Slessor, Mary
Letter no. 60 12th April 1909

 
Miss Slessor has not been well but is feeling much better.   She tells of the 
excellent progress being made by one of her young workers, Miss Peacock.   
Work still goes ahead on the road, but parts have been rutted by overloaded 
motor transport.   She has been called to a conference with representatives of 
other Missions regarding division of lands in which to work & unfortunately this 
co-incides with a special discussion being held in the local Court House with the 
DC and ADC which she will not be attending.   The girls have started on the 
basket making project, having received some instructionat the prison.   She 
hopes Mr. Partridge will benefit from a change of scenery and agrees that 
European dress in Africa is inappropriate.   She ends with a plea to know how he 
is.


                                                Use Ikot Oku
                                                     12.4.09

My dear old friend,

                          Wasnt I glad to get your letter?   My scrap to you wd. cross it, & 
we are quits.   I have been so very feeble & frail, that last week I had almost 
made up my mind to take a sea trip & if it was not of sufficient good to 
encourage me to hoping to be better, I was just to go straight home.   But I have 
rallied again a little & today the weakness & the pains in my limbs are ever & 
ever so much better.   I only feel that I have broken faith with Ikpe Ikot Nkon, & 
Nkara in not having gone to them.   I expect a lady here in Autumn.   that seems 
so far off -!   When she comes I cd. go to them.

Miss Peacock is still here, & is growing a fine woman.   The old stiffness is 
greatly gone, & she is most successful in her work both in the schools & in the 
villages.   She is as kind to me as if she were my own born sister, & her sane 
ways of looking at things & of doing things, now she has got the right clue, are a 
great strength to me.   She has a very much finer girl in Miss McMinn than she 
had in Miss Reid, - who was married last week - & so the profit is mine as well.   
I have not any news.   The "Motor" has been taking too heavy loads, & the rains 
have made some ugly ruts here & there on the Rd in the low-lying places, but 
hosts of prisoners from Ikot Okpene & Itu are working on the various places 
when gravel & stone is found & are mending.   Quite a host are at Ikot Obon 
Court buildings & Rest House & as they were making baskets for the sand 
carriers, I took up the girls & we had a couple of days lessons in basket making -
--   Do you remember the desire for it when you were here? -   so they are all 
busy with their first lot today & are doing not so bad, myself among them.   I 
went up & held a service among them Yest - with the wardens permission, & it 
was very encouraging.   I think our presence has not broken the discipline but 
rather broken the monotony & the sulkiness of the gatherings.

Dan pushes my Cycle up the hills as I have not been able to pedal a step - but I 
can always be sure of being better of the outing, & I just run down all the way.   
I'm quite sure I could pedal all the levels today, I feel so well.

I go to Calabar tomorrow to attend a conference ordered from Home by the two 
small societies (English) & our own Scotch Missions, in regard to locations & 
division of lands in which to work.   Oron has some small society who find they 
want outlet, & they have sent a man to Ikot Okpene, which lies right in our 
objective, & then too lies across the boundary the Ino Iboe Mission - largely 
supported by our Church - & we! had made a score of years ago.   Ino Iboe, 
wants to meet Nyo, i.e. Ikorofion stations, on one side & us on your side, but 
there is so much room for all, we want to help each other regarding transport & 
etc, & I have been commanded to attend.   And as ill luck has it, Here has come 
a letter from the newly appointed A.D.C. {Note 1] Mr Dickson at Itu to say He, 
& the D.C. [Note 2] Ikot Okpene, Capn Warrey, are to meet me at Court on 
Thursday to "revise" some former decisions some appeals, & neither of them 
(Two) have a grain of either interest or importance, so I shall have to seem very 
inhospitable & careless.   However it will give them greater freedom in revising 
a judgement of mine.

I do not yet know my place or the meaning of the "supervision" of the Ikot Obon 
court, & I shall lose the opportunity of asking, but both gentlemen are most 
punctilious & gentlemanly in their conduct to me, & in all their correspondence.   
Halliday is installed as Interpreter at Itu, & Dibue at I' Okpene.   The latters 
vocabulary is very circumscribed.

I have no visitors, tho' the I' Okpene Dr. is now installed at Itu - & comes in as 
he passes now & again, but there is not any one here we care to make friends 
with at present.   Mr Underhill is back at "Russells".   I dont know if the very 
fine man who came to releive him has gone.   Dr Robertson comes & goes & is 
the same as of old.   My men never cease to ask about you, & to say "When you 
write send comps.

I think I feel glad that you are away to a station.   I quite agree with you as to the 
absurdity of the metropolitan styles.   Give me Home, or Africa, not a caricature 
of one under the disabilities of the other.   I hope you will like the freedom & the 
movement & the living interest in men & things, even if only native men & 
things, & your brain will be clearer for some literary work, which I hope you are 
still keeping up.

Is Mr Maxwell near you?   If so, remember me to him, & do send me a line now 
& then to say how you do.   You dont say whether your health is good or bad, or 
indifferent.   Cd. you not ignore my weakness for airing my aches, & dont be 
afraid that hearing of yours will confirm in me the evil habit.   It wont, & I shd 
like to know that you keep fairly well.

Now this is just a *wee* *wee* - that [scotive?] - bit of scribble to let you know 
you are not forgotten.   God bless & keep you,
accept warmest regards
                          from yours affectionately,
                                  Mary M Slessor

I hope you will be able to decipher it. Im not very Fit.
*Ta ta*



EDITORIAL NOTES:     

1]   ADC = Aide-de-camp
                                  
2]   DC = District Commissioner

TRANSCRIPTION BY:   Leslie A. Robertson,  1997

DATA ENTERED BY:   Ruth E. Riding,  1997



Slessor, Mary
Letter no. 61 8th May 1909

 
Miss Slessor is worried not to have had news from Mr Partridge, and begs for "a 
wee wordie".  A visit is expected from the Governor and much work is being 
carried out on the Road and Telegraph in readiness for this.  However his timing 
is unfortunate as the people wish to concentrate on bringing in their harvest, 
which this year is a good one.  She gives news of the latest wrongdoings and of 
the Courts, including Udo Antia.  Itu now has a District Commissioner and Court 
of its own.   She reports on a visit to a new type of house made of bamboo.


                                            Use Ikot Oku
                                                8. 5. '9.

Very dear & valued friend,

                                     What is the matter?   Did you not get my note which 
crossed yours? or are you ill again?   I have been both busy & unwell, & have 
allowed the mails to slip past, till I'm getting to think something is wrong.   
Please send if only one side of a sheet of paper, just to say, "Well" & "How Do?"   
It will keep the feeling of uncertainty away.

