seat, the mildest methods
are the most likely to be efficient, and the smallest progress should be watched
and commended, that it may excite to further attention and diligence. With those
who are called dull boys this method rarely fails. But there are few teachers
who possess the happy art of developing genius. They have not sufficient
penetration to find out the bent or characteristic propensity of their pupils'
minds, to give them the requisite excitement or direction. In consequence, there
have been innumerable native diamonds which have never shone, because they have
fallen into such hands as could not distinguish them from common pebbles; and to
them neither the hand nor the art of the lapidary has ever been applied. Many
children, not naturally dull, have become so under the influence of the
schoolmaster." *[2]
The elder Mr. Clarke was a man of right honest purpose, and of resolute
determination. He reigned in the school as an absolute monarch in his kingdom.
His juvenile subjects knew the man and his communications, and worked with the
assurance that nothing short of actual improvement would keep them right with
him. He was their friend, though a severe one. It was their welfare he had at
heart. Coldsmith's description of a similar potentate applies to him in this as
in other respects --
"Beside you straggling fence that skirts the way,
With blossom'd furze unprofitably gay,
There, in his noisy mansion, skill'd to rule,
The village master taught his little school.
A man severe he was, and stern to view:
I knew him well, and every truant knew.
Well had the boding tremblers learn'd to trace
The day's disasters in his morning face
Full well they laugh'd, with counterfeited glee,
At all his jokes, for many a joke had he;
Full well the busy whisper, circling round,
Convey'd the dismal tidings when he frown'd.
Yet he was kind; or, if severe in aught,
The love he bore to learning was in fault."
The progress of Adam Clarke's intellectual history will have our attention more
fully hereafter. The only other incident I shall mention here relates to the
manner in which he made his first free outset in the path of learning. And this,
as also two or three other critical passages in his experience, we will recount
in his own words: -- "As soon as Adam got through the 'Reading made easy,' had
learned to spell pretty correctly, and could read with tolerable ease in the New
Testament, his father, who wished if possible to make him a scholar, put him
into Lily's Latin Grammar. This was new and painful work to little Clarke, and
he was stumbled by almost the first sentence which he was ordered to get by
heart, not because he could not commit it to memory, but because he could not
comprehend:-- ' In speech be these eight parts following: noun, pronoun, verb,
participle, declined; adverb, conjunction, preposition, interjection,
undeclined.' He," however, "committed this to memory, and repeated it, and many
of its fellows, without understanding one tittle of the matter; and, as the
understanding was not instructed, the memory was uselessly burdened. The
declensions of nouns were painful, but he overcame them; and the conjugations of
verbs he got more easily through. 'Propria quae maribus' he got through with
difficulty, at two lines each lesson. With the 'As in praesenti' of the same
ponderous Grammar he was puzzled beyond measure: he could not understand the 'Bo
fit psi; do fit di; mo fit ui,' &c., and could by no means proceed. Of the
reason or probable utility of such things he could form no judgment ; and at
last it became so intolerable, that he employed two whole days, and part of a
third, in fruitless endeavors to commit to memory two lines, with their
construction, of what appeared to him useless and incomprehensible jargon. His
distress was indescribable, and he watered his book with his tears. At last he
laid it by with a broken heart, and in utter despair of ever being able to make
any progress. He took up an English Testament, sneaked into an English class,
and rose with them to say a lesson. The master perceiving it said, in a terrific
tone, 'Sir, what brought you here? Where is your Latin Grammar?' He burst into
tears, and said, with a piteous voice, 'I cannot learn it.' He had now reason to
expect all the severity of the rod: but the master, getting a little moderate,
perhaps moved by his tears, contented himself with saying, ' Go, Sir, and take
up your Grammar. If you do not speedily get that lesson, I shall pull your ears
as long as Jowler's,' (a great dog belonging to the premises,) 'and you shall be
a beggar till the day of your death! ' These were terrible words, and seemed to
express the sentence of a ruthless and unavoidable destiny. He retired, and sat
down by the side of a young gentleman with whom he had been in class; but who,
unable to lag behind with his dullness, requested to be separated,
that he might advance by himself. He was received with the most bitter taunts: '
What, have you not learned that lesson yet? O, what a stupid dunce! You and I
began together; you are now only in As in praesenti, and I am in syntax;' and
then, with cruel mockery, he began to repeat the last lesson he had learned. The
effect of this was astonishing. Adam was roused as from a lethargy: he felt, as
he expressed himself, as if something had broken within him; his mind in a
moment was all light. Though he felt indescribably mortified, he did not feel
indignant. 'What!' said he to himself, 'shall I ever be a dunce, and the butt of
these fellows' insults?' He snatched up his book, in a few minutes committed the
lesson to memory; got the construction speedily; went up, and said it without
missing a word; took up another lesson, acquired it almost immediately, said
this also without a blemish, and in the course of that day wearied the master
with his so often repeated returns to say lessons, and committed to memory all
the Latin verses, with their English construction, in which heavy and tedious
Lily has described the four conjugations, with their exceptions, and so forth.
Nothing like this had appeared in the school before. The boys were astonished;
admiration took the place of mockery; and from that hour -- it may be said, from
that moment -- he found his memory at least capable of embracing every subject
that was brought before it, and his own long sorrow was turned into joy." *[3]
At Agherton a new church had been built, and the old one, which is now a ruin,
was appropriated as the school for the parishioners' children. Within those
venerable walls Adam pursued his juvenile studies, and now made rapid progress
in classical and mathematical learning. Waiving, however, all further references
for the present to his intellectual culture, we will note a few circumstances in
his physical education, which seem to have been intended by Providence to form
his constitution for the toils which were destined to fill the history of his
future years. The mode of living to which the family were compelled by their
penurious income was severely economical. The hungry boy was made thankful for a
supply of the plainest food, and learned, poor youth, to become patient under
the bodily trials of hunger and thirst. In the matter of raiment also, he was
but thinly clad, and, after the habits of the rustic folk in Ireland, went
frequently without a covering for the head or feet. The intervals of
school-lessons were filled up by such sports as boys become familiar within the
country, or were spent more frequently in hard work in the garden or the fields.
To eke out the scanty revenue of the school, his father rented a small farm in
the neighborhood, which took up much of his spare time, and called into exercise
the growing strength of his two sons. It was a pleasant reminiscence of Dr.
Clarke's, that his father, more in the spirit of a classical scholar than of a
plodding matter-of-fact farmer, wished to cultivate his grounds upon the
principles laid down in the Georgics of Virgil. In recording this recollection,
the Doctor remarks that his father did not appear to have calculated "that the
agricultural rules of that elegant work were in many respects applicable only to
the soil and climate of Italy;" and that "to apply them to a widely different
climate, and to a soil extremely dissimilar, lat. 55 N., was not likely to bring
about the most beneficial results." We should think not; and the worthy scholar
might have gathered such a conclusion from the first lessons of his
favorite pastoral:--
At prius ignotum ferro quam scindimus aequor,
Ventos et varium caeli praediscere morem,
Cura sit, ae patrios cultusque habitusque locorum;
Et quid quaeque ferat regio, et quid queque recuset.
Hic segetes, illic veniunt felicius uvae:
Arborei faetus alibi, atque injussa virescunt
Cramina. Noune vides, croceos ut Tmolus odores,
India mittit ebur, molles sua thura Sabaei?" *[4]
"But ere we stir the yet unbroken ground,
The various course of seasons must be found:
The weather, and the setting of the winds,
The culture suiting to the various kinds
Of seeds and plants, and what will thrive and rise,
And what the genius of the soil denies:
This ground with Bacchus, that with Ceres suits;
That other loads the trees with happy fruits;
A fourth with grass unbidden decks the ground.
Thus Tmolus is with yellow saffron crown'd,
India black ebon and white ivory bears,
And soft Idume weeps her odorous tears.
This is the' original contract; these the laws
Imposed by nature, and by nature's Cause."
In these labors of the mind and body all the lad's natural powers were called
into full exercise, and grew with his growth. In summer the household were all
astir at four in the morning, and in winter long before daylight. Each season
had its appropriate toil, each hour its duty, and the hour-glass in the cottage
was turned twelve times every day before any one in the family was permitted to
go to rest. Little Adam, if at seven years of age he could do no harder work,
was able to take care of the cows, and bring them home at milking-time. When big
enough, he took his part in sheep-shearing; and at twelve he essayed the plow,
and was thrown among the horses' feet, by the share coming into contact with a
hidden rock. He was great at peat-cutting, and could keep two persons employed
in piling and carrying the fuel as fast as he digged it. Nor was he a little
proud of the strength of hand with which he sent the wheat-seed broadcast over
the furrowed soil. I wonder whether the child had any dawning corruption a t the
time, that these employments were symbolical of the labors of distant years, in
which, having put his hand to another plow, he would be able, with power given
from on high, to break up the fallow ground of men's hearts, go forth to sow the
seed which bears its harvests to eternal life, and, as an under shepherd, tend
the flock of the Lord's redeemed.
Here is an incident which discovers some shrewdness in a boy of ten years old:--
He had been sent by his mother, near nightfall, on an errand which required him
to cross a waste piece of country lying toward the sea, a great part of which
was a soft marsh. Darkness came on apace, and along with it a thick fog. In the
depths of this mist the boy found himself bewildered; and, to increase his
uncertainty, an ignis fatuus rose up before him, and filled him with no small
dismay. He retreated, but it followed him. It would not be evaded, whether he
turned to the right hand or to the left. Meanwhile, by these attempts to escape
from this strange phantom, of which he had heard many an ill-omened story, he
had entirely lost the bearing of the place he was so anxious to arrive at; and
the bog abounded with dangerous depths, into some one of which he knew he might
sink the very next step. Thus haunted without, by the fairy flame, and within,
by growing terror, he suddenly heard a strong whirring sound near him in t he
air. He had roused a flock of wild ducks. He could not see them, but the noise
of their invisible wings supplied him with the guide he wanted. He knew their
haunts by the sea; and, conjecturing that they would now make for these,
resolved to follow in the direction they had flown. He was so correct in this
judgment as to emerge at length from the bog, within a few yards of the house
where his errand was to be done.
Among the exercises to which he was addicted, horsemanship also afforded him a
vast delight. He would sometimes ride down to the shore, and, plunging with the
animal through the surf, breast the waves with a long swim outward. Once
swimming alone, a considerable distance from the shore, he found that he had
unintentionally gone out too far, and that the tide, which swells there with
great force, was opposed to his return. He recruited his exhausted strength by
lying on his back, though at the expense of being carried further away to sea,
and then, with the most resolute effort, was enabled by the mercy of Providence
once more to touch the land.
The neighborhood of the sea afforded him also, and his father as well, the
profitable pursuits of the fisherman. His father was a great lover of the sport,
and Adam, whether with him or alone, fished in the Moyola and the creeks of the
Bann; so that often, and especially in the salmon season, the table at home
smoked with the produce of their healthy and legitimate recreations.
These hardy exercises were not, however, without their dangers. On one occasion
he was thrown with such violence from a horse, as to be taken up for dead; and
on another, his life was more nearly lost by drowning. In this latter case, it
was always his own opinion that life had really become extinct, and that he
experienced a renewal of earthly existence by a return of the soul from the
world of spirits. It was one morning, when he rode a mare of his father's into
the sea, to bathe her. The sea was not rough, and the morning very fine; and he
thought he might ride beyond the breakers, as the shore in that place was smooth
and flat. The mare went with great reluctance, and plunged several times. He
urged her forward, and at last got beyond the breakers, into the swells: one of
these coming with terrible force, when it was too late to retreat, overwhelmed
both rider and horse. There was no person in sight, and no help at hand. He said
afterward, that he seemed to go to the bottom with his eyes open, and then ,
with neither apprehension nor pain, entered on the consciousness of perfect
tranquillity and happiness, -- not derived, indeed, from anything around him,
but from the inward state of his own mind. (An account of this singular
experience was given by Dr. Clarke, long years after, in a sermon preached in
aid of the Royal Humane Society; and with more minute particulars in a
conversation with the late Dr. Letsom. The whole is, probably, too well known to
need transcription here.) A ground-swell bore his apparently lifeless body to
the shore. The first sensation, when he came to life, was as if a spear had been
run through his heart. He felt this in getting the first draught of fresh air,
when the lungs were merely inflated by the pressure of the atmosphere. He found
himself sitting in the water, and it was by a very swelling wave that he had
been put out of the way of being overwhelmed by any of the succeeding ones. The
intense pain at his heart, however, still continued; but he had felt no pain
from the moment he was submerged till the time when his head was brought above
water, and the air once more entered into his lungs. He saw the mare at a
considerable distance, walking quite leisurely along the shore. How long he was
submerged, cannot be precisely affirmed; but sufficiently long, in his own ever
retained opinion, to have been completely dead, never more to breathe in this
world, had it not been for that Providence which, as it were, once more breathed
into him the breath of life, and caused him to become once more a living soul.
If Wesley in his childhood was rescued from the flame, that, as "a brand plucked
from the burning," he might glorify God in a life devoted to His service, Clarke
in a yet more striking manner was delivered from the flood, that he too might in
his kindred sphere magnify the same great Protector, who has said, "When thou
passest through the waters, I will be with thee; and through the rivers, they
shall not overflow thee: when thou walkest through the fire, thou shalt not be
burned; neither shall the flame kindle upon thee: for I am the Lord thy God, the
Holy One of Israel, thy Saviour."
These short recitals will suffice to indicate the manner of Adam Clarke's
outward life in the season of his youth; and how Providence was fitting him, by
its discipline, for a career which demanded patience in suffering, and
perseverance in toil. When far on his way, in the retrospect of this early stage
of his pilgrimage he acknowledged this, and gave thanks to God for the hardy
manner in which he had been brought up: "My Heavenly Father saw that I was
likely to meet with many rude blasts in journeying through life, and He prepared
me in infancy for the lot He destined for me; so that, through His mercy, I have
been brought from childhood up to hoary hairs. He knew that I must walk alone
through life, and therefore set me on my feet right early, that I might be
qualified by practice for the work I was appointed to perform."
* * * * * * *
DIVISION 2
BOOK I
(The Morning of Life)
CHAPTER 2
REGENERATE
We are admonished by St. Paul, that a work wrought in the mind by the Spirit of
God can only be understood by those who are spiritually minded. There are men
enough, not only among the shallow and unlearned, but among the erudite and
intellectual, to whom the statements we are to make in this chapter would seem
mere foolishness; while the Christian discerns in them the sure and intelligible
evidences of a Divine intervention, and the practical tokens of that great
redeeming design which has brought our sin-infected and perishing nature under
an economy of regenerating grace. Our present task, however, is not to battle
with the prejudices of the world, but to give the details of this work of mercy
in such plain words of truth as may tend to edify the believer, and to light the
steps of the sincere inquirer to the path of peace.
The grace of God, which bringeth salvation, dawned upon the mind of Adam Clarke
with the morning hour of life, and preoccupied his heart with a disposition
toward the holy and the Divine. Some of the child's first thoughts were
"Thoughts that wander through eternity."
Let us hear him recount a reminiscence of those first days: "Near where Mr.
Clarke lived was a very decent orderly family of the name of Brooks, who lived
on a small farm. They had eleven children, some of whom went to Mr. Clarke's
school: one, called James, was the tenth child, a lovely lad, between whom and
little Adam there subsisted a strong attachment. One day, when walking hand in
hand, in a field near the house, they sat down on the bank, and began to enter
into a very serious conversation. They both became much affected, and this was
deepened into exquisite distress by the following observations made by little
Brooks: 'O, Addy, Addy, what a dreadful thing is ETERNITY! and how dreadful to
be put into hell-fire, and to be burned there for ever and ever!' They both wept
bitterly, and, as they could, begged God to forgive their sins; and they made to
each other strong promises of amendment, and departed from each other with full
and pensive hearts.
"I was then truly and deeply convinced that I was a sinner, and liable to
eternal punishment; and that nothing but the mercy of God could save me from it:
though I was not so conscious of any other sin as that of disobedience to my
parents, which at that time affected me most forcibly. When I left my little
companion, I went home, told the whole to my mother with a full heart,
expressing the hope that I should never more say any bad words, or refuse to do
what she or my father might command. She was both surprised and affected, and
gave me much encouragement, and prayed heartily for me. With a glad heart she
communicated the information to my father, on whom I could see it did not make
the same impression; for he had little opinion of pious resolutions in childish
minds, though he feared God, and was a serious, conscientious Churchman. I must
own that the way in which he treated it was very discouraging to my mind, and
served to mingle impressions with my serious feelings that were not friendly to
their permanence. Yet the impression, though it grew faint, did not wear away.
It was laid deep in the consideration of eternity, and of my accountableness to
God for my conduct, and the absolute necessity of enjoying His favor, that I
might never taste the bitter pains of eternal death. Had I had any person to
point out the Lamb of God which taketh away the sin of the world, I believe I
should then have been found as capable of repentance and faith (my youth and
circumstances considered) as I ever was afterwards. But I had no such helper, no
'messenger,' 'one among a thousand,' who could show man his righteousness."
The neighborhood in which he lived had not at that time the privilege of the
plain Gospel. The inhabitants were chiefly of the Protestant confession, and
were pretty equally divided between the Established and Presbyterian communions.
The rector of Agherton was the Rev. Mr. Smith, "a good man, full of humanity and
benevolence," who preached the truth so far as he knew it; "but on the way in
which a sinner is to be reconciled to God, he was either not very clear, or was
never explicit." On the other hand, in the Presbyterian congregation, "the
trumpet gave a very uncertain sound, as both pastor and people were verging
closely on Socinianism. We do not wonder, then, that "a general forgetfulness of
God prevailed in the parish," and that "there was scarcely a person in it
decidedly pious, though there were several that feared God, and but few who were
grossly profane."
The religious state of the Clarkes, as a family, partook at that time of the
general tone. An old friend of theirs, the Rev. Henry Moore, speaking of them as
he knew them in his juvenile days, says, "The family were what is generally
called good sort of people, honest people, clearing their way by sober industry.
They thought they must be good in order to go to heaven, and had a wholesome
fear of being found wicked. They likewise embraced the common forms of
religion." The schoolmaster of Agherton was a steady member of the Episcopal
Church, but not strongly awake to the importance of vital religion, nor savingly
enlightened with an experimental knowledge of its consolations and hopes. But
his worthy and faithful wife, albeit a stranger (like himself) to the refined
enjoyments of personal godliness, seems to have had a deeper sense than he of
the need of that which they had not yet attained. Her mind was habitually
serious, and her whole conduct in the training of the family betokened an
earnest solicitude for their everlasting welfare. Like many other great and good
men, Dr. Clarke owed an unspeakable debt to his mother for the influence she
exerted over the formation of his character. Looking back on those pristine
days, he said on one occasion, "For my mother's religious teachings I shall have
endless reason to bless my Maker." She was the instrument of imprinting on his
conscience those ethical convictions which in after-time germinated, by the
grace of God, into great and fruitful virtues. She would garnish and fortify her
instructions with pithy adages, which her children's memories never lost. Was
the conversation, for example, about the transient nature of this life's
affairs? she would conclude with, --
"Thus we may say, Come weal or woe,
It will not be always so:"
-- like the motto that the eastern legend tells us king Solomon furnished for a
brother monarch, who requested of him some sentiment which, inscribed on his
ring, should be suited to cheer him under misfortune, and to temper his joy in
the season of prosperity, -- "This also shall pass away!"
But the treasury from which our good mother drew her choicest gems to enrich the
minds of the children, was the written word of God; and in the matter of
discipline, and the infliction of punishment, it was often found that a text of
Scripture, well applied, did infinitely better execution than the rod. Dr.
Clarke says that his mother "had read the Bible with great care and much profit
... And if the children did wrong at any time, she had recourse to it uniformly,
to strengthen her reproofs, and to deepen conviction. With the Scriptures she
was so conversant and ready, that there was scarcely any delinquency for the
condemnation of which she could not find a portion. She seemed to find them at
the first opening, and would generally say, 'See what God has guided my eye to
in a moment.' Her own reproofs her children could in some measure bear; but when
she had recourse to the Bible, they were terrified, -- such an awful sense had
they of the truth of God's word, and the majesty of the Author. Adam one day
disobeyed his mother, and the disobedience was accompanied with some look or
gesture that indicated an undervaluing of her authority. This was a high
affront: she immediately flew to the Bible, and opened on these words, which she
read and commented upon in a most awful manner: ' The eye that mocketh his
father, and despiseth to obey his mother, the ravens of the valley shall pick it
out, and the young eagles shall eat it.' The poor culprit was cut to the heart,
believing the words had been sent immediately from heaven. He went out into the
field with a troubled spirit, and was musing on this horrible denunciation of
Divine displeasure, when the hoarse croak of a raven sounded to his conscience
an alarm more terrible than the cry of fire at midnight. He looked up, and
perceived the ominous bird, and, actually supposing it to be the raven of which
the text spoke, he took to flight with the greatest perturbation." *[1]
Dr. Clarke imagines that the severe Puritanic creed, which his mother had
derived from the Scotch Calvinists, led her more frequently to represent the
Supreme Being as a God of justice than as the God of mercy. The consequence was,
the children dreaded God, and obeyed only through fear. Yet, perhaps, this was
the way to awaken in the minds of the young a sense of responsibility and an
assurance that retribution will ever track the footsteps of guilt.
To the faithful admonitions of this stern but loving instructress, her son ever
attributed, under God, that fear of the Divine Majesty which prevented him from
taking pleasure in sin. "My mother's reproofs and terrors never left me, till I
sought and found the salvation of God. And sin was generally so burdensome to
me, that I was glad to hear of deliverance from it. She had taught me such
reverence for the Bible, that if I had it in my hand, even for the purpose of
studying a chapter to repeat as a lesson, and had been disposed with my
class-fellows to sing, whistle a tune, or be facetious, I dared not do either
while the book was open in my hands. In such cases, I always shut it, and laid
it down beside me. Who will dare to lay this to the charge of superstition?" --
The boy was right. Would that all men were like-minded!
No sight has a greater sacredness and beauty than that of a devout mother
leading her child to God in prayer. It was Adam's privilege to have a mother who
could pray for him, and with him, and teach him to pray for himself. As soon as
the children could speak, she taught them, in the Lord's Prayer, to call God
"our Father." As they grew older, they were instructed to ask His blessing on
their parents and relatives. The evening devotions of the elder ones included
the Apostles' Creed, and occasionally a versified Collect, which the Doctor
remembered to his latest day:--
AT MORNING PRAYER
"Preserve me, Lord, amidst the crowd,
From every thought that's vain and proud;
And raise my wandering mind to see
How good it is to trust in Thee.
"From all the enemies of Thy truth,
Do Thou, O Lord, preserve my youth;
And raise my mind from worldly cares,
From youthful sins and youthful snares.
"Lord, though my heart's as hard as stone,
Let seeds of early grace be sown,
Still water'd by Thy heavenly love,
Till they spring up in joys above."
AT EVENING
"I go to my bed as to my grave,
And pray to God my life to save;
But, if I die before I wake,
I pray to God my soul to take.
"Sweet Jesus, now to Thee I cry,
To grant me mercy ere I die;
To grant me mercy, and send me peace,
That heaven may be my dwelling-place."
AT CONCLUSION
"Give to the Father praise,
And glory to the Son,
And to the Spirit of His grace
Be equal honor done."
These compositions, it must be confessed, are homely enough; but they were made
for home use, whoever wrote them. Adam Clarke always entertained a fond
attachment to them. "They contain," said he, "the first breathings of my mind
towards God; and even many years after I had known His power to my salvation, I
continued to repeat them as long as I could with propriety use the term youth."
When on Sundays Mrs. Clarke held a little service with her children, in addition
to a portion of Catechism she would read a chapter, sing part of a psalm, offer
a prayer, and then fix their minds on some important sentence in the chapter,
making them repeat the words; a method which secured their attention, and imbued
their minds more thoroughly with the truth.
"The world," in the sinister import of that term, -- "the flesh," as denoting
the bondage of our nature to corrupt propensions, -- and "the devil," as the
name for the great tempter and accuser of mankind, -- may, with the man who
yields acquiescent obedience to their impulses, be regarded as words only: but
he who has begun to struggle against the tide which is bearing the other to
perdition unawares, and who will clean escape their corruptions, will speedily
learn that these words are but the names of mighty realities, whose antagonism
to his salvation he can only overcome by the mightier power of God. Now, even in
the secluded part of Ireland where Adam Clarke was brought up, the world could
offer him seductions, which, if yielded to, could not have failed to enlist him
among her votaries, and lead him from depth to depth in sin. One form which
these temptations took was the pleasure he found in the amusement of dancing.
The years of mere childhood were passed, and he was a growing youth. He had
learned to play on the violin, and, becoming fond of music, joined a class who
took lessons from a master. There was another in the neighborhood who gave
lessons in dancing as well as music. Adam's master, "willing to stand on equal
ground with his competitor, proposed to his pupils to divide the usual hours
into two parts; to teach singing in the former, and dancing in the latter. This
brought him several additional scholars, and the school went on much to his
advantage. At first Adam despised this silly adjunct to what he always deemed of
great importance, and for a considerable time took no part in it. At length,
through much persuasion, his steadfastness was overcome. By long looking, the
thing began to appear harmless; by and by, graceful; and lastly, an elegant
accomplishment. It was now, 'Cast in your lot with us.' He did so; and, as it
was always a maxim with him to do whatever he did with his might, he bent much
of his attention to this, and soon became superior to most of his schoolfellows.
Formerly he wen t to the school for the sake of the singing, now he went most
for the sake of the dancing: leaving his understanding uninfluenced, it took
fast hold of his passions. If prevented at any time from going, he felt uneasy,
sometimes vexed, and often cross; his temper in such cases being rarely under
his own control."
"Mald ave," says he, "when about thirteen years of age, I learned to dance. I
long resisted all solicitations to it, but at last I suffered myself to be
overcome, and learnt and profited beyond most of my fellows. I grew passionately
fond of it; would scarcely walk but in measured time, and was constantly
tripping, moving, and shuffling, in all times and places. I began now to value
myself, which, as far as I can recollect, I had never thought of before. I grew
impatient of control, became fond of company, wished to mingle more than I had
ever done with young people. I got, also, a passion for better clothing than
that which fell to my lot in life, and was discontented when I found a
neighbor's son dressed better than myself. I lost the spirit of subordination,
did not love work, imbibed a spirit of idleness, and, in short, drank in all the
brain-sickening effluvia of pleasure. Dancing and company took the place of
reading and study; and the authority of my parents was feared indeed, but not
respected. And few serious impressions could prevail in a mind imbued now with
frivolity. Yet I entered into no disreputable assembly, and in no one case ever
kept any improper company. Nevertheless, dancing was with me a perverting
influence, an unmixed moral evil; for, although by the mercy of God it led me
not to depravity of manners, it greatly weakened the moral principle, drowned
the voice of conscience, and was the first cause of impelling me to seek my
happiness in this life. Everything yielded to the disposition it had produced,
and everything was absorbed by it. I have it justly in abhorrence, for the moral
injury it did me; and I can testify, (as far as my own observations have
extended, and they have had a pretty wide range,) I have known it to produce the
same evil in others. I consider it, therefore, as a branch of that worldly
education which leads from heaven to earth, from things spiritual to things
sensual, and from God to Satan. Let them plead for it who will; I know it to be
evil, and that only. They who bring up their children in this way, or send them
to those schools where dancing is taught, are consecrating them to the service
of Moloch, and cultivating the passions so as to cause them to bring forth the
weeds of a fallen nature with an additional rankness, deep-rooted inveteracy,
and inexhaustible fertility. Nemo sobrius saltat, ' No man in his senses will
dance,' wrote Cicero, a Heathen. Shame on those Christian parents who advocate a
cause by which many sons have become profligate, and many daughters have been
ruined." *[2]
This temptation, however, had not a lasting power; and before he was fifteen
years of age, he had got entirely free from the dangerous snare. His love of
mental cultivation returned with greater force; and that vigor of intellect
which gave such a character to his future life began now to move him with
impulses after knowledge which throbbed on with his life, and kindled that
unquenchable desire that led him to separate himself to intermeddle with all
wisdom. From a mere child, he had been a great reader of tales and books of
imagination suited to his years; for some of which -- as the History of the
Seven Wise Masters, the Seven Champions of Christendom, Robinson Crusoe, the
Peruvian Tales, and the Thousand and One Nights -- he always maintained a kind
of grateful affection, not only for the entertainment they had given him, but
for the strength they had imparted to his mental instinct to seek pleasure in
the region of the intellect, and the communion they had opened to him with
things that lie beyond the immediate province of the senses. But now, with the
enlargement of his mind, he felt the need of a higher and more congenial
aliment, and a satisfying acquaintance with the realities of truth. But, for
want of a proper guide, he was even here in danger of taking a wrong track at
the outset. With a mind characteristically eager in investigation, he was not
content to read such books as expounded the outward phenomena of nature, but
longed to penetrate, also, the arcana of the spiritual world. He had a notion
that it was possible to attain such a knowledge of those unseen agencies which
reveal their effects in the appearances of the outward world, as would enable
the possessor of it to wield those agencies according to his own will; that men
once lived who had won this secret, and that some might even then be living who
enjoyed it. He had heard that among the gypsies many vestiges of this precious
lore were handed down from father to son; and, learning that a wandering party
of that singular people had pitched their little camp at a distance of some
miles, he sallied forth in quest of them. After some ingratiating talk, he told
them what he had come for. The conversation which followed was highly
satisfactory; for he found, to his great joy, that they had at least a great
part of a book for a sight of which he had been devoured by desire, -- the
Occult Philosophy of Cornelius Agrippa. The gypsies were not disposed to part
with these precious sibylline leaves, but gave him full permission to read them
on the spot, and make whatever extracts he pleased. Adam made full proof of his
opportunity; and day by day, so long as the wanderers haunted that part of the
country, he might have been seen in their out-of-the-way retreat, with
ink-bottle and notebook, appropriating in unspeakable eagerness the hieratic
secrets of the great master. The pleasure afforded by these excursions was
enhanced by the memory of a sore disappointment he had undergone some time
before, when, being informed that a certain schoolmaster who lived many miles
away had a copy of Cornelius Agrippa in his library, he made a pilgrimage for
the purpose of borrowing it, or, at least, of inspecting it, but met with a
decisive refusal. On that occasion, (we mention it to show the lad's eagerness
in this pursuit,) his mother had attempted to dissuade him from going, as the
distance was great, and the way unknown. "Never fear, mother," said he: "I shall
find it well enough." "But you will be so weary by the time you get there, that
you will not have strength to return." To which be answered, "Never fear,
mother: if I can get there, and get the book, I hope to get as much out of it as
will bring me home without touching the ground."
On the influence which these early impulses had upon his mind in following
years, we shall have to write hereafter. But, even at this inexperienced period
of life, his own good sense, and a reverential fear of being guilty of what was
unlawful in the sight of God, tamed in his soul the inordinate desire after a
species of knowledge which is either forbidden, or injurious to him who employs
it, when obtained. A paper he read in an odd volume of the Athenian Oracle,
which he met with about that time, made a wholesome impression on his mind, and
contributed to set it in a more profitable direction. He had quieted some
misgivings on the subject of spiritual incantations by the thought, that what
was done in these ways was done with reference to, and dependence on, the power
of God. By His terrible name all spirits were to be invoked, employed, bound, or
loosed. But the writer in the Athenian Oracle, to the question, "Is that magic
lawful whose operations are performed in the name of God, and by solemn
invocations of His power?" gave, by way of answer in the negative, the quotation
from the Gospel where our Lord has declared, "Many will say to Me in that day,
Lord, Lord, have we not prophesied in Thy name, and in Thy name have cast out
devils, and in Thy name done many wonderful works? And then will I profess unto
them, I never knew you: depart from me, ye that work iniquity." Warned off,
then, from this enchanted ground, Adam betook himself, though (it must be
confessed) not without some lingering and looking back, into the more open and
honest fields of actual knowledge. In the excellent works of Ray, on the Wisdom
of God in the Creation, and of Derham, on Astro-Theology, he found a clue to the
true physico-theology, and was led by those great masters "from nature up to
nature's God." He sought the Eternal, where, in one of His ways of revelation,
He is willing to make Himself known, -- namely, in His works. Though not at that
time in the language of one who became a favorite sage in other years, he could
yet say with him in effect, "Waken my faculties to behold Thee, and to gaze,
with the vision of the heart, on Thy grandeurs; and teach me to make known Thy
wondrous acts: for I see Thy name in the works of Thy hands. The heavens are
moving in lines of measure, the spheres revolve in their orbits, among them the
earth has her abiding-place; she is suspended by the bands of Thy love. The sun
shining in his might, the moon pouring silver streams as from a fountain,
clusters of stars like flowers in a garden, the outspread pavilion of the skies,
and the variegated landscapes of the world, all speak of Thy deep wisdom." *[3]
Thus the things that are seen became to him a heart-stirring memento of the
ever-present Deity. The heavens at night spoke, and told him how great is God;
the spheres sang; the deep down on the shore, as he stood on the rocks, was
heard lifting up a voice in the great chorus. "His praise the winds, that from
four quarters blew, breathed soft or loud;" and the pine-woods waved their tops,
with every plant, in sign of worship. Already the future commentator was musing
on that text, "The invisible things of Him from the creation of the world are
clearly seen, being understood by the things that are made, even His eternal
power and Godhead."
But the time was at hand when he should no longer stand wondering in the outer
court of the Great Unseen, but be admitted within the temple of salvation, and
worship and serve Him with them who have access to the Deity Himself: for God,
who commanded light to shine out of darkness, was about to shine into his heart,
to give him to behold His glory in the face of Jesus Christ. We have had
occasion to allude to the low state of religion in the neighborhood where Adam
Clarke then lived; but it was by no means so bad as that which was found in many
other parts of the three kingdoms. A much deeper ignorance shrouded the myriads
of the Irish Catholic population: nor were the peasantry of England more
enlightened; while, in the more crowded towns and cities, vice and immorality
prevailed in frightful measures. On the Continent the state of things was
infinitely worse. European Christendom had reached the zero of apostasy;
Voltairism had come like an evil blast upon the people; and the shadow of
atheism fell, colder than death, upon the millions. But God was now revealing in
our land His signal mercy. There was the voice of one crying in the desert,
"Repent: for the kingdom of heaven is at hand." The Gospel had become a
freshly-uttered oracle from heaven. The sower had gone forth to sow: the Sun of
righteousness, breaking through the clouds, shed healing beams; and the showers
of heavenly influence gathered over his path. WESLEY was then fulfilling his
course, and approaching, indeed, the consummation of that illustrious career in
which he had been made the instrument of wondrous good, not only in our
island-home, but across the ocean too, in the distant lands of the West. The
agencies of Methodism were becoming more extensive and more potent every year;
and, in the order of a merciful Providence, some of the devoted men who toiled
in the great work were led to visit the hamlets and villages of the north of
Ireland.
The Clarkes had hitherto known nothing of these men. A stray anecdote of one of
them, which Adam met with in a newspaper, gave him the first intimation of their
existence. One day it was rumored in the neighborhood that there would be
preaching that evening at a farm-place, called Burnside; a barn, with a cottage
attached to it. Adam went, along with a companion of his, a son of Counsellor
O'Neil. It was now that he saw for the first time a Methodist preacher, -- a
tall thin man, with serious-looking countenance, and long hair. *[4] Adam heard
the sermon with inward reasonings, and not without some feeling. His mind seemed
to be drawn to the man; and, when the service was over, he lingered near him.
The preacher turned, and with deep solemnity exhorted him to give himself to
God. Adam was so far impressed as to wish to hear this doctrine more largely. He
seized the first occasion, and heard Mr. Brettell again. The text was, "Behold,
I stand at the door, and knock." The effect of this sermon was to show him, that
the consequence of slighting the call of mercy would be everlasting ruin.
Meanwhile the preachers stationed at Coleraine had made arrangements for
regularly visiting that neighborhood as a part of their Circuit; and Mr.
Brettell was followed by Mr. Thomas Barber, a truly apostolic man, under whose
ministry a multitude of people in various parts of the country had been awakened
to repentance. Mrs. Clarke herself was now induced to attend. She heard, and
immediately pronounced, "This is the doctrine of the Reformers; this is true and
unadulterated Christianity." The Lord had opened her heart to receive His truth,
and she forthwith opened her dwelling to its messengers, where, from time to
time, they found a welcome resting-place, and brought the blessing of their
Master with them; for salvation came to that house. Mrs. Clarke now joined the
newly-formed Society. As for Adam, though not violently affected, he had become
seriously bent on the salvation of his soul. Anxious to hear the Gospel at every
opportunity, he rose at four in the morning to complete his day's work, so as to
be able to go here and there in the evening to listen to the word; and his chief
study now, in the intervals he could spare from toil, was the examination of
what he heard by the test of the written word of God, -- "searching the
Scriptures daily, whether these things were so." In short, he had now
matriculated in the school of Jesus Christ, in which alone the divine or the
Christian can be formed; and he sat at the feet of a master who could make him
wise to salvation. His Scripture-reading had hitherto been desultory; but he now
began to read the New Testament regularly through, and that with deep attentive
and earnest prayer. One consequence was, his mind became enlightened to
comprehend the analogy of the faith; the great redeeming plan, so harmonious
with itself and with all truth. From these oracles of the living God he learned
his creed, and never changed it. Another and yet more important consequence was,
he was gradually enabled to lay hold upon the truth, thus revealed, with that
faith of the heart which made him a new creature. The Spirit was working his
great work of mercy in his soul; convincing him of sin, righteousness, and
judgment; awakening him alike to a sense of guilt, and a despair of escaping its
punishment, if left to his own bankrupt resources. "All his past diligence,
prayer, reading, and so forth, now appeared as nothing; multitudes of evils,
which before were undiscovered, were now pointed out to his conscience as with a
sunbeam. He was filled with confusion and distress; wherever he looked, he saw
nothing but himself. The light which penetrated his mind led him into all the
chambers of the house of imagery; and everywhere he saw idols set up in
opposition to the worship of the true God. He wished to flee from himself, and
looked with envy on stocks and stones; for they had not offended a just God, and
were incapable of hearing his displeasure.
"The season was summer time. The fields were in their beautiful dress; the
flocks and herds browsed in the pastures, and the birds caroled in the sky and
in the woods; but his eyes and ears were no longer inlets to pleasure. In point
of gratification, nature was to him a universal blank, for he felt himself
destitute of the image and approbation of his Maker; and besides this
consciousness there seemed to be needed no other to complete his misery. He
said, with one of old, 'O that I knew where I might find Him, that I might come
even to His seat! Behold, I go forward, but He is not there; and backward, but I
cannot perceive Him; on the left hand, where He doth work, but I cannot behold
Him; He hideth Himself on the right hand, that I cannot see Him.' " *[5]
Let us not be told here anything about moody melancholy or ignorant fanaticism.
There is not a vestige of fanaticism in the case. Here is a young man of
education, sound in health, steady in nerves, vigorous in intellect, and, so far
as outward morality is concerned, of well-regulated and virtuous habits of life;
but thoughtful betimes of the great question which, sooner or later, shakes
every human soul, -- How can a fallen sinner be reconciled to God? The Bible is
in His hand, and the light of the Holy Spirit shining in His conscience. Can we
wonder, then, at his solicitude? He had within himself a dread sense of
wrongness before his Divine Judge; and the all-absorbing care of his heart was,
"How can I be set right?" Was not this a rational inquiry? Who is the insane
fanatic, -- the man who in these circumstances, common to us all, asks the
question, "What must I do to be saved?" or he who wilfully ignores it?
He who would be saved feels the need of THE SAVIOUR; and whatever interferes
with the clear view of the Divine majesty and power of the adorable Being who is
revealed in the Gospel in that most blessed character, will interfere with that
man's salvation. With such an obstacle Adam Clarke had just now to contend,
through painful doubts on the Divinity of Jesus Christ, which some Unitarian
acquaintances of his had thrown upon his mind. But in his well-read New
Testament he had the infallible antidote to this evil, and he overcame it. He
found also some help to faith in partaking for the first time of the Holy
Communion; but still he could not lay hold on the promises of God, so as to be
delivered from those fears of perdition which sometimes rose within him like an
agony. In after-days he saw the value and purpose of those exercises. "It was
necessary that I should have hard travail. God was preparing me for an important
work. I must emphatically sell all to get the pearl of great price. If I had
lightly come by the consolations of the Gospel, I might have let them go as
lightly. It was good that I bore the yoke in my youth. The experience that I
learned in my long tribulation "was none of the least of my qualifications as a
minister of the Gospel."
At length, however, the day of deliverance, the "time of finding," *[6] came. He
had been brought to that point in which, had it been longer delayed, the spirit
that God had made would have failed before Him. We shall be most sure in giving
the recital in his own words:--
"One morning, in great distress of soul, he went out to his work in the field.
He began, but could not proceed, so great was his mental anguish. He fell down
on his knees in the earth, and prayed; but seemed to be without power or faith.
He arose and endeavored to work, but could not; even his physical strength
seemed to have departed from him. He again endeavored to pray; but the gates of
heaven appeared as if barred against him. His faith in the atonement, so far as
it concerned himself, was almost entirely gone; he could not believe that Jesus
had died for him; the thickest darkness seemed to gather round and settle on his
soul. He fell flat on his face on the earth, and endeavored to pray, but still
there was no answer: he arose, but he was so weak that he could scarcely stand.
His agonies were indescribable: he seemed to be for ever separated from God and
the glory of His power. Death, in any form, he could have preferred to his
present feelings, if that death could put an end to them. No fear of hell
produced those terrible conflicts. He had not God's approbation; he had not
God's image. He felt that without a sense of His favor he could not live. Where
to go, what to say, and what to do, he found not: even the words of prayer at
last failed; he could neither plead nor wrestle with God ... It is said, the
time of man's extremity is the time of God's opportunity. He now felt strongly
in his soul, 'Pray to Christ:' another word for, 'Come to the Holiest through
the blood of Jesus.' He looked up, confidently, to the Saviour of sinners. His
agony subsided, his soul became calm. A glow of happiness thrilled through his
frame: all guilt and condemnation were gone. He examined his conscience, and
found it no longer a register of sins against God. He looked to heaven, and all
was sunshine; he searched for his distress, but could not find it. He felt
indescribably happy, but could not tell the cause; a change had taken place
within him of a nature wholly unknown before, and for which he had no name. He
sat down upon the ridge where he had been working, full of ineffable delight. He
praised God. His physical strength returned, and he could bound like a roe. He
had felt a sudden transition from darkness to light, from guilt and oppressive
fear to confidence and peace. He could now draw nigh to God with more confidence
than he could to his earthly father; he had freedom of access, and freedom of
speech. He was like a person who had got into a new world, where, although every
object was strange, yet each was pleasing: and now he could magnify God for his
creation, a thing he never could do before. O, what a change was here! and yet,
lest he should be overwhelmed with it, its name and its nature were in a great
measure hidden from his eyes. Shortly after this, Mr. Barber came to his
father's house: when he departed, Adam accompanied him a little on the way. When
they came in sight of the field that had witnessed the
agonies of his heart, and the breaking of his chains, he told Mr. Barber what
had taken place. The man of G od took off his hat, and, with tears flowing down
his cheeks, gave thanks to God. 'O, Adam,' said he, 'I rejoice in this. I have
been in daily expectation that God would shine upon your soul, and bless you
with the adoption of His children.' Adam stared at him, and said within himself,
'O, he thinks, surely, that I am justified, that God has forgiven my sins, that
I am now His child. O, blessed be God, I believe, I feel I am justified, through
the redemption that is in Jesus.' Now he clearly saw what God had done; and
though he had felt the blessing before, and was happy in the possession of it,
it was only now that he could call it by its name. Now he saw and felt, that
'being justified by faith, he had peace with God through our Lord Jesus Christ,
by whom he had received the atonement.'
"He continued in peace all the week. The next Lord's day there was a lovefeast
in Coleraine: he went to it, and during the first prayer kneeled in a corner,
with his face to the wall. While praying, the Lord Jesus seemed to appear to the
eyes of his mind, as he is described, Rev. i. 13, 14, 'clothed with a garment
down to the foot, and girt about the paps with a golden girdle; His head and His
hair white as snow, and His eyes like a flame of fire.' And, though in strong
prayer before, he suddenly stopped, and said, though not perhaps in a voice to
be heard by those who were by him, ' Come nearer, O Lord Jesus! ' Immediately he
felt as if God had shone upon the work he had wrought, and called it by its own
name. He fully and clearly knew that he was a child of God the Spirit bore this
witness in his conscience, and he could no more have doubted of it, than he
could of the reality of his own existence.
' Meridian evidence put doubt to flight.' " *[7]
Adam Clarke, having thus found the liberty of God's children, felt a powerful
instinct in his heart to enjoy communion with them of whom he could now say,
"Their Father is my Father; and their God, my God." He accordingly lost no time
in becoming a member of the Methodist Society; thus, at once, giving his heart
to God, and his hand to His cause and people. Some months before, he had
accompanied his mother to her class-meeting, but was not at that time in such a
state of mind as to render the manner in which the hour was spent sufficiently
attractive to induce him to repeat the visit. Now, a great change had been
wrought in this respect also; for his heart had become as theirs, and his name
took its place in their registries, to abide in them for ever. *[8] This was the
right procedure. Had he remained aloof from the church, as too many do in
similar cases, he, as they do, would have deprived himself of a Divinely
appointed means of succour for the mind in the temptations of life, and would
probably have f ailed, after all, of the grace of God. But he looked at the
Christian church as a Divine institution, and felt it his duty to God, to man,
and to himself, to be identified with it. And to what part of it should he so
naturally unite himself as to that which had been the means of his conversion?
And in doing this, it was the steadfast conviction of his long life, he had done
rightly. Unlike the weak-minded and worldly, he was not to be warned off from
the fulfillment of a grand duty by the vain bugbear of a name. On the contrary,
if there were any reproach in bearing the name of "Methodist," he was the more
willing to bear it for the love which now reigned in his heart to Him who was
called the Nazarene.
I have before me an autograph memorandum inserted on the title-page of his old
copy of the Minutes of Conference, in these words: "I joined Society in the year
of our Lord 1778, at Mullihical, near Coleraine. Adam Clarke." If born in 1760,
he must therefore, at the time of these transactions, have been in his
eighteenth year. We doubt not that the alliance he was then enabled to make with
the disciples of Christ helped to preserve him from the seductions of the world,
which become at that period so potent to the young, as well as to confirm his
best tendencies to insure his final salvation, and meanwhile to introduce his
uncertain step, into a pathway which led to a great and good career. And so long
as he found pleasantness and peace in the company of them whose "fellowship" was
"with the Father, and with His Son Christ Jesus," he was led by the same Spirit,
and enabled to maintain his confidence in the mercy which had forgiven him. The
witness of the Divine Comforter proved not a transient but a perennial grace. He
had come to abide; and the day-star had risen upon his heart with an unsetting
light, to bring that knowledge of salvation through the remission of sins which
became the strength, the glory, and the joy of his life; "a staff when he was
weary, a spring when he was thirsty, a screen when the sun burned him, a pillow
in death."
* * * * * * *
DIVISION 3
BOOK I
(The Morning of Life)
CHAPTER 3
FIRST ESSAYS IN THE SERVICE OF CHRIST
The love of God, when kindled in the heart, burns into a flame which reveals
itself in our life. When Christ said to His disciples, "Ye shall be My
witnesses," He pronounced the words of a moral law which has been a binding one
in His people's conscience ever since. The constraining impulses of this
principle began now to move in the breast of Adam Clarke, and urged him to make
known the Saviour he had found. He began with those nearest to himself, and made
the circle of his own domestic life the first sphere of his evangelic efforts.
Family worship, except on Sundays, had fallen among them into desuetude
[disuse]. He stated to them his convictions about the necessity of observing
this duty; but without avail, unless he himself would perform it. The diffidence
of a modest youth rendered this a formidable task; but it had been so laid upon
his conscience, that he dared not shrink. "At last he took up this, to him,
tremendous cross, and prayed with his father, mother, and family. And as long as
he was under their roof, he was, in this respect, their chaplain. Yet he ever
felt it a cross, though God gave him power to bear it. A prayerless family has
God's curse. If the parents will not perform family prayer, if there be a
converted child, it devolves on him; and should he refuse, he will soon lose the
comforts of religion."
The influence of his holy life soon began to show its effects in the more
serious spirit of his relatives. The Bible was more read, and private prayer
resorted to. Hannah, his fourth sister, soon joined the Society, and lived to be
one of its ornaments, at Bristol, when the wife of that eminent scholar and
true-hearted servant of God, the late Thomas Exley, M.A. The eldest sister soon
took the same course. This lady was afterwards united in marriage with the Rev.
Dr. Johnson, rector of St. Perrans Uthnoe, Cornwall. In short, most of the
family became hearers of the word among the Methodists, and ultimately members
of that communion.
Outside of this circle, the next objects of his solicitude were his old
schoolfellows and companions. He reasoned with them in their social intercourse,
and prevailed on some of them to go with him and hear the word of God. Here,
too, he had some first fruits of usefulness; and among these youthful comrades,
whose friendship was strengthened and purified by the sanctities of religion,
was one who himself became a preacher. This was Andrew Coleman, a young man of
good education and great promise, of whom Clarke had afterwards the sacred task
of writing a beautiful biography, which was published in the Methodist Memorial.
These incipient efforts soon took a wider range. He now filled up his occasional
hours of leisure in going from house to house, and from village to village;
doing, in his simple way, and from sheer love to the souls of the people, the
work of a Scripture-reader and home-missionary. The Sunday he would entirely
devote to this work, and he made full proof of his opportunity. He had
undertaken to lead a class at a place six miles away from home, and this at an
early hour, which required him in winter to set out two hours before daylight.
When this was done, he would go to a neighboring village, and, entering the
first open door, say, "Peace be to this house," and inquire if they were willing
that he should hold a short religious service with them, and such of their
neighbors as would like to come in. Having done so, (and he rarely met with a
refusal,) he proceeded to another village, and so labored through the day. Thus,
while "not slothful in business," but more diligent than ever in the farm and
the school, and in the earnest study of the classics, the French language, and
the practical mathematics, he was "fervent in spirit, serving the Lord." We have
here, coming out more and more distinctly to our view, the types of that
character which the church and the world have since looked upon with
undissembled admiration. Does any young man wish to know the sure way to
prosperity and greatness? He will find it if he track the footsteps of Adam
Clarke.
The zeal of our young convert extended to everything in his power to help the
cause of religion. A congregation having been raised at Upper Mullihical, the
want of some place to meet in was greatly felt. The people, led on by Adam,
resolved to build one for themselves; and in the manual labor of the undertaking
he took no inconsiderable part. Many years after, when opening a chapel at
Halifax, he said, -- "It has been one of the most pleasurable feelings of my
life, in connection with the worship of God, that I have an interest in a place
reared to His honor, by having helped to build it. The good people fixed upon
having a chapel, near the place where my father resided. I loved God, and
rejoiced in the prosperity of His work. My father allowed me to take his own
horse and cart, and to and from the cart I carried stones nearly twice the size
of what ought to have been lifted by me in proportion to my strength: but I
seemed inspired on the occasion; and if any person had offered me twenty
thousand pounds for every twenty pound of stone I carried, as an inducement to
abandon the work, I would have rejected the proposal with contempt."
Meanwhile the question as to his future vocation in life was becoming at home
more pressing every day. His father had always a kind of presentiment that Adam
would be a clergyman of some order or other. His own predilections would, of
course, have chosen for his son the office to which he had himself aspired in
early life, -- that of the ministry of the Established Church; but the influence
of his own disappointment, and the scanty resources of the family, combined to
paralyze any effort to fit him for it at the University. At the same time Mr.
Bennett, a relative, who carried on an extensive linen-trade in Coleraine, made
him a liberal offer to receive Adam into his establishment, which, in the
wavering state of Mr. Clarke's will, gave the casting decision to it to devote
his son to the pursuits of commerce. Adam, as an obedient son, yielded his
assent, though without any faith in the enterprise, as he felt no response to it
in his own mind, and could not divest himself of an ever-strengthening
conviction that God had designed him for a more spiritual career. However, to
Coleraine he went and, though he did not become a linen-merchant, he gave proof,
during the eleven months spent under Mr. Bennett's roof, that in his young
relative that gentleman had a diligent and conscientious servant; but one who,
at the same time, from the peculiar habitudes of his mind, was not the best
fitted for the customs and speculations of mercantile life. The employment,
moreover, was not congenial with his physical constitution. Health drooped, and
his memory became strangely oblivious. Everything within and without him seemed
to indicate that he was not in his proper place. His religious diligence did not
flag: he was earnest in reproving sin, and the Lord made him useful in the
conversion of sinners, as in the case of a wicked, blaspheming domestic of his
master's, and others in the town. He sought to promote the work of God among the
people in Coleraine; helping the morning preacher by going round before five
o'clock with a b ell to give them a reveil [reveille -- a military
waking-signal] for the house of prayer; and on Sabbath-days taking his now
accustomed part in the work of exhortation in the villages. The pious and
intelligent Society in the town took knowledge of him, and learned to love him
for his work's sake. They considered "the end of his conversation," Jesus Christ
ever the same: they appreciated his strong native talent, and educational
advantages; and expressed their conviction that his true predestined calling was
not the Irish linen-trade, but the Gospel ministry. This tended to strengthen,
the latent bias of his own mind, and gave a more distinct pronunciation to the
voice which was bidding him to be free from the entanglements of the world, that
be might become a soldier of Jesus Christ. On the other hand, Mr. Bennett's
esteem for him was shown in a kind offer, that, if he did not like his business,
he would advance him money to enter upon another; at the same time recommending
the trade in Irish produce (butter , hides, and tallow) to England. But the die
had been virtually cast: he was to be "a merchantman" who should seek "goodly
pearls," in souls for ever saved. Equally futile was the other alternative, to
become, like his father, a tiller of the ground: he was to "go forth bearing"
more "precious seed," and "gather fruit unto life eternal." The issue of this
episode of his life was, that he and Mr. Bennett parted with mutual affection
and lasting respect, and Adam returned to the farm-house at Agherton.
Providence now spoke at once. The superintendent, Mr. Bredin, enlisted him as an
occasional helper in the Circuit. On going forth on his first expedition, a
journey of thirty miles, he tells us, that, "just before he set out, early on
the Monday morning, he took up his Bible, and said, 'Lord, direct me to some
portion of Thy word that may be to me a subject of useful meditation on the
way.' " He then opened the book, and the first words that met his eyes were
these: "Ye have not chosen me, but I have chosen you, and ordained you, that ye
should go and bring forth fruit, and that your fruit should remain: that
whatsoever ye shall ask of the Father in My name, He may give it you." (John xv.