I have not any news tho' Im sending this.   I hear the governor is coming soon; & 
so they are making great to do about getting the Rd. right, & the Telegraph lines 
cleared.   Thats the only news I have.   It is produce & Farm time, & this is a 
splendid produce season - so the people will not take it with good nature I fear.   
As it is so untimely.   The new D.C. [Note 1] Court is a fact now at Itu, & Mr 
Dickson is kept busy, while we are the usual 100 - or so cases behind & are 
sitting twice a week.   If they sent 20 D.C.s they would still have crowded 
offices.   I need hardly say that many at Itu are little asides from Ikot Obon.   
They dont get any encouragement however, for Mr D. is most loyal to us.   We 
have a recrudescence of the old thing I came here to stop.   Attempts to claim 
people & land etc. by Calabar & the Coco House.   The latter have a claim for a 
whole house 8 persons, & lands & whole possession of an Itu House refuted by a 
book produced as Cocos own, of having sold himself by Mbian oath [Note 2] to 
Coco.

Another is a boy claimed by Eyo House, who is also claimed by Udo Antia.   
Neither of the Efiks have a shadow of right on their side, but it is Mr D.s palaver, 
not mine.   Udo Antia, has learned at last I think his proper place, & comes now 
in sackcloth & ashes, no more shoes & socks.   His boys have all been in revolt, 
since the raid, & his wives, are *all* scattered after having been spoiled by the 
boys, 4 of the lads got 6 months H.L. [Note 3] a fortnight ago, & after giving 
Udo a punishment for his brutality to a wife with 4 fine children she has brought 
up for him, she was given up to him, & he has duk donam [Note 4] to take 
medical treatment for the witch & Ibok of his people.   He tried to bluff, till he 
found it was no good, so he has at last sat down after many of his old sins have 
chased him into Court.   Ofon Ikot was here & asking about you last week, with 
Compts [Note 5] from his old Mother.   He wondered if they might see Esien.  
I'm to ask if his mother may, when Im in Calabar 3 weeks hence, D.V. [Note 6]   
Ninety [90] prisoners are on the Rd here, from Ikot Okpene.   The motor carries 
gravel & red sand, & the natives are taking out all the stones they can, *&* 
*they* *are* *getting* *such* heaps all along the route - & the prisoners are 
laying a layer of large stones, then the gravel, so they are making a fair bottom I 
think, but the Motor tyres still make a small rut if there is a shower.   The 4 mile 
camp have got a new house built up there, & on a new plan.   All the partitions 
are bamboo, like a Huge Organ, all pipes.   It is very cool.   2 men are in it, & 
they asked the 2 ladies from I'Obon & myself to afternoon tea to see the house, 
so we went & spent a quiet nice hour with them.   One is a Mr Rising.   I dont 
know the others name, but he used to be at Itu.   Whether in Rds Depot.     
Mfiokke, the old trick of catching produce on the rd. has been revived at 
Okopedi.   Mr Underhill is on the watch & we have had several prosecutions, but 
they are all given by Mr Dickson as yet.   I have not any news as I said, so I shall 
just let this scrap go to shew that you are still cared for & thought of in this old 
place, which is very new in its personel & ways.   Write a wee, *wee* wordie, & 
take care of yourself, & may God have you in His special & Holy Keeping.   I 
am your sincere old friend
                                          Mary M Slessor

Miss Peacock wd send a message if she knew I was writing   MMS
I'm awfully well now.

EDITORIAL NOTES:    

1]   DC = District Commissioner

2]   Mbian oath.   A solemn oath involving the use of mbiam, a "liquid substance 
which is tasted, & sometimes put on various parts of the body". "It is supposed 
to cause dropsy, & so destroy any individual swearing falsely",  from 
"Dictionary of Efik" by Rev. Hugh Goldie.

3]   H.L. = Hard Labour

4]   Duk donam.  Meaning unclear, perhaps Latin?

5]   Compts. = Compliments 

6]   D V = God willing [Deo Volente]

TRANSCRIPTION BY:   Leslie A Mackenzie,  1997

DATA ENTERED BY:   Ruth Riding,  1997



Slessor, Mary
Letter no. 62 7th July 1909

 
Here she explains why it took so long for a Telegram from Mr Partidge to reach 
her and she describes an agonising illsness, blood poisoning, which produced 
hundreds of painful boils all over her head rendering her partly bald.   As a 
result, she has been unable to attend the court for almost 5 weeks on end.   There 
is more news of the Coco House claim against Itu, and of the local ude of 
lawyers to argue Court decisions.   Mr. Partridge is about to go on leave again, 
and she hopes the weather keeps fair for him.   Towards the close of her letter 
she tells him of her conviction that, without Christian teaching, the white man 
will never hold what he has in Africa, citing the Indian Mutiny as an example of 
what happens when this is ignored.



                                         Use Ikot Oku
                                                 7. 7. '9

Very Dear Old Friend,

                             I only got your Telegram last week.   I went to the 
"Commission" & went very ill, with at least 100 boils over my head!   But that 
was not nearly enough!   I lay down, or *stretched* *accross*, is nearer the thing 
- Mrs Wilkies bed, & for a whole month I was in one prolonged agony of pain.   
Then the boils came in shoals, over my face, till you wd. not have recognized 
me, all over my neck & ears, & whenever I got rested long enough from one 
operation of having the cores pressed out, another began & I cried like a child.   
When I was not shrieking all the long weeks, no sleeping draught cd keep out the 
pain, & I am a very shakey bundle of nerves down to this hour.   I could not see 
to read, if I had been able, for my very eyelids were full, so my letters & all lay 
unopened.   The Telegram was not delivered till I was gone from Ikot Obon & it 
was sent up to Court - from there to Miss Peacock, who opened it to see if it 
needed an immediate answer or what, & she sent it back to the office, where it 
seems to have lain ------   When will they put a white officer on at Itu Post 
Office???   I have often written to & joked with you in my own mind tho' about 
the "Pretty Hair" & the halo.   Poor hair!!   Poor head!!   It is as bald as a 
sixpence now all over the back, & I wear a H.K.F [Note 1] knotted at the four 
corners! as we did in school days.   How long this will continue I know not - for 
the few hairs left on the front are like those of a dolls head put on with bad glue.   
Every time I put in the brush, it comes off in heaps.   I dont think it can last 
many days more, & it is so very painful still to brush my hair that I dread the 
process.   The Dr never saw anything like it, & said it was blood poisoning, 
which I beleive is right, as one day 3 weeks or so before it came on, while 
teaching a fly got on my head, & a girl said "sit still Ma" & clapped the thing 
which was so full of blood that it splashed all over us, & the cloth I was sewing 
was soiled.   Next day it itched, & I scraped it with my comb - I have worn 
combs since I was at home of course ----- & I scraped it so very fiercely every 
day after that, when the itch came back, till 3 small boils came, which was the 
awful beginning.   So nervous am I, that Yest was the first day I dared ride over 
the tracks of the motor in the mud.   I have had to come off, but yest. I came on 
very well, which gives me hope that I am on the road to betterness.   I was absent 
from Court 4 or 5 weeks, 10 Court days.    But as I told you, they superseeded 
me by putting an A.D.C. [Note 2] at Itu, who is President of Ikot Obon Court, so 
he often goes ill & it is not of much matter.   He is a **very** **very** nice 
fellow though, & never does a thing without me.   He is just as a "Chum", so it 
has been easy, & he does not bring Halliday to interpret, but we do the thing 
together, & it is very helpful, but poor fellow, It is a hard seat.   The Lawyers , 
have their tools all up this creek, & Eniyon & Aro Chuku never get a summons 
but they go to a Lawyer, & get a bigger summons or they take the Courts 
finding, & appeal to a Lawyer so that our Findings have no finality or even 
meaning.   At this rate the Court will soon be a sham & a joke.

I think I told you the Coco House [Note 3] brought a claim for a whole house 
with all their lands & etc against Itu.   They did not think it wd. be brought up 
here, & when he made his first statement, & was so severely questioned, as to 
the secrecy of the transaction with Coco, not a Cheif from Itu;  etc, & was told 
that a Jury wd. be brought from Eniyon & Ibibio who were entirely neutral, & 
who wd be larger & perhaps more unbiased than we wd. be alone.  He 
transferred his case to a Lawyer, or says so, & so on, so on & so on!   Had he 
wanted to go to the Judge, or to Calabar, why wait 5 years, for it is that time 
since the man died, & the man told me in his life time that they wanted his coco 
farm, but never said they wanted himself.   The proof is an entry in a book, 
purporting to be in Cocos handwriting, without a witness.   It is the boy at the 
Okopedi beach, "Inna" with whom you kpe-d [Note 4] the ground for Russels 
that he wants.

Did you know the Signor Comr [Note 3] men?   They were very kind to me.   I 
was far from well, & they were most courteous.   I do wish I had known, to have 
asked about you, for you seem so far off some how, & the idea of your going 
home seems to put you farther off still.   But it will be good for you to get a 
voyage & a sight of the Homeland, & you will have the lovely autumn weather 
which is even better & bonnier than summer.   I hope it will be a good time for 
you & yours.   Our folks at home are all telling me I must not on any account 
stay more than 2 years, but that is nonsense.   I have never got to redeem my 
promise to Ikpe Ikot Nkon yet.   A lady - a Miss Turner comes out to me in 
August, so I am hoping to leave her here a week at a time, or more if the two 
ladies at Ikot Obon will share their nights with her, & so get some more of this 
doubtful mission work spread.   I know this more & more from all I see, & hear, 
that without the Gospel, the White Man will never *keep* or *rule* what he is 
trying to snatch.   The very men you are educating with gun & motor & 
Telegraph will turn you all out & keep Africa for the Africans.   Only Xtianity 
[Note 4] will give them a motive for loyalty, & good living, & obedience to law.   
The Indian Mutiny & Sierra Leone can be redone on other conditions.   This is 
not pessimism.  I *Know* the Gospel wd hold them, & *all* Xtians are not of 
the evil order.   We have loads & loads of good Xtian people, who are the 
producers & real citizens of Calabar & neighbouring districts, but they dont 
appear at the Courts.   Now hit back hard, but dont hit my head!   It is pitted all 
over, & *soft* - **soft** ***soft***, which you will take for the reason of the 
foregoing.   All right!!   Im not near!!   I had a plea for a reading of your "Cross 
River Natives", last week from Itu trading houses.   I dont know the houses or 
the agents, but he hoped "He was not too cheeky,"  as he was very anxious to 
have a reading of it.   Capn Werrey has got an A.D.C. as well as the one at Itu so 
they are beginning to learn what your old district means.   Our good Mr 
Hargrove has gone to Nyo.   Im  so sorry.   He is just a man after your type & 
your heart, & when I say that, Ive said all I can say.   But this must go as it is 
without any news, as I have none, but it goes with a very warm heartful of love 
& good wishes.   Do let me have a line & let me know your whereabouts, & may 
God bless you & keep you, & give you every good, I am Yours affcetly M M 
Slessor

not a boil came below my neck.
Thats the *first* Telegram Ive had in Africa
MMS



EDITORIAL NOTES:     

1]   H.K.F. = Handkerchief

2]   A.D.C. = Aide-de-camp  

3]   Comr = Commissioner

4]   Xtianity = Christianity

TRANSCRIBED BY:   Leslie A Mackenzie,  1997

DATA ENTERED BY:   Ruth Riding,  1997















Slessor, Mary
Letter no. 63 15th October 1909

 
Mary has been very busy and had to leave several letters unanswered.  However 
she now gives a report of a marriage in her household, but also sad news of the 
deaths of old Ekpo Nive, Captain Werrey and Mr Wessels.   Also problems with 
certain unprincipled Calabar people.   The cloak that he had given her is about to 
be pressed into service again for a friend, but the precious Bike has suffered 
harm and she is waiting for it to be returned mended.  Comments on modern 
exploration and travel.

[Envelope addressed to:]
Chas Partridge Junr. Esq.
    Stowmarket,
         Suffolk,
            England

Re-addressed to [Baelore?] Herefordshire

Postmarks show it was sent from Stowmarket by the 9.30 post on 10th 
November 1909, and received in Hereford the same day.

                                                               Use Ikot Oku
                                                                    15th Oct. 1909

My Dear Old Boss,

                       Your very welcome letters came all right, & tho all are 
unanswered by pen they have been answered often in my own mind.  The photo 
too, is just simply splendid.   It is perfectly life like & everyone thinks you look 
well.   I do hope you have got some strength after your illness, & that the bracing 
weather of the Autumn will clear off West Africa from your system entirely, 
body & brain.  

I have had a good deal of fever, but not too severe, & I can keep on my work - 
but with nothing to spare.   We have been to Creek Town for Presby. [Note 1] 
for one week & I have had visitors, & have also had a marriage in the house.   
Mary has been married to the motor driver here, & there has been a very quiet 
wedding, but it made a deal of work too, to get her off nicely & to clear up after 
it.   She did a deal of the heavy work of the house too before she went.   
Wedding & building & so we were kept at it.