16.) This word gave him great encouragement, and he went on his way rejoicing.
When he came to the city, Mr. Bredin desired him to go the next night and supply
his place at a village called New Buildings, about five miles from Derry. To
this he agreed. "But," says Mr. Bredin, "you must preach to the people." "I will
do th e best I can," says Adam, "with God's help." "But," says Mr. Bredin, "you
must take a text, and preach from it." "That I cannot undertake," said Adam.
"You must and shall," said Mr. Bredin. "I will exhort as usual, but cannot
venture to take a text." "Well, a text you must take; for the people will not be
satisfied without it. A good exhortation is a sermon, and you may as well have a
text as not." To this authority he was obliged for the present to bow, though he
went with rather a perplexed than a heavy heart. "I will go," thought he to
himself: " I can only bring back the tidings that I went, tried, failed, and
brought a disgrace upon Methodism." He arrived near the place a good while
before the time, and, not knowing any one, strolled on the bank of the river; so
depressed and melancholy as to lie down on the grass and weep. He tried to
obtain relief in prayer, and then had recourse to his Bible. While reading, he
was forcibly struck with the words, "We know that we are of God," upon which he
felt his mind could fasten, as the text he wanted. Just as he had risen from the
grass, a man passed, of whom he inquired for the place of preaching occupied by
the Methodists. "He asked, 'Are you the preacher? ' Adam answered, that he had
been sent in that capacity by Mr. Bredin. The man measured him apparently with
his eye, from head to foot, and then, in a tone of despondency mingled with
surprise, said, 'You are a young one to unravel the word! '
It was on that evening, June 19th, 1782, that he preached his first sermon. The
text was the passage that had made the impression on his mind in the field, 1
John v. 19: "We know that we are of God, and the whole world lieth in
wickedness:" from which he extemporized a discourse on the following topics:--
1. That the world lies in wickedness: proved by appeals to the state of man's
nature, and the actual condition of human society. 2. That it is only by the
power of God that men are saved from this state of corruption; those who are
converted being converted by Him: "We are of God." 3. Those who are converted
know it; not only from its outward effects in their lives, but from the change
made in their hearts: "We know that we are of God."
When we look at this logical and striking distribution of the subject, we are
not surprised to find that "the people seemed gratified, and gathered round him
when he had finished, and entreated him to preach to them at five the next
morning, at a place a mile or so off, where many gathered together, to whom he
explained and applied 1 John iv. 19: "We love Him, because He first loved us."
After a fortnight's work, he returned home, with a strong persuasion in his
mind, that God had called him to preach His word; and that the verse to which he
was directed on his outset was the evidence of a call which He had graciously
given him. Whatever some persons may think of them, these convictions were
sacred to the young man's heart, and the issues of his life have abundantly
proved that they were not fallacious.
Some time before this, Mr. Bredin, believing that Adam Clarke was so called of
God to the ministry, had written about him to Mr. Wesley, who, in reply, offered
to take him to the school he had established at Kingswood, near Bristol; where
he might increase his classical knowledge, and, by occasional pulpit-exercises,
become more fully prepared for the work. He had not long returned from Derry,
when another letter arrived from Mr. Wesley to Mr. Bredin, appointing the latter
to an English Circuit, and directing that he should bring Adam Clarke with him.
* * * * * * *
DIVISION 4
BOOK I
(The Morning of Life)
CHAPTER 4
THE OPENED ROAD ROUGH AT THE OUTSET
The life which was unfolding its perspective to our young preacher could have
attractions only to one who, having counted all things but loss for the
excellency of the knowledge of Christ Jesus, could find no peace or honor or joy
but in doing the unearthly work of turning the sinner from the error of his
ways, and saving the soul from death. This was a labor which, in a worldly point
of view, would bring him no return. He had, indeed, respect to a recompense of
reward, but it lay beyond the horizon of time; and the life he was to live
meanwhile, he could then view only as one of toil and martyrdom. But none of
these things moved him, neither counted he his life dear to him, so that he
might fulfil his course, and the ministry he had received of the Lord Jesus, to
testify the Gospel of the grace of God.
Such was the lofty principle which reigned in the breast of the lone young man,
who, on the 17th of August, 1782, stood on the deck of a vessel bound from
Londonderry to England. As to outward appearance, though something above the
middle height, he was slightly made, and had the look of being worn to extreme
thinness by fasting and ascetic exercises. Plain in his features, he had,
nevertheless, a certain moral beauty, from the strong reflection of an intellect
wakeful with high and solemn thought, and hallowed by the love of God. A
by-stander would have judged that he had some relation to the ecclesiastical
life, by the loose straight coat then worn by the preachers, and the broad
triangular hat. In fact, the sailors of a press-gang let him pass free, from
their having taken him for an Irish priest. His wardrobe was extremely light,
his purse yet lighter; and his whole viaticum for the voyage to Liverpool, and
the land-journey to Bristol, consisted of a little bread and cheese. Poor enough
as he was, in t he career that was before him he was, to all human calculation,
likely to remain so. The life of a Methodist preacher in those days was all work
and no pay, or next to none. Scanty as is the remuneration which the greater
number of these faithful and laborious servants of the public now receive, with
the first race of the Wesleyan ministers it was unspeakably worse. We shall see
in what way Adam Clarke was destined for a time to feel this.
But the experience did not take him unawares when it came. If, according to Dean
Swift, the man is blessed who expecteth nothing, our friend could lay claim to
that beatitude. He was content to believe that Providence would grant him food
and raiment: as to the latter, more strictly speaking, (as he himself says, when
referring to this epoch,) he thought nothing about it. But there were obstacles
to his entering even upon a course like this; and one arose from the difficulty
which his father and mother felt with regard to it. His brother had already gone
from home, and Mr. and Mrs. Clarke naturally looked to Adam to be the stay and
support of their declining years; and, with all their respect for the Methodist
ministers, they knew enough of their temporal affairs to be convinced that for
their son to cast in his lot with theirs would be ruinous to all his interests
in the present world. They gave the project therefore, at first, their most
decisive refusal. Mrs. Clarke urged her objections in the most strenuous terms,
and sealed them on his mind with the threatening of her curse. In this painful
dilemma, Adam could only refer all to the Divine will. He took his burden to the
throne of God, and by prayer and supplication commended all to His disposal.
Grace was given in the time of need. He had prayed that, if it were the will of
his Heavenly Father that he should go, the will of his earthly parents might be
brought into harmony with it. Business called him into Coleraine for several
days. On his return, he went to walk in the garden. His mother came to him, and
informed him that their objections had been surmounted, and that, if his mind
were still bent upon going, the way, so far as they were concerned, might be
considered open. "She had got the persuasion," says he, "that God required her
to give up her son to do His work; she instantly submitted, and had began to use
her influence with his father, to bring him to the same mind; nor had she
exerted herself in vain. Both of them received him with a pleasing countenance;
and though neither said, 'Go,' yet both said, ' We submit.' In a few days he set
off for the city of Londonderry, whence he was shortly to embark for Liverpool.
"On his departure, he was recommended by the pious Society of Coleraine to God.
He had little money, and but a scanty wardrobe; but he was carried far above the
fear of want; he would not ask his parents for any help; nor would he intimate
to them that he needed any. A few of his own select friends put some money in
his purse, and, having taken a dutiful and affectionate leave of his parents and
friends, he walked to Derry, a journey of upwards of thirty miles, in a part of
a day; found Mr. Bredin waiting, who had agreed for their passage in a Liverpool
trader, which was expected to sail the first fair wind.
"As he was young and inexperienced, (for he had not seen the world,) Adam was
glad that he was likely to have the company and advice of his friend Mr. Bredin;
but in this he was disappointed.
"Just as they were about to sail, a letter came from Mr. Wesley, remanding Mr.
Bredin's appointment. There was no time to deliberate; the wind was fair, the
vessel got clear out, and about to fall down the Lough: Adam got a loaf of
bread, and about a pound of cheese, went instantly aboard, and the vessel
sailed. By this step he had separated himself from all earthly connections and
prospects in his own country, and went on what he believed to be a Divine
command, not knowing whither he was going, or what God intended for him."
In those days steam-navigation was unknown, and the voyage begun on the Saturday
was not completed till the Monday afternoon. Adam would have improved the Sunday
in the usual way, but was prostrate with sea-sickness. He reproved the sailors
for profane swearing, and they took it respectfully and refrained. He observed
the captain to read a good deal at intervals, and found the author was Flavel.
This opened the way for serious conversation, with which Captain Cunningham
expressed himself much pleased. Off Hoylake a pilot came on board, and warned
them that they would meet with "a hot press" up the river. This was soon
explained by the sight of a man-of-war's tender, which brought them to by a
couple of guns. The captain could only obey, but exhorted the passengers to hide
themselves as they best could below. The two steerage-passengers, the one a
seafaring man, and the other a hatter, took his advice; but Clarke said to
himself, "Shall such a man as I flee? I will not. I am in the hands of the Lord:
if He permit me to be sent on board of a man-of-war, doubtless He has something
for me to do there." So he took a seat on the locker in the cabin, lifting up
his heart in prayer. Presently the tender's boat was alongside with six men and
an officer. On boarding, the officer "with a hoarse voice summoned all below to
come on deck. Adam immediately walked up, and stood, reclining against the
gunwale. The lieutenant dived below, in quest of other passengers, but found
only the hatter, -- of whom, poor fellow, they made a capture. "And who have you
got here?" said one of the gang, looking at Adam. "A priest, I'll warrant. But
we took a priest yesterday, and will let this one alone." With that the
lieutenant came, and, having scrutinized him from head to foot, took his hand
and manipulated it, as if to judge whether he had been brought up to the sea, or
hard labor; and, casting it from him, with an oath, gave it as his opinion that
"he would not do." Adam's bosom swelled with indignation, not only then, but
when, relating this circumstance afterwards, he used to inveigh against the
tyranny of a custom, at once iniquitous and cruel in itself, and utterly at
variance with the spirit and the letter of the British Constitution.
The worthy captain's wife was the mistress of a boarding-house, and there our
young traveler found a quiet and congenial sojourn during his brief stay in
Liverpool. The inmates were a Scotch gentleman and a naval officer. The
conversation at the tea-table gave Adam an occasion of respectfully admonishing
the lady about a habit she had of asseverating [declaring solemnly] by her
conscience. This led to a further discussion at supper, when the naval man
avowed himself a member of the Roman Catholic Church; and, stating his belief in
the doctrine of transubstantiation, demanded of Adam whether he had anything to
say against that. "O yes, sir," replied he; "I have much to say against it;" and
then proceeded to argue largely to prove the dogma to be unscriptural and
absurd. The captain then asked him, What he had to say against the invocation of
saints, and the worship of images? He gave his reasons at large against these
also. Purgatory, auricular confession, and the priest's power to forgive sins,
were then considered, and confuted from Scripture and reason. But the last topic
gave him the opportunity to speak on the nature of sin, the condemned state of
fallen man, and the impossibility that any one could take away guilt, but He
against whose law the transgression is committed; as well as on the terrible
doom that awaits the unforgiven. He then showed that reconciliation with God was
impossible except through the great sacrifice made by Jesus Christ, which
becomes effectual to no man who does not truly repent and implicitly confide in
it. While discoursing on these subjects, God gave him uncommon power and freedom
of speech. The company heard him with a fixed and solemn gaze, and at length
showed by tears that the word had entered their hearts. Hereupon he rose, and
invited them to pray. They fell on their knees, and he concluded this remarkable
interview with fervent supplication, which seemed to find a mighty response in
every one's mind. The effects of these well-spent hours may hereafter be
unfolded in a better world.
On leaving Captain Cunningham's the next morning, he inquired for his bill. "No,
sir," said Mrs. Cunningham: "you owe us nothing. It is we who are deeply in your
debt. You have been a blessing to our house; and were you to stay longer, you
would have no charges." He departed earnestly invoking that God would remember
that family for good, for the kindness they had shown to a poor stranger in a
strange land.
The same good Providence was over him in the journey to Bristol, which he
performed as an outside passenger of a lumbering and slow-going conveyance
miscalled the Fly. A young gentleman, one of the "insides," came outside for a
change, and commenced a gay rattling conversation, interlarded with an
occasional oath. Here was another task for Adam, who at once accepted it, and
told the swearer what he thought of his bad custom. "What," said the gentleman,
"are you a Presbyterian?" "No, sir," said Adam, "I am a Methodist." This
provoked his risibility [humor] to an uncommon degree, and he made it the
subject of a great deal of harmless but rather foolish wit. On returning inside,
he told his tale in his own way, and this excited the curiosity of his
companions to see the strange creature. A gentleman from within accordingly
offered Adam to exchange places with him. Adam preferred remaining where he was.
Another overture was followed by the same result. At length, when the coach
stopped, a lady asked him to favor them with his company. Adam, observing the
still unsettled face of his risible friend, excused himself, on the plea that he
did not think his company would be agreeable. She answered, "Sir, you must come
in: this young gentleman will take your place, and you will do us good." Thus
challenged, he could no longer refuse. Questioned about his religion, the
purposes of his journey, &c., he gave such an account of himself as visibly won
their good sympathies, and some hours were passed in cheerful and profitable
conversation. Adam, finding the gentleman was a scholar, fortified some remarks
he made to him about the confidence that every true servant of God has in His
favor and protection, by observing that the principle was not unknown among even
the heathens, though many called Christians deny that we can have any direct
evidence of God's love to us; and quoted the verse from Horace:
"Integer vitae, scelerisque purus
Non eget Mauir jaculis neque arcu,
Nec venenatis gravida sagittis,
Fusce, pharetra." *[1]
"True," said the gentleman; "but if we take Horace as authority for one point,
we may as well do it in another; and in some of your received principles you
will find him against you. Witness another ode:
'Nunc est bibendum, nunc pede libero
Pulsanda tellus.' " *[2]
Adam acknowledged the propriety of this critique; and sometimes referring to it
used to say, "We should be cautious how we appeal to heathens, even as to
morality; because much may be collected from them on the other side. In like
manner we must be careful how we quote the Fathers in proof of the doctrines of
the Gospel; because he who knows them best, knows that on many of those subjects
they blow hot and cold."
When the coach stopped for dinner at Lichfield, they insisted on his being their
guest, and would not suffer him to be at any charge; and, as they were going on
to London, they urged him to go round to Bristol by the same way, with the
assurance that they would defray his expenses. Anxious, however, to get to
Kingswood by the most direct route, he took leave of this agreeable party with
mutual good feelings.
At Birmingham Providence was equally kind, in opening to him the hearts and home
of an excellent family, the relatives of Mr. Brettell, the first Methodist
preacher he had heard in Ireland. He accompanied them to chapel in the evening,
and heard old Parson Greenwood discourse on the words of the apostle, "I am in a
strait betwixt two." The preacher pointed out the example of many good men who
have been constrained to make that confession: upon which Adam made the
reflection, that, had he known the circumstances in which he himself was then
found, he might safely have added him to the number.
It was well for him that he met with these kindnesses by the way; for, on coming
to Bristol, he found that his little store of cash had dwindled to one shilling
and sevenpence halfpenny. This was occasioned by the expense of the journey by
coach, which he had designed at first to perform on foot, till he yielded to the
dissuasions of Mr. Cunningham at Liverpool. On the last day of the journey, no
dinner offering itself, he had subsisted on "a penny loaf and a halfpennyworth
of apples." Hungry and exhausted, he went into the kitchen of an inn in
Broadmead, warmed himself at the fire, and asked for a piece of bread and
cheese, and a drink of water. "Water!" said one of the servants: "had you not
better have a pint of beer?" "No, I prefer water," said he. It was brought; and
for this homely supper he paid sixpence, and sixpence for his bed, before be lay
down. He had now sevenpence halfpenny; sixpence of which the chambermaid charged
for taking care of his box. Breakfast next morning was out of the question; so
he left Bristol with his whole fortune of three-halfpence, and bent his steps up
the hill towards Kingswood. He found the Wesleyan establishment, consisting of a
mansion, school, and chapel, surrounded by a small grove of trees, in an open
moorland country. It was seven in the morning, the hour for prayers and sermon,
and several people were entering the chapel for the service. He joined them; and
drank in some words of consolation which the preacher, Mr. Payne, spoke from the
text, "Why weepest thou? Whom seekest thou?" The topic was seasonable; for an
unusual oppression weighed upon his mind. Mr. Brettell at Birmingham had given
him some uneasiness, by expressing a strong opinion that his expectations of
getting any profit at Kingswood would turn out to be fallacious; and he now
suffered a presentiment of distress which he could not shake off. Immediately
after the service he requested to be introduced to the head-master, Mr. Simpson,
to whom he delivered Mr. Wesley's letter. The master appeared surprised, and
told him that his coming was totally unexpected, and that, in effect, they had
no room in the school for any one. He added, that Mr. Wesley, who was then in
Cornwall, would not return for a fortnight; and that it would be necessary for
him to go back to Bristol, and lodge there till he came. Crushed at heart with
distress, poor Adam ventured to say, "I cannot return to Bristol, sir. I have
expended all my money, and have nothing to subsist on." The master said, "But
why should you have come to Kingswood at all? It appears from this letter that
you have been already at a classical school, and can read both Greek and Latin
authors. If you are already a preacher, you had better go out into the work at
large; for there is no room for you in the school, and not one spare bed in the
house. At last it was decided he should have permission to occupy a room at the
end of the old chapel, where the forlorn youth passed several days and nights,
encountering meanwhile not a few annoyances. And when, at length, he was allowed
to take a place at dinner at the family-table, all comfort was annihilated by
the overbearing rigor of the hostess. It is needless to go minutely into the
circumstances which embittered his transient sojourn: some of them it might be
found impossible to recall with accuracy. I will be content to offer a remark
which some readers may require, to obviate the scandal they might be led to
attach to Kingswood School itself. The establishment at that place had been
founded by Mr. Wesley with the combined object of affording an educational
asylum for the sons of his preachers, and a seminary on the plan of a
boarding-school for the children of Methodist parents who were desirous of
giving them the benefits of a system in which the religious element formed a
well-defined constituent, along with the essentials of secular learning. The
design was noble and good, but it must be confessed that hitherto it had proved
a failure. The staff of teachers seemed unexceptionable. Mr. Simpson himself was
a Master of Arts, and, as Dr. Clarke records, "a man of learning and piety, but
one too easy for his situation." The Rev. Cornelius Bayley, afterwards Dr.
Bayley, of St. James's church, Manchester, was English teacher; Mr. Vincent De
Baudry, professor of French; and Mr. Bond, assistant teacher. "The scholars,
however, were none of them remarkable for piety or learning. The boarders had
spoiled the discipline of the school; very few of its rules and regulations were
observed; and it by no means answered the end of its institution. Though the
teachers were men of adequate learning, yet, as the school was perfectly
disorganized, every one did what was right in his own eyes. The little children
of the preachers suffered great indignities; the parlor-boarders had every kind
of respect, and the others were shamefully neglected." Mr. Wesley had become
acquainted with this state of things; and, in an exposition of the case which he
gave shortly after at the Bristol Conference, expressed his determination
"either to mend it or to end it."
It was mended. The idea of the united school was given up, and the establishment
henceforward devoted to the purpose of affording a wholesome and useful
education to the children of the itinerant preachers. Another branch was
subsequently located at Woodhouse-Grove, in Yorkshire. Kingswood School has been
improving steadily with the lapse of time, and is now one of the best
educational institutions in the country. Its locale has been transferred to the
vicinity of Bath, where, on Lansdown Hill, it forms one of the ornaments even of
that neighborhood, so distinguished by fine architecture. Nor has the other
design been overlooked by the present generation of the Methodist people; of
which their beautiful collegiate establishments at Sheffield and Taunton are
conspicuous monuments. The Methodists are now, indeed, behind no religious
communion in their enterprises for the promotion of knowledge and learning. They
have founded hundreds of primary schools in various parts of the kingdom, all of
them in connection with a noble Training College for teachers at Westminster.
Their theological faculty accomplishes an effective training of devoted young
men for the service of the church, at their colleges of Richmond, Surrey, and
Didsbury, near Manchester. In India, Africa, and Australia, similar institutions
are rising; while, in America, some of the best universities in Canada and t he
United States are conducted under the auspices of the Methodist church. All Mr.
Wesley's ideas had the imprint of a mind which combined the characteristics of
the refined scholar and the Christian apostle; and, in their ever-growing
development, whole myriads of families are grateful partakers of benefits which
have rendered his name a sacred symbol of whatever things are pure, or lovely,
or of good report, or productive of virtue and of praise.
But now to return to our poor solitary. The authorities at Kingswood made him,
as we have seen, dwell apart at first; and, when admitted to the table, laid him
under restraints which rendered solitude more agreeable to him than their
society. He had, however, by this time got his trunk with his few books *[3] and
papers from Bristol; and he filled up the intervals of study by working in the
garden, *[4] and occasional essays to do good, by speaking to the people, as
occasion offered. Moreover, Mr. Rankin came, the superintendent preacher, who
conceived a partiality for him at once, and set him to do some work in the
Circuit. In one of his excursions he preached at the village of Pensford, when
"a venerable man" in the congregation came and laid his hand upon him, and said,
with a look of approval and solemnity, "Christ bless the word! Christ bless the
word! Christ bless the word!" The kind feeling manifested by this aged disciple
was like a gleam of sunshine on the young man's heart.
At length Mr. Wesley arrived at Bristol; and, having received Mr. Simpson's
statement in relation to the young stranger, expressed a wish to see him. The
interview is described by Adam:-- "I had this privilege for the first time on
September the sixth. I went to Bristol; saw Mr. Rankin, who took me to Mr.
Wesley's study, off the great lobby of the rooms over the chapel in Broadmead.
He tapped at the door, which was opened by this truly apostolic man. Mr. Rankin
retired. Mr. Wesley took me kindly by the hand, and asked me how long since I
had left Ireland. Our conversation was short. He said, ' Well, brother Clarke,
do you wish to devote yourself entirely to the work of God? ' I answered, ' Sir,
I wish to do, and be, what God pleases. ' He then said, ' We want a preacher for
Bradford, in Wiltshire: hold yourself in readiness to go there. I am going into
the country, and will let you know when you shall go. ' He then turned to me,
laid his hands upon my head, and spent a few moments in praying to God to bless
and preserve me, and to give me success in the work to which I was called. I
departed, having now received, in addition to my appointment from God to preach
His Gospel, the only authority I could have from man in that line in which I was
to exercise the ministry of the Divine word."
That evening he heard Mr. Wesley preach on these words, "Not by might, nor by
power, but by My Spirit, saith the Lord of Hosts." Two days after he first saw
Charles Wesley, being not a little gratified to have the opportunity of seeing
"the two men whom I had long considered as the very highest diameters upon the
face of the globe, and as the most favored instruments which God had employed,
since the days of the twelve apostles, to revive and spread genuine Christianity
in the earth." On the twenty-sixth of the month he received final instructions
to repair to his Circuit.
He obeyed at once. There were no bands of love to detain him at Kingswood an
hour. That very morning he walked away to Hanham, and from thence to Bath, where
he again heard Mr. Wesley; and thence again next day to Bradford, lodging that
night at the house of Mr. Pearce. The day following he found his way to
Trowbridge, the headquarters for the preachers of the Circuit.
Sursum corda.
* * * * * * *
DIVISION 5
BOOK I
(The Morning of Life)
CHAPTER 5
THE EVANGELIST
Though Wesleyan Methodism had not at that time risen to the massive strength in
which it is now recognized as one of the established religious institutions of
the country, it had nevertheless, so far back as the time of which we are now
writing, unfolded the character of a vital and powerful system of Christian
agency, which was exerting an enlightening, moralizing, and pacific influence
over immense masses of the English people. Congregations, not on Sabbaths only,
but from day to day, in all parts of the land, came in silent crowds to hear
from its preachers the word of God; and hundreds of Societies, united in the
faith, hope, and charity of our holy religion, walking in the comfort of the
blessed Spirit, and being ever multiplied, gave proof that the word was not
heard in vain. When, therefore, Mr. Adam Clarke entered on the sphere of labor
assigned him under the circumstances we have recounted, he had not to feel his
way with the uncertain step of a mere adventurer, but had only to make his
credential s known, to secure for himself the welcomes of a numerous people
prepared to receive all such as he with the benedictions of the Gospel of peace.
Some of them, indeed, struck at first sight with the extreme juvenility of their
new preacher, might have wished that a man of greater age and consequent
experience had been appointed to them; and the pleasant tradition is yet
repeated, that on his first visit to one of the chapels, as he walked with
solemn step along the aisle to the pulpit, one of the seniors of the
congregation was overheard giving a sort of vexed expression to his first view
of the affair, with, "Tut, tut! what will Mr. Wesley send us next?" Yet they
proved themselves fully able to appreciate and ever after to love the stranger,
now such no longer, who had come among them. His own musings, too, upon this
difficulty, were by no means agreeable. "His youth," he writes of himself, "was
a grievous trial to him, and was the subject of many perplexing reasonings. He
thought, ' How can I expect that me n and women, persons of forty, three score,
or more years, will come out and hear a boy preach the Gospel? And is it likely
that, if through curiosity they do come, they will believe what I say? As to the
young, they are too gay and giddy to attend to Divine things; and if so, among
whom lies the probability of my usefulness?' " Time, however, with its rapid
wing, would too soon leave all these complaints behind him. Meanwhile the
intellectual and religious characteristics of this youth placed him on a par
with "persons of forty," ay, and with some of the sages of "fourscore." As to
the people among whom he had come, young or old, -- boy as he was, he could
teach them all. He was himself taught of God. "The Bible was his one book, and
prayer his continual exercise: he frequently read it on his knees, and often
watered it with his tears." When he says the Bible was his one book, he records
his conviction that the sacred volume is the only absolute canon of Divine
truth; the sole infallible rule of doctrine, an d the grand warrant of hope to
man; from which all effectual teaching must be derived, and to which all creeds
must be subjected. As the sun enlightens the face of the planet, so the Bible
illumines the true teachers of the church.
"Hither,
As to their fountain, other stars repair,
And in their golden urns draw light."
The late Thomas Marriott, Esq., had a Bible of Dr. Clarke's, which he believed
to be the identical copy he brought with him from Kingswood, or rather from
Ireland, to Trowbridge. It has, in addition to his name, the date, "Trowbridge,
Wiltshire, August 9th, 1783. Bene orasse est bene studuisse." At the end of the
Old Testament is the memorandum, "June 10th. Read through:" while by another, at
the beginning of Genesis, we judge that he recommenced the next day: "Incepi,
June 11th, 1784." I have myself a pocket Bible of his, in a stout red morocco
case. On the top of the title-page are the words in his handwriting, "God is
love. Glory to His name. Adam Clarke, May 21st, 1783." This copy, therefore,
must have been in his possession at Trowbridge, as well as that obtained by Mr.
Marriott.
Searching thus the Scriptures, with habitual and devout meditation, he had
already acquired a deep insight into the analogy of the Christian faith, and was
enabled to embrace and ever hold fast the great principles of revealed theology.
It was not far from this time that he drew up the following theses, which may be
considered the alpha and omega of his religious creed, no article of which, he
tells us, he ever saw occasion to alter:--
"I. That there is but one uncreated, unoriginated, infinite, and eternal Being;
-- the Creator, Preserver, and Governor of all things.
"II. There is in this Infinite Essence a plurality of what we commonly call
Persons; not separately subsisting, but essentially belonging to the Deity or
Godhead; which Persons are generally termed father, Son, and Holy Ghost; or,
God, the Logos, and the Holy Spirit, which are usually designated the Trinity
which term, though not found in the Scriptures, seems properly enough applied;
as we repeatedly read of these three, and never of more persons in the Godhead.
"III. The Sacred Scriptures or Holy Books, which constitute the Old and New
Testaments, contain a full revelation of the will of God in reference to man;
and are alone sufficient for everything relative to the faith and practice of a
Christian; and were given by the inspiration of God.
"IV. Man was created in righteousness and true holiness, without any moral
imperfection, or any kind of propensity to sin; but free to stand or fall
according to the use of the powers and faculties he received from his Creator.
"V. He fell from this state, became morally corrupt in his nature, and
transmitted his moral defilement to all his posterity.
"VI. To counteract the evil principle in the heart of man, and bring him into a
salvable state, God, from His infinite love, formed the purpose of redeeming him
from his lost estate, by the Incarnation, in the fulness of time, of Jesus
Christ; and, in the interim, sent His Holy Spirit to enlighten, strive with, and
convince men of sin, righteousness, and judgment.
"VII. In due time this Divine Person, called the Logos, Word, Saviour, &c., &c.,
did become incarnate; sojourned among men, teaching the purest truth, and
working the most stupendous and beneficent miracles.
"VIII. The above Person is really and properly God: was foretold as such, by the
prophets; described as such, by the evangelists and apostles; and proved to be
such, by His miracles; and has assigned to Him, by the inspired writers in
general, every attribute essential to the Deity; being One with Him who is
called God, Jehovah, Lord, &c.
"IX. He is also a perfect Man, in consequence of His incarnation; and in that
Man, or Manhood, dwelt all the fulness of the Godhead bodily: so that His nature
is twofold -- Divine and Human, or God manifested in flesh.
"X. His Human Nature was begotten of the blessed Virgin Mary, through the
creative energy of the Holy Ghost; but His Divine Nature, because God, infinite
and eternal, is uncreated, underived, and unbegotten; and which, were it
otherwise, He could not be God in any proper sense of the word: but He is most
explicitly declared to be God in the Holy Scriptures; and, therefore, the
doctrine of the Eternal Sonship must necessarily be false.
"XI. As He took upon Him the nature of man, and died in that nature; therefore,
He died for the whole human race, without respect of persons: equally for all
and every man.
"XII. On the third day after His crucifixion and burial, He rose from the dead;
and, after showing Himself many days to His disciples and others, He ascended
into heaven, where, as God manifested in the flesh, He is, and shall continue to
be, the Mediator of the human race, till the consummation of all things.
"XIII. There is no salvation but through Him; and throughout the Scriptures His
Passion and Death are considered as sacrificial: pardon of sin and final
salvation being obtained by the alone shedding of His blood.
"XIV. No human being, since the fall, either has, or can have, merit or
worthiness of, or by, himself; and, therefore, has nothing to claim from God but
in the way of His mercy through Christ: therefore pardon, and every other
blessing promised in the Gospel, have been purchased by His Sacrificial Death;
and are given to men, not on the account of anything they have done or suffered,
or can do or suffer, but for His sake, or through His meritorious passion and
death alone.
"XV. These blessings are received by faith; because they are not of works, nor
of suffering.
"XVI. The power to believe, or grace of faith, is the free gift of God, without
which no man can believe: but the act of faith, or actually believing, is the
act of the soul under that power. This power is withheld from no man; but, like
all other gifts of God, it may be slighted, not used, or misused: in consequence
of which is that declaration, ' He that believeth shall be saved but he that
believeth not shall be damned. '
"XVII. Justification, or the pardon of sin, is an instantaneous act of God's
mercy in behalf of a penitent sinner, trusting only in the merits of Jesus
Christ and this act is absolute in reference to all past sin, all being forgiven
where any is forgiven: gradual pardon, or progressive justification, being
unscriptural and absurd.
"XVIII. The souls of all believers may be purified from all sin in this life;
and a man may live under the continual influence of the grace of Christ so as
not to sin against God: all sinful tempers and evil propensities being
destroyed, and his heart constantly filled with pure love both to God and man.
And as love is the principle of obedience, he who loves God with all his heart,
soul, mind, and strength, and his neighbor as himself, is incapable of doing
wrong to either.
"XIX. Unless a believer live and walk in the spirit of obedience, he will fall
from the grace of God, and forfeit all his Christian privileges and rights; and,
although he may be restored to the favor and image of his Maker from which he
has fallen, yet it is possible that he may continue under the influence of this
fall, and perish everlastingly.
"XX. The whole period of human life is a state of probation, in every point of
which a sinner may repent, and turn to God; and in every point of it a believer
may give way to sin, and fall from grace. And this possibility of rising or
falling is essential to a state of trial or probation.
"XXI. All the promises and threatenings of the Sacred Writings, as they regard
man in reference to his being here and hereafter, are conditional; and it is on
this ground alone that the Holy Scriptures can be consistently interpreted or
rightly understood.
"XXII. Man is a free agent, never being impelled by any necessitating influence,
either to do good or evil; but has the continual power to choose the life or the
death that are set before him: on which ground he is an accountable being, and
answerable for his own actions; and on this ground, also, he is alone capable of
being rewarded or punished.
"XXIII. The free will of man is a necessary constituent of his rational soul;
without which he must be a mere machine, -- either the sport of blind chance, or
the mere patient of an irresistible necessity; and, consequently, not
accountable for any acts which were predetermined, and to which he was
irresistibly compelled.
"XXIV. Every human being has this freedom of will, with a sufficiency of light
and power to direct its operations; but this powerful light is not inherent in
any man's nature, but is graciously bestowed by Him who is 'the true Light which
lighteneth every man that cometh into the world.'
"XXV. Jesus Christ has made, by His one offering upon the cross, a sufficient
sacrifice, oblation, and atonement for the sins of the whole world; and His
gracious Spirit strives with, and enlightens, all men; thus putting them into a
salvable state: therefore, every human soul may be saved, if it be not his own
fault.
"XXVI. Jesus Christ has instituted, and commanded to be perpetuated in His
church, two sacraments only:-- 1. BAPTISM, sprinkling, washing with, or
immersion in, water, in the name of the holy and ever-blessed Trinity, as a sign
of the cleansing or regenerating influence of the Holy Spirit, by which
influence a death unto sin and a new birth unto righteousness are produced; and,
2. The Eucharist, or Lord's Supper, as commemorating the sacrificial death of
Christ. And He instituted the first to be once only administered to the same
person for the above purpose, and as a rite of initiation into the visible
church; and the second, that by its frequent administration all believers may be
kept in mind of the foundation on which their salvation is built, and receive
grace to enable them to adorn the doctrine of God their Saviour in all things.
"XXVII. The soul is immaterial and immortal, and can subsist independently of
the body.
"XXVIII. There will be a general resurrection of the dead, both of the just and
the unjust; when the souls of both shall be re-united to their respective
bodies; both of which will be immortal, and live eternally.
"XXIX. There will be a general judgment; after which all shall be punished or
rewarded, according to the deeds done in the body; and the wicked shall be sent
to hell, and the righteous taken to heaven.
"XXX. These states of rewards and punishments shall have no end, forasmuch as
the time of trial or probation shall then be for ever terminated; and the
succeeding state must necessarily be fixed and unalterable.
"XXXI. The origin of human salvation is found in the infinite philanthropy of
God; and, on this principle, the unconditional reprobation of any soul is
absolutely impossible.
"XXXII. God has no secret will, in reference to man, which is contrary to His
revealed will, -- as this would show Him to be an insincere Being, professing
benevolence to all, while He secretly purposed that that benevolence should be
extended only to a few; a doctrine which appears blasphemous as it respects God,
and subversive of all moral good as it regards man, and totally at variance with
the infinite rectitude of the Divine Nature."
We do not insert these remarkable articles as setting forth an exposition of the
Methodist theology, (though substantially in harmony with it, with one
exception, to which we shall have occasion, though reluctantly, to refer
hereafter; I mean, that numbered the tenth, the concluding inference from which
varies from the faith of the catholic church,) but merely to show with what
effect Mr. Clarke had even then applied his honest and vigorous mind to the
close investigation of the holy Scriptures. Hardly more than a boy in years, it
is plain that he had already become a man in understanding. The good people of
Trowbridge and Bradford would not find his preaching to be "yea and nay," but
the steady inculcation of fixed principles, explained with precision, and
applied with power, for doctrine and reproof, for correction, and instruction in
righteousness.
But, though he was thus confident in what he believed to be Divine truth, the
disposition with which he enforced it was not that of arrogant self-sufficiency,
but of humble, lowly, and prayerful dependence on the grace of God. "He never
entered the pulpit but with the conviction that, if God did not help him by the
influence of His Spirit, his heart must be hard, and his mind dark; and,
consequently, his word be without unction and without fruit. Under this
influence be besought the Lord with strong crying and tears; and he was seldom,
if ever, left to himself."
He has given an instance of the favor thus shown him from on high, in giving him
seals to his ministry and souls for his hire, which I cannot help transferring
to our pages. On his first visit to Road, a country village between Trowbridge
and Frome, where the congregation had been very small, a report had got abroad
in the neighborhood, that "a boy was going to preach in the Methodist chapel
that evening, and all the young men and women in the place were determined to
hear him. He came, and the place, long before the time, was crowded with young
persons of both sexes: very few elderly persons could get in, the house being
filled before they came. As he preached, the attention was deep and solemn, and
the place was still as death. He then gave out that affecting hymn, --
"Vain, delusive world, adieu,
With all thy creature good;
Only Jesus I pursue,
Who bought me with His blood:
All thy pleasures I forego,
And trample on thy wealth and pride;
Only Jesus will I know,
And Jesus crucified."
The fine voices of this young company produced great effect in the singing. When
the last verse was ended, he said, 'My dear young friends, you have joined with
me heartily, and I dare say sincerely, in singing this fine hymn. You know in
whose presence we have been conducting this solemn service: the eyes of God, of
angels, and perhaps of devils, have been upon us! And what have we been doing?
We have been promising, in the sight of all these, and of each other, that we
will renounce a vain, delusive world, its pleasures, pomp, and pride, and seek
our happiness in God alone, and expect it through Him who shed His blood for us.
And is not this the same to which we have been long previously bound by our
baptismal vow? Have we not, when we were baptized, promised to renounce the
devil and all his works, the pomps and vanities of this wicked world, and all
the sinful lusts of the flesh and that we will keep God's holy will and
commandments, and walk in the same all the days of our life? This baptismal
promise is precisely the same as that contained in this affecting hymn. Now,
shall we promise, and not perform? vow, and not fulfill? God has heard! Now,
what do you purpose to do? Will you continue to live to the world, and forget
that you owe your being to God, and have immortal souls which must spend an
eternity in heaven or hell? We have no time to spare. The Judge is at the door.
I have tried both lives; and find that a religious life has an infinite
preference above the other. Let us, therefore, heartily forsake sin, and seek
God by earnest prayer, nor rest till He has blotted out our guilt, purified our
heart, and filled us with peace and righteousness. If we seek earnestly, and
seek through Jesus Christ, we cannot seek in vain.' -- He thus prayed, and many
were deeply affected. That night and the next morning thirteen persons, young
men and women, came to him, earnestly injuring what they should do to be saved.
A religious concern became general throughout the village and neighborhood; many
young persons sought and found redemption in the blood of the Lamb. The old
people, seeing the earnestness and consistent walk of the young, began to
reflect; and many were deeply awakened, while others, who had become
indifferent, were roused to renewed diligence and a hopeful revival of religion
spread through the vicinity. Thus was he shown that the very circumstance, his
youth, which he thought most against his usefulness, became a principal means,
in the Divine hand, of his greatest ministerial success. Methodism in Road
continued to prosper during the whole time he was in the Circuit; and when he
visited them several years after, he found it still in a flourishing state. In
fact, half a century from that time there were persons still living in Road who
had maintained a faithful conversation from those days; and when Dr. Clarke
preached his last sermon at Frome, shortly before his death, one of them came to
that place to meet him."
The Circuit in which he continued to labor during the remainder of the
Methodistic year, extended into three counties, Wiltshire, Somerset, and Dorset;
and comprehended the towns of Bradford, Trowbridge, Shaftesbury, Shepton-Mallet,
Frome, Melksham, Wells, and Devizes, with a number of villages. His colleagues
were Messrs. Wrigley, Pool, and Algar. With the last Mr. Clarke found much
congeniality of heart, though not a man altogether of the same type with himself
as to intellect or learning. From one influential quarter, he got no help in the
latter department; but, no doubt unintentionally, a sore and injurious
hindrance. One of his counselors, though a man of undoubted integrity, labored
under the disadvantage of a total lack of education, and a temperament in which
sternness had a marvelous resemblance to obstinacy. At Motcomb, a village near
Shaftesbury, Mr. Clarke, observing one day a Latin sentence written in pencil on
the wall of the preachers' room, relating to the vicissitudes of life, wrote
under it a quotation from Virgil (with a verbal change) corroborative of the
sentiment:--
"Quo fata trahunt retrahuntque sequamur.
Per varios casus, per tot discrimina rerum
Tendimus in coelum." *[1]
This met the eye of the stern monitor, in whose esteem "human learning " was a
sin. He read the above words, but was not wicked enough to be able to understand
them. There was something, however, in the very look of them, which stirred his
godly ire, to which he gave expression in the following lines, inserted as a
pendant to the Virgilian metre:--
"Did you write the above
To show us you could write Latin?
For shame!
Do send pride
To hell, from whence it came.
O, young man, improve your
Time, eternity's at hand."
I make no comment on this effusion, and should consider it too insignificant for
mention here, but that it helps to unfold an admirable trait of character in the
subject of our biography; I mean, great tenderness of conscience, and a
disposition to renounce favorite, unexceptionable, and even profitable pursuits,
if they became stumblingblocks in the path of the weak-minded. On coming to the
room at Motcomb, in his next turn, the poor youth read these words of
sanctimonious folly with great confusion and dismay. He had evidently offended
some sense of propriety which reigned in another's mind, though not in his own;
and the people of the house, who would no doubt have read them as a sentence of
condemnation, would henceforth have misgivings about him as a preacher of the
right kind. Moreover, he saw that scholarship might engender pride; and it was
too plain that, instead of provoking honorable emulation, it might have no other
tendency than to excite envy. Under the influence of these temptations, he sank
upon his knees, and made a premature vow "that he would never more meddle with
Greek or Latin so long as he lived!" Whatever he thought of the wisdom of the
objurgation on the wall, the manner in which it was exhibited, he felt, was most
unkind; and, when he next saw the writer, he told him as much. "Why," said he,
"did you not admonish me in private, or send me the reproof in a note?" "I
thought what I did was the best method to CURE you," was the reply. Mr. Clarke
then told his sagacious adviser what uncomfortable feelings the writing on the
wall had produced in him, and how he had vowed to study literature no more.
Whereupon the other applauded his teachableness and godly diligence, assuring
him that he had never known a learned preacher who was not a coxcomb!
Let no reader imagine, that he who wrote on the wall was a representative of the
views of the Methodists in their estimate of learning. There have been a very
few exceptions to the common rule in these matters; but no body of men can
entertain a more solemn and religious love for real erudition than they.
It was not till four years after that Mr. Clarke was able to get free from the
scruples with which this rash vow had trammeled him. To this point we shall have
need to recur further on. Meanwhile, those philological studies, without which
he could never have been the expositor of the Septuagint and the Greek
Testament, were rendered impossible. Had the evil spell continued to work on Mr.
Clarke's mind, this fanaticism would have deprived the church of God of his
Commentary on the Bible.
At length the year rolled round, and his labors in his first Circuit were ended.
He had preached, it appears, five hundred and six sermons, many of which had
been delivered at five o'clock in the morning; in addition to a great number of
public exhortations, class-meetings, and religious conversations in the numerous
houses where he passed the intervals of time not spent in reading or travel.
The Conference of 1783 was held in Bristol. As Mr. Clarke had no authority to be
there, whatever might have been his wishes, he cherished no thought of going,
till on the 1st of August he received by letter a requirement to attend. The
next day, Saturday, he set off, and reached Bristol that evening. An extract
from his journal will give us a glimpse of a Conference Sunday in Bristol in
those days:--
"Sunday, August 3d, 1783. -- At five this morning I heard a very useful sermon
from Mr. Mather, at the chapel, Broadmead, on Isaiah xxxv. 3, 4. I then went to
Guinea-street chapel, where I heard Mr. Bradburn preach on Christian perfection,
from 1 John iv. 19. This was, without exception, the best sermon I had ever
heard on the subject. When this was ended, I posted to the Drawbridge, and heard
Mr. Joseph Taylor preach an excellent and affecting sermon, on Rom. v. 21. This
ended, I returned to my lodging and breakfasted; and then, at ten o'clock, heard
Mr. Wesley preach at Broadmead, on Acts i. 5. After sermon, he, assisted by Dr.
Coke, the Rev. B. B. Collins, and the Rev. Cornelius Bayley, delivered the holy
sacrament to a vast concourse of people, which I also received to my comfort.
When dinner was ended, I heard the Rev. B. B. Collins preach at Temple church,
on Mark xvi. 15, 16. I next went and heard Mr. Wesley in Carolina-court, on Heb.
vi. 1; after which he met the Society at the chapel, Broadmead, a nd read over a
part of his journal relative to his late visit to Holland. To conclude the
whole, I then posted to Kingsdown, where I heard Mr. T. Hanby preach an
awakening sermon on 1 Peter iv. 18. Thus have I in one day, by carefully
redeeming time, and buying up every opportunity, heard seven sermons, three of
which were delivered out of doors. Surely this has been a day in which much has
been given me, and much will the Lord require. O, grant that I may be enabled to
render Thee a good account!"
We need not remark here, that the rareness of the occasion only could justify
this excess of hearing. No one in his senses would recommend either a young
Christian or an old one to hear seven discourses in a day. But it should be
considered, that Mr. Clarke was himself a preacher who had never had an
opportunity of listening to the great and good men of the time. All was new to
him, and he did well to improve the season. No doubt he would also take notes of
what he heard, as the material for future recollection. It was, therefore, very
well for once; but, as a habit, an overplus of sermon-hearing must be pronounced
unfriendly to true improvement. It bewilders the brain, and hardens the heart.
Two good discourses on the Sunday, heard with attention, and retraced with one's
Bible in retirement, will yield the soul a profit it can never find in a
succession of services, in which one set of ideas and impressions must be swept
away by the influx of another.
The Conference were so well satisfied with the steadiness and promise of Mr.
Clarke's character, as to resolve to admit him into fall connection at the end
of his first year's itinerancy. He was by far the youngest man who had ever gone
out "to travel;" and his reception into full orders was the earliest that had
ever taken place. On this occasion his mind was deeply affected. "This day,
Wednesday, August the sixth," writes he, "I have promised much before God and
His people: may I ever be found true to my engagements! In particular, I have
solemnly promised to devote my whole strength to the work of God, and never to
be triflingly employed one moment. Lord, I fear much that I shall not be found
faithful; but Thou hast said, My grace shall be sufficient for thee. Even so let
it be, Lord Jesus."
When Methodist ministers are admitted into full connection with the Conference,
they receive from the president a manual which is called "The Large Minutes."
The copy which was presented to Mr. Clarke at this time I have now on the table.
On the blank side of the title-page stands the usual formula of reception,
signed by the secretary, Dr. Coke.
"To ADAM CLARKE:
"As long as you freely consent to, and earnestly endeavor to walk by, these
Rules, we shall rejoice to acknowledge you as a fellow-laborer.
"THOMAS COKE."
Underneath, in a neat handwriting, we have the following:-- "O Lord, Thou
knowest that of myself I am unable to do these things. Therefore give me Divine
strength and wisdom: so shall I be enabled to walk by these Rules, and
consequently to glorify Thee in the land of the living. Grant this, O Lord, for
Jesus Christ's sake. Amen. A. C."
The prayer was answered.
* * * * * * *
DIVISION 6
BOOK I
(The Morning of Life)
CHAPTER 6
THE EVANGELIST -- (CONTINUED)
Mr. Clarke was now appointed to labor in a large tract of country in the
counties of Norfolk and Suffolk, having the city of Norwich as the head of the
Circuit and for this new sphere of Gospel enterprise he lost no time in setting
out, traveling the whole way in the saddle. The Methodist preachers in those
days were all horsemen. The country people, all over England, used to speak of
them as "the riding preachers." The new evangelists were decidedly an equestrian
order, who prolonged the days of chivalry. And among these soldiers of the
cross, who went abroad through all the land to comfort the afflicted, rescue the
oppressed, and save the perishing, Adam Clarke had now been finally enrolled. He
wore now the armour that St. Paul describes in the Epistle to the Ephesians, --
the helmet and breastplate, sword and shield; and never more laid them aside,
till the day of his death. In thinking of him now, as he pursues his way with
much solemn musing and frequent prayer, one is reminded of old Spenser's
emblematic picture-words in the "Faerie Queen," where he describes "a gentle
knight" who "was moving o'er the plain, clad in mighty arms and silver shield:--
"And on his breast a bloody cross he bore,
The dear remembrance of his dying Lord,
For whose sweet sake that glorious badge he wore,
And dead, as living, ever Him adored.
Upon his shield the like was also scored,
For sovereign hope which in its help he had.
Fight faithful true was he in deed and word,
And ever, as he rode, his heart did yearn
To prove his puissance in battle brave
Upon his foe, a dragon horrible and stern."
The service to which Mr. Clarke was called, in his new Circuit, was one which
required him to "endure hardness as a good soldier of Jesus Christ." The people
among whom he labored were ignorant and depraved, and his efforts to bring them
to truth and righteousness were prosecuted in circumstances most depressing to
body and mind. On arriving in the city of Norwich, he found one of the late
preachers lying ill of a fever, and, unable to vacate the room which had been
assigned as his own sleeping-place. In this sorrowful domicile, which he
describes as "pestiferous," he got such rest as could be obtained; and then he
went out into the Circuit. It comprehended two-and-twenty towns and villages,
and was traveled every month by a journey of not less than two hundred and sixty
miles. Of his colleagues, the superintendent was Mr. Richard Whatcoat, who was
afterwards sent to America, and there became one of the bishops of the Methodist
Episcopal Church. Mr. Clarke describes him as "a very holy man, a good and sound
preacher, diligent and orderly in his work, and a fine example of practical
piety in all his conduct." He pursued among his transatlantic brethren the same
quiet and good career, seeking only the establishment of the kingdom of God,
both in himself' and others; and died at length in the faith, universally
esteemed.
The other two were Messrs. Ingham and Adamson; the latter of whom was "a young
man very sincere, and who had got the rudiments of a classical education; but
was of such an unsteady, fickle mind, that he excelled in nothing." The next
year he retired from the work. The four preachers took each one his week in the
city, and then three weeks in itinerating the Circuit. Both in town and country
they fared very poorly. In Norwich itself the preachers' residence was tenanted
also by another family, who "provided for the preachers at so much per meal;"
and he was most certainly considered the best preacher who ate the fewest
dinners, because his bills were the smallest. In this respect Mr. Clarke
excelled. He breakfasted on milk and bread, drank no tea or coffee, and took
nothing in the evening. In short, he adapted himself to these dietetic
circumstances, and endeavored to make the state of things as agreeable and
useful in the domestic department as he could. It was not without some allowable
hilarity that he w ould afterwards tell how he mended the bellows, and repaired
the coal-shovel, though the poker, worn away to the stump, defied his ingenuity.
Nay, obeying the letter as well as the spirit of the "Rules of a Helper," -- "Do
not affect the gentleman;" and, "Be not ashamed of cleaning your own shoes, or
your neighbor's," -- he frequently did this for his own, and those of his
brethren.
Out in the Circuit things were worse. Except at a few places, the accommodations
were very bad. The winter, too, was that year unusually severe. The snow began
to fall on Christmas-day, and lay on the ground for more than three months, in
some places from ten to fifteen feet deep. The frost was so intense, that in
riding he could seldom keep his saddle five minutes together, but was forced to
alight, and walk and run, to prevent his feet from being frost-bitten. In the
poor cabins where he lodged, and where there was scarcely any fire, and the
clothing on the bed was very light, he suffered much, "going to bed cold, and
rising cold." In one place, I have been told, he had a wooden door laid upon him
as a succedaneum for an upper blanket. He could indulge also in astronomical
contemplations, as the stars shone upon him through chinks in the roof. *[1] In
another place he lodged in a loft of an outhouse, where the cold was so intense,
that warm water which be brought with him into this arctic region froze in a few
minutes. In such circumstances, I wonder not that, like one of his brethren,
who, while laboring in Herefordshire, "went to bed at night, boots and all," Mr.
Clarke should often have been "obliged to get into bed with a part of his
clothes on, strip them off by degrees, as the bed got warmer, and then lie in
the same position, without attempting to move his limbs, every unoccupied place
in the bed which his legs touched producing the same sensation as if the parts
had been brought into contact with red-hot iron." No doubt he would henceforward
understand something better those lines in Milton, --
"The parched air
Burns frore, and cold performs the effects of fire."
The refreshments of the table were in general keeping with the hardness of the
lodging, -- very homely food, and sometimes but little of it; which the poor
people, nevertheless, most readily shared with him who came to their houses and
their hearts with the good tidings of better things to come; since, but for such
preaching, they must have been almost totally destitute of that instruction
without which there was little hope of their salvation. It was by these means,
and often in these conditions of privation and suffering, that the Methodist
preachers spread scriptural Christianity through the land, and became the
instruments of improving the moral and civil life of the great masses of the
poor.
Yet not always welcome. In some parts of the Circuit, and even in Norwich
itself, they had not only to bear up under the discouragements of apathy on the
part of the people, but at times to face their more open opposition. "They were
called," says an historian of the times, "to meet the rude assaults of the mob,
who did not wish to be disturbed in their ungodly courses; and the county of
Norfolk was distinguished for this kind of conduct. Mr. Clarke did not scruple
to pronounce it the most ungodly part of the British empire he knew. In Norwich
the preachers scarcely ever got through the service on a Sabbath evening without
having less or more disturbance, or a mob at the chapel-doors. Even Mr. Wesley
himself could not escape rude treatment." On one occasion he visited Norwich in
company with Mr. John Hampson, a preacher of gigantic make, and the strongest
muscular powers, nor wanting, either, in strength and grandeur of mind. When Mr.
Wesley had finished, on going from the chapel he found the street crowded with a
mob who were waiting to offer him some violence. As they closed in upon him, Mr.
Hampson stepped forward, and fronted them in an attitude of threatening. Mr.
Wesley, fearing he would really attack them, called out to him to refrain; upon
which Mr. Hampson replied in a thundering voice, "Let me alone, sir. If God has
not given you an arm to quell this mob, He has given me one; and the first man
who molests you here, I will lay him for fall." Mr. Wesley and his doughty
[brave] acolyte [a person assisting a priest in a service or procession] passed
away unmolested.
It was in the course of this year that the founder of Methodism, the grand
itinerant whose circuit was the whole kingdom, and whose parish was the world,
came again into that part of the country; and Mr. Clarke was greatly refreshed
in hearing him preach nine sermons, on the following texts:-- "We preach Christ
crucified." "Wherefore He is able to save to the uttermost." "Except your
righteousness shall exceed the righteousness of the scribes and Pharisees, ye
shall in no case enter the kingdom of heaven." "Put on the whole armour of God."