He is a steady lad, & his mother has written from Lagos, & his brother who 
holds evidently a good post, so I am pleased, & it is her own choice tho' 2 other 
men, one Ibibio & one Okoyong man were waiting for her consent.   Dont be 
sarcastic now over this!   Annie was there with her husband and baby, & they 
seem to do well & have a decent home; so tho' I'm short handed - for the babies 
come all the time - Im glad to see them settled.   Poor old Ekpo Nive died this 
last week.   He was blind & very stupid, so it was a happy release for him.   
There was no drinking or rowdyism at all, only the mourning women, & the 
Egbo [Note 2] drum during the first night were heard.   All the males of his 
house are church folks, & his wife is a candidate for baptism, & the funeral was 
quiet & orderly, & very decent in regard to the appointments of the grave & the 
body.   Next day most people from the village were at the fishing, & the school 
has not been interfered with at all.   What a change from say 2 years ago!   Now, 
again! dont be sarcastic!!   I'm not to say one word in answer to all you say about 
Ikpe, & the poor bit of work I do, & the Gospel I preach & the - Big D. - you 
speak of, and I am not to pose as a Martyr for "*I* *love* My Master & I will 
not go out from Him".   & I do beleive that I am doing Ikpe & Use good, by 
giving them that which takes away the hunger of the Spirit, & gives them a 
definite "tangible" Helper & hope & life.  So there!!!   As long as I can nurse a 
motherless bairn, or help to keep peace in a home or town;  or be a mother to my 
own bairns, I'm to stick to my post, & you wd. be the first to cry shame if I 
turned tail for a bit of fever, or even a bald head.   My hair is growing in nicely, 
& I hope it will be quite covering the scalp before you come out to see me.

Now I've not good news this week from Ikot Okpene.  Poor Capn. Werry is 
dead.   Died very suddenly.  Went into the new bungalow on the Saturday, & 
was in his usual, only had lumbago & sciatica, but wd. not go home as he had 
only a month to do.   He took a fit of coughing next morning, & Dr Foran went 
over with a temperature of 105: to him, stopped the cough, which came back 
during the day, & in the evening he was dead from swelling in the Throat.  Foran 
too has gone down, was carried past last Sunday in a hammock very ill.   Now 
all this week Mr Wessels has been lying with Blackwater [Note 3], the Dr from 
[Bomy?] has been there, & I asked for a Hammock to go & stay but Mr & Mrs 
Moffat from Calabar were staying with Miss Peacock & they went over & are 
not back yet.   I expect a Dr will have come to help last night with the mail boat.   
So you see we have had an anxious week, but I am hoping that as he has kept on 
so long, he will get over it.  Mr Dickson, the ADC [Note 4] at Itu too has had 
boils for a long time & needs his releif badly, tho' I am sorry to lose him as he is 
a perfect gentleman, & so easy to work with.   I shall feel releived if he can go 
tomorrow.

Those Calabars!  The Coco house & others, & the Lawyers & Eniyon worry his 
life out.   The former came back again like bees when he came, seeking to take 
whole houses from him, but when they saw that he only heard these Cases at 
Ikot Obon, they have all, without exception, backed out & fled.   The Lawyers 
are bleeding Eniyon to the tune of from £40  " " for small things, to £350 all paid 
down for those fellows Ekanden Nmo Akpan, & Ishi, & all those you & Mr 
Mansfield settled.   The best is, the Lawyers never appear.   The Assizes are on 
now at Aro, & all the cases from this Court for malcontents are in this fix.   After 
lying for months, Halliday still works for Mr Dickson, Clerk & Interpreter.   Mr 
Underhill for Russell & all the usual people, Jury Men included, & all keep you 
in their Kindest membrances.   You are preEminently, their father now.   I must 
stop, as I have a lot of Church folks to write to.  I have only one copy of my 
Photo taken at home.   If I could make it up I should post it for you.   I shall get 
some one to do it soon, tho' Im sure you don't want to have an old fad of a 
woman like me in your Album.   I'm just to close this & get out my fur Cloak to 
give to Miss Amess to go home with.   It went with Miss McKinney & has come 
back without a spot, or a moth bite, so Mina shall get it, & it will bring out some 
other one before I require it, so you see it is in harness.  My Bike was left at 
Russell's & they put it against the Iron, & blistered & tore all my tyres, & it is in 
Calabar to see if ladies size can be got there.   I'm so anxious for Monday to see 
if it comes, for it is as the loss of my right hand, & the Court road is long without 
it.

Thank you so much for Shackleton!   Isnt it a wonderful time, South & North 
poles, & the air so far conquered!  surely you will not be so foolish as to try the 
dirigibles or the aeroplanes.   Better cross the Chanell by boat, or even by Tube!  
Eh?

Dear boy, good bye.   I cd yarn all day if duties manifold did not call me.  If you 
dont get books, beleive me to be ever the same, & to have you in remembrance 
before my Fathers throne.   May your stay at home be happy & health-full & if I 
may, may I wish for you a help mate or, meet, or both to make your life full & 
complete.
All good be yours.   I am ever 
    Yours Affectionately
                         Mary M Slessor

Dont pay me out by failing to write.
                 Mokop? [Note 5]



[Written halfway down on the blank page opposing page 5] "Word just come 
that Mr Wessells is dead."



EDITORIAL NOTES:     

1]   Presby.  The Meeting of the Presbytery

2]   Egbo = Efik secret society

3]   Blackwater =  Blackwater Fever: a severe infectious disease, a complication 
of Malaria

4]   ADC = Aide-de-camp

5]   Mokop.  An Efik word, meaning unknown


TRANSCRIPTION BY:   Leslie A. Mackenzie,  1997

DATA ENTERED BY:   Ruth E. Riding,  1998









Slessor, Mary
Letter no. 64 9th December 1909

 
Miss Slessor apologises for her previous un-stamped letter and then goes on to 
relate in detail the circumstances under which she felt it necessary to resign from 
her Court work.   New government administrators have taken office who are not 
known personally to her, and a short letter of acceptance had been received.   
She had had some interesting visitors, and the ladies at Ikot Obon Mission had 
been sent a bicycle by Mr Fosbery.   The Road is in fine condition, and she goes 
on to give some household news.  She finishes on a plea for news and to know 
when he will be returning to Nigeria.


[Envelope addressed to]
C Partridge Esqr
Stowmarket
Sussex
[This addressed erased in a different hand and re-addressed to]
District Commissioner
Lagos
Southern Nigeria
[Post marked:  Calabar Dec 10th 1909;  Stowmarket Jan 3rd 1910;  Lagos Jan 
22nd 1910]


                                                                 Use Ikot Oku
                                                                       9. 12. 09


My dear Old Governor

                           If you only knew the shame & mortification I have writhed 
under you would pity me rather than blame me for the *UN*-stamped card you 
got by last mail.   I could not get a messenger, & so sent the girls & told them to 
tell MacCauley to weigh & stamp them & see the girl stamp the letters.   The Str 
[Note 1] was lading, & he wd. be worried, & he took them all, impatient of her 
talk, & put them all in the bag, giving her [1/3?] [Note 2] worth of stamps back 
with her.   When I saw them, you may guess how I felt, & as the truth dawned on 
me more & more it was horrid for days.   Please *do* forgive me, or rather the 
Clerk & the girls.   It was entirely a mistake, due to the pride of our ancestors 
who tried to build a Tower which wd make them independent.   Alas!   For the 
descendents of those proud men!  Is the race extinct think you?  

 Well, I have not written; partly because I waited for the "Convenient" time & 
*more* *partly*, because I wanted my news to be definite & my pride to go 
down lest I shd. be unjust to any one.   For a few months back, the *new* road 
men, *not* big offficers, have resented their boys coming to me with any 
complaint.   Later the bigger officers have made it plain that they beleive 
themselves to be the only persons responsible or competent to judge anything for 
their boys.   *I* hold that at work & under limits they have a right to settle all 
disputes; but outside the days work; or if discipline as administered by an Efik 
scamp who has picked up a little English at the beaches be to the Effusion of 
blood, or be given *out* *side* the work hours & place, the rights of citizenship 
have been invaded, & every boy has a right to take out a summons & be heard in 
open Court.   This **may** have something to do with developments, but I'm 
only *supposing* it has.   I dont know.   It is the *first* time we have had any 
trouble with work men .   Messers Darly, Rosario & Hanson, got every thing 
explained here;  & were always satisfied & even grateful.   Now it is not so.   
Well, you know the sad sad time we had at Ikot Okpene.   Good Capn Werry, & 
then in a week or two, Mr Wessells both died, & they sent a man named 
Hodgeson as A.D.C.   I heard that he too had been sent down sick, & as they 
carried a White Man in a hammock lying down, towards Itu while we were in 
Church that week, I beleived it.   Any how I did not then know his name, & I 
thought there was no White Officer at the Station.   Meanwhile Ibianan came one 
morning very early with a broken demijohn & telling that a woman had fallen 
out in the bush at the edge of the town, had cut an artery & bled to death, & as 
they had got her from another village, they were afraid there wd be trouble with 
her people "What shd they do?"   "Wd. we send to see the body"   I sent at once 
to the Clerk to send on the oldest C.M. [Note 3] to see the body & report on 
Mbian oath [Note 4], also Okodi to go at once to the womans relatives & ask 
them to go & see the body, & get it buried decently & if there was to be palaver 
[Note 5], we wd make the strictest enquiry.   Meanwhile a messenger came from 
the Rds Dept [Note 6] to say there had been, what they feared was a murder, the 
noise attracted them & the blood.   I explained that we had done what was 
necessary, & as the C.M.s had their orders, it wd. be well that no outsider 
interfered. - A day or two later Itu Ndem sent Chiefs & lads to say that 2 White 
Men had come to their town & taken 9 or 10 people to Ikot Okpene, & their 
followers had wrecked a lot of property.   Would I send to Ikot Okpene & ask 
what the palaver was, as they did not know.   I wrote on one side of a sheet of 
paper & did not enclose it a query to that effect, adding nothing, as I did not 
know if a White Man was there.   Two large sheets of Rhodomontade [Note 6] 
came back type written, with such an impossible story, & with what I can only 
call insult to me.   I wrote at once - again on half a sheet of paper, - "Sir, as I 
have yet to learn when & where I ever interfered with "a case being handled by a 
D C [Note 8],"  as I have also to learn how & when I "shewed active sympathy" 
or passive sympathy either for that part, "with *those* *people*", I fail to see the 
point of this communication, & of course it is impossible for me to serve any 
longer under your rule, in any form, so I resign all connection with Ikot Obon 
Court.   In a P.S. I added " an M.P. sent by you last week to Mr Dickson, 
regarding a case judged first while I was in Britain, & again for contempt of that 
judgement, judged & sentenced by A.D.C. [Note 9] impugned the probity & 
ability of the Ikot Obon Court & made them guilty of ------  Hence I told Mr 
Dickson at that time that I cd not serve under the writer of *such* a letter.

Brooks came up at that time to take charge, & after he was 3 or 4 days set down 
he sent a *most* *official* note accepting my resignation & *thanked* *me* 
*in* *the* *name* *of* *the* *Govr.* *for* *all* *my* *work*.   The 
Ludicrous side then dawned on me, & I laughed & despised the height of the 
man more than ever.   That was three weeks ago.   Last boat brought a very nice 
friendly note from Mr Fosberry regretting that I had found it necessary to resign, 
& with a *gentlemans* thanks, for service rendered, & wishing me all good.   So 
thats the position!   & I'm dismissed & that by utter strangers.   The Chiefs & 
people, & even the Clerk, cant understand, & the people *will* come, & the 
Clerk asks about things I know of & he doesnt as they were before his time, & 
how can I act?   To let them see my rift within the Lute, wd give the show away.   
It wd. be fatal, as there wd be 2 parties, & yet I dare not interfere or write a note 
for any one.   If it were not that the down river ladies may come up for the Xmas 
holidays - they all break up on 16 or 17 ult, I wd. go  up to Ikpe & stay till every 
body fell off.   But they will always come, as they have always come before 
there were Courts, & how am I to meet it, unless God takes me Home out of the 
way.

Now I have not told a soul but you, so you will respect my confidence & keep it 
closely in your own heart.   Never speak of it.   It is an *individual* palaver, & 
no one outside that is to blame, besides perhaps it is the only way to bring home 
to me the fact that I'm growing too old to be trusted with the affairs of a people.   
A new A D C came to Itu at the same time.   He was to get any advice as to the 
laws etc, & was to come up, but I have neither seen him, nor have I had an 
answer verbal or written to the various things I have been forced to write & send 
to him since then.   Even when I apologised for not having caught his name & 
had sent all the letters & books & people - to the D C at Itu.   He never even 
enlightened me.   I have since heard he is called Hopkinson, so you see Im a 
social leper.