"The kingdom of God is at hand." "Ye shall be baptized with the Holy Ghost."
"They despised the pleasant land, they believed not His word." "What shall I
render unto the Lord for all His benefits toward me? I will take the cup of
salvation, and call upon the name of the Lord." "While we look not at the things
which are seen, but at the things which are not seen: for the things which are
seen are temporal; but the things which are not seen are eternal." Adam Clarke
had n ow learned to love Mr. Wesley, as a son loves a father. "With him he had
now the privilege of conversation concerning the state of his soul, from which
he derived much edification and strength. Referring in his journal to the last
of these interviews, he adds, -- "Here I took leave of this precious servant of
God. O Father, let Thy angels attend him wheresoever he goes; let the energetic
power of Thy Spirit accompany the words he shall speak, and apply them to the
hearts of all, and" [make them] "the means of conviction, conversion, comfort,
and strength, as they may severally require. And let me also abundantly profit
by the things I have heard."
The heavy toil of this year produced, apparently, but little fruit. A kind of
invincible ignorance and brutal depravity marked the state of the multitude of
the people; and Antinomianism had perverted the minds of many who professed the
faith of the Gospel. Yet, doubtless, the day of eternity will reveal bright
evidences that these labors were not in vain in the Lord. His holy word does not
return void. Mr. Clarke had the honor of introducing Methodism into some
neighborhoods in the eastern counties, where good religious effects have been
produced. The town of Diss, one of those places, has since become the head of a
Circuit. The people of God in the different congregations were edified under his
ministry, and the more intelligent among them discerned in him the signs of
future greatness. As to cases of individual conversion, the disclosures of the
future life will show more than he was permitted to ascertain in the present.
But, though that unfriendly soil should have yielded no such fruit, it was not
for want of earnest and persevering endeavors on the part of this good and
faithful servant, *[2] whose work is with the Lord, and his labor with his God.
By the Conference of 1784 Mr. Clarke was appointed to the East Cornwall Circuit.
The journey thither, about four hundred miles, he accomplished on horseback; and
for the defrayment of the expenses he received a guinea. His whole salary in the
Norwich Circuit had been but twelve pounds; and of this, little, I ween [think,
suppose], was remaining when he left the ground. In fact, it appears, by an
entry of his own, that he had but half-a-crown beside the guinea, at the time of
his setting off. He rode from forty to fifty miles a day, fasting nearly all the
way, as the poor horse required nearly all the money he could command. A penny
usually served for a breakfast, and a dinner too; and at nightfall, at the
places where he rested, being of necessity obliged to take something, he made
the repast as light as he could, from a tender regard to the infirm state of his
purse. He reached London on the Saturday, (August 14th,) and, making himself
known to his brethren, received their not unwelcome hospitality, and helped them
in their preaching-labors on the following day. At that time Moorfields, in the
neighborhood of the headquarters of the preachers at City-Road, formed an
unoccupied space, in which the Methodists had open-air preaching. Mr. Clarke
preached there on this Sunday. While addressing his motley congregation, his
attention was arrested by the singular conduct of two men, which was explained
to him many years afterward by one of them, who said, -- "I was one of those
men: the person with me was my brother. We both heard the truth, and hated you
for telling it to us. We thought you were too young to teach others, and
resolved to pull you down, and do you injury. For this purpose we made our way
to the desk, taking our stand on each side of it, and encouraging each other. He
beckoned me to do it, and I made signs to him: but neither of us seemed to have
the power. We were secretly and unaccountably deterred. At length we began to
attend to what was said, were both impressed with the force of truth, and I am
now, through the mercy of God, a local preacher in the Methodist
Society."
Next day our itinerant turned his face toward the west, and on the 18th, passing
through the scenes of his last year's labors, found himself again among his old
friends at Trowbridge; where, as at Bradford, Shepton-Mallet, and some other
places, he spent several useful days. Once more recruited, he went on his way,
and entered the town of St. Austel on Saturday, August the 28th. He here learned
that the Circuit comprehended more than forty places. His colleagues were his
former superintendent, Mr. Wrigley, and Mr. William Church.
In Cornwall Mr. Clarke would find, even in that day, an intellectual element
which differed greatly from that in Norfolk and Suffolk. The people in this
western peninsula are distinguished by a strong sentiment of respect for real
religion, great reverence for learning, and a kind of natural love for
metaphysical disquisition. Cornwall had in old times a strong character for
devotion. The primitive British Christianity found an asylum there. In what we
call "the dark ages," the religion of the times, such as it was, exerted over
the people of these coasts a lofty and powerful influence. Hence we find a great
number of the parishes still called after the names of eminent saints, whose
lives and labors wrought once great miracles of mercy among a not ungrateful
people, and of whom a priest and poet, *[3] who loves well to trace their
haunts, and commemorate their virtues, has thus sung:--
"They had their lodges in the wilderness,
Or built them cells beside the shadowy sea;
And there they dwelt with angels like a dream!
So they enclosed the volume of the Book,
And fill'd the fields of the evangelist
With thoughts as sweet as flowers."
But the later Romanists, and, subsequently to the Reformation, their Protestant
successors, failed to perpetuate those zealous works, while the people gradually
sunk both in mind and morals; till, at the beginning of the eighteenth century,
the inhabitants of some parts of Cornwall had become little better than
barbarians. It was then that Wesley came among them, and, with the still small
voice of Gospel truth, charmed them to Christian civilization, and brought them
back to God. The first visit of this minister of Christ inaugurated a new era in
the religious history of Cornwall and from his days to our own the work of
improvement has been steadily advancing.
Mr. Clarke found that though "the Circuit was exceedingly severe, the riding
constant, the roads in general bad, and the accommodations in most places very
indifferent;" yet, unlike his last year's experience in Norfolk, his exhausting
labors were attended by visible results. Crowded congregations received him as a
messenger from the Lord. Sinners were converted, and believers edified in their
holy faith. He has recorded that "there was a general spirit of hearing, and an
almost universal revival of the work of God. Thousands flocked to the preaching;
the chapels could not contain the crowds that came; and almost every week in the
year he was obliged to preach in the open air, -- even at times when the rain
was descending, and when the snow lay upon the earth. But prosperity made
everything pleasant; for the toil, in almost every place, was compensated by a
blessed ingathering of sinners to Christ, and a general renewing of the face of
the country:--
"In St. Austel the heavenly flame broke out in an extraordinary manner, and
great numbers were there gathered into the fold of Christ. Among those whom Mr.
Clarke united to the Society, was Samuel Drew, then terminating his
apprenticeship to a shoemaker, who afterwards became one of the first
metaphysicians of the age; with several others since distinguished either in
literature or mechanics."
Of Mr. Drew, if space permitted, we could write many things expressive of a
veneration awakened in the author's mind while hardly more than a child, by the
reading of his "Original Essay on the Immortality of the Soul;" and in later
years strengthened and confirmed by occasional conversations with the great
reasoner himself, in whose mental and moral character he saw much of the
dialectical acumen of a Plato combined with much of the evangelic grace of a St.
John. The history and example of his life have been set forth by his son. *[4]
Samuel Drew's works should not be suffered to pass into oblivion. The choicest
of them at least should have the benefit of a new and uniform edition, and so be
commended to future time. In them the lover of abstract meditation will always
find something to please his peculiar taste, and never pervert his best
principles, while "sitting apart" with one who --
"In elevated thoughts will reason high
Of Providence, foreknowledge, will, and fate,
Fix'd fate, freewill, foreknowledge absolute,
But find no end."
Mr. Clarke's ministry was prosecuted in a great variety of circumstances. The
Methodists of Cornwall had not then the spacious temples which are now the
ornaments of their towns, and where they assemble by hundreds and thousands to
solemnize the worship of the Almighty. They met in those days under the roof of
the cottage, in the kitchen of the farm-house, or in such humble erections,
sacred to religion, as their scanty means would allow them to build; and not
infrequently, when the pressure was too great, preacher and people would go
forth into the great temple of God, and worship Him under the firmament of His
own power. Preaching out of doors would, however, subject him at times to the
opposition of such as were of the contrary side. And on one occasion Mr. Clarke
was carried by the parish authorities to "the nearest magistrate," who happened
to be the Reverend Sir Harry Trelawney, who had been a field-preacher himself,
and that before his ordination. From him Mr. Clarke received nothing but
encouragement. Sir Harry strongly advised him to get a regular license, and so
put himself more effectually under the protection of the law. But to this
measure Mr. Clarke had always an objection, as, not being a Dissenter in
principle, he scrupled to take the oath prescribed only for such as are. In
principle, he was always a moderate Church-of-England man; and I should have
mentioned, while treating of the time he spent at Kingswood, flint, a
confirmation being held in Bristol just then, he availed himself of the
opportunity, and received that ordinance at the hands of Bishop Bagot. But to
return:-- About four months after his arrival in Cornwall, he suffered a violent
fall from his horse, "which had nearly proved fatal. The horse had formerly
belonged to Mr. Wesley, but turned out a most dangerous beast, from the habit of
stumbling; and, although he could scarcely ride him ten miles without at least
one fall, yet such was the feeling he had for the animal for his former owner's
sake, that he had not as yet been prevailed on, though strongly advised, to
part with him.
On this occasion, however, the injury was too serious to warrant any further
risk. There was a hard frost that evening, and, "coming over the down above
Rothernbridge, the horse fell, according to custom, and pitched Mr. Clarke
directly on his head. He lay some time senseless, but how long he could not
tell. At length having come to himself a little, he felt as if in the agonies of
death, and earnestly recommended his soul to his Redeemer. But he so far
recovered as to be able, though with difficulty, to reach the house. As a
congregation attended, the good people, not knowing how much injury he had
sustained, entreated him to preach. He could not draw a full breath, and was
scarcely able to stand. Still he endeavored to recommend to them the salvation
of God. That night he spent sleepless with pain. The next day a person was sent
with him to stay him up in the saddle, that he might get to Port Isaac, where he
could obtain some medical help. Every step the horse took seemed like a dart run
through his body . He got at last to Port Isaac. Doctor Twentyman," an excellent
physician of the place, "was sent for, and bled him. It appeared that some of
the vertebrae of the spine had been injured. He was desired to remain in the
house some days, which he could not consent to do, as there were four places
where he was expected to preach on the following day; and this he did, at the
most serious risk of his life. From this hurt he did not fully recover for more
than three years."
With the worthy physician of Port Isaac he formed a profitable intimacy. He was
a singular character, deep in the study of alchemy. He told Mr. Clarke he had
dreamed of him before he ever saw him. He then described the school-yard at
Kingswood where he met him in the dream, drawing in words a graphic picture of
the spot, though he had never been there, and had never heard it described by
others. He recommended alchemy as a study which brings a man nearer to the
Creator. Mr. Clarke had many interviews with him, and never, as he says, without
being the better for them.
To another gentleman also, Mr. Richard Mabyn, of Camelford, he ever after felt a
grateful sense of obligation. At his house the young man found what he had long
been a stranger to, -- the comfort of a home; and in his letters written to Mr.
Mabyn, long years after, he still expresses his affectionate acknowledgment of
kindnesses in which that good man proved to him at once a teacher, a parent, and
a friend.
He continued to be cheered in his work by tokens of the Divine benediction. In a
letter to a friend at Trowbridge, he says, "Among the children there is a most
blessed movement. Numbers of them, being made sensible of their need of Christ,
have set their feet in the paths of the Lord, and are running with steady pace
to their Heavenly Father's kingdom; and are, contrary to the nature of things,
turned fathers to the aged. You may remember that I wrote to you something
concerning a Magdalene whom I admitted into Society. Her character was so bad
before, that almost the whole Society opposed her admittance; some threatening
to leave the class. I withstood them all, and proclaimed from the pulpit that I
would admit the most devil-like souls in the place, provided they would cast
aside their sins and come to Jesus. After she had been hindered some little
time, she at last got leave to meet; and, O, how wonderfully did God confound
the wisdom of the prudent ever since she has walked and spoken agreeably to her
profession. At St. Austel the Lord has lately laid to His hand, and there is
such a revival now in it as I have never seen in any place before. Numbers are
lately joined; and our chapel, though the largest in the Circuit, is so filled,
that the people are obliged to stand on the seats to make room; yet, after all,
many are obliged to return home, not being able to gain admittance. Last Sunday
night I preached there, and was forced to enter at the window to get to the
pulpit."
The incessant efforts of this year wore him down grievously. Five hundred and
sixty-eight sermons, many of them preached out of doors in all weathers, besides
the other duties of the Methodist itinerancy, had made, by the time that
Conference drew nigh, a serious inroad upon the vigor of his constitution. His
appetite failed, and health rapidly declined. Nature called for rest, but the
necessities of the work to which he had committed himself gave him but little
time for respite; for, so early as the 27th of August in the following
Methodistic year, we find him entering on the duties of his new appointment at
Plymouth.
Mr. Clarke's early labors in the west established a sympathy between himself and
the Methodists of Cornwall, which lasted through his life, and which, on their
part, still survives in the veneration with which their children regard his very
name. He was certainly enabled to set before them, both in doctrine and life,
the excellency of the knowledge of Christ Jesus: "by pureness, by knowledge, by
long-suffering, by kindness, by the Holy Ghost, by love unfeigned, by the word
of truth, by the power of God, by the armour of righteousness on the right hand
and on the left, by honor and dishonor, by evil report and good report; as
unknown, and yet well known; as dying, and yet living; as chastened, and not
killed; as sorrowful, yet alway rejoicing; as poor, yet making many rich."
Such had been the unction and effectiveness of his popular ministry, that the
people in the St. Austel Circuit were earnestly desirous of obtaining his
services another year, and a request to that effect had been lodged with the
Conference, to which Mr. Wesley was at first disposed to give his consent. But
an unquiet state of things had latterly prevailed at Plymouth, which had just
issued in the secession of a strong party from the Society; and Mr. Wesley, who
knew well how to put the right man in the right place, had already formed such
an estimate of the talents and piety of Mr. Clarke, as to be assured that the
pulpit he occupied would become a rallying-point to re-gather the scattered
flock. The event fulfilled his expectations; and in his new sphere of labor our
young evangelist was graciously blessed, and made a blessing. His colleagues
were Messrs. John Mason and John King. Of the former, whose name is yet, and
ever will be, much honored by the Methodist people, Mr. Clarke has in his
"Letter to a P reacher" put on record the following memorial:-- "Mr. Mason made
it the study of his life to maintain his character as a preacher, a Christian,
and a man; the latter word taken in its noblest sense: and he did this by
cultivating his mind in every branch of useful knowledge within his reach; and
his profiting was great. In the history of the world, and of the church, he was
very extensively read. With anatomy and medicine he was well acquainted; and his
knowledge of natural history, and particularly botany, was ample. In the latter
science he was inferior to few. His botanical collections would do credit to the
finest museums in Europe; and especially his collections of English plants, all
gathered, preserved, classified, and described by himself. But this was his
least praise: he laid all his attainments in the natural sciences under
contribution to his theologic studies; nor could it be ever said that he
neglected his duty as a Christian minister to cultivate his mind in
philosophical pursuits. He was a Christian man, and in his life and spirit
adorned the doctrine of God his Saviour. The propriety and dignity of his
conduct were, through the whole of his life, truly exemplary; and his piety
towards God, and his benevolence towards men, were as deep as they were
sincere."
Of Mr. Clarke's own mental development and literary studies we will treat more
fully in a subsequent chapter. It may be remarked, however, that, while in this
Circuit, his intellectual powers seem to have made a great stride in the
acquisition of positive knowledge, and in the use of the faculties by which this
is combined for use, and employed for instruction. He read much and well, and
had the advantage of access to works from which his inquiring mind had hitherto
been debarred.
The year passed on in peace; with his colleagues he lived in fraternal harmony,
and the troubles of the Society were lulled into Christian repose. One little
ruffle only seems to have occurred, and this of a nature almost too trifling to
merit notice, unless considered in connection with one of those few but strong
prejudices which characterized Dr. Adam Clarke, -- a kind of distaste for, or a
disparagement of the use of music in the worship of God. We will give the
incident at Plymouth in his own way:--
"This year the Society at Dock built a new chapel at Windmill Hill, much more
commodious than that which they had opposite the Gunwharf Gate; but so much had
the congregations increased, that this new erection was soon found to be too
small. When the seats of this chapel were in course of being let, he noticed for
the first time, what he had occasion to notice with pain often after, how
difficult it is to satisfy a choir of singers; of how little use they are, in
general; and how dangerous they are, at all times to the peace of the church of
Christ. There was here a choir, and some among them who understood music as well
as most in the nation; and some who, taken individually, were both sensible and
pious. These, in their collective capacity, wished to have a particular seat,
with which the trustees could not conveniently accommodate them, because of
their engagements with other persons. When the singers found they could not have
the places they wished, they came to a private resolution not to sing in the
chapel. Of this resolution the preachers knew nothing. It was Mr. Clarke's turn
to preach in the chapel at the Gunwharf the next Sabbath morning at seven, and
then they intended to give the first exhibition of their dumb-show. He gave out,
as usual, the page and measure of the hymn. All was, silent. He looked to see if
the singers were in their place; and, behold, the choir was full, even unusually
so. He, thinking that they could not find the page, or did not know the measure,
gave out both again; and then looked them all full in the face, which they
returned with great steadiness of countenance. He then raised the tune himself,
and the congregation continued the singing. Not knowing what the matter was, he
gave out the next hymn, as he had given out the former, again and again; still
they were silent. He then raised the tune, and the congregation sang as before.
Afterwards he learned that, as the trustees would not indulge them with the
places they wished, they were determined to avenge their quarrel on Mighty God;
for He should have no praise from them, since they could not have the seats they
wished. The impiety of this conduct appeared to him in a most hideous point of
view They continued this ungodly farce, hoping to reduce the trustees,
preachers, and Society to the necessity of capitulating at discretion but the
besieged, by appointing a man to be always present to raise the tunes, cut off
the whole choir at a stroke. From this time the liveliness and piety of the
singing were considerably improved."
On this question of congregational singing, Christians in general have but
little difference of opinion. The God of nature has given to music its eternal
laws; and the God of grace has ordained by revelation that this most beautiful
provision for the solace of our spiritual life shall be consecrated to His
service as a vehicle of instruction, and an expressive token of worship. So it
was in the tabernacle and temple of old; so it is, by apostolic precept, in the
Christian services; so it will be in the solemnities of the resurrection-life of
the world to come. As to the abuses of it by frivolous or weak-minded persons,
the church has it ever in her power to restrain them; but the use of it, if we
read our Bibles rightly, she has not the liberty to abolish.
The Lord's blessing so rested upon the ministry of His servants among a Society
which they had found in a distracted and dwindling condition, that, at the end
of the year, they had the gratification to report not only the return of many of
the wanderers, but an accession of more than a hundred members. The
congregations, too, had become immense. The people of the towns, and the marine
population of the ships in the Hamoaze, came in crowds to hear the word of God.
Among the naval men who attended Mr. Clarke's ministry here, he mentions Mr.
Hore, afterwards purser of the "Venerable," in which Admiral Duncan commanded
when he beat the Dutch under De Winter. The friendly warrant-officer lent Mr.
Clarke some good books, and among others Chambers's Encyclopedia, which was
always a favorite work of reference with him. Mr. Hore died when serving in the
fleet off Egypt. Another was Cleland Kirkpatrick, who had lost an arm in an
engagement with Paul Jones, the American pirate-commodore. Kirkpatrick, who was
now rate d on board the "Cambridge," was brought under the power of the Gospel,
joined the Society, became an itinerant preacher, fought the good fight of
Christ's service, and finished his course with joy.
At the Conference of 1786 a new field of enterprise was opened to Mr. Clarke.
The people at Plymouth had been looking forward to the renewal of his services
among them; but their wishes, as well as his own, were somewhat painfully
crossed, by an unexpected appointment to the Norman Isles. In one of that
beautiful group of islands Methodism had already found a promising lodgment,
through the labors of Robert Carr Brackenbury, Esq., of Raithby Hall,
Lincolnshire; a gentleman who, having tasted himself of the good word of God,
had for some years consecrated his time and talents to the great work of making
it known to his fellow-men. He was one of the lay coadjutors of Mr. Wesley, and
in fact had the status of a regular itinerant preacher. Having been led by
Divine Providence to establish his residence for a time in Jersey, he had
entered upon a series of evangelic operations there, which were followed with
such propitious results as to induce him to apply to the Conference for the
appointment of another preacher, who should extend his labors to the neighboring
islands. The Conference knew that Mr. Clarke possessed already some knowledge of
the French tongue; and this circumstance, combined with the admirable attributes
of character which they saw unfolding themselves in him, inspired the leading
men of that body with the wish that he should be intrusted with the mission. He
seems himself to have yielded to this arrangement more from a submission to the
will of his fathers and brethren, than from any pleasurable impulse toward it in
his own mind. He was yet young in years and experience; and the anticipation of
having to bear, in an isolated station, the responsibility of an important
undertaking, threw the shadows of anxiety upon his mind. He was, nevertheless,
prepared to encounter any difficulty, and to bear any inconvenience, which might
occur in the well-marked path of duty. "I am willing," said he in a letter to
Mr. Brackenbury, "to accompany you to the islands. I desire only to receive and
to do good; and i t matters little to me in what department of the vineyard I
am, if these ends are accomplished. I feel God is here; and this is a powerful
incentive to obedience, and renders duty delightful." As to difficulty,
privation, and opposition, he had already counted the cost, and had learned that
his vocation as a laborer in the kingdom and patience of Jesus Christ was to do
and suffer, and through that ordeal pass to the triumph and repose predestined
to the faithful. He had now taken for his motto the sentence of the Grecian
sage, -- "Stand thou as a beaten anvil to the stroke; for it is the property of
a good warrior to be flayed alive, and yet to conquer." Nor this alone; there
was another which lay yet deeper in his soul: "When I am weak, then am I
strong:" "I can do all things through Christ which strengthened me." He now held
himself in readiness to sail with Mr. Brackenbury, who had gone down to his seat
in Lincolnshire, to make such arrangements as would permit him to continue for a
while longer his residence in the islands.
Some delay having occurred, Mr. Clarke took the opportunity to visit his brother
Tracy, who was now settled in a medical practice at Maghull, near Liverpool;
and, during the few days of this visit, preached in several places of that
neighborhood. Then, repairing to Southampton, by way of Bristol, he was
refreshed in body and mind by a sojourn among his friends at Trowbridge, with
some of whom he had formed a religious and abiding intimacy; and among them,
with her who was the destined companion of his life, and for whom friendship was
now fast strengthening in his bosom into a most sacred and perpetual love.
At Southampton he load expected to find Mr. Brackenbury, but a fortnight further
elapsed before he had the pleasure of meeting him. The interim was spent, partly
at Southampton, and partly at Winchester, in both which places he preached
several times. In the cathedral of the latter city he passed many hours with a
solemn interest, and stored the pages of his journal with descriptive notes on
the various antiquities of that venerable pile, and with meditations suggested
by the sight of them. I select two of these entries, as giving a favorable idea
of the manner in which this young man had schooled his mind to profitable
thought.
ON EARTHLY GLORY
"How little is worldly grandeur worth, together with the most splendid
distinctions which great and pompous titles, or even important offices, confer
upon men! They vanish as a dissipated vapour, and the proprietors of them go
their way, -- and where are they? or of what account? Death is the common lot of
all men; and the honors of the great, and the abjectness of the mean, are
equally unseen in the tomb. This I saw abundantly exemplified today, while
viewing the remains of several kings, Saxon and British, whose very names, much
less their persons and importance, are scarcely collectible from 'rosy damps,
mouldy shrines, dust and cobwebs.' This exhibits a proper estimate of worldly
glory, and verifies the saying of the wise man, that 'a living dog is better
than a dead lion.' The meanest living slave is preferable to all these dead
potentates. Is there any true greatness but that of the soul? And has the soul
itself any true nobility, unless it is begotten from above, and has the spirit
and love of Chris t to actuate it? The title of servant of the Lord Jesus Christ
I prefer to the glory of kings. This will stand me in stead, when the other is
eternally forgotten.
"In the time of the civil wars, the tombs of several of our kings, buried in
this cathedral, were broken up and rifled, and the bones thrown indiscriminately
about. After the Restoration they were collected, and put into large chests,
which are placed in different parts of the choir, and labeled, as containing
bones of ancient kings, but which could not be distinguished."
THE PROGRESS OF REVELATION
"Why is it that God has observed so slow a climax in bringing the knowledge of
His will and of their interest to mankind? e. g., giving a little under the
patriarchal, an increase under the Mosaic, and the fullness of the blessing
under the Christian dispensation? It is true He could have given the whole in
the beginning to Adam; but that this would not have as effectually answered the
Divine purpose, may be safely asserted.
God, like His instrument nature, delights in progression; and though the works
of both in semine were finished from the beginning, they are not brought forward
to complete existence but by various accretions. And this appears to be done
that the blessings resulting from both may be properly valued; as, in their
approach, men have time to discover their necessities; and when relieved, after
a thorough consciousness of their urgency, they see and feel the propriety of
being grateful to their kind Benefactor.
Were God to bestow His blessings before the want of them had been truly felt,
men would not be grateful. He gives His blessings so that they may be truly
esteemed, and he Himself become the sole object of our trust; and this end He
secures by a gradual communication of His bounties, as they are felt to be
necessary. He brings forward His dispensations of mercy and love, as he sees men
prepared to receive and value them; and, as one makes way for another, the soul
is rendered capable of more extended views and enjoyments: so the Divine being
causes every succeeding dispensation to excel that which preceded it -- in
light, life, power, and holiness.
"We first teach our children the power of the letters, -- then to combine
consonants and vowels to make syllables, -- to unite syllables into words, and
then to assort words into regular discourse. To require them to attempt the
latter before they had studied the former, would be absurd. The first step
qualifies for the second, and that for the third. Thus God deals with the
universe, and thus with every individual: every communication is a kind of seed,
which, if cultivated, brings forth fruit. 'Light is sown for the righteous, and
gladness for the upright in heart.' "
At length Mr. Brackenbury reached Southampton. They embarked in a Jersey packet;
and, landing on the twenty-sixth of October in St. Aubin's Bay, they walked to
St. Helier's, where Mr. Clarke found himself that evening an inmate in the house
which Mr. Brackenbury had engaged as his residence.
* * * * * * *
DIVISION 7
BOOK I
(The Morning of Life)
CHAPTER 7
THE MISSIONARY
The Norman Isles, those beautiful spots which adorn the French waters of La
Manche, were now to be the scenes of evangelic agencies whose results have made
a multitude of families in them the better for time and eternity. Some while
before the arrival of Mr. Brackenbury upon those shores, several persons in
Jersey had been awakened to a concern for the salvation of their souls, and had
formed themselves into a kind of religious community for mutual edification.
They were a little flock without a shepherd, and too feeble in their
circumstances to attempt a regular church-organization under a stated ministry.
A regiment of soldiers arrived just then from England, among whom were some
pious men who had heard Captain Webb preach at Southampton and Winchester. The
word of truth ministered by that good servant of God and the king had been so
blessed to them, as to urge them to recommend to these Jersey Christians to open
a communication with Mr. Wesley, in the hope that he would be induced to supply
them with on e of his preachers. They did so, through the intervention of Mr.
Jasper Winscomb, one of the early Methodists of Hampshire. At the following
Conference of 1783, Mr. Wesley read Mr. Winscomb's letter to the assembly, and
asked, "Whether any preacher found it in his heart to obey the call?" It was
then that Mr. Brackenbury offered his services. In him the Conference did not
fail to see the man every way designated by Providence and Grace to initiate
this new enterprise under the most favorable auspices. Nor were they
disappointed by the events. He lost no time in fulfilling his commission. Having
found his way to Jersey, he hired an old "religious house," which happened to be
vacant, near the sea, and commenced the public preaching of the Gospel. A
procedure so novel excited conflicting feelings among the people of the
vicinity: some were pleased and grateful; others stirred up to opposition, and
that, at times, of a riotous and dangerous character. Mr. Brackenbury kept
steadily to his work, and soon began to make a sound impression. Another place
was opened, at St. Mary's, and then another. Some pious young men of good talent
were raised up to exhort, and then to act as local preachers; Societies were
formed; in short, the Methodist tree had struck its roots.
When Mr. Clarke joined Mr. Brackenbury as his colleague, they made no delay to
extend their operations to the other islands. Accordingly, after preaching a few
times in Jersey, Mr. Clarke proceeded to attempt the introduction of the good
cause into Guernsey. At the present time the English language is fast
superseding the French in both the greater islands; and even in those days the
majority of the townspeople were conversant with both tongues; so that the
missionary found no difficulty in getting an audience, though, as yet, too
little accustomed to speak French to venture a sermon in it. His first
preaching-place in Guernsey was a large warehouse at Les Terres, just without
St. Peter-lePort; and among the congregation he found some who were willing to
open their houses in different parts of the town for occasional services. Under
these circumstances, he commenced those three years which have borne such ample
fruit unto life eternal. In some neighborhoods, he found French indispensable;
and, in conducting a service in that language, was under the necessity, to him a
disagreeable one, of reading a discourse which he had previously prepared. While
the good word sunk into the hearts of not a few with saving effect in both
islands, it stirred up a spirit of opposition in them who were of the contrary
side. Some specimens of this we may extract from his own statements.
"One Sabbath-morning, Mr. Clarke, accompanied by Captain and Lieutenant W.,
having gone to preach at La Valle, a low part of Guernsey, always surrounded by
the sea at high water, to which at such times there is no access but by means of
a sort of causeway; a multitude of unruly people, with drums, horns, and various
offensive weapons, assembled at the bridge, to prevent his entering the islet.
The tide being a little out, he ventured to ride across about a mile below the
bridge without their perceiving him, got to the house, and had nearly finished
his discourse before the mob could assemble. At last they came in full power,
and with fell purpose. The captain of a man-of-war, the naval lieutenant, and
the other gentlemen who had accompanied him, mounted their horses, and rode off
at full gallop, leaving him in the hands of the mob. That he might not be able
to escape, they cut his bridle in pieces. Nothing intimidated, he went among
them, got upon an eminence, and began to speak to them. The drums and horns
ceased, the majority became quiet, only a few from the outskirts throwing stones
and dirt, from which, however, he managed to defend himself; and after about an
hour they permitted him to depart in peace. On returning to St. Peter's, he
found his naval heroes in great safety.
"He had a more narrow escape one evening at St. Aubin's, in Jersey. A desperate
mob of some hundreds, with almost all instruments of destruction, assembled
round the house in which he was preaching, which was a wooden building with five
windows. At their first approach, the principal part of the congregation issued
forth, and provided for their own safety. The Society alone, about thirteen
persons, remained with their preacher. The mob, finding that all with whom they
might claim brotherhood had escaped, resolved to pull down the house, and bury
the preacher and his friends in the reins. Mr. Clarke exhorted the friends to
trust in that God who was able to save, when one of the mob presented a pistol
at him through the window opposite to the pulpit, which twice flashed in the
pan. Others had got crows, and were busily employed in sapping the foundation of
the house. Mr. Clarke, perceiving this, said to the people, 'If we stay here, we
shall be all destroyed. I will go out among them; they seek not you, but me.
After they have got me, they will permit you to pass unmolested.' They besought
him with tears not to leave the house, as he would infallibly be murdered. He,
seeing that there was no time to be lost, as they continued to sap the
foundations, said, ' I will instantly go out among them in the name of God.' Je
vous accompagnerai, ('I will go with you,') said a stout young man. As the house
was assailed with showers of stones, he met a volley of these, as he opened and
passed through the door. It was a clear full-moon night, after a heavy storm of
hail and rain. He walked forward. The mob divided to the right and left, and
made an ample passage for him and the young man who followed him to pass
through. This they did to the very skirts of the hundreds who were assembled
with drums, horns, spades, forks, bludgeons, to take the life of a man whose
only crime was proclaiming to lost sinners redemption through the blood of the
cross. During the whole time of his passing through the mob, there was a
deathlike silence, nor was there any motion but what was necessary to give him a
free passage. Either their eyes were holden that they could not know him; or
they were so overawed by the power of God, that they could not lift a hand or
utter a word against him. The poor people, finding all was quiet, came out a
little after, and passed away, not one of them being either hurt or molested. In
a few minutes, the mob seemed to awake as from a dream, and, finding that their
prey had been plucked out of their teeth, they knew not how, attacked the house
afresh, broke every square of glass in the windows, and scarcely left a whole
tile upon the roof. He afterwards learned, that their design was to put him in
the sluice of an overshot water-mill, by which he must have been crushed in
pieces!
"The next Lord's day he went to the same place. The mob rose again; and, when
they began to make a tumult, he called on them to hear him a few moments; when
those who appeared to have most influence grew silent, and stilled the rest. He
spoke to them to this effect:-- ' I have never done any of you any harm; my
heartiest wish was, and is, to do you good. I could tell you many things, by
which you might grow wise unto salvation, would you but listen to them. Why do
you persecute a man who never can be your enemy, and wishes to show that he is
your friend? You cannot be Christians, who seek to destroy a man because he
tells you the truth. But are you even men? Do you deserve that name? I am but an
individual, and unarmed; and hundreds of you join together, to attack and
destroy this single unarmed man. Is not this to act like cowards and assassins?
I am a man, and a Christian. I fear you not as a man: I would not turn my back
upon the best of you, and could probably put your chief under my feet. St. Paul
th e apostle was assailed in like manner by the Heathens: they also were
dastards and cowards. The Scripture does not call them men; but, according to
the English translation, certain lewd fellows of the baser sort; or, according
to your own, which you better understand, les batteurs de pave, -- la canaille.
O, shame on you, to come in multitudes to attack an inoffensive stranger in your
island, who comes only to call you from wickedness to serve the living God, and
to show you the way which will lead you to everlasting blessedness ' He paused
-- there was a shout, 'He is a clever fellow: he shall preach, and we will hear
him.' They were as good as their word: he proceeded without any further
hindrance from them, and they never after gave him any molestation.
The little preaching-house being nearly destroyed, he some Sabbaths afterward
attempted to preach out of doors. The mob having given up persecution, one of
the magistrates of St. Aubin took up the business; came to the place with a mob
of his own, and the drummer of the regiment stationed at the place; pulled down
Mr. Clarke while he was at prayer, and delivered him into the hands of the
canaille he had brought with him. The drummer attended him out of the town,
beating the 'Rogues' March' on his drum, and beating him frequently with the
drumsticks, from the strokes of which, and other misusages, he did not recover
for some weeks. But he wearied out all his persecutors. There were several who
heard the word gladly; and for their sakes he freely ventured himself, till at
last all opposition ceased."
From the rude encounters he had thus sometimes to meet in the discharge of his
mission-work, Mr. Clarke found a grateful relief in Guernsey in the privilege of
residing with the family of Mr. De Jersey, at Mon Plaisir, an old manor
farm-house, about a mile from St. Peter's. Every attribute of this favored spot,
*[1] the Hesperide climate, [Hesperides, nymphs in Greek mythology who guarded a
tree of golden apples] the scenery, the commodious and tranquil mansion and
gardens, where the myrtle and laurels rise to the proportions of stately trees,
and the orange ripens in the open air, all combined to render it a most
desirable asylum for the student bent on learning, or the laborer sighing for
repose. The writer of these pages can never forget the pleasure with which,
during a ministerial residence in Guernsey, he has often visited this spot;
where, under the leafy shade of a bower formed of the entwined boughs of a
cluster of fig-trees, the family used to tell him how, in that very
summer-house, Dr. Adam Clarke had spent so many hours in reading his Bible and
writing his sermons. The family of Mon Plaisir, of whom the Rev. Henry De
Jersey, now of the French Conference, is one of the worthy representatives,
embraced the cause of Methodism with their whole heart. One of the first of the
many good offices which the elder Mr. De Jersey performed, for the service of
the good cause among them, was to build a room on the north side of the house
that should serve for a domestic chapel, to which he could invite the
inhabitants round about. Mr. Clarke, as the chaplain of the place, held stated
services in this room on Thursday and Saturday evenings; offering the first
prayer in English, and preaching the sermon in French, with a prayer in the same
language.
In these sequestered shades our friend applied himself with new vigor to those
more solemn studies which were destined to give character to his after-life. He
had long felt that the vow, so foolishly made four years before, to have nothing
more to do with Greek and Latin, was wrong in itself, as well as unadvised, and
that he could conscientiously renounce it. In resuming those languages, he found
that long cessation from classical reading rendered it necessary for him to
begin again in that department with the grammars themselves. But, having by dint
of effort recovered his lost ground, he brought his new acquisitions to bear
upon the study of the Septuagint Bible and Greek Testament, for the purposes,
and in the manner, to which we shall have occasion to refer more fully
hereafter. It was now, also, that with a moderate knowledge of Hebrew he struck
out into the study of Chaldee and Syriac, by the help of Bishop Walton's
"Introduction to the Oriental Languages," the Scholia Syriaca of Leusden, and
some other works to which he had access in the public library at Jersey. Before
he left the islands, he obtained possession of a copy of Walton's Polyglot Bible
of his own. True to those instincts which Providence and Grace had implanted in
his heart, he began even now to turn this biblical knowledge to account, by
committing to paper memoranda for notes on the Gospels, which formed the first
nucleus of his future Commentary.
Meantime the great objects of his mission were carried on with energy. In the
course of the year he was moved to attempt the introduction of preaching into
the island of Alderney. In recounting to Mr. Wesley the manner in which this was
carried into effect, he says: "My design being made public, many hindrances were
thrown in my way. It was reported that the governor had threatened to prohibit
my landing; and that, in case he found me on the island, he would transport me
to the Caskets (a rock in the sea, about three leagues W. of Alderney, on which
there is a lighthouse). These threatenings, being published here, rendered it
very difficult for me to procure a passage, as several of my friends were
against my going, fearing bad consequences; and none of the captains who traded
to the island were willing to take me, fearing to incur the displeasure of the
governor; notwithstanding that I offered them anything they could reasonably
demand for my passage. I thought at last I should be obliged to hire one of t he
English packets, as I was determined to go, by God's grace, at all events.
"Having waited a long time, watching sometimes day and night, I at last got a
vessel bound for the island, in which I embarked; and after a few hours, though
not without some fatigue and sickness, we came to the S. W. side of the island,
where we were obliged to cast anchor, as the tide was too far spent to carry us
round to the harbor. The captain put me and some others to shore with the boat.
I climbed the rocks, and got to the top of the island, thanking God for my
passage. But now I had some new difficulties to encounter. I knew not where to
go: I had no acquaintance in the place, nor had any one invited me thither. For
some time I was perplexed, till that word of the God of missionaries came
powerfully to me, ' Into whatsoever house ye enter, first say, Peace be to this
house. And in the same house remain, eating and drinking such things as they
give.' From this I took courage, and proceeded to the town, which is about a
mile distant from the harbor. After having walked some way into it, I took
particular notice of a very poor cottage, into which I felt a strong inclination
to enter. I did so, with a 'Peace be unto this house,' and found in it an old
man and woman, who, having understood my business, bade me welcome to the best
food they had, to a little chamber where I might sleep, and (what was still more
acceptable) to their house to preach in. On hearing this, I saw plainly that the
hand of the Lord was upon me for good; and I thanked Him, and took courage.
"Being unwilling to lose any time, I told them I would preach that evening, if
they could procure me a congregation. This strange news spread rapidly through
the town; and long before the appointed hour a multitude of people flocked
together, to whom I spoke of the kingdom of God. It was with difficulty I could
persuade them to go away, after promising to preach to them again the next
evening.
"I then retired to my little apartment, where I had scarcely rested twenty
minutes, when the good woman of the house came and entreated me to come down and
preach again, as several of the gentry, among whom was one of the justices, were
come to hear what I had to say. I stepped down immediately, and found the house
once more quite fall. Deep attention sat on every face, while I showed the great
need they stood in of a Saviour, and exhorted them to turn at once from their
iniquities to the Living God. I continued in this good work about an hour,
having received peculiar assistance from on high; and concluded with informing
them what my design was in visiting the island, and the motives which had
induced me. Having ended, the justice stepped forward, exchanged a few very
civil words with me, and desired to see the book out of which I had been
speaking. I gave it into his hand: he looked over it with attention, and asked
me several questions, all which I answered apparently to his satisfaction.
Having bestowed a few more hearty advices on him and the congregation, they all
quietly departed; and the concern evident on many of their countenances fully
proved that God had added His testimony to that of His feeble servant. The next
evening I preached again to a large attentive company, to whom, I trust, the
word of the Lord came not in vain.
"But a singular thing took place the next day. While I sat at dinner, a
constable, from a person in authority, came to solicit my immediate appearance
at a place called the Bray, (where several respectable families live, and where
the governor's stores are kept,) to preach to a company of gentlemen and ladies,
who were waiting, and at whose desire one of the large store-rooms was prepared
for that purpose. I went without delay, and was brought by the lictor [an
officer attending the consul or other magistrate] to his master's apartment, who
behaved with much civility, told me the reason of his sending for me, and begged
I would preach without delay. I willingly consented, and in a quarter of an hour
a large company was assembled. The gentry were not so partial to themselves as
to exclude several sailors, smugglers, and laborers, from hearing with them. The
Lord was with me, and enabled me to explain, from Prov. xii. 26, the character
and conduct of the righteous, and to prove that such an one was beyond al l
comparison more excellent than his ungodly neighbor, however great, rich, wise,
or important he might be in the eyes of men. All heard with deep attention, save
an English gentleman, so called, who walked out about the middle of the
discourse.
"The next Sabbath morning, being invited to preach in the English church, I
gladly accepted it; and in the evening preached in the large warehouse at the
Bray, to a much larger congregation, composed of the principal gentry of the
island, together with justices, jurats, constables, &c. The Lord was again with
me, and enabled me to declare His sacred counsel without fear.
"The next day, being the time appointed for my return, many were unwilling that
I should go; saying, 'We have much need of such preaching, and such a preacher:
we wish you would abide in the island, and go back no more.' The tide serving at
about eleven o'clock in the forenoon, I attended at the beach, in order to
embark; but the utmost of the flood did not set the vessel afloat. I then
returned to the town: the people were glad of my detention, and earnestly hoped
that the vessel might set fast, at least till the next spring-tides. Many came
together in the evening, to whom I again preached with uncommon liberty; and God
appeared to be more eminently present than before. This induced me to believe
that my detention was of the Lord, and that I had not before fully delivered His
counsel. The vessel being got off the same night about twelve o clock, I
recommended them to God, promised them a preacher shortly, and setting sail
arrived in Guernsey in about twenty-one hours. Glory be to God for ever! Amen."
But this uninterrupted tension of mind, and extraordinary labor of body, began
to make serious inroads on his constitution, and in the spring of this year
reduced Mr. Clarke to the brink of the grave. A complication of disorders seemed
to have fastened on him. He had been declining for some weeks, till at length he
sank in utter prostration. We have a memorandum of this illness from himself,
written shortly after to a friend in England:-- "Being attacked," says he, "from
so many quarters, there was little prospect of my lingering long, especially as
I had been slowly wasting for some months. The people were greatly alarmed, and
proclaimed a day of fasting and prayer, to snatch their poor preacher from the
grave. Their sorrow caused me to feel: for myself I could neither weep nor
repine; but I could hardly forbear the former on their account. The doctor on
his second visit found that I was severely attacked by jaundice, and so took the
cure of that first in hand; but withal observed, that I should not regain my
health properly till I resumed my former habit of riding. Through much mercy, I
am now greatly mended; my cough is almost entirely removed. I am yet confined to
my room, and am very much enfeebled. Indeed, considered abstractedly from my
spirit, I am little else than a quantity of bones and sinews, wrapt up in none
of the best-colored skin ... When almost at the worst, I opened my Septuagint on
the ninety-first Psalm, and on the last three verses, which are much more
emphatical than the English, particularly the middle clause of the fifteenth
verse, -- 'I am with him in affliction.' Blessed be my God and Saviour, I have
found it to be so.
A voyage across the Channel, and a visit to some loved friends in England,
contributed to restore his wasted strength. Two or three incidents on the
passage back are worthy of preservation, as unfolding some personal
characteristics. At Southampton, having a few hours to spare before embarking.
He preached by special request to a miscellaneous congregation. who heard with
great seriousness, and some of whom escorted him to the boat, "wishing him more
blessedness than their tongues could express." Among the passengers were a party
of military officers, a lieutenant in the navy, and some gentlemen, so called."
With these he had several altercations, in consequence of his reproving them for
blasphemous language. On the Sunday their profanity seemed purposely augmented,
he remonstrated, but only to find that a transient cessation was followed by
still more objectionable conduct. The preacher, however, was not to be daunted.
Acting on the maxim, "Ne cede malis, sed contra audentior ito," he went among
them again, and insisted on their putting a stop to such wickedness. They
demanded by what authority he bore himself in this manner. He replied, "I am a
servant of Jesus Christ, and the authority by which I denounce your wickedness I
have from God." It ought to be mentioned, in justice to the officers, as well as
to the credit of their reprover, that they acceded to his wishes.
In the month of May he resumed his labors in the islands, and in the following
September had the great gratification of receiving a visit from Mr. Wesley, who
was accompanied by Dr. Coke and Mr. Bradford. In Jersey they lodged at Mr.
Brackenbury's, and in Guernsey at Mon Plaisir. Immense crowds heard Mr. Wesley
in both islands, and the memory of his visit has become a tradition among the
people.
Obliged at length by in appointment at Bristol on a particular day to leave
Guernsey whatever wind was blowing, Mr. Wesley availed himself of an English
brig touching at the island on her way from France to Penzance. Mr. Clarke had
obtained liberty to return with the party for a few days' visit to England. The
wind blew fairly for their course to Penzance as they sailed out of Guernsey
road, but soon slackened till it died away, and then, rising in the opposite
quarter, freshened into a stiff contrary breeze; and much time was spent in
frequent tacking before they could well clear the island. I will now recount
what followed in Mr. Clarke's own words: "Mr. Wesley was sitting reading in the
cabin, and, hearing the noise and bustle occasioned by putting the vessel about
to stand on her different tacks, he put his head above, and inquired what was
the matter? Being told the wind was become contrary, and the ship was obliged
thus to tack, he said, ' Then let us go to prayer.' His own company who were
upon deck walked down, and at his request Dr. Coke, Mr. Bradford, and Mr. Clarke
went to prayer. After the latter had ended, Mr. Wesley broke out into fervent
supplication, which seemed to be more the offspring of strong faith than of mere
desire, in words remarkable as well as the spirit, feeling, and manner in which
they were uttered. Some of them were to the following effect:-- 'Almighty and
everlasting God, Thou hast Thy way everywhere, and all things serve the purposes
of Thy will: Thou holdest the winds in Thy fists, and sittest upon the
waterfloods, and reignest King for ever. Command these winds and these waves
that they obey THEE, and take us speedily and safely to the haven whither we
would be." The power of his petition was felt by all. He rose from his knees,
made no kind of remark, but took up his book, and continued his reading. Mr.
Clarke went upon deck, and what was his surprise when he found the vessel
standing on her right course with a steady breeze, which slackened not, till,
carrying them at the rate of nine or ten knots an hour, they anchored safely
near St. Michael's Mount in Penzance Bay! On the sudden and favorable change of
the wind Mr. Wesley made no remark: so fully did he expect to be heard, that he
took it for granted he was heard. Such answers to prayer he was in the habit of
receiving, and therefore to him the occurrence was not strange. Of such a
circumstance how many of those who did not enter into his views would have
descanted [sung] at large, had it happened in favor of themselves! Yet all the
notice he takes of this singular circumstance is contained in the following
entry in his Journal:-- ' In the morning, Thursday, (September 6th, 1787,) we
went on board with a fair moderate wind. But we had but just entered the ship
when the wind died away. We cried to God for help; and it presently sprung up
exactly, fair, and did not cease till it brought us into Penzance Bay.'
On landing, Mr. Clarke volunteered to become the avant-courier of the party,
and, riding on, preached at Redruth, St. Austel, and Plymouth; in each place
announcing for Mr. Wesley on the following evening, till at Bath Mr. Wesley
proceeded to Bristol, and Mr. Clarke to Trowbridge.
This latter place had long had an attraction for him, which had now become too
strong to be surmounted. In fact, ever since his residence in that Circuit, he
had cherished a deep attachment to a lady who was the object of his first and
everlasting love. She was the eldest of several sisters who resided at
Trowbridge with their mother, the widow of Mr. John Cooke, formally a
substantial clothier of that town. These ladies had been frequently hearers of
Mr. Wesley, Mr. Brackenbury, and others of the Methodist preachers; and the two
younger sisters had been so moved by the word as to give themselves to the Lord,
and to His people according to His will. Mrs. Cooke also found much pleasure in
extending to Mr. Wesley, and some of the other ministers, the hospitalities of
her house on their occasional visits. Miss Cooke, who, with much feminine
delicacy, was distinguished, nevertheless, by much coolness of thought and
firmness of character, did not at first accede to these Methodistic tendencies;
but, struck with the beautiful effects of the new faith in the life of her
sisters, she was induced to accompany them to the humble preaching-room, and was
herself gradually brought under the converting power of the Gospel. Made a
partaker of this great benefit, she consecrated heart and life to her Saviour's
cause, and became a helper of the faith of others, in inviting them to the house
of prayer, and, as a leader of a class, in watching over the incipient piety of
some who had obeyed the heavenly call they heard there. It was in those sweet
days that Adam Clarke and Mary Cooke learned to love each other with a pure
friendship, which, hallowed by all the sanctities of religion, endured with
their years, and proved itself at last more strong than death.
At this period, however, there were obstacles to their union too formidable to
be overcome. Mrs. Cooke, while she entertained a high esteem for Mr. Clarke as a
young man of learning, piety, and promise in the Christian ministry, was yet too
well aware of the rough experiences of a Methodist preacher's life not to feel
an almost invincible reluctance to a marriage which would, to all human
appearance, identify her beloved daughter's life with penury and discomfort. Nor
did Mr. Wesley himself, who had been led to entertain a personal affection for
the young people, (who, on their part. looked up to him with a true filial
reverence as their father in Christ,) regard the question of their union without
serious misgiving. At first, coinciding with the wishes of Mrs. Cooke, he gave
the thing his entire disapproval, and threatened Mr. Clarke with his heaviest
displeasure, "if he married Miss Cooke without her mother's consent."
Subsequently, his opinion was somewhat modified; and, in reply to a letter
written by Adam Clarke in urging a favorable consideration of the marriage, he
tells him, -- "While your health is so indifferent, you have no business to
marry: therefore my consent, at present, would do you no good. Wait patiently,
at least till your health be restored; then strange revolutions may happen, and
things unexpected take place to make your way more easy.
In October, after a most stormy passage, we find him again at work in the
islands. In the Stations of the July Conference, Robert Carr Brackenbury and
Adam Clarke stand for Jersey, and two other preachers for Guernsey, -- William
Stephens for the English congregations. and John De Queteville for the French
work. In consequence of this arrangement, Mr. Clarke spent the greater portion
of his time in Jersey, alternating with the other islands. Mr. Brackenbury
continued his zealous labors, and supplemented them with pecuniary help toward
the support of the rising cause; an instance of which I find in a letter of Mr.
Clarke, addressed to him in the month of November in this year, in which he
acknowledges the receipt of £80, seventy of which were for public purposes, and
the remaining ten for himself. This eminent Christian gentleman and eloquent
preacher of the word of God thus labored in all ways to promote the interests of
a cause to which he had consecrated his existence; and he has left for himself
an imperishable name in the annals of early Methodism. He died in 1818, beloved
and regretted by the thousands to whom in word and deed he had been as an angel
of God. The sentiment of the Methodist Connection at large on the bereavement
occasioned by his decease is well expressed in the Magazine of that year:-- "As
this revered and lamented friend of religion and virtue, and eminent servant of
our Lord Jesus Christ, had adorned and preached the Gospel among us, with great
approbation and success, for upwards of forty years, we exceedingly regret not
being allowed to give a sketch of his exemplary life and great usefulness; which
we are prevented from doing by his own particular request, ' that nothing should
be said or written concerning him.' We much question. However, whether such a
request, dictated, doubtless, by his extreme and, we think, mistaken modesty,
ought to be so strictly observed as to deprive the church and the world for ever
hereafter of the edification, encouragement, and comfort which even an imperfect
narrative of his life, and delineation of his character, would certainly have
afforded them; and much more such a biographical account of him as we know his
bereaved and mourning partner would be well able to lay before the public."
In the Rev. John De Queteville, Mr. Clarke had a zealous and effective
colleague. He was a native of Jersey, and one of the first-fruits of the
Methodist ministry in that island. A short time after he had begun to preach the
Gospel to the French-speaking population, he was ordained by Dr. Coke, whom he
accompanied to Paris for the purpose of founding, if possible, an evangelical
mission in that capital. The project at that time failed. The atheistic frenzy
of the Revolution had not sufficiently subsided in the public mind to induce the
Parisians so much as to listen to the word of God. Dr. Coke purchased one of the
confiscated churches, and opened it for public preaching. They found none
willing to hear, but many to revile the truth which they had rejected; and, in
walking the streets, the preachers were threatened with the exaltation of the
lamp-post. A rabble surrounded them, not once nor twice, with the old
terror-time cry of A la Lanterne! Dr. Coke saw that the enterprise was as yet a
hopeless one; and , by the kind offices of a friend, who negotiated for him with
the public minister, he was released from his bargain for the church, and
returned to England. Mr. De Queteville resumed his labors in the islands, and
spent a long and honorable life in building up the cause of God among them. A
man naturally of impetuous temper, he became, by the sanctifying grace of God, a
pattern of holiness and active benevolence. I knew him in the evening of his
days, at his quiet little parsonage at St. Jacques', waiting, with the venerable
and amiable partner of his life, to be called into the presence of the Saviour,
"All praise, all meekness, and all love."
The funeral rites at the grave of this aged saint were performed by the Rev.
John Hawtrey. This distinguished servant of Christ was originally an officer in
the army, and had served in the Peninsula under Lord Wellington. Converted to
God, he became a Methodist minister, and labored many years in connection with
the Conference, honored and admired, wherever he was known, as a man of noble
exterior, a Christian gentleman, and an eloquent and powerful expositor of the
Gospel. He was subsequently induced to enter the ministry of the Episcopal
Church. Mr. Hawtrey held the incumbency of St. James's church, in Guernsey for
some years; but removed, towards the close of his life, to a parish near
Windsor. At his decease, the officers of the garrison at Windsor testified their
veneration for his memory, by solemnizing his funeral with military honors.