But I have more pleasant news than this, this is to be forgotten, but I *had* to 
tell *you* as you made me take up the work.   Mr George Gray & another Mr 
Grey going to Ikot Okpene in some capacity, called early on Sabbath morning.   
Scarcely had they gone, after a most pleasant talk, when Lady Edgerton called.   
She had only come the night before to meet him as he came round from I'Ekpene 
& they wd be going off next day.   I think it was so kind of her to come when her 
time was so limited.   She is an example to all ladies in the Protectorate & 
Mission, by her quiet unassuming behaviour & manner, her pure womanliness, 
& the plainness & yet elegance of her dress & tastes.   His Excellency passed 
down on a motor cycle as we were in Church at midday, so I have not got a 
glimpse of him.   Then too, one of those days when I was dismissed with Brooks 
Ironical thanks, Miss Peacock came down & she shewed me an official envelope 
& a formal note from this new ADC of Itu, saying that the Provincial 
Comner.[Note 10] had sent up a ladys Bicycle to the ladies at Ikot Obon for their 
use.   It is a fine Bike with the speed thing & all new things, but it is not new, so 
we think it has been Miss Boggs or Mrs Fosbery's & that they have gone home.   
However we dont know.   The A D C sent it to "Miss Peacock Principal lady at 
Ikot Obon", & she wrote back a Formal note of receipt & thanks.   Now was not 
that a kind thought of Mr Fosbery's tho' I dont  beleive he knows there is such a 
person as Miss Peacock.   It was a kind thing for the Station seeing the road is 
good for so far.   So there is sunlight in the world yet.   I think the Governor will 
be pleased with the road.   It has been metalled all over.   Huge stones laid down 
under the sand, & the motor which runs all the time makes little impression on it 
now.   The driver of the motor, a Lagos boy, came for my Mary, & they seem 
very happy & he has been very generous to us all, & is a good quiet Xtian [Note 
11] lad.   His mother & brother wrote to me from Lagos before I agreed to the 
marriage, but I am pleased with it, more than I shd have been with those who 
were seeking her from Ibibio & Okoyon & Ikpe, tho' all were good enough & 
well to do.   His house & manner of life & food & etc are more like what she has 
been brought up to, & their small house *is* *not* in a compound, thats to me 
the ugly part of our native life, the publicity of it all.   Annie has a fine baby boy 
& her husband - a school lad of Use - is kind to us all, & helpful to me, & a good 
boy.   Only Jean & the younger ones are at home.   Dan & Asogud are gone to 
the Institute.   It wd make them such ninnies to be always among girls even if 
they had good schooling.   I have two baby girls talking, one lies on my knee 
asleep now, & a wee ricketty boy whose mother died, & his father works on the 
road & he has no one to look after him.   He has just got over that fearful scab - 
the Yaws [Note 12] - & has swollen feet & hands often, but with codliver oil & 
milk he puts on flesh apace.   Now Bye bye.   *Do* *let* *me* *have* *if only 
a line*.   Im wearied to know how you are, & when you mean to be back.   God 
bless you & guide you is the prayer of Yours Affectionately
                                           Mary M Slessor




EDITORIAL NOTES:     

1]   Str = Steamer

2]   1/3 = one shilling and three pence (or 6 and a half new pence)  

3]   C.M. = Court Messenger

4]   Mbian oath.   A solemn oath taken with the use of Mbiam which is a "liquid 
substance which is tasted, & sometimes put on various parts of the body.   It is 
supposed to cause dropsy, & so destroy any individual swearing falsely."  from 
Charles Partridge's copy of "Dictionary of the Efik Language" by the Rev. Hugh 
Goldie.

5]   palaver = usually denotes a discussion, consultation, or Court Case

6]   Rds Dept = Roads Department

7]   Rhodomontade. Extravagant boasting.

8]   D C = District Commissioner

9]   ADC = Aide-de-camp

10]   Comner. = Commissioner

11]   Xtian = Christian
  
12]   Yaws.  A contagious disease of the skin.
                                


TRANSCRIPTION BY:   Leslie A Mackenzie,  1997

DATA ENTERED BY:   Ruth Riding,  1997



Slessor, Mary
Letter no. 65 22nd December 1909

 
Mary writes to Mr Partridge, Senior, to apologize for the unstamped letter 
[mentioned in letter 64] which would have been received by him after the 
departure of his son for Lagos.   She goes on to congratulate him on having such 
an excellent person as his son.

[Envelope addressed to:]
Chas Partridge Esqr -senr.
   Stowmarket
       Suffolk
           England

[Postmarked Calabar Dec 23rd 1909; further postmarked, Stowmarket 5.30pm 
Jan 15th 1910.]

                                                                   Calabar
                                                                    22nd Decr 1909

Dear Sir,

             My name is Miss Slessor & I had the great pleasure of working under, & 
I think I *dare* say that I made, & keep the privilege of friendship with your son 
Mr C Partridge, during that time of co-operation.   Well, I sent him a Photograph 
of myself, as the only Xmas card I had within reach, & to my shame & 
mortification, the man at the Transport, either too busy, or not able to understand 
the language of the messenger, threw my heap of mails, several *un*stamped, 
into the bag, & sent the stamps for the money that was to get stamps for the 
letters.   The Card to Mr Partridge was among them, & when last mail his letter 
told me he wd have left home by time it was due, I was simply overwhelmed 
with shame at the fact of the card going *un*paid to *you*.   I sent a letter by 
the next mail apologizing, but you wont see it, so I send this to you to apologise, 
& trust it has not vexed or shamed you, for I have the very highest regard for Mr 
Partridge, & only wish I knew how I could serve him to purpose.

I know from him that you are a Xtian [Note 1], & I am a missionary - have been 
for 33 years - in the Scots Presbyterian Mission here, so I hope you will accept 
my apology.   Also accept my congratu;ations on the possession of such a son as 
Mr Partridge is.   He not only lives a White life out here, but his upright & 
sympathetic tactfulness as an administrator have endeared him to our people, 
[who long all the time that he be sent back to this province], but raise their 
conceptions of what a White Man & a Christian is.   Hence he not only serves & 
adorns & extends the British Empire, but he is a tower of strength to all, who 
like myself, work against the dreadful odds of heathenism.

Please excuse my forwardness in addressing you, also accept my apologies for 
the affront given without intent & through the crudeness of our Postal 
arrangements

                I am Yours faithfully
                                              Mary M Slessor



EDITORIAL NOTE:     

1]   Xtian = Christian

TRANSCRIPTION BY:  Leslie A Mackenzie,  1997

DATA ENTERED BY:  Ruth Riding,  1998




Slessor, Mary
Letter no. 66 23rd December 1909

 
Mary explains that she has written to Mr Partridge's father to apologise and 
explain the unstamped letter.   She is glad he is returning to Nigeria, but sad that 
he is not to return to Calabar.



                                                                 Use Ikot Oku
                                                                    23rd Decr 1909


My Dear Old Chief

                   I got up at first cock-crow, in order to write an apology to your 
father for an unstamped card I had sent, & which will reach your home *after* 
you have left.   O, if I was ashamed before, I have been simply overwhelmed 
since with mortification at giving them this affront, & at Xmas time time too!!!   
I do hope they will not misunderstand, or think that it is disrespect to you, for 
whom I have a pardonable affection & respect.   I had also sent an apology to 
you the following mail, & you will very much wonder at the other news that 
letter will give.

I was in the bush yest. & they got a boy to post any letters I had ready, but I cd 
not get this done then & am hoping that at daybreak, I shall see some of the road 
workers going to Okopedi who can take this in time to catch the boat this 
morning.

I cant write a letter, nor thank you for yours, nor touch on the wonderful news 
that a Xmas present of such magnitude should be given me, all this will go by 
next week.   This will meet you on your arrival at Lagos, & will let you know 
that your return causes joy to me heart at least.

O I wish you were coming here!   shall I ever see you again?   I hope you will 
keep well, & that this Year may bring you every Good that even our God can 
bestow.

With ever & ever so much of the greetings & good wishes & tender regards 
associated with the season, I am ever
    your affectionate friend
                     M M Slessor

I was 60 years old last week.  Fancy that!   I cant realize it.
                                                                                MMS



TRANSCRIPTION BY:   Leslie A. Mackenzie,  1997

DATA ENTERED BY:   Ruth E. Riding,  1998



Slessor, May
Letter no. 67 3rd February 1910

 
Mary writes of her excitement over Mr Partridge's gift of a new bicycle.   As she 
has been attending the Presbytery meeting she has not yet been able to try it!.   
She cannot write much as her thumb has swollen painfully but promises a letter 
the next week.

[Envelope addressed to:]
C Partridge Esqr.
     Badagry,
        So. Nigeria
  [c/o Consulate Lagos]

[Postmarks show that it was received in Lagos on February 9th 1910 and arrived 
in Badagry on February 15th 1910]

                                                    at The Manse Duke Town
                                                              3.   2.  '10


O You dear!!

                  I have been so excited for over a week about my cycle.   I only *saw* 
it for the first time the day before I came down here for Presbytery.   Mr Fosbery 
wrote to me that he had sent it up, & sent me a nice letter, but the A.D.C. [Note 
1] to whom it was consigned was, I think, at Ikot Okpene & I was just crazy for 
a week waiting to see it, then Marys husband told the Chaufeur, & they brought 
it up, & took it right up to the garage at the Ikot Obon Camp to put it in riding 
order, & they wanted to bring it down the morning they left, but I said "no, keep 
it till I come back", so I have not yet got a trial of it.   I feel as eager to get to it, 
as to get to the bairns.   But my dear old Rudge [Note 2] is my bosom friend & 
I'm jealous for the dear Bike that has carried me so long, & given me such 
pleasure & healthful exercise.

I have still this gouty Calabar swelling & cant hold the pen.   My thumb is so 
sore.   So I cant write to you today, & we leave tomorrow.   I go to tea with the 
nurses this after-noon, & to Dinner with the McGregors at the Institute.   I 
brought Dan down after holiday & must see to his clothes too this evening.

Please dont be vexed with this scribble.   I have crops of boils again on my head, 
but am otherwise well, & I shall be quite able to write to you next week when 
my hand is better.   Mr Child has been up, shall you see him.   Im lost about your 
new place, but shall find out.   I do hope you will like it & keep well.   Thanks 
for word of Essien, shall write to him.   Ever & ever so much of grateful thanks, 
& shall tell you all about the station and Bike next time
                                             With affectionate greetings & wishes I am ever your 
old Friend M M Slessor



EDITORIAL NOTES:     

1]   ADC = Aide-de-camp

2]   Rudge.  The manufacturer and trade name of Miss Slessor's first bicycle.

TRANSCRIPTION BY:   Leslie A Mackenzie,  1997

DATA ENTERED BY:   Ruth E Riding,  1998





Slessor, Mary
Letter no. 68 3rd March 1910

 
The boils mentioned in her last letter have multiplied and caused Mary severe 
pain and even blindness for a time.   Dr Thompson has brought about a great 
improvement enabling her to reply ["by groping over the paper by instinct"] at 
last to Mr Partridge's letter, and she is looking forward to trying out her new 
Bike in a couple of days!   She expresses her delight at receiving letters from 
both his parents and hopes to be able to see well enough to write replies in a 
week's time.

[Envelope addressed to:]
C Partridge Esq
     Badagry
        via Lagos
            Nigeria
["Badagry" struck out by another hand & re-addressed to Igbeni Hill.
   Postmarks show it left Itu on March 3rd; then Calabar on March 14th, and 
arrived at Igbein Hill, Abeokuta on March 14th 1910]

                                                Use Ikot Oku
                                                     3rd March 1910

My very dear friend

                           I thank you ever so much for your cheerful letter which has 
helped me not a little, & I am sure you are quite right in *all* you say.   I cant 
write a letter, as Im almost blind.   Ive had that head & neck of boils again, but 
Dr Thompson from Ikot Okpene came up with the A D C [Note 1] from Itu & 
said "Im simply come to take care of you, & youve got to do what I tell you."  & 
he did work a miracle of healing.   He said one of the oldest Drs on the Coast 
had the same thing last year, & I was to take his drastic measures, & when I 
think of how he has healed me in such a short time, & quite killed the hundreds 
of things, & made life quite bearable again, I feel mad at the month of agony I 
suffered last year, & the 3 weeks of the same this year.   I was quite blind for a 
time.   Then only yesterday, have been able to read or write again for a week, but 
it is all right today, & tho Im groping over the paper by instinct there is not any 
pain in the eye, & in a couple of days, I shall be on my cycle again.   Will you 
beleive me that I've never tried my new one yet!    Ive not got my head down so 
the want of sleep made me so nervous again that I dare not ride or even hear the 
bairns crying or making a noise.   A new baby [nearly died yest] from Nyo has 
come today but Jean is always pleased & never thinks a baby a trouble so she is 
keeping it.   Mr Gray has been offering me his escort home, as he thought it was 
time I was going, he leaves this month.   Mr Maxwell has written a nice 
brotherly breezy letter letter.   Isnt it good of them?  & Dr Thompson I shall 
never thank him enough for his goodness & skill    I hear Mr Bedwell takes Mr 
Fosberys place here.   Im so glad for he is a good man, I understand him, & he 
me.