Although separated from his former brethren in the mere matter of church
ceremonies, Mr. Hawtrey, as I knew from personal intercourse with him in
Guernsey, never lost his love for the cause of Methodism. His affections were
ever true to it, and his devout wishes attended its progress. As already stated,
he buried good old Jean De Queteville; and I shall never forget how, when
standing by his side at the aged laborer's grave, beneath the serene and
cloudless heaven, and surrounded by the grand panorama of island-landscapes and
unruffled seas, with uplifted eyes. and a face illuminated with faith and hope.
He gave us to hear again "a voice from heaven, saying, Write: Blessed are the
dead who die in the Lord. Yea, saith the Spirit: for they rest from their
labors, and their works do follow them."
Reverting to Mr. Clarke's days in the islands, we find that, as health returned,
he resumed all his former pursuits, preaching "before day and after nightfall,"
and diligently improving the intervening hours by close study, or personal
intercourse with his flock. Among these were some who had long known the Lord,
and whose steadfast piety made a sacred impression on his own mind. With these
"deeply experienced Christians," as he describes them in a letter to Miss Cooke,
he felt it a privilege to be permitted to have any communion. Compared with
them, he speaks of himself as being "a very little child." The most remarkable
were two females, one elderly, the other young. "The former," says he, "seems to
possess all the solemnity and majesty of Christianity: she has gone, and is
going, through acute bodily sufferings; but these add to her apparent dignity:
her eyes, every feature of her face, together with all her words, are uncommonly
expressive of ETERNITY. To her I put myself frequently to school during my short
abode in the island, and could not avoid learning much, unless I had been
invincibly ignorant or diabolically proud. The latter seems possessed of all
that cheerful happiness and pure love which so abundantly characterize the
Gospel of Christ. Peace, meekness, and joy, judiciously immingled by the
sagacious economy of the Holy Spirit, constitute a glorious something,
affectingly evident in all her deportment, which I find myself quite at a loss
to describe. *[2] Two such I know not that I have before found: they are indeed
the rare and excellent of the earth; the one 'not grave with sternness,' nor the
other ' with lightness free.' "
Among the converts whom the Lord gave him as the seals of his ministry was a
soldier, whose case merits a record. Writing at the time he was confined by
illness, Mr. Clarke says: "Yesterday a soldier belonging to the Train, whom the
Lord gave, together with his wife, some time ago to my feeble labors, came to
see me. I have seldom seen more affection, commixed with as much of childlike
simplicity as you can conceive, evidenced before. He looked in my face
pitifully, and saying, 'I heard you were sick,' sat down in a chair, and melted
into tears. Yes; and yet he is a soldier. It is amazing, this man was a very
great slave to drunkenness. One morning last summer, having got drunk before
five o'clock, (!) he some way or other strolled out to Les Terres, and heard me
preach. and was deeply affected. 'What, and he drunk?' Yes. After preaching he
took me by the hand, and with the tears streaming down his cheeks, betwixt
drunkenness' and distress, he was only capable of saying a very few words: 'O
sir, I know you are a man possessed by the Spirit of God.' He went home, and,
after three days' agonies, God in tender mercy set his soul at liberty. His wife
also set out for the same heaven in good earnest, and shortly found peace. Both
joined the Society, and have walked ever since most steadfastly in faith and
good works."
The congregations at St. Peter's were not without their fluctuations. "It is
strange to see how times change. Last winter I had in general a congregation
made up of several of the most reputable persons in the island:-- to keep me
among them, they offered to provide handsomely for me, which kind offer I again
and again rejected. However, they continued to hear, believing I spoke the words
of truth and soberness, and, as they phrased it, ' in the best manner they had
ever heard.' 'Pity it was that I could not be permitted to preach in the church
at least every Sunday.' However, this, like all things under the sun, must have
an end. By and by, one of these gentry stayed away, another attended less
frequently, then he dropt off; such and such did not come, and therefore I lost
some more; and so on, till hardly a soul of them came either on Sabbaths or
other days. I was then as a person who had been in honor and continued not; and
my ministry was at last confined to the poor, the best friends of my God. These
cleaved closely to me, and praised God that the candlestick was yet in its
place. With these I endeavored to keep on my way, and the dropping in of one now
and then to the Society held up my hands. Persecutions arose, and evil reports
were liberally spread abroad: this made it rather dangerous for any of my
quondam [former] friends to take any notice of me. Then I was obliged fully to
walk alone; but through the strength of God I was enabled to weather every
trying circumstance. Finally, as things cannot be long at a stay under the sun,
the time for a revolution must again take place; and the honor that I sought
not, had, and lost, would, as unsought for, again return. One -- another -- and
another have ventured back, heard, were pleased and profited once more, brought
others along with them, till at last I have all back again, with an accession of
several new ones; and now I am an honorable man, and surely a great many good
things would not be too good for me now, would I accept them. Thus you see, my
dear Mary, there is but as one day between a poor man and a rich. It is well, it
is ineffably well, to have a happiness that is not affected by the change to
which external things are incident. What a blessing to be able to sit calm on
the wheel of fortune, and to prosper in the midst of adversity!"
Nor did the mercy of God withhold from him this inwardly satisfying beatitude.
"Blessed be the Lord, it has been a time of much good both to my body and mind.
Since I wrote last, the Lord has opened His heaven most benignly in my soul;
and, with that, has given me to discover Him, as one uniform, uninterrupted,
eternal Goodwill towards all His creatures. When I look into myself, I am
astonished that He condescends to pay me the smallest visit; but when I
contemplate Him in the above attribute, my astonishment ceases, though I cannot
forget myself ... Were I like Mohammed's feigned angel, having 'seventy thousand
heads, each actuated by as many tongues, and each uttering seventy thousand
voices,' I should think their eternal utterance of His praise an almost no
tribute to a God so immeasurably good. And yet where am I going? I have but one
tongue, and that speaks very inexpressively. The choicest blessings of heaven
are given to me; and how seldom, comparatively, is it used in showing forth His
excellency, or acknowledging how deeply His debtor I am! O my God, what reason
have I to be ashamed and confounded! But Thou wilt have mercy!"
The spring of the year 1788 became a memorable epoch in his life. The opposition
to his marriage with Miss Cooke had so far given way at Trowbridge, partly by
the kind offices of Mr. Wesley, and partly by the strengthening influence of Mr.
Clarke's character on the minds of the opponents of that measure, that his way
was considered to be now sufficiently plain to admit of the fulfillment of the
vows the two parties had so long held sacred. Accordingly, Mr. Clarke and Miss
Cooke were married in Trowbridge church, on the seventeenth of April. Upon this
event I cannot do better than give the doctor's own reflection, written many
years after:-- "Few connections of this kind were ever more opposed; and few, if
any, were ever more happy. The steadiness of the parties during this opposition
endeared them to each other: they believed that God had joined them together,
and no storm or difficulty in life was able to put them asunder ... Mrs. Cooke,
many years before her death, saw that this marriage was one of the most happy in
her family, in which there were some of the most respectable connections; one
daughter having married that most excellent man, Joseph Butterworth, Esq., M.
P., a pattern of real Christianity, a true friend of the church of God, and a
pillar of the state; and another having married the Rev. Mr. Thomas, rector of
Begelly, in South Wales, an amiable and truly pious man."
Eleven days after their wedding, Mr. and Mrs. Clarke embarked at Southampton for
the islands. The steam-packet had not then appeared on our seas, and a voyage
which can now be made in as many hours took them on this occasion not fewer than
eight days to accomplish. The reception which awaited Mrs. Clarke in Guernsey
was all that herself or her husband could desire. The worthy family at Mon
Plaisir had sent over a trusty domestic to attend on Mrs. Clarke, and on their
arrival welcomed them with true family hospitality. From Madame De Saumarez,
(the mother of Sir James De Saumarez, who commanded the "Ocean" at Trafalgar,)
Miss Lempriere, (whose brother wrote the once much-used "Classical Dictionary,")
and other ladies of Guernsey, she also received most kind attentions. As to Mr.
Clarke, his marriage not only conduced to his own personal comfort, but greatly
increased his influence among the people. Henceforward with an undivided mind he
toiled for their edification. His labors were still distributed between Jersey
and Guernsey, his headquarters being in the former island. At Les Terres he had
continued to preach in English twice on Sundays, on the Wednesday evening, and
Friday morning. The place was so crowded as to render the erection of a large
chapel, if possible, highly expedient; and already measures were taken for such
a purpose, with a decision and liberality which gave every promise of success.
These operations were sustained, during the following year, by a new appointment
from the Conference of 1788; in the "Minutes" of which the stations for the
islands are, -- Jersey, Messrs. Brackenbury and Clarke; and Guernsey, Messrs.
Bredin and De Queteville. Mr. Clarke appears to have worked alternately in the
islands, a quarter in each. The winter of this year was unusually severe, and
one night in the month of January he had a narrow escape from perishing by the
cold. In going to preach at St. Aubin, the snow lying in great depth inland, he
was obliged to follow the sea-mark along the bay. Accompanied by a young man,
the same who had stood by him at the time when the house was beset, (as before
recounted,) they arrived at the town wet through, and benumbed with the wind and
sleet. Mr. Clarke preached, though exhausted, and then set out with his
companion to retrace their way, between four and five miles, to St. Helier's.
Meanwhile a heavy snow had set in, and the night grew worse and worse. He set
out, having taken no kind of refreshment, and began to plod his way, with faint
and unsteady steps. "At last a drowsiness, often the effect of intense cold when
the principle of heat is almost entirely abstracted, fell upon him. 'Frank,'
said he to the young man, 'I can go no farther till I get a little sleep: let me
lie down a few minutes on one of these snow-drifts, and then I shall get
strength to go on.' Frank expostulated, 'O sir, you must not: were you to lie
down but one minute, you would never rise more. Do not fear: hold by me; I will
drag you on, and we shall soon get to St. Helier's.' He answered, ' Frank, I
cannot proceed: I am only sleepy, and even two minutes will refresh me;' and he
attempted to throw himself upon a snow-drift, which appeared to him with higher
charms than the finest bed of down. Francis was then obliged to interpose the
authority of his strength. -- pulled him up, and continued dragging and
encouraging him, till, with great labor and difficulty, he brought him to St.
Helier's." Th ere can be no doubt that, but for the providential company of
Frank Bisson, he would have that night perished on the snow; and he ever after
entertained a lively sense of obligation to him, of which he had the opportunity
of giving a practical evidence more than once.
To the erection of the chapel in Guernsey many difficulties had risen, and all
the more formidable from the determined opposition of the bailiff, the chief
magistrate of the island. Several letters on these matters passed between our
missionary and Mr. Wesley, whose counsels, inculcative of gentleness in words
and conduct, perseverance, and fervent prayer, were followed by Mr. Clarke and
his friends with entire success. The disinclination of the bailiff suddenly gave
way. Mr. Wesley himself was surprised at the genial change of mind in this
gentleman; and he says, "I really think the temper and behaviour of the bailiff
are little less than miraculous." In fact, he sold them a piece of ground from
his own property, promised to subscribe fifty pounds himself, before the
building was begun added ten pounds more, and engaged a pew for himself and
family. Among the other subscribers we find the name of Mr. Walker for a hundred
pounds, and that of Mr. De Jersey for a hundred. The latter tried friend lent
them also three hundred, with -- "Pay it as you can; or, if I never receive a
farthing of it, I shall be well contented." He was about to build a house for
his daughter and son-in-law, Mr. De Queteville; but declared that not a stone of
it should be laid till the chapel was finished. We set this down because such an
example of hearty devotion to the cause of Jesus merits a record. Servant of
God, well done!
Some difficulty was encountered about the legal settlement of the chapel
according to what is called "the Conference plan;" the jurisdiction of the
English Court of Chancery, in which the Wesleyan chapels are enrolled, not
extending to the Norman Isles. But even this obstacle was overcome, and Mr.
Clarke had the satisfaction of being able to write: "We have a large chapel
built here. It is astonishing to think how this handful of people have done it;
but God was with us. What is nearly as wonderful is, that, notwithstanding the
English laws are not admitted here, yet I have got it settled on the Conference
plan by a public Act of the Royal Court. I am about, therefore, to leave this
people on a good footing, prospering in the ways of God, and well established in
spiritual and temporal matters."
In Jersey, too, a similar movement took place for the erection of a chapel at
St. Helier's; and, along with these efforts to promote the material
consolidation of the good cause, the preachers had the unspeakable joy of
witnessing the manifestation of the Divine power in the upbuilding and
beautifying of the spiritual temple of the church. I will conclude these annals
of Mr. Clarke's missionary life, by transcribing a manuscript letter, which
gives some remarkable details on this subject. It is addressed to Mr. Wesley,
and was probably the last he wrote to him from the islands. The date is "Jersey,
July 15th, 1789."
"MY REVEREND FATHER IN CHRIST,
"In my last I gave you a short account of the prosperity of the work of God
among us, and the prospect we had of an increase. Since that time the Lord has
indeed wrought wonderfully. You perhaps remember the account I gave you of the
select prayer-meeting I had just then established for those only who had either
attained, or were groaning after, full redemption. I thought that, as we were
all with one accord in the same place, we had reason to expect a glorious
descent of the purifying flame. It was even so. Soon five or six were able to
testify that God had cleansed their souls from all sin. This coming abroad, for
it could not be long hid, (the change being so palpable in those who professed
it,) several others were stirred up to seek the same blessing, and many were
literally provoked to jealousy, among whom one of the principal was Mr. De
Queteville. He questioned me at large concerning our little meeting, and the
good done. I satisfied him in every particular; and, being much affected, he
said, '' ' T is a lamentable thing that those who began to seek God since I did
should have left me so far behind. Through the grace of Christ, I will begin to
seek the same blessing more earnestly, and never rest till I overtake and
outstrip them, if possible.' For two or three days he wrestled with God almost
incessantly. On the 30th of June he came into my room with great apparent
depression of spirit, with the earnest inquiry, ' How shall I receive the
blessing, and what are its evidences?' I gave him all the directions I could,
exhorted him to look for it in the present moment, and assured him of his
nearness to the kingdom of God. He returned to his room, and after a few
minutes, spent in wrestling faith, his soul was fully and gloriously delivered.
He set off for the country, and like a flame of fire went over all the Societies
in the island, carrying the glorious news wherever he went. God accompanied him
by the mightily demonstrative power of His Spirit, and numbers were stirred up
to seek, and several soon entered into, the promised rest. I now appointed a
lovefeast on the 5th inst. Such a heaven opened on earth my soul never felt
before. Several were filled with pure love; and some then and since have,
together with a clean heart, found the removal of inveterate bodily disorders
under which they had labored for a long time. This is an absolute fact, of which
I have had every proof which rationality can demand. One thing was remarkable,
there was no false fire; no, not a spark that I would not wish to have lighted
up in my own soul to all eternity; and, though God wrought both in bodies and
souls, yet everything was under the regulation of His own Spirit, and fully
proclaimed His operation alone. To speak within compass, there are not less than
fifty or sixty souls who, in the space of less than a fortnight, have entered
into the good land, and many of them established, strengthened. and settled in
it; and still the blessed work goes daily on.
"This speedy work has given a severe blow to the squalid doctrine of
sanctification through suffering, which was before received by many, to the
great prejudice of their souls. Several of your particular acquaintances, my
dear sir, have had a large 'share in this blessing; and, among others, Mrs.
Guilliaume, Madame De Saumarez, and Miss Lempriere. The former is one of the
greatest monuments of God's power to sanctify that I have seen. The latter are
blessedly brought out of [their former] dreary state. Several, who had long been
adepts in making Procrustes' bed, are now redeemed from every particle of sour
godliness."
The Divine blessing on the labors of Brackenbury, Clarke, and their colleagues
in the islands, was seen in the numerical and moral strength which the cause had
thus already attained. Mr. Clarke left 248 members in Jersey, and 105 in
Guernsey. At the present time, chapels of the French and English Methodists are
found in all parts of the islands. There are more than three thousand members in
Society; who, beside sustaining thirteen ministers, English and French, in their
own service, contribute some seven hundred pounds per annum to the cause of
foreign missions.
* * * * * * *
DIVISION 8
BOOK I
(The Morning of Life)
CHAPTER 8
THE CIRCUIT MINISTER
A new and noble field of labor was now opening to Mr. Clarke. Henceforward his
ministry will be exercised in large and thickly-peopled cities, and thousands be
enriched from those stores of saving truth which had been incessantly
accumulating in his soul. The character of the times was assuming an
unprecedented grandeur. Europe was beginning to heave with the throes of that
political earthquake in which the feudalism of the past was doomed to give way
before another development of society. The trumpets of Providence were sounding
the advent of a new era in the history of the world. Revolution and change had
become the order of the day; and, in the desired abolition of many
unquestionable corruptions, there was a danger that the sacred institutes of
legitimate authority and rule, the safeguards of the true rights of mankind,
might also be swept away by the swelling tides. The demon of infidelity had come
forth into this storm, and was pervading the popular mind with imaginations of
rapine and murder. Nor wa s England without her peril of being drawn into this
vortex of ruin. Among the masses of the people there were too many who, without
consideration, were disposed to feel and act with the atheists and democrats of
bewildered France. In those days, then, the voice of the evangelist was more
than ever needed; and the Gospel of order and peace, which from his lips went
straight to the hearts of the people, contributed more to the security of the
altar and the throne than the worldly wisdom of Parliaments, or the whetted
sword of the secular law. It was in the opening time of this national ordeal
that Mr. Clarke began to appear as a prominent member of an order of men whose
self-denying endeavors have not only saved multitudes of souls for all eternity,
but contributed also, in a most honorable degree, to the temporal safety and
well-being of their country.
Our preacher quitted the Norman Isles in July, 1789, and proceeded to the
Conference at Leeds, leaving Mrs. Clarke and their infant at Trowbridge on his
way. The trustees of the Leeds Circuit had already petitioned Mr. Wesley that
Mr. Clarke should be appointed there the ensuing year, -- a measure that was
frustrated by a circumstance which seems sufficiently ludicrous. Mr. Clarke
preached twice in Leeds on the Conference Sunday. In the morning prayer he
casually omitted to pray for the king. Reminded of the failure, he endeavored to
repair it in the evening, when, among other supplications for His Majesty, he
devoutly implored that God would bless him with His pardoning and sanctifying
grace. Some of the "chief women" of the congregation took umbrage at this style
of petition, as implying "that the king was a sinner!" So deeply was their sense
of loyalty wounded, that a remonstrance against the appointment was signed by
these ladies, and sent into the Conference, with the understanding that "the
dangerously democratic principles" implied in such a prayer sufficiently
unfitted the person who could utter it for ministering among the people of
Leeds. Mr. Wesley, who wished to keep peace so far as possible, and who had a
sincere respect for the simple-hearted, steadfast piety of the petitioners,
acceded to the request, and appointed Mr. Clarke to Halifax. The leading men of
the Society, however, were not so well satisfied with this decision, and an
overture was made to reverse it. But Mr. Clarke was unprepared to listen to
anything of the kind, and hastily pronounced the resolve never to enter Leeds in
the way of an appointment as a traveling preacher; because he would not
recognize any church, nor minister in any, in which the supreme rule was not
with his Divine Master!
Just at that time he seems to have been incapable of propitiating the good
graces of the Methodist ladies of Yorkshire; for, at Halifax, when his
appointment there was notified, a remonstrance from the female members was sent
forthwith, objecting to him, as being "dull, though learned." So once more he
was displaced. The same process followed as at Leeds. The men at Halifax wished
him to come, and wrote a letter of explanation to that effect, which drew forth
a reply from Mr. Clarke, reiterating the sentiment he had already pronounced:
"The same principle must guide his movements on this as on the former occasion;
his call, he conceived, not extending to any place in which women were the
governors, because he was certain that Christ had not truly the rule where the
women held the reins!" These little annoyances were, however, controlled for the
best; and at the close of the Conference he held a confirmed appointment to the
city of Bristol.
This sphere of duty was one of the most important that could have been assigned
him, next to London. The Circuit held the preeminence in Methodism, and
numbered, even at that time, the city and outlying places included, more than
two thousand members. The necessities of the Circuit would admit of but a very
short vacation, and with the opening of the year Mr. Clarke was at his post. As
in imagination we see him enter the pulpit at Broadmead, on the first Sabbath
morning, amid the silence, the prayer, and devout expectations of the crowded
congregation, we insensibly call to mind the time when be first visited Bristol.
The hungry, ill-clad youth, who had eaten his frugal supper of bread and water
in the kitchen of the inn just opposite, and whose apparition had so disturbed
the powers who reigned at Kingswood, now reappears, a man in all the majesty of
intellect, a husband and father, alive to the most sacred affections of our
nature, and a minister of Jesus Christ, with the full seal of spiritual power,
in the evidences with which Heaven had attested his vocation, as well as the
solemn concurrence and approbation of him who held the office of scriptural
bishop in that communion of the church. Every young man should see in this
example a type and pledge of the success which awaits him in whatever condition
of life Divine Providence may have cast his lot, if, with the subject of our
memoir, he will live and act in the spirit of the prayer, "Let integrity and
uprightness preserve me; for I wait on Thee."
But the duties of the Bristol Circuit were so extensive and heavy as to tax Mr.
Clarke's physical powers to the utmost. Unhappily, he entered on this new stage
with enfeebled and shattered health. His life in the Norman Isles had been too
sedentary for a constitution habituated to violent out-of-door exercise. To
almost unremitted study were added the wasting effects of a cough which had
harassed him for years, ever since sleeping in a damp bed in the Trowbridge
Circuit. This complaint had now become so heavy as to threaten his life. Mr.
Wesley, who came to Bristol in an early part of the year, was struck with the
change in his appearance, and intimated, in one of his addresses to the Society,
his apprehensions that they would not long have the benefit of their minister's
services. Some hope was entertained that the waters of the Hotwells, which at
that time were in high medical repute, would tend to restore him; but this
benefit was seriously interfered with by the severity of his labors, and the
disadvantage of living in the rooms appropriated to the preachers over the
chapel, which, pervaded with the effluvium [an unpleasant or noxious odour or
exhaled substance] from the crowded congregations, were altogether unwholesome
as a place of residence. Notwithstanding these drawbacks, he nevertheless
struggled on, though life with him was all that year little better than a
protracted martyrdom. He had two colleagues, Messrs. Wadsworth and Hodgson; and
to these three men were allotted the working of a Circuit comprising a large
number of congregations, and the pastoral care of more than two thousand
members. The quarterly visitation of the classes, carried on simultaneously with
the pulpit and other duties of the Circuit, drained their strength to the
uttermost. In a note to his friend Brackenbury, in January, Mr. Clarke says:
"For a month I have been employed in visiting the classes. This close work has
proved more than I could well sustain. I need not say, that preaching three or
four times a day, *[1] and giving tickets to two or three hundred people,
regulating the concerns of the Society, &c., is more than any common strength is
able to perform. From what I now feel, and the increase of the work, I have
every reason to believe that I shall either be in eternity before Conference, or
be fully invalided. In visiting the classes, I have diligently endeavored to
root out all apparent offences and offenders; and, as the foundation is clearer
than it has been for some time, I expect a more durable building. I see such
fruit of my labor as causes me almost to rejoice in the martyred body which the
most merciful God has in His condescension made an honored instrument in helping
forward so good a work."
So, in the June quarter: "I am now so exceedingly busied, that I have not time
to take my necessary food. We are visiting the classes, in which I am employed
from six o'clock in the morning to five in the evening:" all this, followed by
preaching either in the city or the country. Mr. Wesley, on a visit to Bristol,
gave him all the help he could. Thus in his Journal at this time we read the
entry, -- "On Monday, and the three following days, I visited the classes at
Bristol." Mr. Clarke mentions that he took one class, and Mr. Wesley another,
alternately; thus proceeding during four successive days. As to his
Circuit-work, we take the following specimens of its fidelity and heartiness:--
"I set out for Westbury, walked thither, and preached with great liberty to a
large, attentive congregation. At five I preached at the Room; and the Lord gave
me an hour's work of very convincing speech. I felt in my soul that much good
was done. I may not know to what extent; but this the Lord has favored me with,
that a notorious sinner was thoroughly convinced, and has since been earnestly
wrestling with God, that he may escape eternal fire. Glory be to Thee, O God! I
then met the Society, and spoke all my mind; the lazy rich I did not spare. On
Monday morning, I had at five o'clock such a congregation as I think I never saw
in Bristol: several of the great folks, too, were hearing for life. These things
are tokens for good. Our friends tell me there is a great stir all round
Bristol. In such a large place it cannot be so palpable [readily perceived] as
in a smaller; but, thank God, this is no matter. Glory, glory to God and to the
Lamb!" The next Sunday: "I preached at Donkerton, to a very simple, pleasing
people; and God was in the midst: at noon and night, in Bath. He gave me
liberty, and I have no doubt much good was done. I had one soul for my hire at
the last preaching: such a power from on high rested on all as I have seldom
seen. God seemed to have given the people into my hand."
"Yesterday rode from Bath to Bristol, and back again this morning. Met five
classes, and preached once: have yet to meet six classes, and preach twice.
Tomorrow morning return to Bristol, as we begin to meet classes at six in the
morning, and continue with short intervals the whole of the day, to the end of
the week. I feel willing, but am almost (completely done in). *[See Transcriber
Note at the end of this chapter.]
"Went last Sunday to Kingswood, preached twice, gave an exhortation, and met
nine classes. Thence to Guinea-street, where preached, met Society, and gave
tickets to one class." Again: "At seven A.M. met the Bridge-street Society;
preached at Guinea-street, thence to Westbury, preached at two o'clock, and gave
tickets; then back to Bristol, fatigued and wet; preached at five, and met the
Society. Next morning at five preached again; and then rode to the Marsh, where,
scarcely able to speak, I preached again, and gave tickets. From Marsh the next
morning back to Pensford; from thence to Clutton, through a severe tempest, wet
to the skin. Thursday to Kingswood; preached at five, and returned home to
assist Mr. Hodgson to hold a watchnight, but was scarcely able to move for more
than an hour after I got home. At length I went to lend some aid, and brother
Hodgson and I held on till about eleven o'clock, when we made an apology for
retiring ... Just as I was passing to my bed-room, I thought I would go to the
lobby-window, and take a last view of them, at which moment one of the singers
was giving out a hymn. I thought, 'The meeting will close for lack of persons to
pray. I will go down.' Mr. H. at that moment joined me, and advised me not. I
hesitated a moment; but, finding my soul drawn out in pity to the multitudes, I
said, 'I will go down in the name of the Lord.' Mr. H. would not be left behind.
I had before felt much of the power of God, but now it was doubled. We continued
singing, praying, and exhorting until half-past twelve; during which time strong
prayers, cries, and tears bore testimony to the present power of God. How
excellent the Lord is in working! How wondrous are His ways of mercy! ' I am
Thine, save me.' I am willing to breathe my last in Thy work."
Thus his personal intercourse with the Methodist people of Bristol, Mr. Clarke
now formed friendships which were life-long; and those friendships were
cherished for the poor of Christ's flock, as well as the rich. Among the former
class was an eminent Christian named Summerhill; and we mention her case on
account of its extraordinary character. Dame Summerhill was at that time a
hundred and four years old. Relating her experience one day to Mr. Clarke, she
said that Mr. Wesley was her father in the Gospel. "When he first came to
Bristol, I went to hear him preach; and, having heard him, I said, ' This is the
truth.' I inquired of those around, who and what he was. I was told that he was
a man who went about everywhere preaching the Gospel. I further inquired, ' Is
he to preach here again? ' The reply was, ' Not at present.' ' Where is he going
to next? ' I asked. ' To Plymouth,' was the answer. 'And will he preach there? '
' Yes.' ' Then I will go and hear him. What is the distance? ' 'One hundred and
twenty-five miles.' I went, walked it, heard him, and walked back again!"
When a hundred and six years old, she was accustomed to read the church-prayers
daily, "as a substitute for the public means of grace," which she was no longer
able to attend; reading the small print both of Bible and Prayer-Book without
spectacles.
In Bristol Mr. Clarke sat for his portrait, at the request of several of his
friends. The painter was Mr. Holloway, who distinguished himself some years
after by his engravings of the cartoons of Raffaelle. From several preceding
failures, Mr. Clarke had come to the conclusion that his face was not an
auspicious one for the pencil; and he complied only on two conditions: "First,
that you do not make me appear better than I am; for that will reflect on my
Maker, as though He had not made me good enough: and, secondly, that you do not
make me appear worse than I am; for that will be to burlesque me." The request
of the artist was supported by Mr. Wesley, who wanted to have an engraving of it
for the Magazine. The likeness is correct enough, though the engraving is but
indifferent. Underneath, after the manner of the old portraits in the Magazine,
is the inscription, "Mr. Adam Clarke, Aetatis [at the age of] 27." Mr. Clarke's
father, whom he now had the pleasure of once more seeing in Bristol, objected to
the age, as being two years too young. But upon this point, as we have already
noticed, neither father, mother, nor son was ever quite free from uncertainty.
Though the incessant demand on his time by public and pastoral engagements left
him but few hours for books, the unslaked and ever-growing thirst of his soul
for knowledge made Mr. Clarke still a diligent student to the extent of his
opportunities. He read hard, and thought deeply; and the advantages he found in
access to large collections of books in the city were diligently improved. His
scanty means, also, were taxed to the utmost in acquisitions to his own library,
which even now began to be considerable, both as to the number and the value of
the works of which it was composed.
This year in Bristol, which was passed in one continued series of exertions, was
crowned by the assembly of the Conference there; a circumstance which always
gives additional anxiety to the preachers stationed on the spot, from the task
it devolves on them of furnishing so large a number of strangers with domestic
accommodation. This Conference (of 1790) was distinguished as being the last
over which Mr. Wesley presided in person. It was the forty-seventh of its annual
assemblies, in which this truly apostolic bishop had gathered around him his
sons and fellow-laborers in the Gospel, for counsel and prayer. But his long and
luminous career was now about to end. It was the sunset of his day, and the
evening was without a cloud. The preachers had a presentiment that they were to
see his face no more. His latest counsels sank into their hearts, and the last
accents of his voice became a prophecy to them of benediction and peace. *[2]
On reviewing the state of the Connection, it was found that in Great Britain and
America the numbers in Society amounted to 120,000: thus graciously had the word
preached been attested and blessed by the converting Spirit of God. At the
present time, the numerical strength of the Methodist body, under the care of
the British and affiliated Conferences, exceeds 420,000 members; under the care
of the Methodist Episcopal Churches of the United States, more than double that
sum: not to speak of the various offsets from the parent stock, -- the New
Connection, the Primitive Methodists, &c., &c.; or of the immense multitudes who
habitually hear the Gospel in the congregations, or of the myriads of children
who are educated in the schools. Meanwhile, in the years gone by, hundreds of
thousands who have passed into eternity found in the sanctuaries of Methodism
the gate of heaven. It may be seen that Adam Clarke had devoted the energies of
his wasting life to a work worthy of the sacrifice.
One of the last subjects of anxiety with Mr. Wesley at this Conference was, so
to arrange the work of the preachers that, if possible, no man should preach
more than twice on the Sunday. The case of Mr. Clarke, and a multitude of others
like it, convinced him that these men were exceeding the limits of their natural
strength, and running a career of self-destruction. At the sight of so many
useful servants of God thus shortening their lives, it was his earnest desire to
adopt some plan which, by diminishing the Sunday labor, would give a greater
effect to their services, as well as prolong their duration. Accordingly, (to
use Mr. Clarke's memorandum,) "in a private meeting with some of the principal
and senior preachers, which was held in Mr. Wesley's study, to prepare matters
for the Conference, he proposed that a rule should be made that no preacher
should preach thrice on the same day. Messrs.. Mather, Pawson, Thompson, and
others, said this would be impracticable, as it was absolutely necessary in most
cases ... Mr. W. replied, ' It must be given up: we shall lose our preachers by
such excessive labor.' They answered, ' We have all done so; and you even, at an
advanced age, have continued to do so.' ' What I have done,' said he, ' is out
of the question: my life and strength have been under an especial providence.
Besides, I know better than they how to preach without injuring myself; and no
man can preach thrice a day without killing himself sooner or later, and the
custom shall not be continued.' They pressed the point no farther, finding that
he was determined: but, after all, the Minute went to the press, -- ' No
preacher shall any more preach three times in the same day (to the same
congregation).' By this clause the Minute was entirely neutralized. He who
preaches the Gospel as he ought, must do it with his whole strength of body and
soul; and he who undertakes a labor of this kind thrice every Lord's day, will
infallibly shorten his life by it. He who, instead of preaching, talks to the
people, mere ly speaks about good things, or tells a religious story, will never
injure himself by such an employment. Such a person does not labor in the word
and doctrine: he tells his tale, and, as he preaches, his congregation believes,
and sinners are left as he found them."
At the Bristol Conference Mr. Clarke was appointed to Dublin, and he reached
that capital in the following month. This was a trust which reflected great
honor on him, and showed the strong confidence entertained by Mr. Wesley and the
preachers in his talents, prudence, and fidelity; for the English preacher who
held that station, was looked up to as "the general assistant;" that is, Mr.
Wesley's representative or commissary over all the Irish Circuits. The critical
state of the Society, moreover, required a man of ability and sagacity. There
were two parties among them; one for an entire subjection to the Established
Church; another, with tendencies more free. "Dr. Coke, with the approbation of
Mr. Wesley, had introduced the use of the Liturgy into the chapel at
Whitefriar-street. This measure was opposed by some of the leading members, as
tending to what they called a separation from the Church; when, in truth, it was
the most effectual way to keep the Society attached to its spirit and doctrines;
who, be cause they were without divine service in church-hours, were scattered
throughout the city, some at church, and many more at different places of
Dissenting worship, where they heard doctrines that tended greatly to unsettle
their religious opinions; and in the end most were lost to the Society. In
consequence of the introduction of the Liturgy, a very good congregation
assembled at Whitefriar-street; and much good might have been done, if the rich
members had not continued hostile to the measure, by withdrawing their
countenance and support, which many of them did. At last both sides agreed to
desire the British Conference, for the sake of peace, to restore matters to
their original state, and abolish the morning service. Mr. Clarke, who at that
time labored under the same kind of prejudice, gave his voice against the
continuance of the Prayers; and at his recommendation the Conference annulled
the service. "This," he affirms, "was the greatest ecclesiastical error he ever
committed; and one which he deeply deplored for many years; and he was thankful
when, in the course of Divine Providence, he was enabled afterward to restore
that service in the newly-erected chapel in Abbey-street, which he had formerly
been the instrument of putting down in Whitefriar-street; -- that very same
party, to please whom it was done, having separated from the Methodists' body,
and set up a spurious and factious Connection of their own, under the name of
Primitive Methodism; a principal object of which was to deprive the original
Connection of its chapels, divide its Societies, in every way to injure its
finances, and traduce both its spiritual and loyal character.
"It may be asked, ' Why did Mr. Clarke in 1790 espouse the side of this party? '
It is but justice to say, that to that class of men he was under no kind of
obligation: they had neglected him, though he was on their side of the question,
as much as they did those who were opposed to them. He and his family had
nothing but affliction and distress while they remained in Dublin, and that
party neither ministered to his necessities nor sympathized with him in his
afflictions. What he did was from an ill-grounded fear that the introduction of
the Church service might lead to a separation from the Church, (which the
prejudice of education could alone have suggested,) and he thought the different
Societies might be induced to attend at their parish-churches, and so all kinds
of dissent be prevented. But multitudes of those, by whatever name they had been
called, had never belonged to any Church, and felt no religious attachment to
any but those who had been the means of their salvation. When, therefore, they
did not find among the Methodists religious service on the proper times of the
Lord's day, they often wandered heedlessly about, and became unhinged and
distracted with the strange doctrines they heard. Of this Mr. Clarke was
afterwards fully convinced, and saw the folly of endeavoring to force the people
to attend a ministry from which they had never received any spiritual advantage,
and the danger of not endeavoring to cultivate the soil which had been with
great pain and difficulty enclosed, broken up, and sown with the good seed, the
word of the kingdom."
Notwithstanding these differences, the work of God had not been without some
measure of prosperity among the Methodists of Dublin. Mr. Clarke found that,
some weeks before his coming, a remarkable revival had taken place, the effects
of which were still felt, though retarded by the injudicious conduct of some
who, though mistaken, intended well. I refer to this, and give some portions
from a manuscript letter of Mr. Clarke to Mr. Wesley, for the purpose of
recording the opinion of the latter on a matter of abiding importance, -- the
desirableness of prolonging the good influence of a revival by avoiding the
exhaustive consequences of meetings protracted to an unusual length. This letter
is dated from Dublin in September. After mentioning his arrival, and how he had
found his colleague Mr. Rutherford but slowly recovering from a dangerous
illness, which had left the people somewhat in confusion through their deprival
of the stated services, he thus goes on:-- "The work which was so remarkable
about the tim e of Conference was hardly discernible when I came, owing, as I am
informed, to the extravagance and irregularity in the conduct of those who took
the management during Mr. Rutherford's indisposition. The times of the
prayer-meetings were and are continued, but to an unwarrantable length; hardly
ever breaking up before ten or eleven o'clock, and frequently continued till
twelve or one. And in those meetings some have taken on themselves to give
exhortations of half an hour or forty-five minutes in length. This has a
tendency to wear out the people. I have advised them to shorten their
prayer-meetings at Whitefriars on Sabbath evenings after preaching, as I find
the families of many are shockingly neglected; for how can there be family
religion, especially on the Lord's day, which you know is filled up with
ordinances, if prayermeetings are continued till ten or eleven at night?"
He proceeds to observe that he finds it very difficult to interfere, as the more
zealous persons in the movement have already accused him of opposing the good
work. "We can hardly expect a revival without irregularities and
stumblingblocks: but my heart joins fully with one of the last prayers I heard
my reverend father offer in Bristol: ' Lord, if possible, give us this work
without the stumblingblocks; but, if this cannot be, give us stumblingblocks and
all, rather than not have Thy work.' To this my whole soul says, Amen."
Mr. Wesley replies in a letter which has been printed in his Works: *[3] -- "You
will have need of all the courage and prudence which God has given you ... Very
gently and very steadily you should proceed between the rocks on either hand. In
the great revival in London, my first difficulty was to bring into temper those
who opposed the work; and my next, to check and regulate the extravagances of
those who promoted it. And this was far the harder, for many of them would bear
no check at all. But I followed one rule, though with all calmness: ' You must
either bend or break.' Meantime, while you act exactly right, expect to be
blamed by both sides. I will give you a few directions: 1. See that no
prayer-meetings continue later than nine at night, particularly on Sunday. Let
the house be emptied before the clock strikes nine. 2. Let there be no
exhortation at any prayer-meeting. 3. Beware of jealousy, or judging one
another. 4. Never think a man is an enemy to the work because he reproves
irregularities. Pea ce be with you and yours!"
These precepts merit consideration at all times; and so do some observations
which Mr. Clarke once made on the topic to which they relate. One day, (as he
observed,) having inquired of a pious couple who had discontinued their
attendance at the meeting for prayer, "How it was they had ceased to come, as
usual?" he was told, "We cannot without standing during prayer, which we think
is unbecoming; and the prayers are so long that we cannot kneel all the time
sometimes, too, a verse is given out while the people are on their knees, and
two or three pray; we cannot kneel so long, and therefore we are obliged to keep
away." He could not but assent to the gravity of the objection. In fact, he had
himself suffered much inconvenience from the same cause. "On one occasion," said
he, "a good brother at a meeting went to prayer. I kneeled on the floor, having
nothing to support me. He prayed forty minutes. I was unwilling to rise, and
several times was near fainting. What I suffered I cannot describe. After the
meeting I ventured to expostulate with him, when, in addition to the injury
sustained by the unmerciful prayer, I had the following reproof: ' My brother,
if your mind had been more spiritual, you would not have felt the prayer too
long.' I mention these circumstances," added Dr. Clarke, "not to excuse the
careless multitude, but in vindication of such sufferers; and to show the
necessity of being short in our prayers, if we expect others to join us."
In some rules for the conducting of prayer-meetings, drawn up by a man of great
experience, the late Rev. David Stoner, *[4] we find it prescribed, -- "Let no
individual pray long: in general, the utmost limit ought to be about two
minutes. It will be found much better for one person to pray twice or thrice in
the course of the meeting, than to pray once a long time. Long praying is
commonly both a symptom and a cause of spiritual deadness." The unusual brevity
here recommended will appear to many of us as the opposite extreme to the dreary
length of exercise deplored by Mr. Clarke. But of the two Mr. Stoner's is,
undoubtedly, the preferable. Wesley himself had a strong repugnance to long
prayers. He insists somewhere that the preachers in the pulpit should not exceed
ten minutes in that part of the service.
The winter was ushered in with heavy domestic affliction, which seriously
interfered with the ministerial efficiency of the year spent in Dublin. The
trustees had been building a new house for the minister, which was to serve at
once for a school and a parsonage. The minister's family were to reside in the
apartments on the ground-floor, the school-room stretching over all, above. Mr.
Clarke was obliged to take possession of these premises before they were dry.
This was done at the expense of his own health, and that of his family. In a
fortnight the afflicted parents wept over the grave of their child; and some
time after Mr. Clarke himself, whose cough had not abated its severity, and
whose general health was already so delicate, was attacked with serious illness,
and laid utterly prostrate. On the 20th of January he writes these few lines to
his sister-in-law:-- "I have requested the writing-materials to be brought to my
bed-side, and use them, in order to prove to you that, because the Lord liveth,
I still exist. But a short time ago there was no probability that you would ever
receive a line from my hand. My beyond all comparison excellent Mary continued
my close attendant in the time of unutterable distress. It added to my
affliction to see the part she took in it night and day. This is my nineteenth
day, and I begin, though slowly, to gather a little strength; but have had
hardly my sleep since I was first seized .. You will, perhaps, wish to know in
what stead my profession stood me in the time of sore trouble. I cannot
enumerate particulars: suffice it to say, God did not leave my soul one moment.
I was kept, through the whole, in such a state of perfect resignation, that not
a single desire that the Lord would either remove or lessen the pain took place
in my mind from the beginning until now. I could speak of nothing but mercy.
Jesus was my all and in all. The Lord God omnipotent reigneth. Blessed, blessed
for ever, be the Name of the Lord!"
Mrs. Clarke's assiduity [one meaning is: constant attentions to another person]
was maintained under the pressure of personal infirmity, before which she
herself had at length to succumb; and for three weeks husband and wife were
confined each to a sick room. Toward the close of these trying days he had a
letter of consolation from Mr. Wesley, a few lines of which I extract, as it was
the last Mr. Clarke received from his venerable friend, then on the verge of
eternity:-- "You have great reason, dear Adam, to bless God for giving you
strength according to your day. He has indeed supported you in a wonderful
manner under these complicated afflictions; and you may well say, ' I will put
my trust in Thee as long as I live.' I will desire Dr. Whitehead to consider
your case, and give you his thoughts upon it. I am not afraid of your doing too
little, but too much. Do a little at a time, that you may do the more."
With some degree of convalescence, our preacher now applied himself to his work,
and followed up the energetic ministration of the word with works of beneficence
and piety in restraining evil and doing good, which could not but commend him to
all who, with the poet, could
"... venerate the man whose heart is warm,
Whose hands are pure, whose doctrine and whose life,
Coincident, exhibit lucid proof
That he is honest in the sacred cause."
With a heart naturally tender, and refined by the compassions of the Gospel, he
strove, according to his ability, to soothe the troubles of the afflicted, to
heal the sick, and lead the blind. To do this more effectually, he sought to
secure the united and organized efforts of such as he could find like-minded
with himself, and succeeded in founding an important institution, which, not in
Dublin only, but in all our great towns, has been the means of doing a wonderful
amount of good to the bodies and souls of the perishing; namely, "The Strangers'
Friend Society." The year before, at Bristol, with the concurrence of Mr.
Wesley, he had made an essay of the same kind, which was supported on a small
scale by penny-a-week subscriptions. In Dublin, he attempted something in a
greater way; and in the different towns in which he was afterwards stationed, he
followed the same design. In promoting these benevolent movements, he was not
only found in the chair of the committee-room, but as a visitor of the Society
he went about among the miserable multitudes of the Irish metropolis,
contributing, according to the means thus providentially intrusted to him, as
well to the wants of the body as to those of the soul.
The people among whom he moved took knowledge of him as a man of God. His own
flock revered him as one who was pointing them to a better life, and, by example
as well as precept, leading the way. Though in the world, and living actively
for its service and benefit, he was not of it. His very appearance indicated
that he lived in a mental region of his own. Wasted in form, wan with illness
and labor, rapt in intellectual abstraction, he looked as if he did not belong
to the everyday world of flesh and blood. As he passed along the crowded
streets, he appeared to see no one, but pursued his way as if measuring the
ground, or counting the strides necessary to be taken from chapel to chapel.
As a University city, Dublin possessed a peculiar charm for Mr. Clarke; and,
with his eager tendencies after knowledge, we wonder not that he seized the
earliest opportunity to enter himself of Trinity College. The multifarious
engagements of his life, however, and the inroads which illness made on his
time, did not allow him to avail himself of the general curriculum of study
followed there. He therefore restricted himself to attendance on the medical and
anatomical courses, and to a diligent appropriation of material for his own
future literary undertakings which he found in the college library. He now, too,
became acquainted with several learned and accomplished persons, with whom he
continued to have improving intercourse in after-life. Among them were the Rev.
Dr. Barrett, the librarian of Trinity; Mrs. Tighe, the authoress of "Psyche," a
poem long admired for its pure sentiment and delicate felicity of style; and an
alchemist named Hands, to whose friendship with Mr. Clarke we may revert on a
future page. We should also mention one of Mr. Clarke's Oriental friends, with
whom he became acquainted in Dublin, -- Ibrahim ibn Ali, who had formerly held a
captain's commission in the army of the Sultan. Brought up in the religion of
his father, a Mohammedan, his mind had nevertheless been influenced by the
secret instructions of his mother, who was a Greek and a Christian. Imprisoned
on suspicion of a murder, which was afterwards fully cleared up by the surrender
of the real assassins, he had been in imminent danger of losing his life, and in
the time of peril had been deeply moved by the exhortations of an old Spaniard
to renounce all faith in the false prophet, and confide in the true Saviour of
mankind. In this state of mind, he left his native country, and came to England.
From Liverpool he proceeded to Dublin, where, inquiring for a person who knew
Spanish or Arabic, he was directed to Mr. Clarke, who treated him with all the
kindness in his power. Ibrahim became a sincere inquirer after the truth, and
found in Mr. Clarke a guide who led him to Jesus. After due and cautious
probation, he was at length admitted to baptism; Mr. Rutherford performing the
sacred rite, and Mr. Clarke translating into Spanish the words in which it was
administered. The subsequent career of the convert justified the hopes of his
friends. He accompanied Mr. Clarke to England, and thence went to America in a
mercantile capacity, where he married a lady of the Baptist communion, and died
at last steadfast in the faith.
The year in Dublin drew to a close; and Mr. Clarke felt it his duty to
terminate, for the present, his connection with the Circuit. His feeble health
unfitted him to cope with some of the peculiar difficulties of a station so
responsible; and the party-spirit which reigned so strongly at that time in
Dublin compelled him to decide on returning to England. The Conference was to be
held in Manchester, and the Dublin preachers prepared to go. Mrs. Clarke, also,
and the little ones, were to accompany them, thus making but one voyage for the
family. But this arrangement was not carried out. From some letters of this
excellent lady, which have been confided to me, I take the liberty to extract a
few sentences:--
"When I wrote last, I thought it would have been my last letter from Dublin; but
I wrote doubtfully, because I well know the uncertainty of all things here
below. And so it has been in reference to my going to England. We had our chests
packed, and all ready for embarkation, when John was seized with the measles. I
could not think of taking the child to sea in that condition, and gave up the
thought of accompanying Mr. Clarke, who could not be detained. The people were
glad, as they thought it would secure Mr. Clarke's return for me. The time was
set for the preachers to sail, but no packet came into port. Day by day they
waited; still no vessel came. Meanwhile, John grew better apace; and, no vessel
arriving till Saturday, fearing to be too late for the Conference, they set
sail. Mr. Clarke and Mr. Rutherford wished to stay behind till Monday, when John
might with safety have gone too; but they feared a second detention, and
overruled that all the preachers should go together. Accordingly they sailed,
and , after encountering some sore weather at sea, arrived safe in Liverpool
after a forty-eight hours' passage. Thus much concerning our going to England.
Where we shall be the coming year, I know no more than an utter stranger. I
should fear to choose. Wherever we are, I trust it will be for God's glory, and
the good of many souls."
* * * * * * *
DIVISION 9
BOOK I
(The Morning of Life)
CHAPTER 9
THE CIRCUIT MINISTER -- (CONTINUED)
The Conference assembled at Manchester. It was the forty-eighth, and for the
first time they met without the presence of him who had been their earthly head.
The apostle of England had finished his glorious course on the second of March,
revered by an innumerable multitude of good men. Serious fears had been
entertained by many true friends of the Methodist cause, that this event would
prove fatal to its unity, and even endanger its existence. Soon, however, these
apprehensions were shown to be groundless. Methodism, a visible work of God,
abides and prospers, when individual men, however honored in having been
employed by him as the agents of His great purposes of mercy, are called from
the labors of this life to their eternal repose. The preachers were brought more
than ever to feel their dependence on the adorable Head of the church, who
liveth evermore. Such being their frame of mind, they were now cheered in their
sorrow by tokens of His presence who has said, "Fear not, for I am with you." To
a brief memorial prefixed to the Minutes of this Conference, while they confess
to the Societies their inability to represent adequately their feelings on
account of their "great loss," they express their solemn purpose and hope that
they "shall give the most substantial proofs of their veneration for the memory
of their most esteemed father and friend, by endeavoring with great humility and
diffidence to follow and imitate him in doctrine, discipline, and life."
The cause for which Wesley lived and labored thus survived him. His wise
prevision had secured for the ministers as a body, by the Deed of Declaration, a
legal status in the country; and had consolidated and insured the ecclesiastical
property of the Connection for the sole purposes for which it had been created,
the existence and sustentation [sustaining maintenance] of simple, pure, and
evangelic agencies for the salvation of the people. Among the preachers, too,
there were many who had grown old with him in the work; and to them their
brethren looked up with ingenuous and openhearted confidence. From among these
one was now selected as the presidential head of the Connection for the current
year; and this honor fell upon the Rev. William Thompson, a man venerable for
piety, wisdom, and ability. The office of secretary was conferred on the Rev.
Dr. Coke. All the acts of the Conference were distinguished by a single-minded
purpose to do all to the supreme glory of God. "I have been," said Mr. Clarke,
"at several Conferences; but have never seen one in which the spirit of unity,
love, and a sound mind, so generally prevailed. I would have this intelligence
transmitted from Dan to Beersheba, and let the earth know that the dying words
of our revered father have their accomplishment, -- ' The Lord is with us.' "
Mr. Clarke's new station was Manchester. The favor had been offered him of
making his own choice of a Circuit; but this he declined, -- anxious, as he
said, that God should station him. Having his lot providentially fixed at
Manchester, he was enabled in the two following years to avail himself
repeatedly of the benefit of the waters at Buxton, which contributed in a good
degree to the reinstatement of his health. Of the great utility of those waters,
especially in rheumatic affections, he ever after expressed a high opinion.
Mrs. Clarke and her little ones arrived in Liverpool after a long passage,
through a stormy sea, which had caused no small anxiety to her husband, who was
waiting daily for them "in great misery," to use his own words, "in consequence
of the prolonged voyage of my wife and children, who, I had reason to fear, were
swallowed up in the great deep. Twice every day for a week I went down to the
dock to look out for the Dublin packet, which contrary winds had detained at
sea. At length, while standing on the quay one evening. the vessel, to my
inexpressible joy, hove in sight: I beheld my Mary and the children upon deck,
and hailed them as from the dead. I got on board as soon as possible, and found
the little ones almost starved; for, owing to the tediousness of the voyage,
being several days on the water, all provision had been for some time expended.
I instantly took Adam, (I had an Adam then,) on one arm, and John on the other;
and, running with them into a baker's shop, gave to each a twopenny loaf, and in
an instant their little faces were almost buried in them. I then hastened with
something to my wife; and we walked to a home, no longer desolate to me,
blessing the God of all mercy for the protection he had extended while in the
midst of peril and distress."
At the custom-house he had much annoyance from the reckless exorbitance of the
officials, who turned his boxes of books inside out, charged him threepence per
pound for the classical works, and five pounds for a philosophical instrument!
At length, however, the re-united family found themselves settled in their new
abode; and Mr. Clarke, with such strength as he had, addressed himself to the
duties of the opening year.
Hitherto he had traveled with men who, though pious and faithful preachers of
the Gospel, do not appear to have been distinguished by extraordinary ability.
It was now Mr. Clarke's lot to be associated with two colleagues whose names
have a well-deserved renown in the Methodist world, for the splendor of their
talents, and the importance of their services to the cause to which they were
consecrated. Mr. Bradburn was, confessedly, one of the most accomplished orators
of the day, a man of expansive mind and generous impulses of heart, though not
free from the eccentricities which often reveal themselves in persons of genius.
On the other hand, in Mr. Benson, the church possessed a minister remarkable not
only for great fervency of spirit, but also for an almost imperturbable
correctness of judgment, and an affluence of theological learning which placed
him in the highest order of divines. Very few men have been better read in the
Greek Testament, and few commentators have given so clear an exposition of it.
But it was in the pulpit that he brought those gifts and graces to bear, with
the most signal effect, upon the great end of all, the salvation of souls. His
ministry was transcendently apostolic. With many disadvantages of person and
voice, he exercised a like lofty sway over assemblages comprising intellects of
every grade. While Benson preached, the scholar and the peasant bowed in common
before the majesty of truth, which, in plain, unadorned English phrases, awoke
them as with the thunder-storms of Sinai, or melted them as with the voice from
the cross. *[1] With fellow-laborers like these, whose names were in the book of
life, Mr. Clarke would no doubt find all the soul that was within him roused
into lawful emulation and holy sympathy.
Yet there appears to have been one drawback. He could not feel free to coincide
with them as to the line he considered they were taking in respect to the grand
political question of the times. The bloody drama of the French revolution was
then unfolding scene after scene of horror. Two classes of opinions on this
great crisis held sway on our side of the Channel. One school of political men,
represented by Fox, seemed to hear in the groans of wholesale murders, which the
winds wafted to our shores, only the death-pangs of tyranny, and the transient
throes that were destined to usher in an era of permanent liberty and repose;
while men of another class, represented by Burke, horror-struck at the ghastly
realities of the present, were incapable of gathering any augury [portent,
foretoken] of good for the future from a seed-time so portentously evil: The
riots at Birmingham, caused by the Gallo-mania of Dr. Priestley and his
adherents, and the general tendency among the masses to be led away by the
dogmas of Paine, as the French had been by those of Voltaire, served to bring
the threatening evil home to our very thresholds. The Bible society was thus
perturbed to its foundations, with "distress of nations" and "perplexity, the
sea and the waves roaring, men's hearts failing them for fear, and for looking
after those things that were coming on the earth," it seems to have been
impossible, nay, it would have been a guilty breach of duty, for the watchman in
the pulpit to hold his peace. But then uniformity of doctrine could not be well
expected on matters like these; and the counsels delivered from the sacred desk
took a tinge from the sentiments, antagonistic to each other, which through the
long hours of many a night were then reasoned out in the Senate. Messrs. Benson
and Bradburn differed, undoubtedly, in their modes of treating this grave
problem; but certainly not to that extent which might be inferred from the
hastily-written terms in Dr. Clarke's statement of the matter:-- "It was the lot
of Mr. Clarke to be associated at this time with two eminent men, who
unfortunately took opposite sides of this great political question; one pleading
for the lowest republicanism, while the other exhausted himself in maintaining
the Divine right of kings and regular governments to do what might seem right in
their own eyes, the people at large having nothing to do with the laws but to
obey them. His soul was grieved at this state of things; but he went calmly on
his way, preaching Christ crucified for the redemption of a lost world: and,
though his abilities were greatly inferior to those of his colleagues, his
congregations were equal to theirs, and his word more abundantly useful.
Political preachers neither convert souls nor build up believers on their most
holy faith. One may pique himself on his loyalty, and another on his liberality;
but, in the sight of the Great Head of the church, the first is a sounding
brass, the
second a tinkling cymbal ... When preachers of the Gospel become parties in
party politics, religion mourns; the church is unedified, and political disputes
agitate even the faithful of the land. Such preachers, no matter which side they
take, are no longer the messengers of glad tidings, but the seedsmen of
confusion, and wasters of the heritage of Christ. Though Mr. Clarke had fully
made up his mind on the politics of the day, and never swerved from his Whig
[the British reforming and constitutional party that after 1688 sought the
supremacy of Parliament] principles, yet in the pulpit there was nothing heard
from him but Christ crucified, and the salvation procured by His blood."
It must be confessed there is a tone of unkindness about this paragraph, very
unlike the magnanimity of Dr. Clarke, which indicates that his mind at this time
was under some influence, to us unknown, which, in regard to this particular
subject, beclouded his usually clear judgment. In the opinion he has expressed
on the conduct of his colleagues, he was undoubtedly mistaken: or, to use the
words of a former biographer, "he was not sufficiently guarded in his
expressions. It may be true that Messrs. Bradburn and Benson ranged themselves
on opposite sides; that Mr. Bradburn took his stand on the side of Liberty, and
Mr. Benson on that of Order: but there is no evidence to prove that the one was
so violent a champion of legitimacy, or the other so determined an advocate of
the lowest republicanism, as Dr. Clarke represents them to have been. Both these
celebrated ministers may have been betrayed by a well-meant zeal into the
occasional introduction of their political speculations into the pulpit; but it
is monstrous to suppose that from Sabbath to Sabbath they carried on a
systematic warfare. Mr. Clarke must have been misled by the reports of ignorant
or designing men, who, being themselves, perhaps, violent partisans, tinged
everything with the deep hue of their own excitement; for, while discharging his
own duties with the zeal with which he always did discharge them, he could not
be engaged in collecting the evidence upon which he founded his statement. Mr.
Bradburn, indeed, published a sermon on 'Equality,' in which his prime end was
to show, 'that a firm adherence to the principles of unlimited religious liberty
was perfectly consistent with a steadfast attachment to the king, whom he
earnestly prayed God to bless, and to the civil constitution, which an itself
was excellent, and of which he highly approved.' ' If there had been no such
scripture,' he remarks, 'as that which commands us to honor the king, we,' the
Methodists, 'as a people, have reason to love King George, and to be pleased
with the civil government.' To such an extent, indeed, did Mr. Bradburn carry
his views of loyalty, that he maintained it to be the duty of the Methodists 'to
be loyal, were a Pagan upon the throne;' for, he adds,' what with some is mere
policy, is with us a case of conscience.' The whole scope of the discourse is to
expose the leveling politics which were then so warmly advocated." *[2]
On the other hand, Mr. Benson found himself moving in a population among which
infidelity and republicanism were making victims of the same men in increasing
numbers every week. Paine and Voltaire had indoctrinated them not only with
hatred to King George, but with hatred to Jesus Christ. In these circumstances
he surely did not depart from his duty, but fulfilled it, in warning his bearers
against the horrid contamination to which they were exposed, and in reasoning
with those who were too likely to be misguided, in order to show them the better
way. Mr. Benson's ministry was one of almost matchless power, as the day of
revelation will declare. There is little hazard in affirming that he was
incapable of mixing up party politics with the momentous matters proper to the
pulpit; -- a course which would have merited all the severe reprehension
conveyed in the foregoing extract.
Mr. Clarke's health had not yet become sufficiently confirmed to prevent
occasional relapses of illness. After one of those seasons, he writes to his
friend Mr. Mather, that December and January had been trying months. "I dreaded
the time of meeting the classes, as this always exceedingly hurts me, and cried
to God for support. Glory be to God! that work is now done; and I have been
heard in that I feared. There is a good work among the people. Many are stirred
up to seek purity of heart, and two men at our last public bands gave a clear,
rational account of a complete deliverance from all evil tempers and desires, in
consequence of which they have constant communion with the Father, and with His
Son Jesus Christ, by the Holy Spirit dwelling in them. They have enjoyed this
glorious liberty about two months. As the Lord has condescended to make me the
instrument of their happy deliverance from an evil heart, it is a great
encouragement for me to proceed in my work. There are some here who ridicule the
mention of a work of this kind. They know best from whom they have learned to do
so; but God enables me to bear down prejudice by a number of arguments deduced
from His nature and promises. I look on this doctrine as the greatest honor of
Methodism, and the glory of Christ. The Almighty forbid it should ever cease
among us!"
In the absorbing duties of the Circuit two years passed rapidly away.
Notwithstanding the turbulent character of the times, and the differences which
prevailed in the Societies on the question of service in church-hours, and
others arising from the anomalous [having an irregular or deviant feature;
abnormal] position which Methodism then held with regard to the Establishment,
the interests of religion were sustained and promoted in the Circuit; and, among
other good enterprises, a Strangers' Friend Society was set in active operation.
"Mr. Clarke and I," writes Mr. Bradburn, "have instituted a new charity, called
the Strangers' Friend Society. It succeeds beyond our most sanguine [optimistic]
expectations. We have many pounds in hand. It is certainly very affecting to
hear of the good done every week by it." These two servants of the same Master,
the longer they lived together, liked one another the better. "Mr. Clarke," says
Bradburn, "is a choice companion, when known: he is all in all as my own soul."
O n the other side, Clarke had the greatest admiration for his colleague's
talents. "Put them all together," said he, referring to several distinguished
men, "he was not like any of them; they would not all of them make such a man.
He was like no man but himself. I never knew one with so great a command of
language."
In the house in which Mr. Clarke lived in Manchester, he left a memorial of his
veneration for Mr. Wesley, in an inscription written with a diamond's point on a
pane of glass in his study window, -- "Good men need not marble: I dare trust
glass with the memory of John Wesley, A.M., late Fellow of Lincoln College,
Oxford; who, with indefatigable zeal and perseverance, traveled through these
kingdoms preaching Jesus for more than half a century. By his unparalleled
labors and writings he revived and spread Scriptural Christianity wherever he
went; for God was with him. But, having finished his work, by keeping,
preaching, and defending the faith, he ceased to live among mortals, March ii.,
MDCCXCI., in the eighty-eighth year of his age. As a small token of continued
filial respect, this inscription is humbly dedicated to the memory of the above,
by his affectionate son in the Gospel, Adam Clarke."
Upon the same window in the house in Dale-street some other inscriptions were
recorded by the same hand, consisting of three Greek quotations from the works
of S. Clement of Alexandria.
The term of the Manchester appointment expired in July, 1793; and a new scene of
labor opened to him in the Liverpool Circuit. As in Dublin, so in Manchester,
Mr. and Mrs. Clarke had to leave one of their children a tenant of the grave.
Their little son, Adam, was taken from them by a disease of the throat. The loss
of this favorite child was always a tender grief in Dr. Clarke's mind, nor could
he be persuaded to give his own Christian name again to either of the sons who
were afterward added to his family.
At Liverpool, he enjoyed the advantage of having for his colleague the Rev. John
Pawson, a man of saintly life, and greatly revered in the Methodist communion,
both by preachers and people. With this much-loved and devoted servant of Christ
be worked in perfect harmony, and the pleasure of the Lord prospered in their
hands. Comfortably renovated in health, and with the dew of the Divine Spirit
descending daily upon his soul, he gave himself to earnest study, the visitation
of the afflicted, and unremitted preaching in town and country; his days now
gliding serenely on. The Circuit at that time was more extensive than at
present, and many of the places were at great distances. The traveling Mr.
Clarke accomplished in general on foot; and on that account, preferring always,
if possible, to return home, his journeys after preaching were often late at
night. On one occasion, in returning from Aintree in company with his brother
Tracy, two Roman Catholics, who had heard him preach, lay in wait for him. One
of t hem from behind the hedge threw a stone of more than a pound weight at his
head, with such force that it cut through his hat, and inflicted a deep wound.
His brother lifted him from the ground, and carried him to a cottage hard by,
bleeding profusely. He dressed the wound, and then went in pursuit of the men,
whom he found in a public-house. Upon being charged with the offence, each
accused the other. Mr. Tracy Clarke succeeded in having them apprehended, and
returned to his brother. Here he found that the people of the cottage were
Romanists themselves; and that, on learning the facts of the case, they had
expressed their strong approval of the outrage, and their wishes that it had
proved fatal to the preacher. In these circumstances it was judged best, ill as
he was, that he should be removed from so inhospitable a refuge, and taken to
his brother's house at Maghull; from whence, the next day, the picture of death,
with his hair and clothes still covered with blood," he was brought home to his
alarmed wife. The illness caused by this affair consumed more than a month of
his valuable time, and even threatened for a while to terminate in death. On
recovering, he refused to prosecute, the men binding themselves to refrain from
similar conduct. He learned, however, in after-days, that both of them, by
progressive breaches of the law, had ultimately come to an evil end.
Mr. Clarke's place of residence in Liverpool was badly situated on a clay soil,
where in those days extensive operations in brickmaking were carried on. The
house was also in a confined situation, and surrounded by that description of
small habitations, which, from want of cleanliness in their inmates, create a
perpetual annoyance. His own description was very forcible: "The house is small,
the street in which it stands miserable, the neighborhood wretchedly poor and
wicked; the rest I leave." A gentleman desirous of paying his respects demanded,
"Pray, where do you reside, sir?" "Neither in hell, nor purgatory, yet in a
place of torment," was the reply. "Well, but where is it?" was the reiterated
question. He answered, "You must go down Dale-street, then along East-street;
and, when you are up to the middle in clay and mud, call out lustily for Adam
Clarke." The Society, however, it must be said to their honor, afterwards
released him from that locality, and removed his home to one of the best parts
of th e town.
In the second year of the Liverpool appointment, Mr. Clarke's father and mother
came to reside in that part of England; his father having undertaken to conduct
a classical school at Manchester. They were thus brought into the vicinity of
their two excellent sons, the one a healer of the body, and the other an
increasingly-honored minister of Him who can save the soul; each of them in his
department a hard-working man, and each of them blessed in his deed.
At the close of the year, Mr. Clarke attended the Conference, which was held at
Bristol. The great Methodist question of that time involved the celebration of
service in church-hours, and the administration of the sacraments in the
chapels. Some few of the preachers, and more of the leading trustees in the
principal Circuits, were adverse to these measures, but the majority of the
preachers, and the great body of the people, were in favor of them. The more
formal secession of Methodism as in ecclesiastical organization from the
Established Church, indicated by such movements, had been from year to year
becoming a necessary consequence of the circumstances which compose its early
history. We should recollect that what may be called the first generation of
Methodists did not by any means consist of members of the Church of England. A
minority of them were such; others had been accustomed to hear the Gospel among
the Nonconformists; but the greater mass of them were persons who had belonged
to no church, and many of them had not even been baptized. They had been saved
from ruin by being gathered out of the world, and brought into the fellowship of
the people of God. Now, the duty of the parochial clergy was to cherish this
hopeful movement among the lower orders of the people, to cheer on their
adventurous brethren who had gone out into the waste places to bring the
wanderers home to Christ, and to receive into the fold of the Church these
newly-awakened souls: but, by a marvelous infatuation, they repelled them. From
the primate, Archbishop Potter, who hinted excommunication to the Wesleys, --
and the bishops, Warburton and Lavington, who assailed them and their people
with reproaches and sarcasms, -- down to the most obscure country parson who
raised the rabble of his parish to disturb their worship and maltreat their
preachers, -- persecution of the Methodists on the part of the Church was the
order of the day. "Now it was," says Mr. Wesley, in a paper addressed to the
clergy themselves, "that the bishops began to speak against us, either in
conversation or in public; and, on this encouragement, the clergy stirred up the
people to treat us as outlaws or mad dogs. The people did so, both in
Staffordshire, Cornwall, and many other places; and they still do so, wherever
they are not restrained by their fear of the secular magistrate."
We have said, that many of the people gathered in by the preachers were not even
baptized: they were brought to the parish church, therefore, that they might
then be numbered among the legitimate communicants. They were refused a welcome.
On what ground? Because there were too many of them! "Oct. 13th, I waited," says
Mr. Charles Wesley, "with my brother upon a minister, about baptizing some of
his parish. He complained heavily of the multitude of our communicants, and
produced the canon against strangers. He could not admit that as a reason for
their coming to his church, that they had no sacrament at their own. I offered
my assistance to lessen his trouble, but he declined it. There were a hundred of
new communicants, he told us, last Sunday; some of whom, he said, came out of
spite to him. We bless God for this cause of offence, and pray it may never be
removed!" *[3]
So, when such multitudes had been converted in the city and neighborhood of
Bristol, "the brothers pressed the people to attend the religious services of
the National Church, and set the example themselves. The clergy in Bristol at
first complained of the increase of their labor in the administration of the
Lord's supper. When they found that complaints addressed to the 'intruders' were
of no avail, and that the inconvenience rather increased than diminished, they
entered into an agreement among themselves to repel from the Lord's table both
the Wesleys and the people whom they brought to church." *[4]
Who, then, can wonder that the Methodist people were constrained to seek the
consolations of Christ's sacraments from the hands of the men to whom, under
God, they owed the salvation of their souls? But while the mass of the people
thus wished for the holy rites to be administered in their own chapels, a
considerable number of persons in the Societies were for retaining inviolate the
original ideal of union and communion with the Church. Among these latter were
many of the trustees, who now, at this Conference of 1794, assembled in imposing
strength, to bring the preachers to decide that the practice of administering
the sacraments should be abrogated. The latter, however, declined to do violence
to the consciences of the multitude of the members who were in favor of it. In
this view Mr. Clarke, churchman as he was, perfectly coincided. And, from what
appears in some letters of his, written from the Conference, the spirit and
conduct of the trustees were not marked by irrational or unchristian obstinacy;
a nd though great fears had been entertained about a schismatic rupture in the
Connection, the question was so far amicably adjusted, that the Societies who
requested the privilege of the sacraments were set at full liberty to enjoy
them. On August 2d, he writes: "We have this morning an answer from the trustees
to our answer to their address. They rise in their demands. A committee
appointed to treat with them today at four o'clock. Mr. Pawson and I are of it.
"August 3d. -- We met yesterday at three, and continued till near eight. We
settled matters wonderfully well, and are in a fair train for restoring peace,
even in London. The privilege granted last year of receiving the sacrament where
the people are unanimous, will, I believe, be very little extended this year.
"August 5th. -- We are still in peace, but the sacramental and ordination
matters are not yet finally adjusted. The sacrament will be allowed this year
where the people are unanimous in asking for it, and where it would be
impossible to preserve a great majority of the Society without it.
"August 7th. -- All is peace and harmony, and will be so. In a much better sense
than the Frenchmen can, we may say, The Methodist preachers are 'One and
Indivisible.' No thanks to the devil and his partisans; for they have done all
they could to disunite us."
"The Lichfield business has been brought forward, and a vote passed, that none
of its propositions should be brought forward or noticed. As things go, I am
well satisfied."
This last sentence refers to a private synod of some of the ministers held in
the city of Lichfield, in the preceding April, on the invitation of Dr. Coke, to
consult on the best means of meeting the growing wishes of the Societies for the
full ordinances of the Christian church, after the manner most in accordance
with the apostolic constitutions delivered in the New Testament. The doctor, who
had already officiated in America as one of the first bishops of the Methodist
Episcopal Church, made a proposition to this meeting, as a preliminary to a
similar overture to the coming Conference, that the Methodist ministry should
henceforward comprise the three orders of superintendents, (bishops,)
presbyters, and deacons: a proposition which was afterwards in some good degree
carried out, though under another nomenclature. At that time, as already
intimated, it fell to the ground.
As many exaggerated and erroneous accounts have been given of this Lichfield
meeting, I will here give Mr. Clarke's own notes of it, taken on the spot. I
have transcribed them from his autograph made in the room at the time.
"MINUTES OF THE MEETING HELD AT LICHFIELD, APRIL 2D, 1794.
"1. A PROMISE of secrecy.
"2. All the company except Mr. M. promise to abide by the decisions of the
majority,' except where he believes the Bible is against it, or his conscience
cannot approve of it.
"3. We will make no avowed separation from the Church of England.
"4. The sacrament of the Lord's supper shall be administered wherever there is a
majority of the Society who desire it: but the preachers must not canvass for
votes, or do anything to obtain a majority which may lead to division or strife;
nor should the Lord's supper be administered in any chapel where a majority of
the trustees are against it, except a fair and full indemnification be afforded
them for all the debt for which they are responsible, supposing they require
such indemnity.
"5. That there be an order of superintendents, appointed by the Conference.
"6. That all the preachers who shall be appointed by the Conference shall from
time to time be ordained elders.
"7. That the preachers when admitted into full connection shall receive their
admission by being ordained deacons by the superintendents appointed by the
Conference: provided, (1.) That no preacher at present on probation, or in full
connection, shall be under an obligation to submit to ordination; (2.) That no
preacher shall receive letters of orders till he have been ordained an elder.
"8. That the superintendents appointed among us by the Conference be annually
changed, if it see good.
"9. That the Connection be formed into seven or eight divisions.
"10. That each superintendent shall visit the principal Societies in his
division, at least once a year. That he shall have authority to execute, or see
executed, all the branches of the Methodist discipline; and to determine, after
having consulted the preachers who are with him, in all cases of difficulty,
till the Conference.
"11. That the superintendent of any division, where he judges himself inadequate
to determine in any given case, shall have authority to call in the president to
his assistance; in which case the president shall, if possible, attend, and
shall have the ultimate determination of the case till the next Conference.
"12. The divisions for the present:--
"LONDON: Sussex, Canterbury, Godalming, Norwich, Yarmouth, Diss, St. Ives, Bury,
Colchester, Lynn, Walsingham, Bedford, Higham Ferrers.
"(2.) BRISTOL: Bath, Portsmouth, Sarum, Isles, Bradford, Gloucester, Taunton,
Collumpton, Plymouth, St. Austel, Redruth, Penzance.
"(3.) BIRMINGHAM: Oxford, Worcester, Pembroke, Glamorgan, Brecon, Wolverhampton,
Shrewsbury, Burslem.
"(4.) MANCHESTER: Macclesfield, Leek, Stockport, &c.
"(5.) SHEFFIELD: Nottingham, Northampton, Banbury, &c.
"(6.) LEEDS. (7.) NEWCASTLE. (8.) SCOTLAND, IRELAND, the NORMAN ISLES.
"Proposed superintendents: Dr. Coke, Dr. Mather, Dr. Pawson, Dr. Taylor, Dr.
Moore, Mr. Hanby, Mr. Bradburn.
"Persons present: T. Coke, Alex. Mather, Thos. Taylor, John Pawson, Saml.
Bradburn, Jas. Rogers, Henry Moore, Adam Clarke.
"The whole of the above plan to be laid before the ensuing Conference, to be
adopted or rejected as they may think proper: but those present agree to
recommend and support it as a thing greatly wanted, and likely to be of much
advantage to the work of God."
To return to more personal and private matters. -- With his superintendent, Mr.
Pawson, Mr. Clarke had spent two happy years at Liverpool; and he had formed for
that excellent man an esteem which endured with his life, and survived his
decease. In the letters written to Mrs. Clarke from the Bristol Conference, he
repeatedly refers to their venerable superintendent, his preaching, and his
health:-- e. g., "Mr. Pawson is pretty well. I am just returned from hearing him
at Portland chapel. He preached an excellent sermon indeed. Most of the
preachers think him the best in the Conference. I keep him to his bark, and hope
the swelling of his feet will not increase."
In another: "I take care twice a day to give Mr. Pawson wine and bark. Let Mrs.
P. trust him to me."
And again: "I keep him to his bark and wine, twice a day; and though he growls
at me for it, I never mind him. Tell Mrs. Pawson she has nothing to fear." --
These expressions show the friendly terms on which these two good men lived, who
were now to part. Of Mr. Pawson, as the friend of Clarke, we shall have to speak
again.
In the review of his residence at Liverpool, Mr. Clarke's mind was filled with
tender gratitude to the Lord and Giver of life, "from whom all holy desires, all
good counsels, and all just works do proceed," for the mercy shown him in being
enabled thus to employ his days in a work so holy. "Upon the very commencement
of my preaching in Liverpool," says he, "the Lord began to work. Crowds
attended. Such times of refreshing from His presence I never saw. Should I die
tomorrow, I shall praise God to all eternity that I have lived to the present
time. The labor is severe: nine or ten times a week we have to preach. But God
carries on His own work, and this is enough. My soul lies at His feet. He has
graciously renewed and enlarged my commission. All is happiness and prosperity.
We have a most blessed work; numbers are added, and multitudes built up in our
most holy faith. Such a year as this I never knew: all ranks and conditions come
to hear us. The presence of God is with us; His glory dwells in our land, an d
the shout of a King is in our camp."
* * * * * * *
DIVISION 10
BOOK II
(Meridian)
CHAPTER 1
THE PREACHER
"The path of the just is as the shining light, which shineth more and more unto
the perfect day." This beautiful representation receives one example of its
truth in the career of the subject of our memoir. He arose at the call of God,
and went forth on a path way of progressive brightness. We have seen how from
his youth he looked and toiled upward; and now, the discouragements of early
years left behind, like the sun surmounting the morning clouds which had
threatened to obscure its light, and pouring his benefic rays on all around, the
man of God comes forth to the view of the church and the world, completely
furnished for his work, to shed the healing beams of truth upon myriads of
minds. Mr. Clarke's appointment to London, in 1795, opens a new era in his life;
in which each successive year unfolded attributes of heart and intellect which
rendered him an object of confidence and admiration. As a public instructor, we
shall find him both from the pulpit and the press serving his own and coming
generation s, according to the will of God. If ever a man followed out a course
intended for him by Providence, it was Adam Clarke. "You will find," says Lord
Bolingbroke, (and here, for once, he wrote the truth,) "you will find there are
superior spirits who can show even from their infancy, though it be not always
fully perceived by others, perhaps not always felt by themselves, that they were
born for something more and better: their talents denote their general
designation; and the opportunities of conforming themselves to it, that arise in
the course of things, or that are presented to them by any circumstances of rank
or situation in the society to which they belong, denote the particular vocation
which it is not lawful for them to resist, nor even to neglect." And that is
most emphatically true of a vocation to the work of the evangelist. A man who
receives it, and disobeys it, never prospers. Woe is unto him if he preach not
the Gospel! But Clarke was faithful to the heavenly calling. Through toil, and
storm, an d want, as well as sunshine and competence, like John the Baptist he
"fulfilled his course," and, like Paul, "kept the faith," and won the crown.
As a preacher, Mr. Clarke was distinguished by his originality. With a mind
always inclining to the dialectical, [prone toward investigating the truth] he
thought clearly, and on most subjects reasoned with a conclusive force which the
most obtuse could apprehend, and the most sophisticated was constrained to
acknowledge. But, though a thinker on his own account, by his extensive reading
he availed himself largely of the thoughts of other men, only making them in a
manner his own by processes of the mental laboratory, and always reproducing
them with the mint-mark of his own intellect, and in combinations which genius
only is able to form. His mind thus gave back an affluent return of interest
upon the principal for which, in any amount, he was indebted to others; and
that, not only in the ratio of quantity, but of quality as well. He improved on
what he read, and worked within the deep recesses of his mind, by the secret of
an alchemy which could transmute baser metals into gold. Exercising thus the
faculties with which heaven had endowed him, he did not depend on factitious
aids, but gained even at the outset a standing among those nobler intellects who
think for themselves, and for others too. He remarks, in one of his letters to
Mr. Brackenbury "To reduce preaching to the rules of science, and to learn the
art of it, is something of which my soul cannot form too horrid an idea. I bless
Jesus Christ I have never learned to preach, but through His eternal mercy I am
taught by Him from time to time as I need instruction. I cannot make a sermon
before I go into the pulpit: therefore I am obliged to hang upon the arm and the
wisdom of the Lord. I read a great deal, write very little, but strive to
study."
All the way through his long career, he was, more than most men of the pulpit,
an extempore preacher. In the course of his life he wrote many sermons, which
are now extant in his works; but the greater number of these give but in
inadequate idea of his style and manner of preaching. Some of them were written
designedly for the press, and may be considered more as theological treatises
than pulpit-orations. He wrote as a divine, but preached as an apostle. Many of
his most effective pulpit-efforts were achieved with no previous aid from the
pen. The Rev. J. B. B. Clarke, in the retrospect he has published of his
father's life, says "He hardly ever wrote a line as a preparation for preaching.
I have now in my possession a slip of paper, about three inches long by one
wide, containing the first words of a number of texts; and this was the sole
list of memoranda on which he preached several occasional sermons in various
parts of the country."
Once, when on a visit at Plymouth, he preached for two hours on the great
question in Acts xvi. 30, -- "What must I do to be saved?" Several of the clergy
of the place were present, and united afterwards in requesting him to publish
the discourse; one offering to take a hundred copies for his congregation,
another two hundred and fifty, and another five hundred. Yet he had to tell
them, in reply, that he had "neither outline nor notes of the subject, nor any
time to commit the discourse to writing."
Such a habit of extempore speaking can be recommended to the imitation of but
few; and these, men in whom more than common power of ready and correct speech
is added to more than common stores of knowledge. But it enabled Dr. Clarke to
seize upon any passing incident and turn it to advantage, or to shift the topic
of discourse, if some important object required it, without inconvenience to
himself. On one occasion, after he had preached at City-road chapel, a friend
remarked to him, "I could not but observe that in the sermon you seemed suddenly
to quit the subject in hand, and fly off to a series of arguments in proof of
the Divinity of my Saviour, with which your previous subject was not connected.
Had you any reason for so doing?" "Yes," said he: "I observed Dr. K." (a
celebrated Unitarian) "steal into the back part of the chapel; and, after a few
minutes, plant his stick firmly, as if he intended to hear me out. So, by God's
help I determined to bear my testimony to the Divinity of our Lord, trusting
that He would touch his heart, and give him another opportunity of hearing and
receiving the truth."
From time to time these free outgoings of his soul were attended by an uncommon
influence, "the demonstration and power of the Spirit." In his letters to Mrs.
Clarke he mentions such occasions, not in a temper of egotistic boasting, but
with a devout and wondering acknowledgment of the condescending goodness of God
in so employing him. For example: --
"I was obliged to preach this morning at Oldham-street. The congregation was
really awful. Perhaps I never preached as I did this morning. O, Mary, I had the
kingdom of God opened to me, and the glory of the Lord filled the whole place.
Towards the conclusion the cries were great. It was with great difficulty that I
could get the people persuaded to leave the chapel. Though the press was
immense, yet scarcely one seemed willing to go away, and those who were in
distress were unable to go. Some of the preachers went and prayed with them, nor
rested till they were healed. God has done a mighty work."
Again, from Bristol:-- "I am this instant returned from King-street. The chapel
crowded -- crowded! And God in a most especial manner enabled me to deliver such
a testimony, from I Thess. i. 3, as, I think, I never before delivered. I did
feel as in the eternal world, having all things beneath me, with such expansions
of mind as the power of God alone could give. I was about an hour and a half,
and am torn up for the day."
Mr. Clarke's pulpit-ministrations were substantially biblical. He preached the
word. Here was the secret of his power. He brought a rule to bear upon the
conscience against which there was no appeal. His congregations were summoned to
the obedience of faith, not in the formulas of creeds, the decrees of councils,
or the sentences of the fathers, but in the Scripture which cannot be broken. He
"read in the book, in the law of God, distinctly, and gave the sense, and caused
them to understand the reading." In the "true sayings" penned by the inspired
prophets and apostles, he recognized and demonstrated a revelation from God to
man, and, as such, the sole canon of faith and morals. "There is nothing
certain," he used to say, "in the things which belong to salvation, but the
plain word of God; no safe teacher but the Spirit of Jesus Christ; and that
Spirit teaches the heart what the word teaches the understanding." His habits of
study in elaborating his Commentary had rendered him master of the entire scope
and contents of the sacred volume, and contributed to give his ordinary
pulpit-discourses a rich expository character. All his learning was brought to
bear on this blessed duty, -- to explain the words of God, that he might bring
the people to the knowledge of the things of God. What was said respecting a
prelate of former days might be affirmed of this eminent preacher: "He unfolded
the grandeur of a prophecy, or the comfort of an Epistle; and alarmed the
conscience, or bound up the wounded heart. He brought tidings of foreign
learning to the scholar, of discoveries to the naturalist, and of manners to the
people." Thus he was the ears of the idle, gave matter for reflection to the
thoughtful, and satisfaction to the inquisitive. He "taught in Judah, and had
the book of the law of the Lord with him, and went about throughout all the
cities of Judah, and taught the people."
One consequence of this method was an inexhaustible variety in his preaching.
The Bible contains a universe of truth; and the longest life of man becomes
momentary when brought to the task of unfolding it. We have heard of a German
professor who spent years in a course of lectures on the first chapter of
Isaiah, and died without completing it; and we can easily conceive, that such
expository preachers as Owen and Matthew Henry would review their labors with
dissatisfaction, as having been employed too much, to their feeling, on the
surface, without having penetrated the mysterious depths, of the solemn,
solitary volume which riveted the gaze of their lives. Mr. Clarke, even in the
earlier years of his ministry, adopted a method which insured a wide range of
Bible subjects for the pulpit, in preaching from the Lesson, Epistle, or Gospel
for the day: all which portions of the holy Book he carefully examined, marking
in a large textbook the verses which drew his special attention as likely to
afford topics of public address.
A preacher commanding such an amplitude of topics would always have something
new. And therefore it was that Mr. Clarke's hearers, to whatever chapel they
followed him, very seldom listened to the same discourse. The late Mr. Buttress,
who always accompanied him when Mr. Clarke was stationed in London, affirmed,
that he never heard him preach the same sermon twice. Reflecting thus the
present exercises of his intellect, his discourses had a perpetual freshness;
they came warm from the living heart, and brought life and warmth to the heart
of the hearer. And that, especially, because they brought the Gospel. We have
said he was a biblical preacher, in the truest sense, ever holding forth the
grand evangelism which pervades the Bible, as its soul and spirit, -- namely,
that "God so loved the world, that He gave His only-begotten Son, that whosoever
believeth in Him should not perish, but have everlasting life." In making known
this truth in all its solemn bearings and consequences, he was remarkable among
th e ministers of his day. In the constellation of eminent preachers who moved
at that time in the intellectual sky, but who have now nearly all disappeared
from our sight, Mr. Clarke was in this respect a star of the first magnitude.
From his rising to his setting hour, unnumbered multitudes rejoiced in his light
as a witness and guide to the mercy which could save them. In his ministry
Christ was all in all; the alpha and omega, the beginning and the end. He
essayed to unfold the entire evangelic revelation, the whole counsel of God with
respect to the way of salvation by Jesus Christ. He showed the sinner his mighty
need of such a Saviour, and led him in repentance to His feet. By him
"The violated law spoke out its thunders;
And by him, in strains as sweet as angels use,
The Gospel whisper'd peace."
"The only preaching," he said once, in a letter to a brother minister, (and the
maxim had its embodiment in his own practice,) "the only preaching worth
anything in God's account, and which the fire will not burn up, is that which
labors to convert and convince the sinner of his sin; to bring him into
contrition for it; to lead him to the blood of the covenant, that his conscience
may be purged from its guilt; to the Spirit of judgment and burning, that he may
be purified from its infection; and then to build him up on this most holy
faith, by causing him to pray in the Holy Ghost, and keep himself in the love of
God, looking for the mercy of our Lord Jesus Christ unto eternal life. This is
the system pursued by the apostles, and it is that alone which God will own to
the conversion of sinners. I speak from experience. This is the most likely mode
to produce the active soul of divinity, while the body is little else than the
preacher's creed. Labor to bring sinners to God, should you by it bring yourself
t o the grave.
Again, to another:-- "These are not only the first rudiments of heavenly
teaching, but the fulness of Divine truth in reference to salvation: 1. Thou art
a sinner, and consequently wretched. 2. God is an eternal, unfailing Fountain of
love. 3. He has given His Son Jesus Christ to die for men. 4. Believe on Him,
and thou shalt be saved from thy sins. 5. When saved, continue incessantly
dependent upon Him; so shalt thou continually receive out of His fulness grace
upon grace, and be ever fitted for, ever ready to, and ever active in, every
good word and every good work. This is the sum and substance of the revelation
of God; and, O! how worthy it is of His infinite goodness, and how suitable to
the nature and state of man! These are the simple lessons which I am endeavoring
to learn and teach. This is the science in which I should be willing to spend
the longest life. O God! simplify my heart."
No man, since the apostle St. John, seems to have had more large and
soul-stirring views of the love of God than Adam Clarke. Here and there in his
Commentary the reader will find some bursts of feeling on this grand topic,
which will give an idea of the spirit and manner of the man when in the pulpit.
When this mighty truth began to move in his soul, he became irresistible. The
first time I had the privilege of hearing him, the text was, "God was in Christ,
reconciling the world unto Himself ... Now then we are ambassadors for Christ,
as though God did beseech you by us: we pray you in Christ's stead, be ye
reconciled to God." "Behold, now is the accepted time; behold, now is the day of
salvation." It was then that I witnessed, and felt too, how this man could
master and control the entire intellect and heart of a great congregation by the
simple, honest, and earnest exhibition of the faith once delivered to the
saints.
Ille regit dictis animos, et pectora mulcet.
No wonder that, with this victorious sceptre of truth, the first preachers
vanquished the world. We were all subdued: the tears of repentance, the uplifted
eyes of prayer, the swelling emotion of triumphal joy, which longed to give
itself utterance in one loud thunder of thanksgiving, all showed how powerful is
the uncorrupted Gospel when preached aright. What I then witnessed helps me to
understand his meaning, when on one occasion he said, after preaching: "I would
not have missed coming to this place for five hundred pounds. I got my own soul
blessed, and God blessed the people. I felt," (stretching out his arms, and
folding them to his breast,) "I felt that I was drawing the whole congregation
to me closer and closer, and pulling them away from the world to God."
In expatiating on that Divine mercy "whose height, whose depth unfathomed, no
man knows," Mr. Clarke found endless resources for the conversion and comfort of
the soul and heart.
The love of God," he was wont to say, "will convert more sinners than all the
fire of hell." His confidence in the efficacy of the glad tidings, that God is
LOVE, was unlimited, and lasting as his life. Thus toward the end of his days,
in conversation with his dear son Joseph, he said, "After having now labored
with a clear conscience for the space of fifty years, in preaching the salvation
of God through Christ to thousands of souls, I can say, that is the most
successful kind of preaching which exhibits and upholds in the clearest and
strongest light the Divine perfection and mercy of the infinitely compassionate
and holy God to fallen man, and which represents Him alike compassionate and
just. Tell then your hearers, not only that the conscience must be sprinkled,
but that it was God Himself who provided the Lamb."
In the same spirit he delighted to illustrate the pleasures and advantages of a
life devoted to the service of a reconciled God. The Rev. Joseph Clarke has
given a good description of his father in the pulpit, which, though it takes us
to a later period of life, we quote here, to render our idea of Mr. Clarke as a
preacher as complete as we can:-- "The appearance of my father, and his effect
while in the pulpit upon a stranger, would probably be something like this: He"
[the stranger] "would see a person of no particular mark, except that time had
turned his hair to silver, and the calmness of fixed devotion gave solemnity to
his appearance. He spreads his Bible before him, and, opening his HymnBook,
reads forth in a clear distinct voice a few verses, after singing of which he
offers up a short prayer, which is immediately felt to be addressed to the
Majesty of Heaven. The text is proclaimed, and the discourse is begun. In simple
yet forcible language he gives some general information connected with his
subject, or lays down some general positions drawn from either the text or its
dependencies. On these he speaks for a short time, fixing the attention by
gaining the interest. The understanding feels that it is concerned. A clear and
comprehensive exposition gives the hearer to perceive that his attention will be
rewarded by an increase of knowledge, or by new views of old truths, or
previously unknown uses of ascertained points. He views with some astonishment
the perfect collectedness with which knowledge is brought from far, and the
natural yet extensive excursions which the preacher makes to present his object
in all its bearings, laying heaven and earth, nature and art, science and
reason, under contribution to sustain his cause. Now his interest becomes
deeper; for he sees that the minister is beginning to condense his strength,
that he is calling in every detached sentence, and that every apparently
miscellaneous remark was far from casual, but had its position to maintain, and
its work to perform; and he continues to hear with that rooted attention which
is created by the importance and clearness of the truths delivered, by the
increasing energy of the speaker, and by the assurance in the hearer's own mind
that what is spoken is believed to the utmost and felt in its power. The
discourse proceeds with a deeper current of fervor; the action becomes more
animated; the certainty of the preacher's own mind, and the feelings of his
heart, are shown by the firm confidence of the tone, and a certain fulness of
the voice and emphasis of manner; the whole truth of God seems laid open before
him; and the soul, thus informed, feels as in the immediate presence of the
Lord."
To this account may be appended a few lines by Mrs. Pawson, all the more
appropriate as they relate to the time already reached in our biography. This
lady, the wife of his venerable colleague at Liverpool, has the following
memorandum in her journal:-- "Brother Clarke is, in my estimation, an
extraordinary preacher; and his learning confers great lustre on his talents. He
makes it subservient to grace. His discourses are highly evangelical. He never
loses sight of Christ. In regard of pardon and holiness, he offers a present
salvation. His address is lively, animated, and very encouraging to the seekers
of salvation. In respect to the unawakened, it may indeed be said that he obeys
that precept, 'Cry aloud, spare not, lift up thy voice like a trumpet.' His
words flow spontaneously from the heart; his views enlarge as he proceeds; and
he brings to the mind a torrent of things new and old. While he is preaching,
one can seldom cast an eye on the audience without perceiving a melting unction
resting upon th em. His speech 'distils as the dew,' and 'as the small rain upon
the tender herb.' He generally preaches from some part of the Lesson for the
day, and on the Sabbath morning from the Gospel for the day. This method confers
an abundant variety on his ministry."
The end and aim of every sermon with him was to do good there and then. One day,
as he entered the vestry at City-road after preaching, a friend remarked, "What
an admirable sermon you have preached to us this morning, sir!" "Brother," he
replied, "Satan whispered that to me as I left the pulpit. But I told him that
by the mischief alone which it did to his kingdom God would judge it. I am
afraid of any other good sermons than those. It is solemn work to stand up
between the living and the dead!"
In style and manner, Mr. Clarke's discourses derived no advantage from
artificial rhetoric, the mellifluous [pleasing, musical, flowing] charms of
elocution, or the little embellishments on which the artist in public speaking
depends so much for his popularity. The harmony of cadences or the aesthetic
grace with which the orator moves to group his thoughts and words so as to win
the ear, and charm the sense of music in the soul, were things quite out of his
line. We are not sure whether he was endowed with that kind of talent more than
in a mediocre degree; but we know that he cared nothing about using it. Yet the
absence of these circumstantials in no way interfered with the universally
acknowledged grandeur of his ministry. The Divine Spirit has endowed the
teachers of the world with a variety of gifts. He who wrought powerfully in St.
Peter to convince the Jew, conferred on St. Paul the ability to persuade the
Greek. Among the great preachers of the early church, the men whose ministry
shed sunlight on the ages in which they lived, we see gifts many, but all
emanating from one Spirit. It was grace that sanctified their natural
endowments, and made itself visible in "the serious end careful perspicuity of
Athanasius," in Basil's refined and graceful sweetness, in the eloquence which
flowed from the lips of Chrysostom like streams of liquid gold, in the
self-possessed dignity of Cyprian, the power with which Hilary could drape his
thoughts in tragic pomp and glory, or the vivid meditations with which Ambrosius
could pierce the soul, "as with arrows dipped in honey-dew." So, in more modern
times, the thunder-storm of Luther, and the placid vigor of Melancthon, and (why
not say it?) the ornate clarity of Massillon, the penetrating unction of
Fenelon, and the imposing grandeur of Bossuet, all betoken His still merciful
presence. In the mighty bursts of truth from Whitefield's lips, or the tranquil,
sincere, and soul-commanding evangelisms of Wesley, we hear His awakening voice.
Did not He who clothes the lilies with their beauty, and spans the heavens with
the rainbow, give to Chalmers the imagination by which he brought visions of
truth before men's minds like a gorgeous panorama; and enable Robert Hall to
show us the river of water of life, clear as crystal, proceeding out of the
throne of God and of the Lamb? Thus, too, in the pulpits of Methodism, the
exuberant pathos of Bradburn, the searching fire of Benson, Richard Watson's
majesty of mind, Robert Newton's bland and evangelic grace, and Jabez Bunting's
unaffected but beautiful and potent oratory, all display the operations of that
same Spirit who,
"Plenteous of grace, descends from high,
Rich in His sevenfold energy,"
to distribute His celestial gifts according to the counsel of His own will.
The servants of God, having these faculties differing one from another, cannot
be expected every one to resemble his fellow; and though Adam Clarke may not be
said to have possessed the peculiar character of any of the men we have named,
yet was his pulpit-ministry distinguished by attributes which set him, in point
of effectiveness, on a level with any of them, the apostles excepted. As an able
critic *[1] says of Augustine, in comparison with some other of the Fathers, "he
had less of beauty, but more of power, than they." In Dr. Clarke's preaching
there was such a breadth and depth of information, such strength of feeling and
fixedness of solemn purpose to save men's souls from death, that all who heard
him knew within themselves that they were face to face with a messenger from
God; and while the learned and the illiterate were alike brought under the same
spell, and earnestly attended to the words spoken by him, he so rightly divided
and faithfully applied the word of the Lord, that the conscience of the sinner
was awakened, and the contrite heart comforted, by its efficacy working in the
soul.
His preaching had all the more heart in it from the experience which he himself
enjoyed of the saving power of the truth. Why did the hearers feel so? It was
because the preacher had felt first. He came before them full-dressed in the
mantle of salvation, with his lamp burning. He told them of a mercy which he had
found, and which they must seek, or perish. He told them of a Saviour who would
be presently their Judge:--
"Before him came, in dread array,
The pomp of that tremendous day
When Christ with clouds shall come:" --
and, with the awful light of these revelations on his soul, he persuaded men as
well by the terrors as by the compassions of the Lord. He delighted, as we have
said, to set forth the mercy of God; but it was done in such a way, that the
whole sermon was at once a warning to the wicked, and a voice of consolation to
the repentant. And preaching as he did under the conviction that this life is
the only span of opportunity for the evil and hell-condemned to obtain remission
and renewal, -- that, in respect to some of his hearers, life was verging on its
latest hour, and that on the very moment then present hung eternity itself, --
he so preached that the truth came from his own to the hearer's heart; that
attention was arrested, feeling excited; the dreamer awoke from his
abstractions, the worldling felt the power of another life, the infidel
insensibly believed; of the reprobate, hovering angels said, "Behold, he
prayeth;" at Christ's omniscient glance, poor backsliding Peter again wept
bitterly; and, ravished at the sight of a Saviour who was dead and is alive
again, another Thomas exclaimed, "My Lord, and my God!" Thus the Gospel came not
in word only, but in power and assurance, and with signs of salvation. Moses
struck the rock.
In presence of these substantial and heart-satisfying powers, the auditors of
Clarke forgot the want of artistic accomplishments which have contributed to
make the modern pulpit sometimes attractive. A comparatively homely manner, and
a voice not tuned at all times to melodious cadences, were not once thought of.
He was not a mere orator. He brought strong thoughts, and clothed them in honest
words, as a means to an end. He had a purpose, and one in which you, as his
hearer, had an everlasting interest. He wanted to make you a better man: he
wanted to save your soul; and to do this, he sought to lay hold on you by the
conscience. The ear with him was only the avenue to the heart. Unless a man has
this purpose and aim, it is in vain that he draws the bow. The arrow from his
hand will never find its way to the mark; or, should it chance to do so, will
fall without effect, like the shaft that Homer tells of, so uselessly launched
by Priam against the shield of the Grecian hero:--
"This said, his feeble hand a javelin threw,
Which, fluttering, seem'd to loiter as it flew;
Just, and but barely, to the mark it held
And faintly tinkled on the brazen shield."
But Clarke drew not the bow at a venture, and seldom without success, in one
degree or another. A multitude of sinners were converted under his ministry;
and, among them, not a few who have themselves been made instruments of
salvation to others.
And these works and services were sustained by him for half a century of time,
and over a great extent of area in the social world. Some excellent ministers
are all their lives restricted to a circumscribed and narrow locality. They pass
their days, by the ordination of Providence, in comparative obscurity,
witnessing the truth but to a few persons, and shining as lights in dark and
unthought-of places. But this man's career was more like that of the sun when he
comes forth in his strength to bathe a hemisphere in light. He went literally
through the length and breadth of the land. From the Norman Isles to the ultima
Thule of the storm-beaten Zetlands, he revealed the glorious Gospel of the grace
of God. The English nation, one might say, knew and revered him. Men in high
places, and men of low degree, in crowded cities and sequestered hamlets, alike
waited for his coming, and welcomed the sound of his voice. "How beautiful upon
the mountains were the feet of him that brought good tidings, that published
peace; that brought good tidings of good, that published salvation; that said
unto Zion, Thy God reigneth!"
One great charm, that rendered his ministry so attractive, was found in the
well-known qualities of his own upright and holy life. It gives one a sacred and
edifying satisfaction, to remember how finely the precepts of the Gospel which
he preached harmonized with his personal character. He lived the Gospel. His
doctrine and life, coincident, proved him to be at once a great and good man.
His life recommended religion; and was itself a ceaseless homily of things
profitable to man, and pleasing unto God. It was a life not only unblemished by
glaring inconsistencies, but adorned by practical excellence; and I believe that
no man could have used the words of St. Paul with less of impropriety than he:
"Whatsoever things are true, whatsoever things are honest, whatsoever things are
just, whatsoever things are pure, whatsoever things are lovely, whatsoever
things are of good report; if there be any virtue, and if there he any praise,
think on these things. Those things, which ye have both learned, and received, a
nd heard, and seen in me, do: and the God of peace shall be with you." In this
respect it will be our wisdom to imitate him, considering the end of his
conversation, Jesus the First and the Last. Christum pectore, Christum ore,
Christum opere, spirabat.
* * * * * * *
DIVISION 11
BOOK II
(Meridian)
CHAPTER 2
THE PASTOR
The vocation of the Christian minister binds him not only to labor to win souls
by preaching, but also to watch over them in the services of that pastoral
office which the Lord by an everlasting ordinance has established in His church.
In the discharge of this solemn duty, it was Mr. Clarke's earnest endeavor to
approve himself faithful. His care was to feed the church of God, to build up
believers in their holy faith, to strengthen such as did stand, to comfort and
help the weak-hearted, to raise up the fallen, and to restore the wanderer. As a
Methodist pastor, he conscientiously administered the discipline of which both
himself and the members of his flock had alike pledged their acceptance. He
considered that discipline to be perfectly scriptural in its character, and
directly conducive to the edification and perpetuity of the church. In the
Circuits in which he presided as superintendent, the peculiar institutions of
Methodism were upheld in their vigor and integrity. Class-meeting, for example,
which has afforded to so many myriads of Christ's disciples a delightful means
of brotherly fellowship, mutual improvement, comfort in trouble, and timely help
in necessity, he would never see neglected without inquiry, and, if needful,
remonstrance or exhortation. The value he set on this means of grace appears in
the fact, that in several of the places in which he was stationed, in addition
to those official visitations of the classes which devolved on him as a
minister, he would have his name on some Class-Book as a private member, and
meet as such, as often as opportunity served. He urged the Methodist people to
make much of this peculiar advantage of their communion, and sometimes in
writing a letter to a friend would throw in a memento bearing on the duty, if it
were only in the simple words appended as a postscript, -- "Mind your class."
So, in a letter to a captain in the navy, a Methodist, with whom he had formed
an intimacy at Liverpool, as a member of the Philological Society in that town;
he says: "May I ask how you get on in your classical, philological, and princely
connections? Do not neglect the two former, by any means; and let the first have
the first claim. We live, my friend, in a miserable world; but we may live well
in it, if we look to God. I know you will be faithful to the trust reposed in
you by His Majesty; but, O, be also faithful to the light and influence of the
Spirit of God. Use every means of grace, and glorify God in all things. I long
after my class, and doubt whether any one will let me in here. I am not
sufficiently acquainted with the people yet to raise one like that in
Liverpool." This last remark refers to his success in forming a class in
Liverpool of entirely new members. At the close of the first meeting, he laid
down his penny (the weekly contribution) on the table, with, "There, thank God,
I am once more in class."
Thus, to another friend: "What a mercy it is that you and I are now in His fold!
May God keep us both steady! Abide in Him, my dear friend, that when He shall
appear, you may see Him as He is. Pray much in private. No soul that prays much
in private ever falls. Read the blessed Book; let His testimonies be your
counselors, and the subject of them be your song in the night. Keep closely
united to God's people. Do not omit one class-meeting even in the year, if you
can possibly avoid it. I have been now a traveling preacher upwards of
twenty-four years, and yet I feel class-meeting as necessary now as I did when I
began. You may think it strange to hear that I meet regularly once a week, and
have done so for years. I find it a great privilege to forget that I am a
preacher, and come with a simple heart to receive instruction from my leader."
Again, farther on in life, to a brother minister: "From long experience I know
the propriety of Mr. Wesley's advice, 'Establish class-meetings and form
Societies wherever you preach and have attentive hearers: for, wherever we have
preached without doing so, the word has been like seed by the way-side.' It was
by this means we have been enabled to establish permanent and holy churches over
the world. Mr. Wesley saw the necessity of this from the beginning. Mr.
Whitefield, when he separated from Mr. Wesley, did not follow it. What was the
consequence? The fruit of Mr. Whitefleld's labor died with himself. Mr. Wesley's
remains and multiplies. Did Mr. Whitefield see his error? He did, but not till
it was too late: his people, being long unused to it, would not come under this
discipline. Have I authority to say so? I have; and you shall have it. Forty
years ago I traveled in the Bradford (Wilts.) Circuit, with Mr. John Pool.
Himself told me this. Mr. P. was well known to Mr. Whitefield, who, having met
him on e day, accosted him in the following manner:-- Whitefield: ' Well, John,
art thou still a Wesleyan?' Pool: ' Yes, sir. I thank God I have the privilege
of being in connection with Mr. Wesley, and one of his preachers.' W.: 'John,
thou art in thy right place. My brother Wesley acted wisely: the souls that were
awakened under his ministry he joined in class, and thus preserved the fruits of
his labor. This I neglected, and my people are a rope of sand.' "
In cases of habitual neglect of meeting in class, Mr. Clarke hesitated at the
quarterly visitation to give the accustomed ticket as the token of membership.
During his residence in Manchester, he met a class one day, when a wealthy
member who never came sent a guinea as his quarterly contribution. Mr. Clarke,
on looking over the class-paper, and seeing how the case stood, refused the
money, desiring the leader to take it back again, and request the gentleman to
give him, Mr. Clarke, an interview.
As a superintendent, he superintended. In a family, a church, a kingdom, there
must be a head. The proper administration of the affairs of the Circuit he
considered a moral duty on his part; and a cheerful, enlightened acquiescence in
every constitutional arrangement of the church, the moral duty of members,
leaders, local preachers, and the other members of the official staff of a
Circuit. In one place the local preachers demurred [objected] to his exclusive
authority to make the Plan, and fix their appointments. To show them by a
practical experiment that it was best for the superintendent to have that power,
he even let them for a time or two arrange their own appointments. "Take and
make out a Plan for yourselves," said he, "and bring it to me, and I will
incorporate the traveling preachers with it." They did so, after much
altercation among themselves; for they could not agree. "We soon had loud
complaints from different parts of the Circuit; for those who were the least fit
for certain places would g o there. The next Plan I gave them as before, and
with great difficulty they planned themselves again; and then the complaints
from the Circuit became louder and louder. The most pious and sensible of the
local preachers saw and heard this. With the third Plan they refused to have
anything to do, and confidence was restored."
Mr. Clarke wished to see the various offices of the church filled by men whose
religious qualifications would uphold their moral influence, and effectively
carry out the purposes for which they had been established. A steward in a
certain town had a commercial partner, who had acted in a dishonorable manner.
This conduct became a topic of conversation at the leaders'-meeting, at which
Mr. Clarke presided. The officer, by some remarks, intimated that he sided with
his partner in what he had done. "Then," said Mr. Clarke, "give up thy
stewardship; for thou mayest be no longer steward." Reflection led this
gentleman to see that he had been wrong, and that his pastor had acted rightly.
He had greatness of mind enough to acknowledge it, and was at once reinstated.
Our worthy pastor inculcated the most inflexible principles on the subject of
commercial integrity. In preaching one Sunday morning, at the old chapel in
Spitalfields, on the fifteenth Psalm, he laid great stress on the relative
duties there laid down for the guidance of men of business. An eminent merchant
who had heard the sermon overtook him on the way home, and observed, "Mr.
Clarke, if what you have said today in the pulpit be necessary between man and
man, I fear few commercial men will be saved." "I cannot help that, sir,"
replied he: "I may not bring down the requirements of infinite justice to suit
the selfish chicanery of any set of men whatever. It is God's law, and by it He
will Himself judge man at the last day."
But, while thus resolute and unbending in maintaining the high moralities of
Christian discipline in the church, he was full of tenderness for the weak and
afflicted, whether in body or mind, and knew how to blend the gravity of the
pastor with the gentle love of a father and a friend. Here is a glimpse of him
in the class-room, as given us by his daughter in one of her piously recorded
recollections: -- "My father had been preaching at Chandler-street (now
Hinde-street); and after service had a class to meet. I accompanied him on that
occasion, and was permitted to sit by him. Addressing one present, he said,
'You, my sister, can speak good of the Lord. You have long known that He is
gracious.' She burst into tears, and said, 'O yes, sir; but I have been most
unfaithful, and my mind has been brought into great heaviness: during my
daughter's late illness, I would not give her up.' 'And did your daughter die?'
'No, sir; she was spared to me.' 'Look up, my sister, and learn this lesson: God
never wastes His grace by giving more than is needed. Had He purposed to take
your daughter, He would have bestowed upon you the gift of resignation to meet
the trial.' " *[1]
To another, who was in affliction, he said, "The cloud will be dispersed by and
by: though affliction endureth for a night, joy cometh in the morning. God will
not always afflict: remember His Son Jesus Christ, and fear not. In all your
afflictions He was afflicted; and He still sympathizes with you. Often have I
preached this doctrine to you; and now that you need it most, receive it
heartily. He is the same God, willing to help, mighty to save. Put His
friendship to the test, and you will find Him all you want, and all you wish."
In the department of pastoral duty which relates to visiting from house to
house, Mr. Clarke could not fully gratify the wishes of his heart. This, indeed,
is true of the great majority of his brethren. There may be from a thousand to
two thousand members under the care of two or three ministers, who are
constantly engaged in the public duties they owe to a number of congregations
spread over an area of many miles. Then, again, the connectional interests of
the body make large demands on their time, involving, in cities and large towns,
frequent attendance on committees, whose activity is necessary to the effective
working, and even the existence, of several institutions of charity and
religion; while the pecuniary support of those institutions frequently requires
them to give up two or three days together in journeys to other Circuits to
preach and speak at public meetings. There is also a necessity, in order to keep
pace with the enlightenment of the age, and to maintain the confidence and
respect of the public in the office of teacher, that the minister should spend
some few hours a day in his own study. Then it must be remembered, that social
visits are to be accomplished either by day or in the evening. But in the hours
of the day, while the people are engaged in their business or labor, a visit
becomes an intrusion: and, on the other hand, in the evening, when families have
more leisure to receive visits, the minister is at work in his Circuit; for most
of us preach or hold meetings every evening in the week. It is not with us, as
with the parochial clergyman or the Dissenting minister, that, time being
secured for the Sunday sermons and the one week-day lecture, several evenings in
the week may be made available for visiting. We are so employed that it becomes
physically impossible for us to gratify, according to our earnest desire, the
social tendencies. Yet it must not be supposed, on these grounds, that the
Methodist people are without pastoral care: on the contrary, no religious
communion is so richly supplied with the means for the enjoyment of that
privilege. Not to speak of Society meetings, in which the flock and the shepherd
unite for intercourse and prayer, -- or of the weekly class-meeting, in which
the concerns of the soul occupy the solemn transactions of the hour, -- in the
visitation of the classes by the ministers at the renewal of the tickets, we
believe there is more direct communication between the pastor and the member on
the interests of the spiritual life, than would be had in twenty occasions in
which, from the presence of other persons, (some of whom, it may be, are opposed
or indifferent to religious things,) the conversation takes a more general
character. In a word, so far as mere gossiping visits are concerned, the
preachers have, and ought to have, but very little time. Some of them very
properly avail themselves of the hour of "tea-time to exchange words of
friendship with a
family, and to offer such instruction as the opportunity may afford: but Mr.
Clarke had (as we think, un fortunately) disqualified himself for this social
enjoyment, by renouncing the use of tea, partly from a notion that the leaf
itself was injurious to health, but more especially for the sake of employing
the time which others spend at the tea-table in the prosecution of his studies.
*[2]
And this reminds us that, in Mr. Clarke's case, it must be taken into account
that he was called of God to a life at once more public, and yet more
sequestered in many of its hours, than that of many of his brethren. It was his
vocation not only to teach with the living voice, but through the medium of the
press; and the hours spent by him in earnest, laborious, and life-consuming
studies, have given forth their results in those voluminous and imperishable
works by which, though dead, he yet speaks, and will continue to be the
instructor of distant generations. When we survey the massive labors of his pen,
and call to mind the active and energetic character of his oral ministry, the
wonder is how he could accomplish all this; and that wonder increases when we
see that in the general routine of pastoral business he would not permit himself
to be behind his colleagues.
Though he had no relish for gossip, and was intolerant of the waste of time, yet
in visiting the sick and afflicted of his flock he was among the foremost. He
adhered to the letter of "the Twelve Rules," to which, as a preacher, he had
pledged his obedience, desiring "never to be unemployed," and "always to go to
those who wanted him most." Had he then time for some visits ? He would hasten
to the house of mourning rather than to that of festivity, and with the poor and
the needy he would share his last sixpence. It was his care to do good as well
to the body as to the soul. His knowledge of medicine enabled him to give
continuous relief to many a sufferer. While in Dublin, be attended the lectures
on Anatomy and Materia Medica, which supplemented a large amount of knowledge he
had acquired of the healing art by extensive reading and observation; and all
this he turned to account in many a chamber where disease and poverty were the
joint inmates. In cases, however, of a critical nature, he sought aid for t he
sick poor from professional men, of whom there were many in the circle of his
own friends. At Manchester and other places he became acquainted in this way
with most of the faculty. In the former city Dr. Eason was much attached to him.
He told Mr. Clarke that he liked to attend the Methodist people in their last
labors, -- "they died so peacefully." From what I have read in manuscript
letters, written in later years by the subject of our memoir, that eminent
physician himself found unspeakable benefit to his own soul from the intercourse
to which allusion has just been made.
Mr. Clarke was once sent for by a person in dying circumstances, who proved to
be a gentleman who had been awakened under a sermon of his some time before, and
who, though then in much penitential trouble, had not yet found rest for his
soul. The minister heard the recital of his anxieties, and formed so good an
opinion of his case as to wonder that he had not already received some
comforting token of the Lord's forgiving grace. In giving such counsel as he
thought to be required, he intimated to the gentleman a surprise that there was
some important act of duty from him to God or man which he was knowingly
neglecting. Whereupon the dying man related that, in sailing some years before
from a foreign port to England, he land by way of frolic secreted a small bag of
dollars which had been committed to the captain's care, but which had been
carelessly allowed to be day after day upon the locker. At the end of the
voyage, the captain making no inquiries for the bag, it was still detained, and
several months elapsed before anything was heard concerning it. At length, the
parties for whom the money was designed, having received notice of the fact,
applied to the captain, who candidly acknowledged that he took it on board, but
added that he could give no further account of it. By this time the person in
whose hands it was became alarmed, and was ashamed to confess, lest his
character should suffer; and so he hid the property. The poor captain was sued
for the amount, and, having nothing to pay, was thrown into prison, where, after
languishing for two years, he died. The guilty person now strove to banish all
thought of the misery which he had occasioned, and to drown the voice of
conscience by business and amusement. But it was all in vain; and, especially
from the time when he heard Mr. Clarke preach, he had suffered great disquietude
of mind. He had agonized at the throne of mercy for pardon, but he could obtain
no answer, and he feared he must go down to the grave unpardoned, unsaved. The
minister inculcated the necessity of restitution. The sum, with compound
interest, was paid to the widow of the captain. The poor man thereupon found
tranquillity of mind, and expired at length in the enjoyment of the mercy of
God.
Wherever Mr. Clarke found genuine piety, it had an attractive charm, which drew
his steps again and again to the humblest abode. He had, in fact, some of his
chief favorites among the truly religious poor. In visiting the simple-hearted
members of his flock Mr. Clarke made himself at home with them, entered into
their affairs, and showed them that he could not only understand their joys and
sorrows, but feel with them. He liked also to eat a mouthful of their food, as a
token of friendship. "I always eat with people," said he, "either breaking a
piece from off a biscuit or cutting a crust from a loaf, to show them that I am
disposed to feel at home among them; for, even if they are very poor, there are
many ways of returning the kindness without wounding the feelings of the party
by whom the hospitable disposition is manifested." So he has been known to eat
two or three potatoes in a cottage, and give a shilling pleasantly for each one
of them. His visits were designedly short. He was aware that a lengthened stay
might inconvenience the family, and spoil the good effect of the interview. He
did not, therefore, as he once termed it, "make a dose of himself where he
went," or turn what he wished to be an agreeable visit into a disagreeable
visitation.
But in [being] the genial friend he never forgot [to be] the pastor, but
reproved, exhorted, gave counsel, and offered consolation, as the case demanded;
while among intelligent young people he would bring out of the stores of his
classical and eastern reading in example, an anecdote, or an illustration, which
gave additional interest and force to the precept he wished to inculcate.
Thus:--
THE DIVINE MERCY OUR ONLY REFUGE
It was once demanded of the fourth khalif, Aalee: "If the canopy of heaven were
a bow, and the earth were the cord thereof; if calamities were arrows, and
mankind were the mark for them; and if Almighty God, the Tremendous and
Glorious, were the unerring Archer; to whom could the sons of Adam flee for
protection?" The khalif answered, saying, -- "The sons of Adam must flee unto
the Lord."
THE HASTY SHOULD GIVE THEMSELVES TIME
The philosopher Athenodorus, who had long resided in the court of Augustus,
petitioned the emperor to allow him at length to retire to some quiet retreat,
where he might end his days in solitude and peace. The request was granted, and
on taking leave of the emperor he ventured to give his sovereign the following
precept:-- "Caesar! I have an advice to give thee: Whensoever thou art angry,
take heed that thou never say or do anything until thou hast distinctly repeated
to thyself the twenty-five letters of the alphabet." "Athenodorus!" exclaimed
the emperor, seizing his hand, "thou must not leave me; I have still need of
the."
CORRUPTING BOOKS
Reference being made to a work, the general tendency of which was bad, though it
contained many well-written and brilliant passages, and one of these being
quoted with admiration, Mr. Clarke said: "The Persian poet Hafiz borrowed the
first couplet of his Divan from an Arabic poet of disreputable morals. His
friends wondered at it, and some remonstrated. Hafiz vindicated himself by
saying that the lines contained a fine sentiment; to which one of the objectors
replied, ' The lion would disgrace himself were he to snatch a bone from the
mouth of a dog!' "
Mr. Clarke urged upon his people the necessity of a thorough conversion, and a
constant effort for moral improvement; of all that is implied in working out our
salvation, while God works within to will and to do. "Remember," he would say,
"that the power that cleanses is needed to keep us clean. It is by Christ
dwelling in our hearts by faith that we are preserved in holiness; and He dwells
in the heart of those only who are lovingly obedient to His voice. Obedience to
the will of God is the very element in which the Christian should live. Seek out
His commandments till you find none left; seek to do them at all times, and in
all places. How blessed to do this!" "You tell me," said he to one, "that God
has opened your eyes: can you tell me that He is keeping them open?" So, not
only as when present, but when absent also, he bore in mind those whom he had
once served in the Gospel. Some of his letters are thoroughly pastoral. Here is
an extract from one, written to a lady who was mourning the loss of her
husband:-- "I am well aware that grief like yours can be alleviated by God
alone; but it must increase the distress of your situation to find a former
friend careless or unaffected. God condescended to make me a messenger of peace
to your dear husband; and how much I loved him, you, and every branch of your
family, it is impossible for me to tell. My love was such that your joys
overjoyed me, and all your troubles deeply affected me ... If it be now
impossible for me to comfort you, it is as much so for me not to sympathize with
you ... But the good, the merciful God needs no entreaty to come in to your
assistance. He is the Fountain of endless love. He knows what He has called you
to pass through; and, as He has ordained the trial, so has He the measure of
strength necessary to support you under it. Yes, my dear sister, He loves you,
and will never leave you, no, never forsake you ... He spared your dear husband,
that he might know His name and receive His salvation; and then, perceiving the
evil that was in his way, and perhaps would have proved his ruin, He has taken
him to Himself from the evil to come. This we are always authorized to say in
such cases, as we are fully assured God does all things well, and never
willingly afflicts the children of men ... And what a wonderful and encouraging
saying is this, -- ' Thy Maker is thy Husband!' and He is thy husband's God.
Then, my sister, if you cannot as yet rejoice, you can submit to His will, and
confide in His mercy, knowing that this also, distressing as it is, will work
for your good ...
"A few days ago I was called to visit a family in distress. One child was dead;
the father was just put into his coffin, and the mother expired a few moments
after I went in. Things are never so ill, but they might be worse. May your
father's God, and the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, be your comfort
and support, and save you and yours unto eternal life!"
In his Commentary on the New Testament, we often meet with sentiments and
precepts relating to the pastoral office, which were evidently transcribed from
an imprint which the Divine hand had made on his own heart, and which it was the
study of his life to carry out into practice. "Here," writes he, "is the
difference between the hireling and the good shepherd. The hireling counts the
sheep his own no longer than they are profitable to him; the good shepherd looks
upon them as his, so long as he can be profitable to them." "A good shepherd
conducts his flock where good pasturage is to be found, watches over them while
there, brings them back again, and secures them in the fold. So he that is
called and taught of God feeds the flock of Christ with those truths of His word
which nourish them unto eternal life, and God blesses together both the shepherd
and the flock; so that, going out and coming in, they find pasture."
We will now resume our narrative. Mr. Clarke was about to enter upon a vast
field of ministerial labor in the metropolis. He went into it trusting alone in
God, whose present Spirit could be his only sufficiency. To save one soul from
hell, or to guide one man from earth to heaven, is a task to which no mere human
wisdom or work is adequate. But he who hears the voice which says, "Lo, I am
with you alway, even to the end of the world," will go about it in the strength
of the Lord, making mention of His righteousness, even His only. Such was the
frame of mind in which this single-hearted and faithful servant of the Lord
endeavored to discharge the trust conferred by Him who in His providence had led
him to the work, and by His grace had endowed him with those heavenly gifts
which qualified him to do it, --
"A prophet's inspiration from above,
A teacher's knowledge, and a Saviour's love."
* * * * * * *
DIVISION 12
BOOK II
(Meridian)
CHAPTER 3
THE PREACHER AND PASTOR CONTINUED
At the present time the Methodist communion has nine metropolitan Circuits; but
in the year 1795, when Mr. Clarke received his appointment from the Manchester
Conference, the whole of London, and much of the surrounding country, formed but
one vast Circuit. It extended, in fact, from Woolwich to Twickenham, and from
Edmonton to Dorking, with occasional visits to various outlying places, as
Barking, St. Alban's, &c. There were about four thousand members in Society. The
superintendent was Mr. Pawson; and Mr. Clarke's other colleagues were Messrs.
Wrigley, West, Griffith, and Reece. His residence in John-street, Spitalfields,
adjoined the chapel. Here he resumed, with greater intenseness than ever, the
labors of his devoted life for, in addition to the great physical and
intellectual efforts demanded by his pulpit and pastoral work, his mind was now
beginning to put forth its strength in those literary toils which in their
results have given him an abiding name. All his past studies had been but
preparatory; and from the stores he had been accumulating, he felt it a law of
God in his conscience to bring forth out of his treasury things new and old,"
for the increase of learning, and the promotion of truth and piety among men.
And more especially were his energies concentrated, in the study, on the
elaboration of a Commentary on the holy Scriptures, to which he applied all the
leisure time he could command; and this, from the very nature of his public
engagements, could be only found in the early part of the day. One of
Mendelssohn's works has the title of Morning Hours;" *[1] and we are sure that
Adam Clarke might have given a similar designation to the goodly array of
volumes with which he has enriched our religious literature. We have in them the
first fresh thinkings of his mind, -- dew-drops glittering in the orient sun, or
manna gathered in the prime. He knew that, unless the early time of the day were
redeemed, his life would yield but little fruit in the field of literature. He
became, therefore, a companion of the morning star. Later in the day he had to
meet the calls of one duty after another, till it was time to take his
accustomed journey for the pulpit and class-work of the evening. His duties in
this last respect took him to various parts of the town, and places in the
suburbs lying miles away from home. He either could not or would not avail
himself of any means of conveyance; But usually performed his journeys on foot,
except when appointed to Dorking. In this way, during his three years' stay in
the Circuit, he walked more than seven thousand miles. In these perambulations,
he had an almost constant companion in Mr. Buttress, one of the leading
Methodists of the Spitalfields chapel; whose name, as maintained by his
descendants to the present day, is honorably cherished in the communion to which
they have been steadfast. Wherever Mr. Clarke was seen in the pulpit, Mr.
Buttress was to be found in
the pew. He, of all men, would be prepared to give an opinion as to the monotony
or manifoldness of his friend's ministrations; and his testimony goes to affirm,
that Mr. Clarke's preaching was remarkable for its endless variety. To one who
asked him whether he did not become tired with hearing the same discourses so
often, he gave the reply, that he had never heard the same discourse twice,
except on one occasion, when it was repeated at his own request. "Well,"
returned the inquirer, "if you did not hear the same text, did he not take the
same subject?" "No," said Mr. Buttress, 'not anything beyond the broad Gospel of
Jesus Christ." *[2]
The results of these well-sustained exertions can only be unfolded in the final
day. In the case of a Methodist minister, who co-operates with so many others in
the same pulpit, it becomes peculiarly difficult to pronounce upon the measure
of good effected by the ministry of one alone. No doubt, each of those good men,
who labored so cordially in word and doctrine, had seals to his own ministry;
and all of them enjoyed the solemn gratification of witnessing the progress of
the work of God in their Circuit at large. Mr. Clarke did not long prosecute his
work in London before he was cheered by the tokens of the Holy Spirit's presence
and grace in the gathering in of some who were the firstfruits of a more
extensive harvest. Among these were two, whose conversion to God was productive
of consequences of everlasting benefit to many more.
Mr. Joseph Butterworth, an opulent law-publisher in London, had married Miss
Anne Cooke, the sister of Mrs. Adam Clarke. Mr. Butterworth, though the son of a
Baptist minister, (author of a well-known Concordance to the Holy Scriptures,)
was not, at that time, a decidedly religious man, nor under any influences which
would prepossess him in favor of Methodism. Still, as Mr. Clarke was his
brother-in-law, though personally unknown to him, he felt a sort of curiosity to
hear him. The effect the sermon had upon him led Mr. B. to hasten the
fulfillment of a purpose to call on him, and to seek a personal acquaintance. He
accordingly went the next day with his lady to Spitalfields. Mrs. Butterworth
had not seen her sister for years, as, from the disinclination Mrs. Cooke had
entertained for her daughter's marriage with Mr. Clarke, but little intercourse
had obtained between the families. These old things, however, were now passing
away, and the two sisters were enabled to renew the friendship of their earlier
day s under the sanctifying benedictions of religion. Learning that Mr. Clarke
was going to preach that evening at Leytonstone, Mr. Butterworth offered to
accompany him.
On the road Mr. Clarke soon perceived that the mind of his brother-ia-law was
awakened to serious inquiry about the way of salvation; and the little journey
passed rapidly in animated conversation on the things of God. In fact, the
"vital spark of heavenly flame" had been kindled in Mr. Bufterworth's heart; and
on the way homeward he disclosed to Mr. Clarke, that, while hearing him preach
on the preceding Sunday, he had received impressions of the truth which had
moved him to seek the grace of repentance unto life; that a sense of guilt and
depravity had arisen in his conscience; and that it was his great desire and
determination to find the mercy which alone could save him. Right gladly did Mr.
Clarke point out to him the way to the attainment of peace with God, through
Jesus Christ; and when, after supper, the visitors having gone home, Mr. Clarke
related to his wife the conversation which had taken place between himself and
her brother-in-law, his gratification was greatly enhanced by learning that the
sisters had spent the evening in converse on the same theme. Mrs. Butterworth
had participated with her husband in the Divine influence which attended the
discourse on Sunday, and acknowledged that she had come for the purpose of
conferring with her sister about the things belonging to her eternal peace.
Equally remarkable it is, that both these inquirers after the pardoning mercy of
G od found the grace they were seeking while hearing another sermon from Mr.
Clarke. The friendship established under these auspicious circumstances received
an eternal seal. Joined to the Lord in one spirit, and in one hope of their
calling, they spent their remaining days in the service of their redeeming God;
and, being gathered "into the ark of Christ's church," "steadfast in faith,
joyful through hope, and rooted in charity," so passed "the waves of this
troublesome world," as to come together "to the land of everlasting life." The
Butterworths, having given their hearts to the Lord, gave their hands at once to
His cause, and as members of the Methodist communion adorned the doctrine of
their Saviour in a life fragrant with devotion and beneficence. In the church,
Mr. Butterworth long sustained most influential offices; and in the world,
whether as a mercantile man, as a patron and manager of various philanthropic
institutions, or as a diligent and effective member of Parliament, he stood for
many years conspicuous among the best men of his time.
In the London Circuit at large, Mr. Clarke, and his excellent colleagues, had
the great encouragement of witnessing the tokens of Divine mercy in those signs
and wonders of salvation by which much people were turned to the Lord. In
writing to a friend at Liverpool, he describes this work as an outpouring of the
Spirit of God such as he had never seen before. "Every part of the city seemed
to partake of it. The preachings were well attended, and a gracious influence
rested on the people. After the regular service we have a prayer-meeting, in
which much good is done. The first movement took place in our Sunday-schools;
and in Spitalfields, New Chapel, West-street, and Snow's-fields, simultaneously.
Several sheets of paper would not suffice to give you even a general idea of
what is going on. Last night we had our lovefeast. For about half an hour the
people spoke: when all was ended in that way, we exhorted and prayed with many
who were in great mental distress. We remained four hours in these exercises.
You might have seen small parties praying in separate parts of the chapel at the
same time. The mourning was like that of Hadadrimmon; every family seemed to
mourn apart. We who prayed circulated through the whole chapel, above and below,
adapting our prayers and exhortations to the circumstances of the mourners. Many
were pardoned; to others strong hope was vouchsafed, and then was the advice
given by each to his neighbor to believe in Jesus: 'He has pardoned me O, do not
doubt, seeing He has had mercy upon me, the vilest of sinners! One scene
particularly affected me. A young man, recently married to an unconverted young
woman, persuaded her to kneel down with two others who were in deep distress.
Presently she was cut to the heart: I visited them backward and forward, at
least a score times. After they had been about three hours in this state, the
young woman found peace, and in a short time the other two entered into liberty.
When the young fellow found his wife praising God for His mercy, he was almost
transported with joy; he sung, prayed, and praised; and great indeed was their
mutual glorying, and so was ours on their behalf. Well, thus we continued, until
at a late hour I prevailed on the people, with some difficulty, to go home. We
are trying to get these meetings shortened. If friends Russell, Robinson, &c.,
were here, they would be in their element."
The population in that part of London where Mr. Clarke resided has always
comprised large masses of the poor and destitute; and, in seasons of commercial
depression, the poor of Spitalfields have been subjected to great distress. This
was the case during his sojourn in that neighborhood; and it well accorded with
the disposition of his heart, aching so often at the sight of so much misery, to
be associated with a number of the Society of Friends, who had formed themselves
into an union for distributing bread and soup to the famishing. For that
respectable body he then formed an esteem which he cherished through life, and
which, on their part, was strongly reciprocated.
From the severe toil of the Circuit, and the constant tension of his mind, as
well for the pulpit as the press, his health became now so disordered as to
compel him to obey the requirement of his medical advisers, to retire for a
short time into the country. He spent, therefore, a little while at the seaside
in Kent, where he was greatly revived by the pleasant air and scenery of the
coast; and then took a short tour into Warwickshire, where the ruins of
Kenilworth, and the baronial halls of Warwick Castle, afforded him a delight
which he has vividly described in his letters to his family at home. At
Coventry, he formed an acquaintance with the venerable Mr. Butterworth, the
father of his brother-in-law, and had the pleasure of occupying the aged
minister's pulpit. Though this effort did not contribute to augment his
slowly-returning strength, it was attended by the satisfaction of knowing that
it was not made in vain. "Yesterday," he writes, "I had indeed sore work. I
preached three times, and at least an hour each time. I was much at liberty, and
really believe much good was done. The old gentleman and all his flock seem
highly pleased. The people are absolutely (pro tempore) turning Methodists,
without knowing it. Several of Mr. Butterworth's disaffected members, who have
not been in his chapel for many months, came twice yesterday, and are likely to
continue." And in another letter: "On Friday evening I preached at our own
place, and had the house full. Most of Mr. Butterworth's family were there, and
the principal members of his church. Never did such death-like attention occupy
an assembly during the hour that I insisted on Matt. vii. 7: 'Ask, and ye shall
receive,' &c. The good old man' got almost into the seventh heaven: had it not
been that I made the full salvation of God too easy to be attained, he might
have walked that evening into paradise. I believe a general quickening took
place among all, and I need not tell you how our Joseph and his wife *[3] were
affected." And again: "This morning we were to have set off for Birmingham; but
I found myself so much indisposed, and I did not like the thought of setting off
in such a tempest. Weary as I am, I must preach tonight at our own place, and
tomorrow night at Mr. Butterworth's; after which I am to take coach for London,
and ride all night. If this be not the way to wear out, it is certainly not the
way to rust out."
With somewhat recruited health, Mr. Clarke resumed his engagements in London,
and completed the third year of labor in that Circuit. He seems to have worked
in perfect harmony with his colleagues, except about one difficulty which
occurred in the case of Dr. Whitehead, who, having been ejected from the office
of local preacher by the late superintendent, Mr. Rogers, on account of what was
deemed a dishonorable use of certain papers in preparing his biography of Mr.
Wesley, was now making strenuous efforts for reinstatement on the Plan. In this
he was seconded by many of the trustees, and had also the concurrence of Mr.
Pawson and others of the preachers. Mr. Clarke, however, felt compelled to
oppose the wishes of his excellent superintendent nor, though Mr. Whitehead was
subsequently reinstated, could he ever modify the opinion he had formed on that
subject. This little ruffle, however, soon passed away, and the current of
friendship rolled on, with a deeper sense of esteem from the knowledge that each
minister had of the other's integrity; and the year, which had thus commenced
under somewhat unpropitious influences, passed away in peace. And this was the
case with the Connection at large, which within the last three years had been
severely tried by the hostile movements of Mr. Kilham and his partisans. Into
the details of that wretched controversy we have no inclination to enter. Its
rise and progress are matters of Methodistic history and time, the great prover
of all things, has given such a verdict on the relative merits of the "Old" and
the "New Connection," as the friends of the former are most thankful to accept.
One tempest has broken its force upon it after another, but Wesleyan Methodism
was never so strong as it is today.
At the end of his third year, Mr. Clarke attended the Conference of 1798 at
Bristol, which was held under the presidency of Mr. Benson. While there, he
wrote to Mrs. Clarke, from time to time, some of the "Conference news."
"Notwithstanding our great losses by the Kilhamites, we have had," says he, "a
considerable increase this year. We are now, glory to the God of heaven, not
less than 100,756 in Great Britain and Ireland. Strange to tell, all the Irish
collections have increased. Mr. Mather, Mr. Benson, and others have been at me
in private to go to Cornwall, and be general superintendent for the whole
county. I am not very fond of ruling, yet I think it is possible I may be sent
there The characters of the preachers examined -- all gone through; and, among
upwards of three hundred traveling preachers, not one charge of immorality
brought against any soul: and yet everything was sifted to the heart. O, what
thanks do we owe to God for thus preserving us from the corruptions of the
world! A solemn exhortation was then given by Messrs. Benson, Mather, and
Pawson, to all the brethren, that they should keep themselves pure." He adds,
pleasantly, "A few preachers were found guilty of long sleeves, cropped heads,
*[4] and stringed shoes," (the buckles cast away!) "and severely reprimanded.
After all, never was there a body of men in the world who winked less at any
appearance of evil than these; and I solemnly believe no body of Christian
ministers, since the world began, so large, was ever found more blameless."
At this Conference, Mr. Clarke was a good deal busied in settling on a legal
basis the Preachers' Annuitant Society, to which he became for a time both
treasurer and secretary. In the prosperity of this institution he ever took a
lively interest, from his sympathy for the aged and disabled laborers in a field
in which he himself was fast wearing out strength and health, as well as on
account of the modicum of comfort its scanty resources would afford to the widow
and orphan. Among some papers before me there is a memorandum by Mrs. R. Smith,
relating to this point, which I shall do well to insert:-- "My father was
remarkable for the zealous care he manifested over any trust committed to him,
though he undertook a charge of that nature very unwillingly. At one period it
was his duty to receive the dividends of the Preachers' Annuitant Society.
Having casually learned that the broker who transacted the business of the
dividends had involved himself in speculations, he determined to apply for the
money as so on as it could be received from the Bank, and, requesting me to
accompany him, entered the counting-house of the gentleman in question, who,
seated at his desk, received this unexpected visit not very graciously. ' I am
come, sir, for the dividend on the Preachers' Annuitant Society.' ' I am very
busy, sir, and cannot attend to it now,' was the reply. ' I am very sorry to
inconvenience you, sir; and, as I myself am in a hurry, will only trouble you to
hand it to me, and not intrude any further on your time.' ' I cannot give it to
you now, sir, having much more important business here before me.' ' Why, it
will not take you long to hand it to me and then I will leave you to your
business, and go away on my own. The gentleman, displeased at seeing him so
determined, said, ' I cannot be interrupted, Mr. Clarke, nor possibly give it to
you now: upon which my father said, in a voice of resolute firmness, ' Sir, I
stand here on behalf of the widows and orphans of God's church, and claim for
them the money you hold, which that church has raised for their support. They
speak by my mouth, and I will not leave till you put the money into my hand. The
money, sir, and I am gone.' The money was paid; and my father took his leave,
satisfied that he had performed a just though painful duty." Mr. Clarke's
connection with this legalized fund extended over several years.
The close of the Conference left him appointed for the second time to Bristol,
under the superintendency of that truly good man, Mr. Walter Griffith. They
found the Society but slowly recovering from the shattering effects of the storm
of controversy which had assailed it from opposite quarters: from the
anti-sacramental bigotry of the trustees and their partisans, on the one
extreme, and the ultra-democracy of the new Kilhamite school on the other. It
seems, however, to have been the determination of the new preachers to know
nothing among those quarrelsome people save Jesus and Him crucified; well
knowing that, if Christ came, He would bring peace with Him. The spirit with
which Adam Clarke went to work, and the encouragements which sustained him,
become apparent in a letter dated about a month after his arrival in the
Circuit:-- "Through mercy, we are all well. Last Sunday was my turn at Kingswood
and Wick. I had a large congregation in the morning, and such a sense of the
presence of God rested on us all as some of the oldest members said they had
never felt before. I took that glorious subject: ' How excellent is Thy
loving-kindness, O God!' &c. My own soul was greatly watered, and the Lord sent
a plentiful rain on His inheritance. Though the place was thronged, there was
not a sound in it save that of my own voice; till, describing how God gave to
those who turned to Him to 'drink of th e river of His pleasure,' -- to be
filled with the very thing which made God Himself happy, -- I raised my voice,
and inquired, in the name of the living God, ' Who was miserable? Who was
willing to be saved? to be made happy? Who was athirst?' A wretched being, who
had long hardened his heart by a course of uncommon wickedness, roared out: ' I
am, Lord! I am! I am!' In a moment there was a general commotion. I seized the
instant, and told them to compose themselves and listen; for I had something
more to tell them -- something for every soul, a great, an eternal good. I am
just going to open to you another stream of 'the river of His pleasure.' They
were immediately composed; and in a very few moments such a flood of tears
streamed down all cheeks as you have perhaps never seen, and all was silence but
the sighings which escaped, and the noise made by the poor fellow who was still
crying to God for mercy. In about half-an-hour we ended one of the most solemn
and blessed meetings I ever ministered in. I was t hen obliged to set off for
Wick, a place several miles farther. Here I had a good congregation.
"You will wish to know what became of the poor man, and I am glad I can tell
you. I had it yesterday from one of the leaders at Kingswood. When he left the
chapel, he set off for the first prayer-meeting he could find, thinking God
would never forgive his sins till he made confession unreservedly of all his
iniquities. He began in the simplicity of his soul, and, with an agonized heart,
and streaming eyes, made known the evils of his life. They prayed with him, and
God gradually brought him into the liberty of His children."
In the following month Mr. Clarke was called to mourn the death of his father,
who had been declining in health for some time, and latterly so much so as to
excite a strong desire in the mind of his son to go down to Lancashire to see
him, and receive his blessing. But the unavoidable business which pressed upon
him on entering his new Circuit at the ticket-time, and his own domestic
circumstances, obliged him still to delay, till, to his great grief, the
opportunity had for ever passed. He had written, however, "to an old and very
intimate friend, John Berwick, Esq., of Manchester, entreating him to watch over
his father, and to minister to his comfort." Mr. Berwick fulfilled the request,
and attended the invalid to the last. "When I arrived this forenoon," he writes
to Mr. Clarke, announcing the solemn event of his parent's [father's] decease,
"I found him much altered indeed He was seated in his chair, but wanted to be
removed into bed. I wished to have your desire of ' a line from his own hand.' I
therefore put a table before him, and paper, and put the pen in his hand. He
faintly said, ' I only wish to send my blessing.' He was very happy, and willing
to die. After he had written the few words, he was got into bed, and appeared
better. I thought he might survive a few hours, and therefore took my leave of
him, and told him I would return. He asked God to bless me, very loud. At my
return I found he had just gone to glory, without a groan. I had spoken to him
respecting you. I told him, I thought it well you had not been sent for, as you
could have done him no good. He said he was perfectly satisfied; for, if you had
suffered from the effects of the journey, he should have been very unhappy. He
added, that he had no pain, and that one moment in eternity would compensate for
all he had suffered here."
On the same sheet of paper is the last benediction:-- "May the blessing of God,
and a dying father's blessing, ever be upon you all, my children. I die full of
hope, and happy. -- John Clarke.
God bless you all.
Adam=Mary,
William *[5]= Mary,
Tracy-all-all. Amen."
Under this sacred record are to be seen the following lines:-- "These words my
precious father wrote an hour and a half before he went to glory. -- Adam
Clarke."
Mr. Clarke was deeply affected by this event. He expressed himself "as if the
bands of life were loosened from around him, and his mental and physical powers
almost brought down together to the sides of the grave." He sent immediately for
his widowed mother, who came and resided with him till he left Bristol, when she
went to live with her daughter, Mrs. Enley, who was then settled in that city.
Mr. Clarke, senior, was buried in Ardwick churchyard, Manchester. His tombstone,
which is inscribed, "To JOHN CLARKE, M.A.," states that he died in the
sixty-second year of his age. So rested this learned, honest, and laborious man
from the toils and disappointments of mortality. Ever afterward his son Adam,
passing that churchyard, either on foot or riding, uncovered his head the whole
length of the cemetery; a token of the reverence and love which all through life
he cherished for his father's memory.
This was not the only circumstance which threw a shadow over the present year.
It was a time of universal gloom. The thunderclouds of war darkened the
political sky; commercial adversity shut up the warehouse of the merchant; and
want, approaching to famine itself, reigned in the cottage. "These," writes he,
"are troublous times; and we need to watch and pray always, that we may be
accounted worthy to escape the things which are apparently coming upon us, and
to stand before the Son of Man." A member of his family, reverting to those
days, observes: "This year, and the succeeding one, were marked by circumstances
of unusual scarcity. All ranks felt and acknowledged the distress as a judgment:
the rich voluntarily ceased from a consumption of flour in the way of elegant
indulgences; the middle classes found it difficult to support their families,
through the scarceness of all provisions; and the poor sought from door to door
a handful of food to save them from dying. Alas! they could not always meet with
ev en this, and numbers of them perished from mere starvation. From the effects
of this distress Mr. and Mrs. Clarke, and their infant family, suffered in
common with others; but they concealed their necessities, in order not to draw
upon the sympathies of their friends, and frequently denied themselves a
sufficiency of food, to save a part of each day's allotment of provisions to
share with the wretched applicants who were in still greater need than
themselves. Mr. Clarke would often talk to his little ones on the subject, and
show them their starving fellow-creatures, who, in cold, nakedness, and famine,
sought relief; and each would put by a bit of the breakfast or supper for the
poor. At its distribution they were all present, and thus were taught to see and
feel the blessings which follow self-denial, in the happiness it yielded to
others. Thus did he early train his little flock to feel for others, and to love
them as their brethren."
Mr. Clarke probably referred to this thing time, when, many years after, on a
visit to Bristol, he casually met with an old timepiece, which had formerly
belonged to him. "That clock," said he, "I sold in this city, for the mere
purpose of buying bread for my children."
But, in the midst of these depressions, his mental activity never flagged. He
had entered the arena of literary life, and was fast rising into notice as an
author. To the works of Mr. Clarke we will devote an exclusive chapter further
on, and be content at present with observing that, after throwing off some
occasional pieces in the Arminian Magazine, (among which was a curious paper on
Judicial Astrology, condensed, apparently, from Barclay's Argenis,") he
published in 1707 his "Dissertation on the Use and Abuse of Tobacco." These
slight efforts were now followed up by a Translation of Sturm's "Reflections,"
and the advancement of a work in Bibliography, which afterward appeared in the
form of a Dictionary, which has long had a high place in the esteem of men of
letters; together with two smaller publications, -- an Account of the Polyglot
Bibles, and a Catalogue Raisonne of the principal Editions of the Greek
Testament. To these latter works, which evince prodigious reading, scholarship,
and indefatigable industry, we shall have occasion ere long to revert. We name
them here, to show in what incessant efforts he must have been filling up his
measured days. Nor should it be omitted, that all the while he was diligently
engaged with the Commentary on the New Testament; of which he had now finished
the Notes on the first two Gospels, and some other parts of the sacred Volume.
It is with Mr. Clarke as a preacher and pastor that the present stage of our
recollections has to do. Let us hear him speak on these matters for himself:--
"Last Sabbath I was at Kingswood. The thronging together of the people was truly
astonishing. The chapel was thronged, and the grave is not more silent than was
that crowd of listening people. While preaching, I felt a strong persuasion that
God would visit them. I told them so, and it had a good effect on all; they
heard for eternity, and I could not help joining in the prayer of one of them,
-- 'O God, save all, save all!'
"I had a sore day last Sabbath fortnight. Rode twenty-four miles, gave tickets
in three places, preached three times, and had not a morsel either of flesh,
fish, or fowl, or good red herring, all day; neither wine nor strong drink; only
about half-past twelve got a few potatoes, and as much as I pleased of a small
beer." (He sometimes fared thus meagerly, from his inveterate dislike to bacon
and pork. His brethren who had no such antipathies made a hearty dinner when our
friend could eat only the potatoes.) "The work of God goes on nobly at
Kingswood. There is a new place taken in, the worst in all the wood: it is
called Cock-road. As the inhabitants were all sons of Belial, no person dared to
go into the place for fear of being knocked on the head. There are thirty of
these miserable sinners now joined in class, and several of them have found
peace with God. The devil has sustained a heavy loss in that quarter."
Referring to this neighborhood afterward, he says: "The work still goes on
gloriously at Cock-road. One man, the vilest of the vile, hearing that several
of his companions were converted, and that they prayed publicly, said, 'So Tom
prays, and Jack prays: what can they say? I'll go and hear;' and away he went,
and got to a prayer-meeting, where every soul seemed engaged with God but
himself. At last the power of God seized upon the wretch's heart, and he
exclaimed, 'One prays, and another prays, -- I'LL PRAY;' and down he fell, and
began in his way to cry to God for the salvation of his soul. This human fiend,
who could scarcely utter a word without an oath, is now transformed into a
saint, and is walking in all meekness and gentleness and uprightness before God.
What could effect this change but the Almighty power of the grace of Christ?
"We had a genuine lovefeast yesterday at Kingswood. How little, how unutterably
little, did all the partisans of infidelity and their opinions appear in the
business of that day! We had some very affecting testimonies, and some uncommon
ones. I began at first to take notes of them; but soon found that, if I
continued them, I should lose the spirit and good of them to my own soul. A
young man delivered a speech of at least twenty minutes in length concerning his
conversion. He was a collier [coal-miner]; it was impressive beyond description;
and so great was the whole, that to me the parts are uncollectible. Some very
great ideas were produced by those plain unlettered men. One of them, recently
brought to God, endeavored at first to get rid of his convictions; but such was
the agony of his soul, and such its continuance, that nature was exhausted. 'On
awaking one morning,' he said, ' I felt ashamed to look at the daylight, much
more to look at God. I roared for the disquietude of my soul. I called mightily
for mercy. No answer. At last I tumbled me out of bed, and prayed with all my
soul. I then drew out my three little children, told them to kneel down, and say
their prayers for their father.' It is needless to add, that his own prayers,
and those of his three little innocents to God, brought a speedy answer of peace
to his spirit; in which salvation he continues to walk in a most exemplary way."
Christian! does not your heart melt at these recitals? Let not the men of
rituals and formulas tell us of the scandal of these transgressions of
ecclesiastical routine. He who understands the true spirit of the apostolic
constitutions knows that these proceedings both fulfill the purpose for which
the apostles labored, and harmonize with every canon they ordained for the
increase and stability of the Christian church.
Intense study, writing eight or ten hours a day, and the full work of a
Methodist preacher's life, had already made sad inroads on Mr. Clarke's health.
Towards the close of his time in Bristol, he says: "I was once a young man both
without and within; but the outward young man is gone, though the inward still
continues. I have only to say, that if my natural force be abated, my eye grown
dim and my hair grey, long before the ordinary time of life, *[6] Satan cannot
boast that these preternatural failures have taken place in his service, or were
ever, either directly or indirectly, occasioned by it. Blessed be God!"
A journey now and then served to withdraw his attention from study, and
invigorate mind and body for further labor. Thus, in January, 1799, he goes to
London. From some characteristic letters to Mrs. Clarke, written while on that
visit, we set down a few sentences:-- "Yesterday morning I preached at
City-road. Though the people had not got much notice, yet there was a large
congregation. I preached on Rom. xv. 4-6. It was an uncommon subject, and I
found considerable liberty. Almost all my old Mercuries were there, and I think
most of the trustees. Many were ready to half-eat me. I went thence to Mr.
Bulmer's to dine with Mr. and Mrs. Sundius, Mr. and Mrs. Butterworth, and Mr.
Edward. I then went to Spitalfields, and preached at three: here was a large
congregation, and by the time I had done my strength was finished. I then went
to see Mr. Johnson, thence to Mr. Fisher's, thence to Mr. Williams's, thence to
W_____, where our dinner-party supped together with Mr. and Mrs. Buttress. They
departed at eleven , and I stayed all night. This morning, after breakfast, I
set off again; for Mr. Sundius had given me two guineas to give to the poor of
my acquaintance. I gave both to _____, and it was a time of need, as they are
much in debt for the necessaries of life. I gave him also a guinea to pay for me
at the Widows' Relief. Thence to Mr. Williams's. They are both very low, having
lost both their children; thence to Mr. Cressall's, thence to Mr. Reece's;
thence to the soup-house, where I got a very good and highly-acceptable bason. I
met with Mr. Bevan, who was very glad to see me, and took me to his house in
Plough-court. He has got up the residue of the yearly epistles. I called in at
Mr. Baynes's at one o'clock. They were going to dinner. I sat down and ate with
them. I hope to sup this evening at Mr. Middleton's. I have not had a quarter of
a night's sleep since I left. Tomorrow I serve at the soup-house."
More than a year afterwards, (March, 1801,) he takes another excursion into
Cornwall. From the kind of epistolary journal sent by several posts to Mrs.
Clarke, on this excursion, we will also take a few passages:--
"My Most Excellent And Beloved Mary,
"We left Bristol about five minutes before six o'clock, and came in safely and
slowly eighteen miles to a place called Cross, where we got breakfast at nine
o'clock. I had some cold beef, and made a breakfast like an ancient Briton. We
soon got under weigh; in all, eight passengers. Through Bridgewater we came to
Taunton, where a dinner was provided of roast swine and boiled swine, with a
miserable knuckle of veal. I asked for a bit of cold meat, and got some of a
very miserable quality. They charged us each four shillings and ninepence. Once
more off. The road most jolty, especially from Collumpton. Arrived at Exeter at
a quarter to one." Leaving the city in a chaise, "through a bad road indeed, got
to Crockerton a little after twelve. The good folks were gone to bed, and the
landlady rose with her child of fourteen months old, which I lugged about while
she lighted a fire and got us a comfortable supper. We again set off, Dark and
rainy was the night; but we got over a rugged hop-jump way to Okehampton a t
half-past three this morning. At half-past four proceeded, and, very much
fatigued, got to Launceston at eight, where I now write. Thus God has conducted
us in perfect safety to within sixteen miles of Camelford. Here we have just had
breakfast, and are in expectation of horses, which Mr. Mabyn ordered to meet us.
Well now, you see that the Lord cares for your queer, odd, good-for-little
husband, I dare say you have been praying for me. Pray on, Mary! I have not
taken this journey from any rambling disposition: I have felt reluctant to it,
but think duty has compelled me, and I wait to see the issue. I shall not
venture down into the west, as I am sure a month would not suffice to go to all
the places I must visit, if I visited any one ... Tell John here is a very
beautiful ancient castle, which I will tell him all about when I return."
"CAMELFORD, March 13th, 1801
"After waiting a long time in a most uncomfortable inn at Launceston, we ordered
a chaise to set forward to Camelford; and, just as we were going to step into
it, our horses came. Having fed them, we took the chaise for eleven miles, and
made the servant follow us with his two Rossinantes, It was well we did; for we
had a tempest all the way. When we came to the inn, I borrowed a large coat from
the landlord, who is an acquaintance of Mr. Mabyn's, mounted my (horse) *[See
Transcriber Note], and hobbled off for Camelford. After many stumbles and
blunders I got safely to Mr. Mabyn's at three o'clock, where we found dinner
waiting. In the journey from Launceston to Camelford I passed by Tregear, once
the residence of my old affectionate friend, T. Baron, Esq. He went safely to
heaven some years ago; and his nephew, who was a young lad at school when I was
formerly in these parts, became heir to his uncle's estates, and, if possible,
more than supplied his place. He turned early to God. Married to a young lady
like-minded, they enjoyed in their family all that earth can afford of felicity,
and all that Satan could envy. God also lived in them, and they lived in God.
Affliction is the lot of all. Death made an inroad in their little family by
removing a beloved child; and the same dart that pierced the child passed
through the father's heart as well. He followed his child to the grave, and in
five days went into it. The ways of God are in the great deep."
"March 14th. -- After dinner I went to Michaelstow, to see my old afflicted
friend Miss Hocken, whom an unaccountable nervous disorder has confined for
thirty years mostly to her room. One of the finest and most sensible women in
Cornwall. She was exceedingly glad to see me, and I spent more than an hour in
profitable conversation with a woman who obliged me to leave the surface and go
to the bottom of the different subjects we discussed. Tell John and Theo., that
in this journey I observed several things which strongly indicated that the
country hereabout has suffered much from some natural violence. I observed one
place where a mountain seems to have been rent in twain: the corresponding parts
on either side are nearly half a mile from each other. There is a deep valley
between them, at the bottom of which a river has found its readiest course ...
On my return, Rough Tor, the highest mountain in Cornwall, rose on my right
hand. On its top two peaks, or, rather, large rocks. On the western point there
is, I am informed, a very fine Druidic monument, -- an altar, with on immense
stone poised on the top of another, and so equally balanced in the center that a
person can move it. Round about are large basons scooped out of the rock, which
communicate by little conduits with each other, and which appear to have been
used for libations, or to receive the blood of the sacrifices ... Last evening I
had a pleasing visit from Mr. Pearse, the duke of Bedford's steward, and several
others. Mr. P., who is one of the excellent of the earth, I joined to the
Society seventeen years ago.
"March 16th. -- I am, thank God, as well as you could expect me to be on Monday,
after such a day's work. Yesterday morning I preached a long and (for me) good
sermon on the purpose and design of the Lord's Supper; after which I
administered that sacred ordinance to the Society. Many were in tears all the
time; and several, I believe, took the sacramentum, or military oath, to be the
faithful followers of Christ for ever. As I had been speaking from half-past ten
to nearly one, I felt great reluctance to preach again at two, especially as one
of their own preachers was present; but they would take no denial: even Mr.
Mabyn himself seemed to have no pity, and I was obliged to work once more. I see
what would have been my fate had I gone to the west. I am afraid our people
never imagine that speaking, as they call it, can hurt a man: but this also must
be borne with. We had now a very lively meeting, with a multitude of elephantine
Amens. By the evening the news had spread far and wide, and we had many from
four to ten miles round, and I suppose at least two-thirds of the inhabitants of
Camelford. All that the chapel could possibly hold came in, and the rest stood
without, cold and uncomfortable as the night was. I worked nearly from six to
eight. On my concluding, they struck up a prayer-meeting, and continued it till
nine, at which almost all that were in the house during the preaching continued.
When I got home, I was supremely wearied.
"I am now preparing to set off for Port-Isaac, about ten miles." (Here follow
some antiquarian descriptions.) "I have had a pleasing interview with a young
gentleman from India: he reads Persian and Arabic with the true accent, and they
come out of his mouth like oil. He is quite a man of science, and has joined the
Society here, and met yesterday in class the first time ... I hope to reach
Plymouth toward the end of this week, and spend the Lord's day there. The longer
I stay away, the more earnestly I desire to return."
These letters, of which there is quite a packet, abound with picturesque
descriptions of the country, and some curious information on the archaeological
remains in that part of Cornwall; the substance of which, with enlargements, the
reader may find in the Doctor's Miscellaneous Works. He appears to have enriched
the letters with these topics for the instruction of his children, who were now
reaching the years when the mind begins to hunger after knowledge. Happy the
young people who could value and improve the advantage of having a father who
was able to nourish their minds, as well as their bodies, with food convenient
for them!
Mr. Clarke returned to Bristol to fill up the remaining months of his period
there in those duties which tended, by the Divine blessing, to the enlargement
and upbuilding of the congregations of the Circuit, both in town and country.
Neither he nor his colleagues were permitted to spend their strength for nought.
Large multitudes were drawn, from week to week, to hear words whereby they might
be saved. The impenitent were awakened and made thoughtful; the seeker found;
the more advanced in the spiritual life were led further heavenward; and God in
all things was glorified.
* * * * * * *
DIVISION 13
BOOK II
(Meridian)
CHAPTER 4
THE PREACHER AND PASTOR CONTINUED
By the Conference of 1801 Mr. Clarke was appointed for the second time to the
Liverpool Circuit. A Methodist minister is called to suffer more than many other
men, from the breaking up of that friendly intercourse with congenial minds
which yields so much consolation to our life. In Bristol, during the last three
years, old friendships had been more strongly confirmed, and new ones, both in
the circles of religion and of literature, contracted, which contributed to
render this new exodus the more inconvenient to his personal feelings. In the
present case, however, he had the advantage of coming among a people who were
not unknown to him; by whom indeed, for his work's sake in days that were past,
he was welcomed now as a heartily-trusted friend, and by not a few of them
revered as a messenger of the Lord.
He entered on these renewed engagements with an intellect amplified by the
studies and trials of the intervening years, and a heart more richly than ever
replete with the graces which the Holy Spirit makes perfect in the faithful; but
with a physical constitution too greatly enfeebled by exhaustion to grapple with
the obligations of the Methodist itinerancy. He was often now taken suddenly
ill, so as to be in an instant deprived of sensation; and on one occasion the
seizure was so ominous, that his friends anticipated the most distressing
results. He staggered on, however, with his work, both in the study and the
Circuit, till in the following April he was obliged to be taken to London for
the best medical advice. It is then that he announces to Mrs. Clarke the very
serious view which an eminent practitioner took of his case:-- "I went this
morning with Mr. Butterworth to consult Mr. Pearson; who said, 'You must totally
cease from all mental and bodily exertion, except such as you may take in
cultivating a garden, or riding on horseback. I know not whether your disease be
not too far advanced to be cured. The ventricles of your heart are in a state of
disease; and, if you do not totally and absolutely abstain from reading,
writing, preaching, &c., you will die speedily, and you will die suddenly. Did I
not believe you to be in such a state of mind as not to be hurt at this
declaration, I would have suppressed it; but, as matters are, I deem it my duty
to be thus explicit, and assure you that, if you do not wholly abstain for at
least twelve months, you are a dead man! Now, my dear Mary, you must not believe
all this; but we will talk the business over when I see you. If I find I cannot
do my work, I will give it up. I will not feed myself to starve the church of
God. I will seek out some other way of maintaining my wife and my children."
With this alternative, he was compelled to give some remission to his habitual
efforts; and with such good effect, that at the following Conference he was
enabled to contemplate the resumption of labor as not altogether unwarrantable,
though with some hesitation about the locality, as Mrs. Clarke's health was at
that time in a precarious state. We have his views on both these subjects in a
letter from the Bristol Conference in July, 1802:--
"My Very Dear Mary,
"My good brother Gibson's letter this morning has brought no small pain to my
mind, and my anxious uncertainty at times is almost unbearable. Unless a more
favorable account come soon, I must set off for Liverpool. Those shiverings
continued alarm me to the extreme. Mr. G. complains that few people call to see
you; but of this I am heartily glad. In staying away they will show more
kindness than by coming to see you. I know not what to say or do in my
appointment. If I thought Liverpool prejudicial to your health, I would have you
removed immediately: for myself I feel no manner of anxiety. I cannot realize my
own danger, if I am in any. It is hidden from me. God prepare me for the worst!
My brethren think there is little or nothing the matter with me; and I am
determined to take up my whole work, and perform it, or die. This is my
resolution, and from it I shall not move, God being my helper. Therefore I
return to begin my work, as if I never had felt a pang of distress. You know my
resolutions are not ye a and nay. But I must add, that when, having tried my
strength to the uttermost, I feel I cannot do the whole of my work, I will not
starve the work of God to feed myself; but get some other employment, by which I
can support my family without burdening the cause of God."
They who wait upon the Lord renew their vigor. So found this brave servant of
Christ. He went in the strength of the Lord God, making mention of His
righteousness; and help came with every hour of duty. "The afflictions of this
present" had the tendency to awaken him to more vivid perceptions of the things
that are eternal; and the solemn review of life hitherto spent, and the ordeal
to which, by the word of the Lord, he subjected the motives of his conduct,
enabled him to thank God and take courage. "I came into the work," says he,
"with the purest motives, and now, probably standing on the brink of eternity,
can say, no motive or end which I cannot acknowledge before God has ever
influenced me for an hour. Notwithstanding my ignorance, which none could feel
so much as myself, I have gotten wonderfully through, and have had as much favor
in the sight of God's people as was necessary for me to go on with some degree
of success and comfort. The blessed God saw that he had sown a seed of
uprightness in my so ul, which the weeds of sinister design or by-ends had never
been permitted to impede the growth of, much less to choke. He has, therefore,
preserved and blessed me for His own Name's sake, and for the sake of that
which, in eternal kindness, He had wrought and maintained in my heart."
As a means of edification to several intelligent Christian friends, and of
assistance in the pursuit of knowledge in its higher branches to young men of
intellectual aspirations, Mr. Clarke formed in Liverpool this year a literary
and scientific association, which took the title of a "Philological Society."
This he regularly organized; and, among other helps to development, supplied it
with a long series of Questions and Theses for examination. Of these, I give a
few as specimens [not in numerical sequence]:-- "No. 3. What is an essay? and
are there any rules by which this species of composition should be regulated?
12. Which of the arts and sciences can be proved to be most useful to mankind?
13. In what arts and sciences do the moderns excel the ancients? and vice versa.
9. Which is the most effectual way of disseminating useful knowledge among the
lower ranks of society? 22. What is the difference between the will and the
affections? and how may we distinguish the operations of the one from those of
th e other? 21. What is conscience? 38. What is the difference between Heathen
virtue and Christian morality? 4. What is the best method of bringing up
children, so as to preserve their health, promote their growth, and improve
their understanding? 23. What is the best method of treating domestics? 24. What
is the best method of managing the thoughts? 28. What are those arguments for
Divine revelation which, all Christians assert, have not been and can never be
refuted? What is an idea? Genius? Common sense? Enthusiasm? Sympathy? A
gentleman? To what causes can the diversity of dialects in a living language be
attributed? 159. Required, an essay on the antiquity, genius, perfections, and
utility of each of the following languages: Hebrew, Arabic, Persian, Greek,
Latin, French, Italian, German, and English; with an account of the most
classical and important philological works in each. 160. Required, a grammar of
each of the above languages, that, in quantity of matter and simplicity of
expression, shall be brought within the reach of the capacity of children. 161.
Required, short, plain, comprehensive treatises on the elements of arithmetic,
geography, astronomy, geometry, &c.; for the use of the rising generation, and
especially adapted to the circumstances of the children of the poor. 171.
Required, an essay on the superiority of the civil institutions of Moses to
those of Menu, Solon, and Lycurgus. 146. Required, a short scriptural and
rational essay on the Providence of God. 60. What further improvements are
necessary in the government of parish workhouses? 169. Required, an essay on the
Pythagoric doctrine of numbers, and the uses to which the Pythagoreans and
Platonists applied the five regular solids, since termed Platonic bodies." -- On
this last subject Mr. Clarke wrote a dissertation, which may be found in his
Miscellaneous Works. It will be seen that these questions do not, all of them,
come under the denomination of strict philology; but the wide sense in which he
used that term he indicates in an address to the Society, where he observes,
that "philology, in the modern acceptation of the word, is not so properly a
science as an assemblage of several. It includes grammar, criticism, etymology,
the interpretation of ancient authors, poetry, rhetoric, history, and
antiquities: in a word, everything relating to ancient manners, laws, religion,
government, and language."
The Society met for conversation, discussion, and the consideration of written
essays on the various themes of their studies. After some time, Mr. Clarke found
he could state that the scheme worked well; that interesting and excellent
papers were produced; and that good would be done to the minds and hearts of the
members.
As to himself, he was working hard at the Bibliographical Dictionary, (the first
volume of which he brought out at Liverpool,) and at the Notes upon the Holy
Scriptures. In addition to these more weighty undertakings, he translated the
Dissertation of Monsieur A. L. Millin on the Silver Disc which bears the name of
"Scipio's Buckler." This was subsequently incorporated in his Miscellaneous
Works.
Generations pass away, and the son follows the parent. As in his last Circuit
Mr. Clarke had been called to mourn the decease of his father, so now another
bereaving providence overtook him in the removal of his only brother, who died
at Maghull, in his forty-fifth year. A biographic notice of this beloved
relative from the pen of Dr. Clarke states, that, after having been brought up
in childhood by his uncle, the clergyman after whom he was named, and instructed
in the classics by his father, he was introduced to the medical profession,
studying, after his apprenticeship, at Trinity, Dublin. He went out as surgeon
in "a Guinea ship," and in two voyages became a witness of the complicated
cruelty and villainy of the African slave-trade, of which he has left in his
journals some graphic details. "Filled with horror at this inhuman traffic,
surgeon Clarke abandoned it after his second voyage: he married, and established
himself at Maghull, eight miles from Liverpool, "in a wide neighborhood, at that
time but ill supplied with medical practitioners where he had great success,
winning the confidence of the people by his skillful treatment, his personal
urbanity, and Christian rectitude of life. But his professional labors
multiplied beyond his strength. At a time when in a delicate state of health, he
was called out night after night in cold and tempestuous weather, till his
remaining strength broke suddenly down, and he sank into a consumption. In his
last days, he was consoled by the affectionate attentions of his brother, from
whose holy counsels and earnest prayers he found most timely help in passing
through the dark vale of death. In a pocket-book of Dr. Clarke's, there are the
following memoranda:--
"Sept. 6th, 1803. -- I went to see my dying brother. He is in a very happy state
of mind.
"Sept. 15th. -- Went to Maghull, and gave the sacrament to my dying brother. He
is in great pain of body, but steadfast in his confidence in the Lord.
"Sept. 16th. -- Preached at Aintree, from Isaiah liv. 13, 14. My blessed brother
died this evening at nine o'clock.
"Sept. 17th. -- I went over to see my dear brother's remains. Quantam mutatas ab
illo!" -- Changed indeed. But from the sight would not the minister of Christ
feel fresh motive to work while it was yet with himself called today, in making
known to dying men the truth and grace of that adorable Redeemer who is our
refuge, our resurrection, and our life?
After two years' residence at Liverpool, Mr. Clarke was re-appointed to
Manchester, where a multitude of Christians, who had long learned to value his
ministry, gave him a most grateful welcome. The opening-sermon at Oldham-street
was attended by a vast concourse; and, from what he then saw and felt, he had
confidence that God would be with them.
Some few details come out in a letter to one of his Liverpool friends, a little
while after his re-settlement in Manchester:-- "I have a very good garret for my
study: poets, you know, and poor authors, generally live in such places. I have
had shelves put up for my books, and have most of them unpacked and carried up
to this sublime region; but it has been severe work, and has fatigued me sadly.
The books and other things have been much injured in the carriage: upwards of
twenty of my boxes were broken, though they came by His Grace's flats" (the duke
of Bridgewater's canal-boats). "I am now quite of poor Richard's mind, that
three such flittings would he equal to one burning ...
"I have heard Mr. Hearnshaw, the young preacher. He bids fair, I think, to make
a luminous star in the church of Christ. He has a very pleasing voice, a neat
delivery, and very decent language; his matter is solid, and his doctrine sound.
Mr. Jenkins you know; the other is Mr. Pipe. He" (Mr. P.) "is full of life and
zeal, and I should not wonder if he be esteemed the first man among us. I like a
good shaking, and long hearty Amens among the people: but, between you and me,
there seems too much of it here; and many, I am afraid, do not distinguish
between sense and sound, -- between the tornadoes of natural passion and the
meltings of religious affection. But I must leave this with God, the only wise
and good. May He keep us right!"
In Manchester, as in other places, Mr. Clarke showed the value he set on
class-meeting as a means of great help and encouragement in the Christian life,
by entering himself as a private member in one of the classes. In Liverpool he
had raised a class of his own; but now, under the leadership of "a plain,
simple-hearted, good man," Mr. Clarke found, as often as his duties would allow
him to meet, that he could derive great profit, and reflect it again in his
ministry, from communion with these lowly ones in the flock of the Lord.
To the Strangers' Friend Society, which, with Mr. Bradburn, he had been the
means of establishing in the town, he turned his renewed attention,
strengthening and extending its truly beneficent agencies.
Steady also to his purpose in combining moral and intellectual culture, in
making men strong in whatever is good, he opened his study on stated mornings in
the week for young men who were desirous of instruction in the original
languages of the Bible, and founded a Society, like that already in operation at
Liverpool, for the promotion of literary, scientific, and Christian studies; --
"to bring forward," as he said, "and improve latent talent, and to prompt the
few, who were aiding and influencing each other, to act upon the million." Many
men who have lived not in vain received good impulses and helps in these
intellectual fellowships; and among them we may name that eminent scholar,
diligent author, and excellent minister of Christ, the late Dr. James Townley.
*[1] The success attending this institute was always a subject of great
thankfulness to the founder; and we may here mention that, when the time came
for him to leave Manchester, the members offered him a token of their esteem,
not only in a verbal tribute, but by the presentation of two massive silver
cups, beautifully ornamented with a border of oak-leaves round the outer rim,
and bearing the inscription:-- "EX DONO SOCIETATIS PHILOLOGICAE, MANCUNIENSIS
REVERENDO ADAMO CLARKE, PRAESIDI DILECTISSIMO ET DILIGENTISSIMO, IN AMICITAE
GRATIQUE ANIMI PLURIMIS PRO MERITIS TESTIMONIUM."
In his own literary career Mr. Clarke gave another token of great activity, in
the publication of the remaining volumes of the Bibliographical Dictionary (the
preface of the sixth volume bearing date, "Manchester, July 1st, 1804"); and
also a new and improved edition of Claude Fleury's "Manners of the Ancient
Israelites," a work which found much acceptance with the public.
As in Bristol and Liverpool, so now in Manchester, the silence of the study was
broken upon by the voice of the knell. Mr. and Mrs. Clarke had to sustain the
affliction of seeing their beautiful little daughter Agnes fade and die like a
flower. This child had become an object of intense affection to her father; and
the stroke which bereaved him was so much the more afflictive. "Agnes," says he,
"was a most interesting and promising child. Few, of her years, ever possessed a
finer understanding, or a more amiable disposition. She was led to remember her
Creator in the days of her youth; she truly feared God, and dreaded nothing so
much as that by which He would be offended, and His good Spirit grieved. Young
as she was, it was evident that she possessed a pious heart. She loved prayer,
attended public worship with delight, and had such a firmness and constancy of
resolution, that nothing could make her change a purpose which she and formed,
when convinced that it was right God saw it best to take her and, having sowed
in her heart the good seed of His kingdom, took her to heaven, where it should
bring forth all its fruits in their native soil."
Twenty years afterwards I find another reference, which shows how lasting was
this love:-- "I had a daughter called Agnes: never was my soul so wrapped up in
a child. God took her ... I had suffered so much in her sufferings, that the
good Dr. Agnew said, if she had lived one week longer it must have killed me.
Agnes is still dear to me, though it is more than twenty years since I lost that
lovely child."
The circumstance that two of their children, Adam and Agnes, lay buried at
Manchester, created a melancholy tie between the hearts of the parents and that
place: but, while nature dictated that mournful sympathy, faith, with its solemn
assurances, strengthened in their souls a more elevated sense of union with the
heavenly world, whither their beloved ones had gone before them, and where,
henceforth exempt from death, the families of the saved are reunited in the full
possession of the inheritance which is incorruptible, and eternally their own.
Having completed his term of service in the Manchester Circuit, Mr. Clarke, amid
the regrets of multitudes, removed from that city to resume his labors in
London, being once more appointed to the metropolis by the Conference of 1805.
As the superintendent of the Circuit, he went into residence at the Methodist
parsonage adjoining the chapel in City-road. Here, with the Rev. Messrs. Bogie,
Entwisle, J. Stanley, and others for his colleagues, a wide sphere of
engagements opened to him. London was still but one Circuit; and since his last
appointment the duties had become yet more numerous by the establishment of
various other preaching places, the building of several new chapels, and the
increase of pastoral duties consequent on the formation and increase of the
Societies connected with them. And if, at present, each of the superintendents
of the nine Circuits into which the metropolis is divided finds that the
multifarious business of his charge demands an incessant care, we may easily
conceive that Adam Clarke, as the sole superintendent of the Methodist work in
London, would be called to a life of almost sleepless labor. Yet his strength
was as his day. By redeeming the early hours of the morning, he carried on the
studies which were yielding plenteous fruitage in his literary works; and by
resolute diligence he made full proof of his ministry as a preacher and pastor,
maintained the financial resources of the Circuit in full vigor, and developed
the various capabilities of the Methodist system for the promotion of the
spiritual and temporal comfort of the multitudes over whom, by the agency of
Sunday-school teachers, prayer-leaders, class-leaders, visitors of the sick,
tract-distributors, exhorters, and local preachers, it exerts its benefic
influence. Yet more, in addition to all these calls upon his time and care, we
find him taking a prominent position in some of the greatest philanthropic
movements of the age. Among these the British and Foreign Bible Society, then
recently formed, awoke a joyful enthusiasm in his soul, which expressed itself
in services to that noble institution as lasting as his life. At the instance of
Mr. Butterworth, who was one of its earliest members, he was invited to take
part in its great work, upon which he entered, as we may say, con amore, with
the relish of the scholar for the philologic criticism involved in the
undertaking to send forth the Bible in the various languages of mankind, and
with the faith of the Christian in the power of Divine truth, so conveyed, to
renew the world in righteousness. Of the ability and zeal with which he
co-operated in this great design we shall have to give some examples in the
subsequent records. Suffice it here to observe, that from his extensive Oriental
learning, his acquaintance with the verbal criticism of the sacred text, and his
sound judgment as a catholic [universal, all-embracing] theologian, the
committee of the Bible Society found
in Adam Clarke the man they wanted. -- Let the reader mark here what great
consequences follow the decisions of our early life. When the friendless youth
at Kingswood bought the Hebrew Grammar with the piece of coin found in the
garden, the world itself was to be the better for the event.
In his own library at City-road, long before the broad mass of London life had
begun to stir itself in a morning, Mr. Clarke was now diligently engaged in
perfecting for the press the first parts of his Commentary, and in supplementing
the six volumes of the Bibliographical Dictionary by two others, comprising a
variety of topics connected with those studies, to which he gave the title of
"The Bibliographic Miscellany." This work bears date, "November 1st, 1806."
Besides these, he lent powerful aid to the editor of the Eclectic Review, in
some articles on the Septuagint, and the study of the eastern languages.
At this time Mr. Clarke felt very strong convictions on the necessity of some
effective measures for the training of men of piety and promise for the work of
the ministry in the Methodist body; which, with the continual increase of its
members and influence in the country, partook as well the educational advantages
by which the English intellect has been so greatly elevated in the present age.
He saw that an illiterate ministry would be inadequate to the wants of the
times; and that, if the pulpits of Methodism were to attract the people, they
must be filled by men who were, at least, on a par with their hearers in mental
cultivation. With these impressions, he took an early opportunity of bringing
the subject under the consideration of the preachers then stationed in London;
and the result of their conversation he details to Mr. Butterworth:--
"We have now a subject of the deepest concern before us. We want some kind of
seminary for educating workmen for the vineyard of the Lord. I introduced a
conversation this morning upon the subject, and the preachers were unanimously
of opinion that some efforts should be made without delay to get such a place
established either here or at Bristol, where young men who may be deemed fit for
the work may have previous instruction in theology, in vital godliness, in
practical religion, and in the rudiments of general knowledge. No person to be
permitted to go out into the work who is not known to be blameless in his
conversation, thoroughly converted to God, alive through the indwelling Spirit,
and sound in the faith. Mr. Benson said he would unite his whole soul in it, if
I would take the superintendence of it. What can we do to set this matter on
foot? The people are getting wiser on all sides: Socinianism, and other isms
equally bad, are gaining strength and boldness ... Every Circuit cries out,
'Send us acceptable preachers;' and we are obliged to take what offers, and
depend upon the recommendation of those who can scarcely judge, but from the
apparent fervor of a man's spirit. My dear brother, the time is coming, and now
is, when illiterate piety can do no more for the interest and permanency of the
work of God than lettered irreligion did formerly. The Dissenters are going to
establish a grammar-school, and have sent about to all our people, as to their
own, for countenance and support. Would not God have our charity in this respect
to begin at home? Are there not many of our people who would subscribe largely
to such an institution? If we could raise enough for the first year for the
instruction of only six or ten persons, would it not be a glorious thing?
Perhaps about twenty would be the utmost we should ever need to have at once
under tuition, as this is the greatest average number we should take out in a
year. Speak speedily to all your friends, and let us get a plan organized
immediately: let us have something that we can lay, matured, before the
Conference. God, I hope, is in the proposal; and we should not promise our
strength or influence to others, till we find either that we can do nothing for
ourselves, or that nothing is requisite."
This desirable project could not at that time be accomplished. The Conference
was burdened with increasing pecuniary difficulties, and the resources of the
Connection were not adequate to the task. At a later day, however, (1833,) the
scheme was carried into full effect, to the great satisfaction of all
enlightened and impartial men in the Methodist communion. A Theological
Institution was founded, one branch of which is situated at Richmond, Surrey,
and the other at Didsbury, near Manchester. Already, in those sequestered
shades, hundreds of pious young men, called of God to the work of the Gospel,
have been soundly trained for the Christian ministry, of which they are making
worthy proof in various parts of the world. The divinity tutors have hitherto
been the Rev. Professor Jackson, for Richmond, and the Rev. Dr. Hannah, for
Didsbury.
* * * * * * *
DIVISION 14
BOOK II
(Meridian)
CHAPTER 5
THE PRESIDENT
In these incessant engagements the year had passed away, and Mr. Clarke attended
the annual assembly of the preachers at Leeds, A.D. 1806. On this memorable
occasion, he was invested with the highest honor his brethren in the ministry
could confer upon him, in being elected President of the Conference. It will be
most pleasant to read such notices of those days as we find in his own letters
to Mrs. Clarke.
One from Sheffield, on the way, acquaints us that his fellow travelers were
twenty-two in number. "I was one of three on the box, with the coachman; Messrs.
Bradford, Cole, and Goodwin were behind me; Mr. and Mrs. Benson, inside ... From
every quarter I find it is the unanimous design of the preachers to put me in
the chair. Perhaps you will be surprised when I tell you that I am absolutely
determined not to go into it. This purpose I believe none can shake. I have
neither a state of mind nor nerves for such a work, and I would not take a
handful of guineas to be obliged to preach the president's sermon. -- Dr. Coke
is here."
"Leeds, July 25th. -- We have got almost through our stationing work, and have
much order and good-will among us ... When at Sheffield, I read over the Plan
for the education of young preachers, before Mr. Holy and some other of the
principal friends, who all highly approved of it. This day I got Mr. Moore to
read it, from whom I expected considerable opposition; but I was disappointed,
by receiving from him the following note on the back of the cover: 'A very
admirable letter. It answers almost all my objections, or rather my fears. If we
were such ministers as we should be, the pious who are well informed, and even
learned, would be glad to join themselves to us.' He means that many pious,
well-informed, and even learned men among our Societies, and who are local
preachers, would be glad to become traveling preachers: but he contends that the
preachers have no proper scriptural authority, [all this having been] already
given up; so that the most vulgar and illiterate in a Leaders' or Quarterly
Meeting ca n, by the number of heads, or show of hands, carry any point of
discipline or doctrine against the preachers. This is certainly true, and is a
sore and increasing evil." *[1]
"July 27th. -- This morning, according to appointment, I rode out to Armley, and
preached at ten o'clock. The good people would have sent me back on horseback,
but I excused myself, and walked home in company with Messrs. Bunting, Collier,
and Button. Brother Garrett we left behind, to follow the blow. I have to preach
this evening again at the new chapel. This will be sore work. Mr. Bradburn
preached this morning on Old Methodism, and acquitted himself, I hear, very
well. How I shall get on, God knows; but I am pledged, and cannot recede.
"The people are coming in, I am informed, from twenty miles' distance and
upwards. The following will show you, in some measure, their spirit and temper.
A Quaker, airing himself in the street by his own house about six in the
morning, saw a plain looking countryman covered with dust, carrying a very large
great coat, and sweating at every pore. He accosted him: 'Friend, whither art
thou come? Thou appearest much fatigued.' ' I am cooming to the Methodist
Conference,' says Bluntspurs: ' I am coom forty mile, and ha' walked all t'
night.' The Quaker, struck with his appearance and honest bluntness, said,
'Friend, I like thy spirit: thee seemest sincere and zealous in this way: turn
in hither, and refresh thyself; thou shalt be welcome to what the place can
afford.' Poor Gruff turned in, and found a hearty welcome. How valuable is this
simplicity of spirit! and how much more happiness do these people enjoy, who are
taking God at His word, than those who are disputing with their Maker Himself
every particle o f His revelation! Scaliger, who understood thirteen languages,
seeing the comparative happiness of the simple and ignorant, cried out once, 'O
that I had never known my alphabet!' But it is probable that from these as many
sources of comfort are sealed up, as there are causes of distress to those whose
minds are cultivated. I shall leave this till after preaching ...
"I am now returned from preaching to some thousands; thousands within, and
hundreds without. To relieve the excessive press, a preacher was obliged to
stand up without, while I wrought an hour and fifteen minutes within. At the
last prayer we had an uncommon shaking, and some acts of solemn self-dedication
took place, never, never, I hope, to be forgotten."
"July 25th. -- This morning our Conference began, and the whole time before
breakfast was employed in filling up the Deed, &c. After breakfast, as I had
heard from all quarters that they designed to put me in the chair, I addressed
the Conference, and, having told them what I had understood, proceeded to give
reasons why I could not go into the chair, and begged that no brother would lose
a vote for me, as my mind was fully made up on the business. This produced a
conversation I little expected. All the old preachers insisted on it that I was
at present the proper person, and entreated me not to refuse. I insisted upon it
that I would not, and solemnly charged every one who intended to vote for me to
give his suffrage to some other. I then wrote [mine] for Mr. Barber, and showed
my paper to those about me, who all followed my example. I trembled till this
business was concluded: and what was the result? I was chosen by a majority of
one half beyond the highest! I was called to the chair in the name of the
Conference, and refused, begging that the next in number of votes might take it.
We were thrown into a temporary confusion, during which Mr. T. Taylor and J.
Bradford lifted me up by mere force out of my seat, and set me upon the table! I
was confounded and distressed beyond measure, and, against all my resolutions,
was obliged to take the seat. After recovering from my embarrassment, I began
business, and have conducted it hitherto with order, and, I believe, much to the
satisfaction of the brethren. Dr. Coke was chosen secretary, and between him and
Mr. Benson there was a close run. We are now at the characters, and have got
through seventy-nine Circuits. There are two or three knotty cases in reference
to charges of false doctrine, which will soon come before us ... I do not see
any sentence in _____'s book which is capable of bearing an evil construction.
It is a poor milksop production, and the time and expense are thrown away upon
it. -- is too high; he has learned to bear no cross for Christ's sake: perhaps
he may now be schooled a little in this necessary science ... Pray, pray hard,
for me. I am far from being comfortable in my mind. The thought of having to
preach next Lord's day before the Conference, and to admit those who have
traveled four years, quite absorbs my spirits."
"July 29th. -- Having a few moments, (sitting on the Conference board, the
preachers beginning to assemble,) I devote them to you. We have gone on well.
When we came to the Wakefield Circuit, Mr. Marsden produced a letter from Mr.
Pawson, containing his dying advice to the Conference. This was read, and a
motion succeeded that it should be printed I have just now got the number of the
preachers present: they amount to two hundred and three. I have long walks, and
sleep, or rather watch, in a front room in the noisiest street in Leeds, in
which there is scarcely a silent hour in the night. I have not had one night's
rest."
"July 30th. -- We have now got through all the characters, except _____'s for
Pelagianism [from the monk Pelagius (4th-5th c.) or his theory denying the
doctrine of original sin.], and _____'s for denying the direct witness of the
Spirit. Mr. _____ has had the questions proposed to him which were sent to Mr.
_____, and has answered all to the perfect satisfaction of the Conference. Mr.
_____, who was under the same accusation, has had the same questions put to him,
and has not answered to their satisfaction ... The brethren are so incensed
against evasive answers on this subject, that every man has Argus [a mythical
person with a hundred eyes] eyes. The question which I sent to Mr. _____ was my
own; but today it has been adopted without variation, to be used as the test on
which the Pelagian heretics should be tried. There is the utmost need to take
heed to our doctrines ... I write this while the rest of the brethren are at
their tea. I am nearly worn out with excessive exertions."
"Aug. 3d -- This morning I went to the new chapel, where the doctor" (Coke) "was
to preach. Long before the time it was more than full. -- Many hundreds were
standing in the street when I got up to it. However, I squeezed in; and, as it
was more than half an hour before the time, and the doctor was not come, I got a
Prayer Book, went into the desk, and began to read prayers. This quieted the
people. As the press was great at the door and in the street, four preachers
stood up in different parts, and began to preach. Thus, instead of one, we had
five congregations. When we had finished the sacrament [of the Lord's Supper,
which was administered] to perhaps eight hundred people, we could scarcely get
out, for the afternoon congregation was waiting to get in. I came home, and,
having got a morsel of dinner, am come to scribe you a few lines, and to look
for a text for this evening. A sore work lieth before me, and how I am to get
through it I know not. I will leave this unconcluded till I return ...
I have just returned. An amazing congregation; thousands, without and within.
There was reason to fear some lives would be lost, the press was so great. I got
on middlingly. Nearly all the preachers were present. I am now weary enough, and
my cold still had. -- There is no morning that I am not in the chapel (though
nearly a mile from my lodging) before five o'clock. What is the use of lying in
bed? I cannot sleep; my eyes are like those of a ferret. I know not when I shall
he able to sleep again ... It is said that there are upwards of twenty thousand
strangers come into town. It is like a county town in the time of election. The
inns and private houses are overflowed, and the streets everywhere full."
"Aug. 6th -- This has been a day of very great fatigue. I have been a good part
of the afternoon examining the young men. I had each doctrine to define and
explain. Though it almost totally exhausted me, I got through with precision ...
I have in about half an hour to go and admit them all, in the presence of an
immense congregation, crowds of which were rushing into the chapel before I left
the Conference board. -- We are still in great harmony. I have nearly as much
authority as I could wish; and, when I choose to exert it, all I can desire. The
brethren behave exceedingly well. I let them feel only that power with which
they have invested me, and they properly respect it ...
"Finding the chapel already full, a half an hour before the time, I immediately
began." He then describes the ordination service, as practiced at that time
among the Methodists, and adds: "I then addressed them in a short speech, and
pronounced the formal words of reception, in the name of God, whose mercy and
love they were to proclaim; of Jesus Christ, whose atonement they were to
witness; of the Holy Ghost, by whose influence they had been thus far fitted for
the ministry, and by whose unction they were to alarm, convince, convert, and in
holiness build up the souls of men: also, in the name of the Methodist
Conference, by whose authority I acted; and in the name of the many thousands
which constitute the church connected with them. Mr. Moore then prayed, and I
pronounced the dismissal."
"Aug. 7th. -- [As to the station for next year] I am returned for London; and
may now give up, as at the highest pitch of honor Methodism can bestow upon me:
president of the Conference, superintendent of London, and chairman of the
London District, all at the same time The Lord knows I never sought it. Well, I
would rather have one smile from my Maker than all this honor, and all the world
could confer besides.
"I own I should feel home very waste if you were not there to receive me when I
come; and yet I wish you by all means to go and see your mother. If I possibly
can, after resting a few days at home, I shall rejoice to accompany you and Mr.
Butterworth to Trowbridge."
The duties of the president, including extensive journeys in Scotland and
Ireland, incessant correspondence, and a formidable amount of Connectional
business, render it necessary that an additional preacher be stationed with him,
as a helper in the ordinary labors of the Circuit. Among the young men who
appeared at the Leeds Conference for ordination was the Rev. David M'Nicoll, who
preached at one of the services, and whose discourse gave the president such an
idea of his capacity and character, as to determine his choice of an assistant
for the coming year. "I have heard Mr. M'Nicoll," says he, in a letter to Mrs.
Clarke, "this morning at five. He is a wonderful fellow. Although a Scotchman,
he has excellent language, and such a flow of words as you have seldom heard. He
will infallibly bear the bell in London. Your husband can, I believe, dig much
deeper; but he certainly cannot fly so high." And again, speaking of the men
received into full connection:-- "David M'Nicoll, who is coming to London, was o
ne of them; and in a very neat, lively, and elegant manner, he testified of the
hope that was in him." Nor was the president disappointed in this high estimate.
Mr. M'Nicoll gave early indications of a genius which, cultivated in after-years
by a most extensive acquaintance with the best literature in the English
language, made him one of the first preachers of the day. The blandness of his
natural disposition, his vivid yet well-governed imagination, his fascinating
musical talent, his wealth of information, and the artless simplicity of his
manners, rendered him one of the most amiable companions; while the moral
virtues of his heart and life, and the power which attended his
pulpit-ministrations, commanded homage as well as affection. *[2]
After the exertions of the Conference, Mr. Clarke availed himself of a few days'
relaxation, making one of a family-party in a tour into Wiltshire. In a series
of well-written letters to his son Theodoret, he describes the most remarkable
scenes and objects which attracted their attention. Mr. Butterworth, who was
chief mover in the affair, had provided two carriages; and they set out for
Devizes, from thence over Salisbury Plain, where the sight of shepherds with
their flocks and dogs gave him huge delight. They visited Stonehenge; and then
Wilton House, the seat of the earl of Pembroke, with its rare collections of
coins and antique sculptures, and, without, its romantic vistas, temples,
groves, and gardens; a spot which altogether won, as he says, his warm
attachment. "We returned," he writes, "to our inn, and partook of a most
comfortable dinner. We were all as hungry as Greenland bears. I have seldom
needed a meal so much, and have not been often more thankful to God for one." On
the road to Wilton, they passed by the church where, as he says, "that blessed
man of God, Mr. Herbert, (the poet,) formerly preached. It is entirely
surrounded with very fine tall yew-trees, and the mere sight of the place
impressed my mind with solemnity and reverence."
The next place was Wardour Castle, the seat of the earl of Arundel. The
paintings here riveted his attention; one of them especially, "The Saviour after
Death," by Spagnoletto. "He" (the Saviour) "is represented as just taken down
from the cross; the countenance indescribably expressive of death, and yet
highly dignified; fully verifying the words, 'No man taketh My life from Me:' '
I give up My life for the sheep:' for, though He groaned and gave up the ghost,
after He had cried with a loud voice, yet it could not be said of Him, --
Vitaque cum gemitu fugit indignata sub umbras.
No; you could see that He was 'free among the dead:' free -- at liberty to
resume His life whenever He pleased, as He had given it up according to His own
good pleasure ...
"The family-chapel is one of the most solemn little buildings I ever saw. It is
laid out in the Romish taste; two lamps perpetually burning before the altar, on
which is placed a costly crucifix. Through a window of stained glass a
sufficient measure of light makes every object visible enough, in conjunction
with the lamps; indeed, the mixture of these two lights produces a sort of
illumination which partakes at once of the cheerfulness of day and the solemnity
of night ... He who can enter a place dedicated to the worship of God as he does
into his own habitation or that of his horses, has (in my opinion) no proper
notion of religious worship, and is never likely to derive much edification from
his attendance on the ordinances of God ... Another thing impressed us, -- the
number of religious books which we saw in every apartment; such as the History
of the People of God, the Imitation of Christ, &c.; and all these books seemed
as if they were in frequent use."
In the progress of their tour they came to the village of Amesbury. "It is
situated among the hills in a chalky soil, and is neat, dry, and clean: there is
one inn, the George, which, much to our satisfaction, afforded us a tolerable
supper and beds. Almost our first inquiry was, 'Are there any religious people
here?' " The waiter, who was "an intelligent man," directed them to some whom he
considered such, and to one, as the leader of the rest, a baker, named Edwards.
"Determined to find this ecclesiastical baker, we sallied out. It was a fine
moonlight evening. I rapped at his door, and asked to see Mr. Edwards. He came,
and invited us in. We entered, and told him we were strangers in the country,
and that, on inquiring whether there were any religious people in the village,
we had been directed to him. As soon as we sat down, I asked him to what class
of religious people he belonged. He replied, ' To Mr. Wesley's people.' " After
some conversation, "we were so pleased with the worthy couple, that we invited
them to sup with us at our inn, where we spent a comfortable hour together." The
Sabbath was spent by the tourists in Bradford, where Mr. Clarke preached in the
morning to a large and deeply attentive congregation. Some of the old people had
heard him years before, when he came to their Circuit in his novitiate.
Refreshed and strengthened in mind and body by this pleasant excursion, Mr.
Clarke resumed his duties in London with renewed vigor. "In labors" he was "more
abundant," and his influence became greater every day. We read that "to him that
hath shall be given;" and the subject of our memoir, in being faithful to the
talents confided to him, became more and more enriched with those heavenly gifts
which rendered him in the pulpit an apostle indeed; in the study an instructor
not of the ignorant only, but of the learned too; and in life "an example of the
believers, in word, in conversation, in charity, in spirit, in faith, in
purity." Not only in his own communion was he regarded with affectionate
reverence and homage, but in the church at large; and among the highest literary
circles his character had begun to be known and admired. Some of the most
distinguished men of the day, as Roscoe, Porson, Lord Teignmouth, Charles
Butler, and Morrison of China, found pleasure and profit in his conversation and
correspondence. A sermon on some public occasion would gather round his pulpit
one of the most choice congregations in London; and a new work from his pen was
welcomed with thankful respect by the good and by the great. Of this universal
sentiment of esteem the senate of the university of Aberdeen only gave a
suitable expression when they conferred upon him, in January, 1807, the diploma
of Master of Arts; and, thirteen months afterwards, created him Doctor of Civil
and Canon Law. These honors had been already merited; but the university knew
that the man who was now invested with them gave pledges of yet greater things
which would more abundantly vindicate their judgment of him, and contribute to
the honor of the learned body who had enrolled him among their associates.
One of the verifications of these prognostics made its appearance in the
following September, in the "Concise View of Sacred Literature," -- a work in
which the learned author gives an analytical account of the great masterpieces
of religious teaching, from the earliest times down to the middle of the fourth
century; with the intention of resuming and completing the course in a
subsequent volume: a purpose which, in process of time, was carried out with
ability by his son, the Rev. J. B. B. Clarke. A treatise on the Christian
Eucharist, and an edition of Harmer's Observations on the Scriptures, were also
at this time in progress; but Dr. Clarke's main efforts turned on the great
labor of his literary life, his own Commentary on the Bible.
At the Liverpool Conference in 1807, Dr. Clarke was thankful to surrender the
presidential seal into the hands of the Rev. John Barber, his successor in
office, and to receive from his brethren the cordial expression of their
approval of the spirit and manner in which he had fulfilled his duties. Anxious
to promote the temporal as well as the spiritual interests of his fathers and
brethren in the ministry, he introduced to the attention of the Conference at
this session a measure which he had closely meditated, and the adoption of which
would, as he conceived, be the means of affording substantial consolation to
many of the preachers who in future years should be found in age and decay
without the means of temporal support. The plan, indeed, was not adopted; but it
has a record here, to illustrate the large and liberal thoughts of him who
devised it. We will give the paper as it proceeded from his own pen:--
"BISMILLAHI ARAHMANI ARRAHEEMI! *[3]
"Taking into consideration the very desolate state of the superannuated
preachers and widows in the Methodist Connection, and well knowing that the
provision made by the Preachers' Aunuitant Society must in every case fall very
far short of even providing them with the necessaries of life, it is proposed,
--
"1. That an asylum or college be erected with as much speed as possible for the
reception of superannuated preachers, and the widows of those who have died in
our Lord's work.
"2. That the asylum be erected in the vicinity of some large town, in a healthy
situation, where the necessaries of life may be found cheap.
"3. That the asylum consist of houses, each containing a sitting-room, two
lodging-rooms, a study, a small kitchen, and a garden, _____ feet long, and the
breadth of the house.
"4. That the building enclose a large square of _____ feet; and that a
commodious chapel, for the use of the institution and the vicinity, be built in
the center or one end of the square.
"5. That the place itself be taken in by the traveling preachers, as one of the
regular places of the Circuit where it is situated; and that all the residents
in the asylum shall meet regularly in class, and be subject to all the rules,
regulations, &c., common to the Methodist Societies.
"6. That no person shall be entitled to a place in this college who has not been
a regular traveling preacher for the space of twenty years, and who has not been
declared superannuated by the Conference merely on account of such bodily
infirmities as render it impossible for him to continue in his work.
"7. That no widow be admitted who has not been the wife of a traveling preacher
for at least twenty years, or has not traveled with her husband during that
time, or has not maintained an unblemished character.
"8. That if any of the widows remarried with one of the superannuated preachers,
she shall go to the apartments of her husband but should she marry with a person
who is not a resident in the asylum, she shall leave it.
"9. That each family have the house free of rent and taxes, and a certain sum be
allowed annually for coals and candles.
"10. That the superannuated preachers and widows resident in the asylum have the
whole of the annuity which they can legally claim from the preachers' fund,
independent of all the privileges and advantages arising from their residence.
"11. That no preacher or widow be obliged to enter this institution, or be
entitled to its privileges, not being resident in it, unless there be no room
for any proper claimant, and the funds be an such a state as to enable the
managers to grant a certain portion of help to such persons.
"12. That the principal friends throughout the Connection be solicited for
subscriptions to purchase freehold premises, on which to erect the necessary
buildings."
This program was supplemented with the following postscript:-- "The preceding
plan was laid before the Conference by Brother Clarke; and he was required by
the Conference to write an Address to the members and friends of the Societies,
accompanied with the plan, soliciting subscriptions for the above laudable
purpose; and the Conference order that the Address and plan be printed in the
Minutes and Magazine.
"J. BARBER, President.
"T. COKE, Secretary."
At this Conference Dr. Clarke was appointed, in conjunction with Dr. Coke and
Mr. Benson, to draw up a compend of Methodist doctrines, confirmed by Scripture,
and illustrated from the writings of Mr. Wesley. This was accordingly compiled,
and a copy sent to the chairman of every District for the consideration of the
preachers.
As the time drew on when, according to the usages of Methodism, Dr. Clarke would
have to leave the metropolis, the Committee of the British and Foreign Bible
Society expressed their sense of the value of his services to that great
institution by an official request to the Conference, that the general custom
might in his case be pretermitted [left off for a time]. To this unusual
application, so honorable to each of the parties, the Conference, from an
earnest desire to promote the interests of the Bible Society, gave their full
consent. In the course of the year Dr. Clarke removed from City-road, and took
up his residence at the Surrey Institution, to the librarianship of which he had
allowed himself to be nominated under the circumstances disclosed in the
following extract from a correspondence on the subject with Mr. Butterworth:--
"Whether I propose myself for librarian to the Surrey Institution, or permit
another to do so, is nearly the same thing. It is a fixed principle with me
never to be a candidate for a public office, either in church or state; and from
this I have never swerved. My heart is in every literary institution: I believe
they are all ordered in the Divine Providence. Perhaps, I am as well qualified,
in many respects, for the office, as I am for any of those I now fill. I must
continue in London another year." In short, he left the matter with the
authorities of the Institution, and they elected him.
Invested with the office, he confronted its duties with his usual decision.
"Mark," says he, "I have all the books in both libraries to provide: I have to
travel from shop to shop, to examine books, to compare prices before I purchase
I have lectures, and the plan of lectures, and even their matter, to arrange:--
I have to construct the whole machine, and to give it proper momentum and
direction; to be incessant in labor, and to employ all my bibliographical and
philosophical knowledge in those things; and, as I have taken them in hand, I
shall do them, if God spare my life."
Among the smaller pieces which Dr. Clarke published at this time, was a memoir
of the last hours of that distinguished scholar, Professor Porson; a notice
which details some literary conversations which the writer had with the
illustrious Grecian, on some points relating to the archaeology of his favorite
language. Another biographical sketch was written for the Wesleyan Magazine. It
refers to a man as eminent for the sanctity of his life as the subject of the
former memoir was remarkable for his attainments in Greek scholarship, -- the
Rev. John Pawson. This little piece will be always read with refreshment and
edification by those who know anything of the power of religion in the soul. It
presents a graphic portraiture of "a man of irreproachable integrity, of
unspotted life, and of very extensive usefulness. As he honored God with his
body, soul, and substance, so God honored him by giving him the highest
affection and confidence of His church and people; with an unction and baptism
of the Holy Ghost; a nd with such a victory and triumph over sin, death, and the
grave, as would have been glorious even in the apostolic times."
The labors of Dr. Clarke in the field of English history, in accomplishing the
redaction [revision, editing, rearrangement] of a great portion of Rymer's
Faedera, will claim a more particular review in another chapter. I only refer to
the subject here to notice a transaction in which he was engaged about this
time, in the purchase of the diplomatic and private papers of Sir Andrew
Mitchell, English ambassador to the court of Berlin during the seven years war.
It was judged that documents which immediately related to a period so eventful
should not be allowed to perish; and Dr. Clarke was requested to negotiate for
their purchase, on behalf of the trustees of the Cottonian Library at the
British Museum. He obtained the papers for £400; and, on his delivering them
personally at the Museum, they were sealed up for thirty years, (according to
the usual agreement in such cases,) to obviate injurious results to private or
public parties who might be involved in the secrets of the transactions recorded
in them. I may add here, from the family memorandum, that at the termination of
this business Sir William Forbes, at whose instance it had been undertaken,
inquired of a friend of the doctor, what compensation he should make to him for
his trouble; but he was assured by that friend (Robert Eden Scott, Esq.) that
Dr. Clarke would be found above receiving remuneration for acts of that kind.
Sir William therefore contented himself with presenting to the doctor a copy of
the Nova Reperta Inscriptionum Antiquarum, with a record on the fly-leaf
expressive of the donor's regard.
The same characteristic of disinterestedness shows itself in the manner in which
he fulfilled the duties of librarian at the Surrey Institution. Finding that
they were really incompatible with the momentous undertakings, ministerial and
literary, in which his whole existence should be absorbed, he, at the end of ten
months' service, relinquished the situation, and refused to receive the salary.
The council of the Institution attested their admiration of his important and
generous services, by installing him as permanent honorary librarian to the
Society. Dr. Clarke now removed his residence to Harpur-street, Bloomsbury.
In the department of biblical literature, in addition to some extensive
engagements on behalf of the Bible Society, he took a zealous part in the
measures adopted by the late Rev. Josiah Pratt, B.D., for a new edition of the
London Polyglot. At the request of Lord Teignmouth, Dr. Burgess, bishop of St.
David's, *[4] and some other friends of this undertaking, he furnished a
specimen sheet in royal folio, and another in octavo. This, under the title of
"A Plan and Specimen of Biblia Polyglotta Britannica; or, an enlarged and
improved Edition of the London Polyglot Bible, with Castel's Heptaglot Lexicon,"
was printed and circulated among the literati at home and abroad. But this noble
and much-needed enterprise came to nothing for want of adequate patronage. A
copy of the prospectus may be found in the British Museum.
But the time had now come, in which Dr. Clarke's long preparatory labors enabled
him to present to the world the first part of his own edition of the English
Bible, with the Commentary which has given him a lasting name among the great
biblical teachers of the church. In the early part of the year, he put forth a
prospectus of the work, which excited general attention, and not the less on
account of a controversial paper from the Rev. Thomas Scott, (himself one of the
most valuable of the English annotators on the Bible,) who, in "The Christian
Observer," impugned [challenged, called in question] the statement that Dr.
Clarke had made in the prospectus, that the Septuagint was the version to which
our Lord and His apostles had constant recourse, and from which they made all
their quotations. The animadversions [censures, criticisms] of this respected
clergyman were answered by Dr. Clarke, through the medium of the same journal,
in a paper which has been reprinted in his Miscellaneous Works. In the month of
July following, the first portion of the Commentary made its appearance, and was
soon in the hands not only of the reading people in the doctor's own religious
communion, (among whom, it received an enthusiastic welcome,) but of a multitude
of the eminent and pious in every branch of the Christian church.
All this while the Methodist preacher was not merged and lost in the man of
letters, and the companion of peers and prelates. In this respect Dr. Clarke was
evermore the same man: he dwelt among his own people, and with heart and hand
labored with his brethren for the promotion of the cause of Christ in the
conversion of sinners, and the edification of the church redeemed by His
precious blood; in the advancement of which both he and they found their peace,
and glory, and joy. We have, indeed, but few documents relating to his
Circuit-work at this period; but here and there in a letter we catch a glimpse
of his manner of life. "I was up this morning about four, and fagged [toiled]
till about a quarter past five, and then had to walk to City-road to attend the
meeting at six." So far were the interests of Methodism from being slighted by
Dr. Clarke, they were advanced by the steps of his own progress. His
pulpit-ministry was now in its effulgent meridian, and the growing influence of
his name attracted many to the chapels in the metropolis who might otherwise
have been strangers to them all their days.
So, wherever he went, in his occasional journeys, crowds assembled roused the
pulpit where he was to preach even a passing sermon. Thus at St. Austel, in a
tour which he took into the west in the autumn:-- "Short as the notice was, we
had the chapel quite full, and several of the principal gentry made part of the
congregation. I preached on Ephes. iii. 13, &c.; and though very weak, and quite
fagged out, spoke an hour and twenty minutes. I met here many of my old friends,
but the greater number are dead.
"We got to Camelford late in the evening, and were followed by some of the
principal of our St. Austel friends, among whom are Mrs. Flamank and Mr. S.
Drew. Many more were to set off today, to be present at the preaching tomorrow;
but the incessant rain must render it impracticable. The floods wash the sides
of the room where I am now writing, and are so high in the streets, that the
[communication between] the upper and lower parts of the town is cut off. I am
to preach here twice tomorrow, and on Monday morning to leave for Launceston,
Exeter, &c. Should I stay here any longer, I should have invitations from every
part of Cornwall. If eating and drinking could make us happy, it would be
enjoyed here in perfection: the finest salmon in the world for sixpence per
pound; whitings, several pounds' weight, for twopence each; large rabbits a
shilling a couple; and so of other things. Here a man may maintain a large
family with a small income. Will you come, and let your poor husband get out of
that world to live in which he was never calculated? I corrected a revise this
morning, and sent off by post. There are a few memoranda in it directed to Theo.
I do not get much sleep at night, and this does not agree with me. I am seldom
contented when from home, which prevents me from getting much benefit when
abroad. The man lives ill at home who rejoices to go abroad, and returns to his
family with reluctance. So it never was with me. I have been obliged to get the
shoes, soled by Mr. _____ before I came away, re-soled. The soles put on by him
were not worth twopence."
We are not fastidious enough to reject these little details. The critic well
says, that "biography is useless which is not true to life. Even the weaknesses
of character must be preserved, however insignificant or humbling. The jest-book
of Tacitus, the medicated drinks of Bacon, the preparatory violin of Bourdaloue,
and the fancy-lighting damsons of Dryden, have their place and value. They are
the errata of genius, and clear up the text. A French mathematician had doubts
about the animal wants of Newton, and ,was disposed to regard him as an
intellectual being in whom the mind's flame had absorbed each grosser particle.
It is certainly a precipitous fall from dividing a ray of light, or writing
Comus, to weariness and dinner. But biography admonishes pride, when it displays
Salmasius shivering under the eyes of his wife, or bids us stand at the door of
Milton's academy and hear the work of the ferule upstairs. It steals on the poet
and the premier in their undress, -- Cowley, in dressing-gown and slippers ;
Cecil, with his treasurer's robe on the chair;"-- and, as we may add, on Adam
Clarke, looking ruefully on the unstable foundation of his shoes.
"Camelford. -- I have finished my Sunday's work. Preached this morning, and gave
the sacrament. Mr. Drew preached in the afternoon, and I again at night. I
assure you those were high times. The day was very fine, and the people flocked
together from all quarters. At the evening's service, Mr. Butterworth and Mr.
Johnson were so affected, that they were almost on the eve of making a glorious
noise; and the latter was just going to break out in prayer, when prevented by
the blessing being pronounced. This visit has done many great good. It is
strange, but the chief members, in almost all the Societies round about, were
convinced and brought to God under my ministry ... Our whole journey has been
one of mercy. God has especially owned the word; many have been blessed. We had
a crowd about us when we set off, and yesterday was a high day indeed."
* * * * * * *
DIVISION 15
BOOK II
(Meridian)
CHAPTER 6
ITINERANCY
A few months later we find Dr. Clarke performing an extensive tour in Ireland,
whither he had gone on some researches relative to the State Record Commission
with which he had now been entrusted by the Government, and to meet the Irish
preachers at their annual Conference. His letters homeward detail some
particulars of this expedition, which give us his revived impressions of years
now receding into the immeasurable past.
"Holyhead, May 30th. -- I wrote to you from Shrewsbury, my very dear Mary, on
Tuesday. Having slept there, we set off between five and six in the morning; and
after traveling through the wildest, most uncultivated and uncultivatable
country I ever saw, -- vast mountains, sudden and tremendous precipices, huge
overhanging rocks, rivers tumbling over the mountains; a country which exhibits
all the disruptions which nature could have suffered by every sort of violence
... we got safe, eighty-five miles on the whole, a little before ten, to Bangor
Ferry. A good supper, and went to bed; slept till just before five; crossed the
ferry, breakfasted at the house where you and I and John had the bottle of fine
cider twenty-two years ago, and then reached Holyhead ... The very sight of some
of the precipices would have drunk up your soul."
"Dublin, 31st. -- Having got a little breakfast, I set out to deliver my
credentials to Mr. Mason, the secretary. Did not find him at home. Met him on
returning, and appointed to meet him within two hours. Went to visit the
preachers, and none of them at home. N.B. The old breakfasting-out system still
lasts. -- I entered the house where we had suffered so many calamities, not
without strong emotions. The school is now held in the parlor on the right, as
you go in. I then called on Mr. _____, and found him embalming his already
demi-mummized body with nicotian [tobacco] fumes. Called to see John Jones and
his wife. Mad with joy to see me. Then to Mr. and Mrs. P. Then to H.-street, to
see my cousin Boyd. They have a fine tall daughter, whom they call Eve. The
father's name you know is Adam. He knows the genealogy of our family most nobly,
and tells me he can trace it up through seventeen Irish kings. Now, go to: could
you have thought you were allied to one who can trace the pure current of his
blood through seventeen monarchs? I hope you will now begin to think much of
yourself. -- leaving them, proceeded to the secretary's, and examined with him
different MS. indexes. He showed me uncommon kindness, and furnished me with
letters to Trinity College. I posted thither, and met Dr. Barrett coming down
his own stairs and going into the hall on an examination. He has appointed to
meet me tomorrow at eleven. Returned to my lodging completely wearied, having
walked over Dublin from one end to the other ... Tell John to see that nothing
exceptionable in the natural history of the Defense of the Nachash be permitted
to pass." *[1]
When journeying in the provinces, Dr. Clarke was careful to avail himself of
opportunities for preaching the Gospel. Thus, at Charlemont: "Sunday morning. --
The people thronging together from all quarters, it was found impracticable to
preach in the chapel. We sent therefore to the commander of the fort to permit
us the use of one of the yards, He readily acceded, and came himself and several
of his men. It was a very stormy morning, and I was obliged to stand exposed to
the wind and rain. We had a very good time, and as soon as finished I drove off
for Dungannon. Here the crowd was great, and we had scarcely hope to stow them
into the chapel, which is by far the largest I have seen since we left Dublin.
As I now felt a touch of sore throat, I dared not venture in the open air a
second time. We got to the chapel. Greatly crowded. Numbers without. Great grace
rested upon all. Many of our old friends followed from Armagh and Charlemont,
and others came from twenty miles around."
From Magherafelt he writes: "We proceeded from Dungannon to Cookstown, where I
had been published to preach in the Dissenting meeting-house ... When I got to
the place, could hardly articulate, owing to the severe cold caught on Sunday
morning. There was no remedy. Into the pulpit. It was supposed that three
thousand were present, from far and near and wide. I went in, found I could not
preach, and gave it over as a lost case. I, however, thought of saying a few
words by way of exhortation. The people were as still as death. I spoke for
forty-five minutes, and with much freedom. All the principal people were there,
and several of the clergy. Yesterday we came to this place. It is astonishing to
think of the concourse of people. We have no chapel here. Got the Presbyterian
meeting-house, and preached with glorious power -- I believe, to every relative
I have in the kingdom: they had heard of my coming, and to the sixth or eighth
generation were gathered together. I am now just setting off for Maghera.
In another letter: "From Castle-Dawson I proceeded toward Maghera, and stopped
to view the place where I had spent the fifth, sixth, seventh, and eighth years
of my checkered life. Half the house in which we lived, one of the best in that
country, is pulled down I walked through the grounds where I had laughed and
cried, sought birds' nests, looked for fairies' haunts, made good resolutions,
and spent the most happy (and, perhaps, the most innocent) period of my life.
Though I had left that place when about eight years of age, yet I remembered
every hill and every hedge, where my brother and I used to see the fairies'
nocturnal fires. The orchard, from which I had eaten often of the choicest
fruit, no longer exists. Zion is ploughed like a field. The emotions to which
these scenes now gave birth cannot be described They connect the long interval
between four years of age and fifty ... To the poor woman I gave three tenpenny
pieces, who received them as from heaven, and, addressing the child, said, 'See,
my dear, God has sent you a new coat by this gentleman; and may the blessing of
God rest upon him and his family for ever! ' ... We soon got to Maghera, --
looking over which before dinner, went to the quondam [former] dwelling of Dr.
Bernard, the bishop of Limerick, celebrated in Boswell. This is also in a state
of ruin; nothing like its former self, except the great beach-tree. Left the
place with reflections not the most pleasant ...
"The next morning I set out to visit the Grove, and to look for my old dwelling,
and the school-house in the wood but could get no farther than the Grove."
From Coleraine: "Our preaching-house being too small in Derry, I was furnished
with the Court-House, a large and elegant building, and in it preached on the
Lord's day to crowded congregations. Yesterday, I went out to Ballyaherton,
where we formerly resided; and when I came to the old habitation, I surveyed it
with reverence. A poor woman was standing at the door. I said, ' Will you permit
me to walk into your house?' She said, 'O, sir, it is not a proper place for
such a gentleman as you to enter.' I answered, 'I have had the privilege of
living in it for several years.' ... I gave the children each a tenpenny piece."
... Perambulating the neighborhood, "I came to a place called Port-Stuart, where
I had often held religious meetings. None knew me. But, after I had discovered
myself to one, the news ran, and the people came in every direction about me ...
"Returned to Coleraine, where I had to preach ... Was not a little surprised to
see Captain O'Neil's and Mr. Crombie's chariot sociable, and all their family,
who came to hear preaching, -- the first of the Methodist kind they had ever
heard ... Preached, thank God, a glorious sermon, two hours. Everybody to hear;
almost all, if not all, the gentry of the town, and some others from five or six
miles distant. This day we went to the Giants' Causeway ... It fell short of my
expectation. -- The pain of which I complained at home has continued with little
intermission."
From Antrim, on the longest day: "Yesterday left Coleraine for Ballymena, a
journey of twenty-two miles. Thirty-two years ago I walked this same road to a
lovefeast. Only one woman remains of those who were in Society at that time ...
On my arrival today, as our own chapel was utterly insufficient, the Rev. Mr.
Babbington, the rector, kindly offered me the use of his church, which, on the
tolling of the bell, was soon filled with a great concourse, to whom I found
considerable liberty in showing what were the doctrines of the apostles, from
Acts ii. 42. Today we left for Antrim, and here we should have had another
church; but the rector happened to be away, and our people had not applied in
time. Preached in the Presbyterian chapel."
On the way to Antrim Dr. Clarke visited the Moravian settlement of Grace-Hill.
They pressed him to give them an address in the chapel. "We entered," he says, "
and I was surprised to find a large congregation. I desired the minister to give
out one of his own hymns. He did so, and they all accompanied the organ in good
full chorus. The hymn gave me excellent scope to speak on for half an hour."
They sang a parting hymn, and he commended them to God in prayer. The settlement
contained at that time four hundred members. He preached again the same evening
in Antrim, "a good deal to my hurt, as, my mental energy being greatly
exhausted, I was obliged to exert the greater physical force; and this to me is
ever unpleasant and hurtful."
Sunday, June 23d. -- He preached twice in Belfast. Immense crowds. His voice
failed in the evening; and again. at Lishurn next day. On the Wednesday at
Lurgan, out of doors, "as nothing but a field would contain the thousands that
gathered together. The day following it was agreed that I should rest: I go
therefore to dine with Mr. Hamilton, and tomorrow preach at Portadown."
From the latter place he writes: "Well, I am now returned from preaching to the
largest congregation I ever addressed. I had almost all the town and all the
country; peasantry, gentry, magistrates, preachers, and clergy. The grass does
not cover the field more thickly than the people ... I found both strength and
mind for the work, and trust God will not permit the word to have been spoken in
vain.
In the same way the Doctor preached at Drogheda, making five times in the open
air within the last eight days of the tour. On the 2d of July he arrived in
Dublin.
"Mr. Butterworth and Joseph are well: they are both greatly improved by their
journey; and I am conscious that I am much the worse every way. My clothes are
worn out, and are not fit to appear in, even in the meanest congregation. I have
had nothing but fatigue and suffering all the time. My love to everybody."
The Conference which now opened, and at which Dr. Clarke had come to preside,
consisted of about a hundred preachers from all parts of Ireland. "I assure you
they are all equal, man for man, with the English preachers. They are all
walking with a clear sense of their acceptance with God; which is of infinite
moment, not only to their own salvation, but to the prosperity of the work of
God.
Yesterday I went to dine with the Rev. Dr. _____. Several of the clergy were
present, and a number of genteel persons of both sexes. The house was elegant,
and the entertainment splendid. But what we were brought together for, unless
merely to eat, I am to this hour at a loss to divine. No topic of conversation
was started, and no person seemed to notice another. Whether this is to be
attributed to self-sufficient confidence, or to a fear of each other, I do not
pretend to say: but the repast ended, as it began, in comparative silence; and
then I took French leave, heartily sorry I had lost so much time, or had,
probably, been the means of preventing the company from enjoying theirs ... This
day I dined at Major Sirr's, at the Castle; where, had I not been confined for
time, I should have spent a pleasant and profitable evening."
The Conference ended on the 17th, leaving Dr. Clarke greatly exhausted. Towards
the close of his stay in Dublin, he accompanied Mr. Butterworth on a visit to
the college of Maynooth, where they were "very politely received by Father De la
Hogue, one of the professors. It costs our government £9,000 per annum. Mr. Knox
is the treasurer. Students, three hundred. I saw nothing very remarkable. Their
library is a poor one, and their chapel not elegant. The only thing I saw worth
observation was the following, written in large letters above the fire-place in
the kitchen: 'Be clean, Have taste, Don't want, Don't waste.' When coming away,
I offered my hand to Father De la Hogue; but he declined receiving it. He had
received us with the utmost politeness. I was a heretic, and therefore he would
not give me the right hand of fellowship. His politeness and courtesy were,
therefore, put on. What an execrable system, which cramps and freezes all the
charities of human life!
"I must now begin to do something for the Records the remaining part of this
week." -- This latter employment now occupied him closely. "I am still driving
from office to office, till nearly off my feet ... If it would do me any good, I
have honor here in great abundance. People whom I have never known, both among
the clergy and nobility, call on me and leave their cards. Invitations to the
city, to the suburbs, to the country, are without end. Last Sunday evening, when
I preached at the new chapel, the street was filled with chariots, coaches,
berlins, and jaunting. cars; and I had lords, ladies, knights, doctors, clergy,
laity, in full score. I wish you had been with me. I have been obliged to go to
the barracks and dine with the officers, who behaved with the utmost politeness
and respect." *[2]
On Dr. Clarke's return to England, he had to encounter the grief occasioned by
the decease of his mother. Her health had been for some time rapidly declining.
He had seen her at Bristol on his way to Ireland, and had found her in the full
possession of her faculties, calmly waiting for her translation to the eternal
mansions. On the subject of the coming change she spoke with a devout serenity;
and, on parting with her son, she commended him with earnest prayer to the
blessing of God. Yet, in the course of his ministerial tour, the Doctor seems to
have expected still once again to visit this beloved parent. Her decease,
however, transpired so closely on the eve of his return, that no news of it had
reached him on the way. "But," says her granddaughter, "from the constrained
manner and tearful eyes which but too eloquently replied to the almost first
interrogation upon entering his house, 'Is all well?' the truth could not be
concealed: upon which his countenance instantly grew pale, his lips quivered, he
spoke not, but in the silence of the heart's agony, with upraised eyes and
heaving chest, he retired to his study."
"The heart knoweth its own bitterness." We envy not the man who is not bowed
down at the death of the mother who bare him, the guide of his youth, the
moralist of his heart, and the encourager of every good feeling and worthy
action: and such had been Mrs. Clarke to him who now mourned her departure. Her
image was ever dear to his memory, and her earliest lessons had shaped the
character and conduct of his life. Yet must his sorrow have been not without
thankfulness for the grace shown both to himself and her, in sanctifying and
saving them together; not without the full assurance of hope that they should
alike have their perfect consummation and bliss in the everlasting kingdom of
Him who had redeemed them.
The Rev. Thomas Roberts, the friend and neighbor of the departed matron, wrote
to Dr. Clarke, on the occasion, a letter of condolence, in which he
appropriately says: "You are justified in entertaining the best feelings when
you reflect that good Mrs. Clarke was your mother. She lived just so long, and
died so well, as to leave in the heart of her son nothing but acquiescence in
the Divine will, and gratitude for that gracious dispensation of heaven which
could not have been manifested in a manner more consolatory to the feelings of
the man, the son, and the Christian."
Dr. Clarke was speedily summoned from the indulgence of lonesome grief, to
resume those life-absorbing efforts which Providence had ordained as the task of
his existence, and in the fulfillment of which his own preparation for the rest
that remaineth unto the people of God could be best carried on. In the stated
work of the pulpit, in advancing the Commentary, and in discharging the duties
resulting from his engagement with the Record Commission, the weeks and months
passed rapidly away. These avocations called him to Cambridge, to Oxford, and
again to Ireland. Connected with his sojourn at Cambridge in December, he makes
a memorandum on the formation of a Bible Society in that town:-- "Lord
Hardwicke," says he, "was in the chair, supported by Lord Francis Osborne, the
dean of Carlisle, and several of the professors. The meeting lasted from eleven
till four o'clock; and such speeches I never heard. Mr. Owen exceeded his former
self; Mr. Dealtry spoke like an angel; and Dr. E. D. Clarke, the traveler, like
a seraph. Everything was carried, and the meeting ended in a blaze of celestial
light. Every man seemed to swear that he would carry the Bible to all who never
knew it, so far as the providence of God should permit him to go. For myself, I
did not laugh and cry alternately; I did both together, and completely wet my
pocket-handkerchief with tears. Between two and three hundred young men of the
University were the first movers in this business." In the following April he
visited Cambridge again, and was hospitably entertained at Corpus Christi
College. During this sojourn he had several hopeful conversations with some of
the junior gownsmen, who greatly pleased him "by their disposition and manners."
One of these, the Rev. Thomas Galland, M.A., became a distinguished ornament to
the Methodist ministry.
* * * * * * *
DIVISION 16
BOOK II
(Meridian)
CHAPTER 7
ITINERANCY
In June Dr. Clarke resumed his travels in Ireland. "Left London," writes he, "at
six A.M., in the Liverpool coach, having under my care a young lady, Miss
O'Connor, a perfect stranger to me, but whom I was requested to protect to
Dublin. I soon found that she was a Roman Catholic, but of an amiable
disposition, and, in her own way, conscientiously religious. At the place of our
last changing between Frescot and Warrington, Mr. Nuttall, Mr. Fisher, and their
man and carriage, were waiting; and took me and my little ward to their place,
called Nut Grove, where they were distractingly glad to see me. On our journey I
observed that my ward had a French work, called Journal du Chretien, (the
Christian's Diary,) in which there is a prayer, and what is called 'an act of
devotion,' for the morning and evening of each day. Poor little thing, though
she had no place of retirement to do these devotions, yet such is her fear of
God, that she could not neglect them; and therefore, at the proper time, both
morning and evening, she took out her book, and read her little devotions. I
rejoiced to show her that a heretic, so called, loves the same God."
"June 11th. -- I preached in Liverpool to an immense crowd. I understand a Roman
Catholic lady, who had long been seeking rest for her soul, came to the
preaching. She was deeply convinced that the foundation of her hope must be
alone in the death and merits of Christ. Her heart appeared as if broken under
the word, and God showed her the way of salvation by faith through the blood of
the cross." The Doctor preached again on the 14th at Brunswick chapel, "on the
providence and mercy of God; who wrought for His own Name, and I have reason to
believe much good was done. We had a bad night at sea: one mast was split, and
the wind was against us. Through mercy, we reached Dublin in safety."
"A gentleman at the Custom-House, seeing 'Dr. Clarke' on different boxes, (for
it was on all Miss O'Connor's,) came out into the mob that surrounded us, and
inquired for Dr. Clarke. I answered. He took me into the Custom-House, instantly
passed all the boxes, would take no money, saw us both into a jingle, and told
the fellow to beware he took no more than his fare, which was six schillings and
sixpence; and so we got safely to Mr. Keene's."
Dr. Clarke's health was again distressingly impaired. He suffered so much, that
existence seemed at times a martyrdom. Through the grace given to him, his will
bore up with an indomitable energy, and carried him through the labors of the
pulpit, or preaching in the open air, the presidency of the Conference, and the
researches of the State Record business, while many a man in like affliction
would have been at home in his bed.
"We this day commence our operations on the Lodge Manuscripts, and I shall open
my way with the chancellor of Christ-church, perhaps call on Dr. Barrett and
others. Major Sim's family fully expected me to lodge there; but our people and
the preachers have taken fire at the proposal. I found here an affectionate
letter from Mr. Averell, who is wanting to convey me to Cork, &c. But such a
journey is now utterly out of my power. Another letter was in waiting from Mr.
Mayne, of Drogheda; an extract from which will not displease you: 'Dear Doctor,
-- Our people anxiously desire to see you; and the public at large, to hear you
once more. Pray do visit us. The last time you were here, God gave a Roman
Catholic to your ministry. He is thoroughly steady, and his wife has since died
in the Lord Jesus. Come, therefore: who knows but God may give you another?' I
know what both you and Mr. Butterworth will say; and, please God, I shall obey
you. There I shall go, God willing, -- I think, Wednesday, -- preach to them on
Thursday, and return on Friday, if this horrible seizure" (of affliction) "will
give me so much respite. But it so thoroughly embitters every comfort, that I
cannot rejoice in anything without trembling. For eight days I have swallowed
nothing, cold or hot, solid or fluid, without great, often extreme, pain. I am
in constant pain, and often in agony indescribable."
"June 22d. -- When in Liverpool, I preached two sermons; and it appears that God
has owned them in a signal manner. They have produced a universal stir. A Roman
Catholic lady was thoroughly converted under the first: she has since joined
Miss Titherington's class, and given a wonderful testimony. The trustees waited
on me formally to thank me for my visit, and to request that I would come to
them next year. -- Yesterday preached at Wesley chapel, and at
Whitefriars'-street. High fever, and utmost exhaustion. Cough most oppressive
today."
"June 26th. -- I am just this minute returned from Drogheda. Mr. Tobias, Mr. F.,
and John accompanied me. Yesterday morning they entertained us with a public
breakfast: you know I not only do not like, but detest, such meetings. How ever,
as it was done to honor me, I endeavored to receive it in good part, and gave
them a sort of sermon for about half an hour. [The interval to the evening was
spent in an excursion to the scene of the battle of the Boyne, and some other
remarkable spots.] ... I went into all the hovels in this most miserable
village, (Munsterboyce,) where Mr. Butterworth's bounty enabled me to leave a
handful of silver last year. I found them in the same or worse misery; and,
trusting in God, I opened my stock, and according to their different necessities
divided with them, at least, as much as last year ... I got a torrent of most
hearty prayers for me and mine. I was not a little tried when I found I must
preach in the new market-place in the open air ... The hour came, and I went to
the spot. There were about a thousand people; many Catholics, and among them two
or three priests. There were also two clergymen. What good may have been done, I
know not. If God have glory, my labor is not in vain."
"July 1st. -- We began our Stationing Committee this morning, and have just got
through forty Circuits. Tomorrow will finish that part of the work; and on
Friday we enter on the regular work of the Conference."
The business of the Stationing Committee brought more vividly before Dr.
Clarke's mind his own approaching change of Circuit; a subject which, in his
peculiar circumstances, excited some uneasiness. It is on this point that he
here adds: "Now, my dear Mary, with respect to going to Liverpool: I am far from
being happy in London. I feel uncomfortable in Harpur-street. I am maintained by
the Society, and they have no adequate work for their money. I do not think I am
acting with justice, to take the maintenance of a preacher, while not doing
one-half of his work. Added to this, it is a considerable expense to Mr. B. to
make up taxes and deficiencies You know I am not partial to Liverpool; yet here
there seems to be an open door. Not only the Catholic lady was converted when I
preached there on my way hither, but also a deist. Perhaps by others, more
accustomed to see God's hand in these matters, these would be considered tokens
for good, and particular calls. What can I do? My own mind leads me to give up
at once, because I cannot do the full work; and neither my judgment nor
conscience will allow me to eat bread in this way, which I have not earned.
Indeed, the business is come to a crisis with me. In my present way I shall go
on no longer. I have suffered greatly in my mind last year on this account; and
shall I commence another in the same circumstances? My day of digging is over;
and, as to begging, I never could do it. But I may still earn a little bread;
though, from all appearances, not long. But that I must leave. I feel I am too
much in the bustle of life, and to this there is no congeniality in my nature.
My heart and soul have long said, 'O that I had in the wilderness the lodging
place of a wayfaring man!' But I am brought on the eve of Conference, without
plan, arrangement, or prospect of being put in circumstances where my mind can
be at ease ... My cough and oppression still continue unabated, and I am not
able to take as much sleep as is necessary to support life."
We transcribe these sentences, however reluctantly, to show the honorable
feelings of the writer, and to make them serve to explain some of the
after-movements of his life. But, while we read them, let us bear in mind that
he who was giving way to morbid self-accusations was all the while one of the
most hard working men among all his contemporaries in the Lord's vineyard. Let
us hear him in the next letter:--
"July 5th. -- From six in the morning till four, in the Conference. Before I go
in the morning, writing till within the few minutes it takes to trot to the
chapel. As soon as I come home, up with the pen, and continue every minute till
I go to bed, except the very short time I take to get a little food. I do not
get half sleep. I have preached this morning at seven, at Gravel-walk. Before I
went, hard at work. The congregation was vast, and the place very hot. Spent
myself; but, as soon as I came home, to work again, and continued till half-past
one. Then to Whitefriars', to preach to an immense congregation. Worked two
hours. Home, and, except about half an hour for dinner, at the writing again;
and now it is about eight o'clock P.M., when I sit down to write to you. -- I
received yours with the proof, and have hurried much to correct it. This morning
I received a letter from the Speaker and Mr. Cayley, inquiring when I shall
return, and requesting me to come to the Tower, and see what they are doing
there for me; requesting me also to go to Oxford, and collate a copy of the
Boldon-Book, in the Bodleian library. One day only is allowed me in the Tower
before I go to Oxford. I must go straight to London, and then to Oxon even
before Conference. The above orders are made out to me in the form of respectful
requests. You know I must either go on or stop. I am in a continual fever, and
my breast gets no time to heal; the oppression and cough are grievous. Is there
any such a fool as I am alive? My life is incessant labor and anxiety."
What follows shows a heart fall of sympathy for the trials of his afflicted
brethren:-- "Yesterday poor John Grace, one of our best preachers, was buried.
He had set out for Conference, was taken ill on the road, and died at Mountrath.
The circumstances of this case are distressing and horrible. Before leaving his
Circuit, he had an inflammation in his chest; riding increased it. When he came
to a friend's house at Mountrath, perceiving him to be very ill, they sent for a
doctor named _____. This rascal ordered him to drink cold water, and pronounced
aloud in the family that his disorder was a dangerous, malignant, and
highly-infections fever. The people of the house took the alarm, and requested
that he might be removed. No one would take him in. Poor Henry Deery, his
colleague, ran away into the town, found an empty house, got a bed, &c., into
it; and, just as they were going to hurry the dying messenger of Christ into it,
the whole neighborhood rose, having heard of the vile quack's decision, and
absolutely refused to let him be brought there. The family where he lay were in
the utmost distress, -- the doctor insisting that, to preserve them from the
infection, he must be removed within an hour. Poor Deery was at his wits' end. A
waste shattered building contiguous to the house was pitched on as the only
asylum. Deery went and got bundles of straw, and stopped up the breaches and
crevices in the walls. Poor John Grace was then rolled up in the bed-clothes;
the bed was got into this place, and he was lifted over a wall, to be stretched
on that from which he never more removed ... He called out for some cold water.
It was brought; and, having drunk it, he said, 'I shall soon drink of that over,
the streams of which make glad the city of God.' There was just time enough to
send for his poor wife, who got to the wretched hovel in time to close the eyes
of her husband, the father of her five children. Such was the end of John Grace,
alter having spent twenty-five years in the public ministry of the word. O God,
how unsearchable are Thy ways!"
"July 11th. -- I am never happy from home, and even journeys of pleasure to me
are journeys of pain. Company I do not love, no matter of what description; and
I scarcely can ever find freedom in places where even good cheer, good breeding,
good sense, and religion itself predominate." (A strange man, according to his
own view of himself, just then.) "To many places of this kind I am invited in
this city: great crowds of the best of the people are gathered together to do me
honor. I wonder that such invitations are repeated, as I often sit like a person
speechless, or one in whose mouth there are no reproofs. Those who are strangers
to me must have, in every sense, a mean opinion of me; for, though I hope I in
general conduct myself according to the rules of good breeding, yet I cannot be
polite, -- i. e., pay compliments without rhyme or reason. I cannot be a
pleasing companion to those who may think themselves entitled to this kind of
entertainment; and, as I rarely speak in public company, I consequently neither
please nor instruct by my conversation. In short, I never was made for the
world."
It may have been true enough that the Doctor, in common with many other eminent
scholars, had occasionally these feelings of constraint in society: but that
such feelings were so habitual as to become characteristic, is more than will be
admitted by many persons, yet surviving, who remember and can never forget the
genial glow of his conversation in the social circle.
"July 14th. -- Tomorrow, please God, I sail for England, as I shall finish the
Conference with a forenoon's sitting. Their financial affairs here take up so
much time. The business transacted at the District-Meetings in England is all
done here in open Conference: a fearful waste of time. But for this we should
have done three days ago."
"Chester, July 18th. -- From Bangor-Ferry to St. Asaph, and thence to Holywell
and this city, where we arrived after one. Never have I felt myself so
exhausted. In the last two stages I was nearly (completely done in). *[See
Transcriber Note-1] My whole vital energy seems nearly gone; and I would
sacrifice not a little to be in London, as I have seriously feared whether I
shall not be laid up. I suppose it is the effect of fatigue and anxiety, and
that a day or two of rest will restore me. But where should I get rest? Here I
am among perfect strangers; and the cry is, preach, preach. I have promised to
preach tomorrow morning."
Seventeen days after the last date we find him again leaving London for Oxford,
from which he writes:--
Aug. 5th. -- We reached Oxford between eight and nine. It being the race-week,
we found it difficult to procure a lodging at the Angel, but succeeded at the
Mitre. This morning Mr. Gabriel's friend procured us the lodgings in
Broad-street, where I now write. I have waited on Mr. Gaisford, Regius Professor
of Greek, with the Speaker's letter. He received us very politely, and invited
us to dine in public hall in Christchurch. We have accordingly dined today in
the first college of the first university in the world."
Writing Aug. 8th, he refers to this again: "It was no small gratification to me
to sit on the same seat and eat at the same table where Charles Wesley sat and
ate nearly one hundred years ago. At Christchurch the Speaker was educated. I
believe he wrote strongly to his college to show me every respect and they have
done so.
"After my labor yesterday at the Bodleian, I went to visit several colleges,
and, among the rest, Lincoln, of which Mr. J. Wesley was fellow. One of the
poorest-looking of the colleges; but it has been the parent, under God, of the
greatest work of a spiritual and reforming nature that has appeared upon earth
since the second century. How many millions have been saved since John and
Charles Wesley first gave themselves to God in this place! And yet this city is
like the coiners in our Mint: it has made the gold for others, and is not
thereby enriched. I have been here four days, and have not seen the face of a
Methodist. I am going this evening to look for some, that I may hear some kind
of preaching tomorrow (Sunday) that will do me some good. Nobody that I meet
knows anything of them. In this case, how like is Oxford to Jerusalem and Zion!
The law proceeded from the latter, and the word (doctrine) of the Lord from the
former; but how little did either Zion or Jerusalem retain of either! So this
great work of God, which began in and proceeded from Oxford, has hallowed the
whole nation, and yet Oxford has not profited by it. The lines of Virgil came to
my mind; which Theo. may translate to you:--
'Sic vos non vobis mellificotis apes;
Sic vos non vobis nidificotis aves;
Sic vos non vobis vellera fertis oves;
Sic vos non vobis fertis aratra boves.' *[1]
"As far as Methodism is concerned, they may be applied to the ancient and
learned city and university of Oxford."
Resuming his work in London, in the pulpit, the committee-room, and especially
that of the Bible Society, -- in visiting the sick, and in carrying on an
extensive correspondence, always answering letters as soon as he had received
them, -- the departing year left him swallowed up in a complication of duties
which tasked his strength to the utmost. In grappling with these obligations,
days, weeks, and months were all too short. "You know," says he, writing to a
friend, "that when I am at home I am never an hour disengaged, being as mere a
slave as any on this side the Pillars of Hercules. Every hour has its work, and
such work as requires every minute of the sixty. Judge, then, how much of my
London labor was behind, after an absence of five weeks. I was almost terrified
to return, knowing what a chaos I should find, to reduce to order. I have been
laboring to bring up my lee-way, -- tugging at the oar for life. You may think
that, during my excursion, I must have acquired a measure of additional health,
an d am the better able to ride out the storm. I gained no ground, but lost
some. You shall judge. I traveled by mail two nights and a day to Liverpool; set
off for Stockport, to preach for their schools: collection, £122. I then rode
off for Manchester; preached the same evening for the schools: collection, £154.
Without waiting to eat, took coach for Nut-Grove, near St. Helen's, where I
arrived about two o'clock on Monday morning. In the course of that week I
preached again and again. The next Sabbath morning I had to preach before three
hundred ministers two hours, enough to (thoroughly exhaust) or (prostrate) *[See
Transcriber Note-2] a strong man for a fortnight. The next Sabbath, at
Warrington, for a Sunday-school. Friday, for Worcester, to open a new chapel:
collection £211, 4s. One hour out of the chapel, and I began again, a second
sermon: collection, £100 0s. 9d. Without waiting to eat, set off on my way to
Liverpool. At Penkridge I lay down about three hours and a half, bought a penny
roll, rode again , and traveled eighty miles without stopping to take a morsel
of food but my penny roll. After various excursions and fatigues, which my paper
will not permit me to enumerate, I got back to London with a decrease both of
mental and corporeal energy, to gird myself to new labors no less exhausting or
depressing than those through which I have passed."
At the Conference of 1814, which was held in Bristol, Dr. Clarke was elected for
the second time to the presidential chair, and, against his own inclinations,
was desired to prolong his residence in London. The preceding year had been
distinguished in the annals of Methodism by the formation of the Wesleyan
Missionary Society. In itself essentially a missionary institution, Methodism
has always put forth an evangelizing energy which lives with its life and
extends with its extent, "spreads undivided," and, we may safely add, yet
"operates unspent." The Wesleys themselves labored as missionaries in Georgia;
and, while as yet the system in England had but comparatively "a little
strength," it stretched its arm across the Atlantic, and turned vast regions of
that continent from a moral wilderness into a fruitful field. In 1769 Messrs.
Boardman and Pilmoor went from the Conference, with fifty pounds, to America,
and laid the foundation of what is now the Methodist Episcopal Church, with its
universities, schools, Bible and Missionary Societies, its apostolic bishops,
its thousands of ordained ministers, its thousands more of local preachers and
exhorters, and a body of communicants greatly exceeding a million.
Among the men who took a prominent part in these great movements was one whose
revered name is indissolubly joined with the cause of Christian missions, the
Reverend Dr. Thomas Coke. This great evangelist carried the Gospel to myriads
beyond the western sea, both on the continent and in the islands. The
slave-population of the West Indies heard from his lips the truth which was
destined to set them free the truth which, as to civil liberty, trained them to
receive it, and meanwhile made multitudes of them partakers of the more glorious
liberty of the sons of God. In the prosecution of these blessed embassies the
Doctor crossed the Atlantic ocean eighteen times; and at length, at an advanced
age, fulfilling the last wish of his heart, -- the establishment of a mission to
India and the East, -- he died at sea on the 2d of May, 1815.
The West-India missions had not only been originated, and hitherto
superintended, by Dr. Coke, but, we may say, they had been supported by him;
largely from his own private resources, and more adequately by his unwearied
diligence in collecting for them, literally from door to door. The present
writer well remembers him, as coming again and again to his father's house, book
in hand, to receive the accustomed subscription. He may be also permitted to
record his reminiscence of hearing the Doctor preach his last sermon in England,
on the eve of his embarkation for the East; the text being the prophecy in the
sixty-eighth Psalm: "Ethiopia shall soon stretch out her hands unto God." *[3]
It may be easily conceived that the loss of such a man would be felt as a heavy
blow to the Methodist missions. But He whose ways are not as our ways willed
that this very loss should tend rather to the furtherance of the Gospel. A new
sense of obligation to take this great cause in hand more fully took possession
of the minds both of ministers and people; and the result was the rapid
organization of the Wesleyan Missionary Society, which, rising from small
beginning, has taken a rank among the beneficent institutions of Christianity
scarcely second to any. Its ordained agents, including those who have relation
to the affiliated Conferences, are more than six hundred in number, besides some
nine hundred salaried catechists, interpreters, exhorters, &c., and more than
ten thousand unpaid agents. By its means the Gospel is preached in more than
twenty languages at three thousand six hundred and fifty places in various parts
of Europe, India, China, Southern and Western Africa, the West Indies,
Australia, Canada, and Eastern British America. Within the forty years of its
existence, immense multitudes, who are now with the dead, have heard by it the
tidings of salvation; and myriads have been gathered into the church, who, in
life and death, have given good evidence that they found those tidings true;
while at present 114,528 church-m embers are under the care of the missionaries,
with 94,500 children, who receive instruction in their schools.
Into this new development of Christian zeal Dr. Clarke entered with his whole
soul. Henceforward a new claim on his time and strength, as an advocate of the
missionary cause, was often enough made; but never, if it could be met, was it
slighted or refused. At the first Missionary Meeting held in City-road chapel,
December, 1814, he presided, and delivered an inaugural discourse, which was
afterwards published under the title of "A short Account of the Introduction of
the Gospel into the British Isles; and the Obligation of Britons to make known
its Salvation to every Nation of the Earth." *[4]
The Commentary, too, was now in rapid progress; and, in transmitting one of the
parts to the Speaker of the House of Commons, the author accompanied it with a
letter, an extract from which is here given, on account of the references made
in it to that communion whose interests and honor the Doctor ever delighted to
identify with his own:--
"As the people with whom I am religiously connected are not only very numerous,
but of considerable weight in the land, I have not hesitated to show them that
those sacred oracles from which they derive the principles of their faith and
practice are in perfect consonance with those of the British Constitution, and
the doctrines of the Established Church: not that I doubted their loyalty or
attachment to the State or the Church, but to manifest to them and future
generations the absolute necessity of holding fast that 'form of sound words'
which distinguishes our National Church, and ever connects the fear of God with
honor to the king.
"Sir, it is with the most heartfelt pleasure that I can state to you, that this
immense body of people are, from conscience and affection, attached to the
constitution both in Church and State; and the late decisions in behalf of
religious toleration have powerfully served to rivet that attachment.''
The duties of Dr. Clarke's second presidential year were largely augmented, as
already intimated, by the formation of various Branch Missionary Societies in
different parts of the kingdom; for which, and other religious interests, he
undertook extensive journeys, in the course of which we find him preaching and
holding public meetings in Bristol and Bath, in Exeter, Plymouth, and some parts
of Cornwall; and then, northward, in Birmingham, Liverpool, and other places.
Everywhere crowds hung upon his lips, and the word preached came with the saving
power of grace to the hearts of many, while it stirred up the various churches
thus visited, by thoughts of "whatsoever things are true," and "honest," and
"lovely," and "of good report," to give the greater diligence in making their
own election sure, and promoting the cause of their Saviour in the world. At the
Conference held in Manchester, he gave up the insignia of the office he had so
well sustained into the hands of his successor, the Rev. John Barber, a
venerable servant of Christ, who, as the event proved, was then within a flew
months of the termination of his earthly course.
With Dr. Clarke the time had now happily come when the same Providence which had
dictated his longer residence in London, was about to open to him the doors of a
more tranquil retreat, where he would be enabled, with greater freedom from
interruption, to prosecute those theologic essays he was so anxious to complete
before the arrival of the fast-approaching time when he too should "cease at
once to work and live." "I have made up my mind," says he, "if God will open me
a way, to leave this distracting city, and get out of the way even of a
turnpike-road, that I may get as much out of every passing hour as I can. I
ought to have no work at present but the Commentary; for none can comprehend the
trouble, and often anguish, which the writing of these notes costs me; and what
adds to the perplexity is the multitude of little things to which almost
incessantly my attention is demanded. Matters are come to this, -- if I do not
at once get from many of my avocations, I shall soon be incapable of prosecuting
any. I must hide my head in the country, or it will shortly be hidden in the
grave."
This was a decision which, in regard to various philanthropic institutions in
London, to which he had long given his gratuitous and effective aid, as well as
to the feelings of a multitude who had greatly profited under his ministry,
could only be unwelcome, except for the personal relief it would give to one so
highly honored and esteemed, whose added years, it was well believed, would be
fully consecrated to the same great objects which had commanded the days of the
past.
* * * * * * *
DIVISION 17
BOOK II
(Meridian)
CHAPTER 8
THE STUDENT AND SCHOLAR
Hitherto our narrative has turned mainly on those incidents of life, and traits
of character, which relate to the subject of our memoir as a Christian minister:
but a biography of Adam Clarke would be essentially defective, in which a
respectful homage was not rendered to his memory as a scholar and a man of
letters. Unhappily, the scanty limits of the present work will not allow of
extensive disquisition [treatise] on this topic, were the writer ever so well
able to indulge in it. Necessity prescribes that our pages should teem with
facts rather than fancies, and should treasure up materials which the thoughtful
reader may make the subject of his own considerations. For myself, I enter on
this chapter with a mortifying sense of insufficiency. I am not going to affect
the critic, or to sit in judgment on the intellect and learning of a man the
latchet of whose shoes I should have been unworthy to unloose. On the other
hand, I may be doing a pleasurable service to my readers by collecting and
setting down such notices of his mental development as have been given, here and
there, by Dr. Clarke himself, or by those who knew him intimately.
We are first led back to the village-school in Ireland, where the child, under
the indignant glance of his disappointed and anxious father, tried to learn, but
could not. The circumstances under which this physical inability was overcome
have been already detailed. His intellect seemed to undergo a sudden
regeneration. The ability to learn was given him, as it were, in an instant of
time. In his own words, "it was not acquired by slow degrees; there was no
conquest over inaptitude and dullness by persevering and gradual conflict: the
power seemed generated in a moment, and in a moment there was a transition from
darkness to light, from mental imbecility to intellectual rigor; and no means
nor excitements were brought into operation but those mentioned in the
narrative. *[1] The reproaches of his schoolfellow were the spark which fell on
the gunpowder and inflamed it instantly. The inflammable material was there
before, but the spark was wanting. This would be a proper subject for the
discussion of those who write on the philosophy, of the human mind."
Dr. Clarke always considered this incident as having an important bearing on his
destiny, and often mentioned it as "a singular providence which gave a strong
characteristic coloring to his subsequent life." He says that it may not be
unworthy the consideration of the instructors of youth, but may teach the
masters of the rod and ferula [stick] that those are not the instruments of
instruction, though proper enough for the correction of the obstinate and
indolent; that motives to emulation, and the prevention of disgrace, may be in
some cases more effectual than any punishment inflicted on the flesh. "Let not
the reader imagine from this detail," says he, "that A. C. found no difficulty
afterwards in the acquisition of knowledge. He ever found an initial difficulty
to comprehend anything; and till he could comprehend in some measure the reason
of a thing, he could not acquire the principle itself. In this respect there was
a great difference between him and his brother: the latter apprehended a subject
at first sight, and knew as much of it in a short time as ever he knew after:
the former was slow in apprehension, and proceeded with great caution, till he
was sure of his principles; he then went forward with vigor, in pushing them to
their utmost legitimate consequences."
These two brothers had for some time but an interrupted school-tuition, from the
demand which the garden and fields made upon their labor. "Before and after
school-hours was the only time their father could do anything in his little
farm; the rest of the toil, except in those times when several hands must be
employed to plant and sow and gather in the fruits of the earth, was performed
by his two sons. This cramped their education, but labor omnia vincit improbus:
the two brothers went 'day about' to school, and he who had the advantage of the
day's instruction remembered all he could, and imparted on his return to him who
continued in the farm all the knowledge he had acquired in the day. Thus they
were alternately instructors and scholars, and each taught and learned for the
other. This was making the best of their circumstances; and such a plan is much
more judicious than that which studies to make one son a scholar while the
others are the drudges of the family, whereby jealousies and feuds are often
generated." *[2]
No doubt this alternation of rustic exercise with school-seclusion had a good
effect in strengthening the child's physical constitution, and in contributing
to insure him a healthy mind in a healthy body. Good air and exercise have a
wondrous influence in giving tone to the intellect, as in after-life Adam Clarke
found, when, a wandering itinerant, he read many a book and thought out many a
sermon sub dio, on the high road, or in the wayside field. So in his
school-days, in summer-time, his lessons were often conned [learned by heart] in
the open air. "The school," he tells us, "was situated in the skirt of a wood on
a gently-rising eminence, behind which a hill, thickly covered with bushes of
different kinds and growth, rose to a considerable height. In front of this
there was a great variety of prospect both of hill and dale, where, in their
seasons, all the operations of husbandry might be distinctly seen. The boys who
could be trusted were permitted in the fine weather to go into the wood to study
their lessons." On this pleasant slope, with the auburn and purple moorlands
spread out before him, the sunlit sea in the distance, and the smoke from the
cottage chimneys here and there rising into the quiet sky, the boy would find
that the pages of Virgil had a charm which made the task of construing, a labor
of love. "Quid faciat laetas segetes," &c., would have a commentary on the page
of nature before him, as well as in the words of the annotator in the margin.
What makes a plenteous harvest; when to turn
The fruitful soil, and when to sow the corn;
The care of sheep, of oxen, and of kine;
And how to raise on elms the teeming vine;
The birth and genius of the frugal bee,
I sing, Maecenas, and I sing to thee." *[3]
"In this most advantageous situation," to quote his own words, "Adam read the
Eclogues and Georgics of Virgil, where he had almost every scene described in
those poems, exhibited in real life before his eyes. If ever he enjoyed real
intellectual happiness, it was in that place and in that line of study. These
living scenes were often finer comments on the Roman poet than all the labored
notes and illustrations of the Delphin editors and the Variorum critics."
The glimpses which his school-books gave into the by-gone times of Greek and
Roman history, awoke in his mind a strong desire to become more fully acquainted
with them; and, among other methods which his scanty means allowed him, he
procured "an old copy of Littleton's Dictionary, and made himself master of all
the proper names, so that there was neither person nor place in the classic
world of which he could not give an account. This made him of great
consideration among his schoolfellows, and most of them in all the forms
generally applied to him for information."
His love of reading had already become intense and unconquerable. "To gratify
this passion, he would undergo any privations. The pence that he and his brother
got, they carefully saved for the purchase of some book ... Theirs was but a
little library, but to them right precious." He gives a list of some of the
books; where, with Jack the Giant-killer, we have Guy Earl of Warwick, the Seven
Wise Masters, the Nine Worthies of the World, the Seven Champions, Sir Francis
Drake, Robinson Crusoe, and Montelion, or the Knight of the Oracle; the Gentle
Shepherd, the Peruvian Tales, and the Arabian Nights' Entertainments; with many
others.
In those fanciful days he greatly delighted himself with whatever books he could
get of a romantic kind, written in a metrical form; and, as he grew up, he
became extensively read in the popular ballad-literature both of England and
Ireland. In after-years he used to boast that his library contained some of the
choicest specimens of the old poetic romances. His mind, indeed, may not have
been poetical; and the pleasure which in later days he found in that description
of reading, resulted rather from the insight it gave him into the manners and
feelings of past generations, than from any sympathy with the charms of the poem
itself. In that respect he read only as an antiquarian [one who studies
antiquities]. Thus, referring to the metrical ballads of Sir Walter Scott, he
said, "I scarcely ever give myself the trouble to read the poetry: the notes are
the most valuable part of the book to me, and these I can convert to my own
purposes." Nor is it at all improbable that the first impulse of his mind to
antiquarian studies was communicated by his converse, in childhood, with these
versified traditions of the past.
Nor was he without some skill in those days in stringing rhymes together. A
specimen which has come down to us, composed "one Saturday afternoon, at a time
when he had not learned to write small hand, so that he was obliged to employ
his brother to write down the verses from his lips," shows, if not a precocity
[premature development] of genius, yet an amount of talent which, if cultivated,
would have given him a place, at least, among our second-rate poets. *[4]
Along with his classical lessons at school, in Greek and Latin, he received some
instruction in mathematics and French; in which departments a good foundation
was laid for the progressive attainments of coming life. One circumstance we
should not omit: He tells us he found it much easier to learn after his
conversion to God. "Though he could not well enter into the spirit of Lucian and
Juvenal, which he then read, yet he was surprised to find how easy, in
comparison of former times, learning appeared. The grace which he had received
greatly illumined and improved his understanding, and learning now seemed to him
little more than an exercise of memory. He has often said, 'After I found the
peace of God, I may safely assert that I learned more in one day than I could
formerly in a month. And no wonder; my soul began to rise out of the ruins of
its fall, by the favor of the Eternal Spirit. I found that religion was the gate
to true learning, and that they who went through their studies without it had
double work to do.' "
In English reading, he was engaged at this time with some very good books, which
were sanctified to his improvement both in mind and heart. Such were the works
of Derham and Ray. He read them with Kersey's and Martin's Dictionaries by him
for the explanation of technical words. Baxter's "Saints' Everlasting Rest," and
the Life of the devoted Brainerd, he perused with solemn and prayerful joy.
These two latter books seem to have given him a great impulse toward the
ministry; and this was probably what he meant when, expressing his obligations
to Mrs. Rutherford, who had lent them to him, he said that it was she who had
made him a preacher.
Such was the stage of mental culture he had attained, when entering, under the
circumstances already related, on the life and labors of an itinerant Methodist
preacher. On leaving Ireland for Kingswood, these treasures of the mind were his
only patrimony. Even of books of his own he had scarcely any to take away. "I
brought from home an English Bible, a Greek Testament, Prideaux's Connection,
and Young's Night Thoughts, on the margin of which I had written a number of
notes. It was a favorite with some of my children, and remained in the family
when the others had gone. Young I twice recaptured; once from Anna, and once
from Eliza; but where it now is I cannot tell."
In the first Circuit some few attempts were made to keep up his classical
reading, but with little effect, from the want of suitable books, and the
necessity of preparation for the constant work of preaching, on which he had now
fully entered. In the course of the year, as we have seen, he was induced by the
influence of well meant but barbarous advice to give up scholastic learning
altogether. Yet it may be questioned whether the four years' recess from those
particular studies, which followed his adoption of that advice, was really
detrimental to his mental education, considered as a whole. A man requires
something more than Greek and Latin to be a preacher of the Gospel. A mere
classical scholar, whose mind is not stored with general knowledge, and whose
reasoning faculties are suffered to lie dormant, is but poorly fitted for the
grand labors of the Christian ministry; and Adam Clarke, while he left Homer and
Virgil to their repose, was earnestly engaged in gathering in, and in giving
forth to others, the precious fruits of that knowledge of the word and ways of
God which makes the moral life of man strong, healthy, and beautiful. He began
the study of the Hebrew Bible, read a good deal in French, and made his first
essay in authorship itself, by translating some of the Abbe' Maury's Discourse
on Pulpit Eloquence for the Arminian Magazine. He, moreover, enlarged his
acquaintance with the works of the great English theologians. He read widely and
diligently, morning, noon, and night, not only in his different places of
sojourn, but in walking and riding as well. Thus those years were by no means
lost, but, probably, more substantially improved than they would have been by
the bald word-studies he had been led for that time to abandon. However this be
considered, the time came when he could conscientiously resume them. Mr. Wesley,
to whom in 1786 he had sent the translation from Maury, in kindly acknowledging
it, charged him "to cultivate his mind, as far as his circumstances would allow,
and not to forget anything he had ever learned." "This," says he, "was a word in
season, and, next to the Divine oracles, of the highest authority with Mr. C. He
began to reason with himself thus: ' What would he have me to do? He certainly
means that I should not forget the Latin and Greek which I have learned; but
then he does not know that by a solemn vow I have abjured the study of those
languages for ever. But was such a vow lawful? Is the study of Hebrew and Greek,
the languages in which God has given the Old and New Testaments, sinful? It must
have been laudable in some, else we should have had no translations. Is it
likely that what must have been laudable in those who have translated the sacred
writings, can be sinful in any, especially in ministers of God's holy word? I
have made the vow, it is true; but who required it? What have I gained by it? I
was told it was dangerous, and would fill me with pride, and pride would lead me
to perdition: but who told me so? Could Mr. _____, at whose suggestions I
abandoned all the se studies, be considered as a competent judge? I fear I have
been totally in error, and that my vow may rank with rash ones. Which, then, is
the greater evil, -- to keep it, or to break it? I should beg pardon from God
for having made it: and, if it were sinful to make, it is so to keep it.' So he
kneeled down, and begged God to forgive the rash vow, and to undo any obligation
which might remain. He arose satisfied that he had done wrong in making it, and
that it was his duty now to cultivate his mind in every way, to be a workman
needing not to be ashamed, rightly dividing the word of truth."
In resuming the classics, he found he had so far forgotten the grammatical
forms, as to be obliged to begin almost de novo. But he now took care to lay the
foundations strongly in acquiring the Greek and Latin accidences; and, going to
work in good earnest, soon regained what had been lost, and thenceforth made
steady advancements.
From the time of his appointment to Bristol, after his return from the Channel
Islands, he was unusually successful in gathering together in his library the
best editions of the classical authors, and spread out his reading in all
directions, till in the lapse of years, spent in persevering study, he had
become familiar with the great authors of antiquity, from Homer and Herodotus
down to the Neo-Platonists of Alexandria and the Byzantine annalists. In
communion with these great minds he lived through the ages of the past: he saw,
in the drama of the Iliad, Troy sink in flame and thunder; he wandered with
Ulysses in his homeward way, and voyaged with the Argonauts through the gorgeous
scenes portrayed by Apollonius. He sat with Theocritus among the wild thyme of
the Sicilian hills; with Hannibal he gazed on Italy from the Alpine rocks; and
stood with Scipio amid the ruins of Carthage. He heard Demosthenes on the Pnyx,
Cicero at the bar, and Plato in the academic grove. And these sights and voices
of times for ever gone did not yield him pleasure only, they brought him profit:
he read with a purpose, and made every acquisition subservient to the great
design of his life, the elucidation of the Bible, and the advancement of
religious truth among mankind. He had ascertained that all knowledge helped to
promote this end; and wherever it was to be obtained, there was he. Ubi mel ibi
apis; and, like the bee, he gathered honey from every flower. This profiting
appears to all who are acquainted with his works, and especially in the
Commentary; in reading which, we see how affluent was the author's erudition
[great learning], and with what advantage he employs it in illustrating the
sacred text, seeking to bring every imagination and thought of even heathen
minds into subservience to the cause of Christ, and to make the heroes,
historians, poets, and philosophers of the pagan world, so many Nethinim, to do
such employment as they could in the courts of the one true God.
So, too, there are those yet living who remember with an unfading pleasure how
richly the conversation of Doctor Clarke was pervaded with choice and useful
allusions derived from classic literature; while, occasionally, an hour spent in
listening to him yielded as much profit as a day's reading.
But, respectable as were his attainments in what is strictly classic erudition,
Dr. Clarke stands out more prominently among the scholars of his time as a
master of Oriental learning. In this respect his celebrity is, perhaps, not
owing so much to a thorough and practical acquaintance with the languages of the
East, as to the circumstance that the cultivation of them has met with but
little patronage in our country, and has called forth the resolute energy
requisite to excel in them from comparatively few of the scholars of England. It
is true that life is short, and that knowledge is a boundless deep; that, where
the whole of a man's years are devoted to study, he cannot learn everything; and
that, in general, a serious application to the classics or mathematics, combined
with professional duties, will not allow men to meddle with Hebrew or Persian.
But what is a just matter of complaint is, that when men have been led to
encounter such tasks, and have so far succeeded as to be able to promote this
description of learning through the medium of the press, they have been almost
uniformly called to suffer for it: so that what Solomon the king wrote, that "he
who increaseth knowledge increaseth sorrow," has been fulfilled in them. The
greatest work in Oriental literature we English possess, next to the London
Polyglot Bible, (itself elaborated with much anxiety, as well as toil,) is the
Heptaglot Lexicon of Edmund Castel; *[5] in the completion of which the author,
instead of winning a fortune, spent one, and brought himself to the threshold of
a jail. We have seen that to the laudable overtures of Dr. Clarke and the Rev.
Josiah Pratt for a new edition of the Polyglot, no response worth naming was
given: a conclusion almost as impotent as what followed when another learned
person published a Prospectus for a new edition of Meninski's Thesaurus, and
received in return the name of one subscriber, and that one, not an Englishman,
but a Pole!
It may not excite great surprise that the dead languages of the Orient are so
scantily cultivated in our schools of learning; but it is a marvel in the eyes
of our Continental neighbors, that England, with such extensive relations to the
East, should be so indifferent to the knowledge of the living tongues of the
people whom Providence has brought under her protection, or subjected to her
rule. One would think our Indian and Asiatic interests would cause the study of
Sanskrit, Hindustanee, Arabic, Armenian, and Persian, to become almost as
popular as German or French. France, which has no such interests to operate as a
motive to the patronage of such studies, has for many years sustained the means
of a gratuitous prosecution of them by all who desire such advantages. At Paris,
where I have for months together enjoyed the privilege of lessons, without money
or price, there are Professors' chairs for the current languages of the East,
free of access to all. Great patronage is also given in Germany, and even in
Denmark, to the same pursuits. From the imperial press at Vienna editions of the
most important works in Oriental learning are continually issuing; while the
Russian government makes such studies imperative on large classes of its
subjects. Every country which has commercial or diplomatic relations with
Russia, has its linguistic representatives in the schools of St. Petersburg, --
Novo Tcherskask, Storopol, and Kazan, -- where the languages of Circassia,
Tartary, Turkey, Persia, Arabia, India, and China, form a regular part of the
education of young men, according to the department of public service to which
they are destined. *[6]
In England some progress has been made of late years, but not enough; far from
enough to answer to the scale of our advantages or our duties. In addition to
what has been done in the establishment at Haileybury, greater effectiveness
should be given to the study of the Oriental languages in our Universities, by
more stringent requirements and more generous rewards; and in the metropolis
there should be, as in Paris, free schools, -- or, if we cannot afford to go so
far, then schools at an easy rate of payment for the encouragement of hundreds
of young men who would gratefully avail themselves of such a privilege.
To return to Dr. Clarke:-- The first bias of his mind toward this kind of
learning seems to have been given at a very early time of life. He tells us that
the reading of the "Arabian Nights' Entertainments" gave him that decided taste
for Oriental history which proved so useful to him in his biblical studies. He
wished to acquaint himself more particularly with races of people whose customs
and manners, both religious and civil, were so strange and curious; and he never
lost sight of this till Divine Providence opened his way, and put the means in
his power to gain some acquaintance with the principal languages of the East.
Under the circumstances already related, he began Hebrew at Trowbridge. He
entered heartily upon it, and soon made himself master of as much as could be
gathered from Bayley's Grammar. The excellence of this work consists in a
variety of copious extracts from the Bible, with a translation and analysis;
but, as a grammar, it fails to give a perspicuous exhibition of the forms of the
language, and is now become obsolete. It is, however, a kind of amiable book;
and a copy is worth having. Dr. Bayley, the author, after leaving Kingswood,
obtained some church-preferment in Manchester. Mr. Wesley in his Journal
mentions being once his guest in that city, and expresses the pleasure with
which he heard Miss Bayley read a Hebrew psalm at the time of family prayer.
The next book Mr. Clarke appears to have got at Plymouth was, Leigh's Critica
Sacra, where he found the literal sense of every Greek and Hebrew word in the
Old and New Testament, and the definitions enriched with theological and
philological notes drawn from the best grammarians and critics. Just lately Dr.
Kennicott had then published his edition of the Hebrew Bible. His sister, who
resided at Plymouth-Dock, lent Mr. Clarke a copy; the careful reading of which
gave him his first practical knowledge of Biblical criticism.
He first saw the Polyglot Bible in the public library at St. Helier's, Jersey.
When first settled in the islands, he had set to work on Grabe's Septuagint,
with the desire to see how far it agreed with or differed from the Hebrew text,
with which he had now become pretty familiar. He found that the Septuagint threw
much light on the Hebrew; the translators, who had advantages we do not possess,
having perpetuated the meaning of a multitude of Hebrew words, which would
otherwise have passed away. He read on in the Septuagitat to the end of the
Psalms; noting down the most important differences in the margin of a quarto
Bible in three volumes, which was afterwards unfortunately lost. At this time
his own stock of books was very small; and, having no living teacher, he had to
contend with difficulties at every stage. But, when it was his turn to serve in
Jersey, he made all the use he could of the public library which had been
established in St. Helier's by the Rev. Mr. Falle, one of the ministers of the
island, and its historian. Here, as before said, he had the use of Walton's
Polyglot. In reading the Prolegomena to the first volume, he perceived the
importance of the Oriental versions there described, and began to feel an
intense desire to read them. His first attempt was with the Samaritan text of
the Pentateuch. This was easy work, as the words are all Hebrew, only expressed
in the andent Samaritan character, which he very soon learned. This Samaritan
text must be distinguished from the Samaritan Version of the Pentateuch, which
is a different work. The text is an invaluable relict. It gives, occasionally,
accounts of transactions mentioned by Moses which are more full than those of
the Hebrew text; it expresses the words, also, more fully; gives the essential
vowels which are supplied in the Hebrew text by the Masoretic points; and
contains as well some important variations in the chronology. The Samaritan
version is a Targum, or paraphrase on the text, in a mongrel dialect, which,
with an Aramaic basis, comprises a multitude of words, Cuthite, Arabic, and
Hebrew.
"Having met with a copy of Walton's Introductio ad Linguas Orientales, he next
applied himself to the study of the Syriac." From that little manual, however,
he would get no further instruction in Syriac than what relates to the orthoepy
[the scientific study of the correct pronunciation of words] of the language;
and that not delivered in the plainest manner. He was, therefore, thankful for
the additional help afforded him in the Scholia Syriaca of Leusden. By the time
he had mastered this, he was able to consult any text in the Syriac version; so
that the Polyglot became more and more available to him. "All the time he could
spare from the duties of his office, he spent in the public library, reading and
collating the texts in the Polyglot, especially the Hebrew, Samaritan, Chaldee,
Syriac, Vulgate, and Septuagint. The Arabic, Persian, and Ethiopic he did not
yet attempt, despairing to make any improvement in them without a preceptor."
When obliged to leave the library, he cast a lingering look at the Polyglot, and
sighed for one he could call his own. Providence gratified his desire, and in a
way which he will best relate for himself:-- "Knowing that he could not always
enjoy the benefit of the public library, he began earnestly to wish to have a
copy of his own; but three pounds per quarter, and his food, (which was the
whole of his income as a preacher,) could ill supply any sum for the purchase of
books ... Yet he believed that God in the course of His providence would furnish
him with this precious gift. He had a strong confidence that by some means or
other he should get a Polyglot. One morning a preacher's wife who lodged in the
same family said, 'Mr. Clarke, I had a strange dream last night.' ' What was it,
Mrs. D.? ' *[7] said he. ' Why, I dreamed that some person had made you a
present of a Polyglot Bible.' He answered, Then I shall get one soon, I have no
doubt.' In the course of a day or two he received a letter containing a
bank-note of £10 from a person