Now for my news!!   And O you dear boy, I love you better & better for it!!   I 
have had the joy of letters from your dear parents.   The dear sweet Mother 
heart!!   I cant speak of her letter, but it makes life richer, & the Father too.   I 
quite *UNDERSTAND* all about it.   In Scotland we say "The Rose of Sharon 
has a smell of its ain." & John Bunyan says "They spoke the language of 
Canaan," & so we do! & so shall **you** one day, & thats my prayer for you 
constantly.   I shall write if I can see next week to them, & mind this always. 
You must not fix the faults of Xtians [Note 2]. or their particular or narrow 
schools, on to the tender perfect Master of us all.   Now dear laddie, good life. 
for a week, God bless you, & keep & company with you.   I am ever yours 
affectionately,                                                          
Mary M Slessor

I hope you can read this.   Mr Darby is gone back to the [East?].   He wont come 
back here.   His sister [wat--?] this [-?]   Our Rd staff are all new.  MMSlessor



EDITORIAL NOTE:    As the letter makes clear this letter was written while 
Mary was unable to see due to the boils that infested her head.   As a result this 
letter has been very hard to read - the ink is very black [coming through the 
paper] and the writing is unclear, though an excellent effort considering her 
difficulty.

MORE NOTES:        

1]   ADC = Aide -de-camp

2]   Xtians = Christians

TRANSCRIPTION BY:   Leslie A Mackenzie,  1997

DATA ENTERED BY:   Ruth E Riding,  1998



Slessor, Mary
Letter no. 69 10th March 1910

 
Miss Slessor is writing to Mr Partridge's parents.  Most of the letter is on 
Christian subjects, eg. the value of prayer [asking particularly for prayers on 
behalf of her children], the certainty of God's presence in her work, the value of 
the Keswick School, etc. with reference to her early life.   She gives a short 
appreciation of their son, touching delightfully on her relationship with him.

[Envelope addressed to:]
C Partridge Esqr
   Stowmarket
      Suffolk
         England
[Postmarked Itu March 9th 1910]

                                                       Use Ikot Oku
                                                            Near Itu
                                                                   Calabar
                                                              10th March 1910


Dear Mr & Mrs Partridge

                                 It is my turn now to be glad that something went wrong, in 
order to get such letters as you have kindly sent me.   I have always known that 
you were Christians.   Mr Partridge told me too that you were *evangelical* 
Christians.   Which made me understand more, so that I am not surprised at your 
letters, & so much have I been told of the dear Mother that I would not be 
surprised at any attainment on her part.   I do thank you so much for taking me 
so under your circle of friends for we serve One Royal Master, & I shall be glad 
if you give me a share of your prayers, & if you specially pray for my *dear* 
Children, that they may be saved & be made saviours of others.   I feel so frail 
sometimes now a days that I feel as if the work must be left to them & while 
they are all good & affectionate & obedient there is a lack of spiritual life, & the 
lack of that passion for the saving of others, that I long for in them, & in myself.  
There is great deadness here, as in the Church at home, an indifference to 
spiritual things, tho God does not leave himself with [Note 1] a witness, for our 
catechism class mostly made up of elderly people, & many of them women, 
which is most hopeful seems to grow in numbers in steadfastness, & we have 4 
baptized members.   Two & a half years ago the villagers were steeped in 
degradation & vice, so I am grateful for so much, but oh! for an awakening & a 
conviction of sin, which will drive them to the Saviour!

Thank you for the booklets!!   Do you go to Keswick at all?   I am sure you will 
be thorough in sympathy with that school & all it stands for.   Long before I 
knew about that, in the days of [Parsale?] Smith, & Boardmans Higher life, 
when I was a young girl, I entered in Gods Great Grace, on the experience of His 
Keeping sanctifying power & excepting for a very little while when Cheyne & 
Driver were at their worst in their destructive Criticism, that Perfect Peace & 
faith has never wavered, & if any one may testify as to the reality of His 
Presence & power, it is surely this unworthy servant, who has lived & worked 
*alone* for the long space of 20 years, & in the darkest place of our Field.   
*He* & *His* *Word* are a living bright reality for sure, & the fact, that I meet 
my congregation, knowing that it is not me, nor my message, but just that I am 
in the Hand of the Spirit as the Channel of Communication, & that my part is to 
see that the Channel is open & clean.   This fact I say keeps away the fear & the 
worry, & the nervousness of being conscious that all their impressions come thro 
me - which is a tremendous responsibility.   This keeps me in quietness of soul, 
that keeps me in health of body.   But what am I writing all this about myself 
for?   I mean to Glorify Him, & to magnify His Grace in me.

I am so sorry Mr Partridge is again settled outside our District!   It meant such a 
lot to me, & to my people too, when he left Ikot Okpene.   But it is such a 
blessing for others to have his just, patient, tactful rule that I try to be glad for 
their sakes.   Foolish & superficial & *hireling* administrators are not wanting 
among us, tho one British rule is far & away the best thing for Africa & for all 
subject races, that the World Powers know.   He never fails to write to me, & 
always in the most cheerful manner.   *Every* place is *good*.   He never has a 
complaint!   He acts out the Hymn sentiment, "Go bury thy sorrow"," "Go give 
them the sunshine" & I am sure, tho' John Bull will never profess any thing lest 
it be called Cant, that he "Tells Jesus the rest."   For all we bicker, & he bothers 
me & teases me, I know that he worships & tries to serve My Lord.  & he knows 
that my earnest prayer for him.   Do you think we thank God enough for, & use 
enough the ministry of privilege in intercession?   I think not.   Open your circle 
to me, & I shall more definitely than ever to you & yours.

A very young boy, whose parents & sisters are Christian, called on me, as he 
passed up a stranger towards Bendi last week.   He is Scots, & of course a 
Presbyterian, so was in some measure aware of our Mission here.   We parted 
with full hearts.   May God bless & Guide & Keep him.   I met Mrs Pen Lewis in 
Scotland some 14 or 15 years ago at the house of mutual friends in Edinburgh.   
Mr Wilson, the late Chairperson of Keswick was there too.   It was a fine time, & 
ever since I have followed the career of Mrs Pen Lewis with great interest.   "She 
Overcomes", was sent to me a short time ago by some friend unknown, so it is 
not altogether a stranger.   What a Grand Number this is!   Those Calvary Papers 
of Mr Gordon are so intensely searching & uplifting.   I feel so far short of any 
thing on meditating thus on the theme of all themes, The Cross.   You are well 
off at Home with all the privileges of Reading & Conference & Communion of 
saints.   But I wd. *not* change with you, For he is *all* *sufficient* here, & 
there many souls to be won, & much land to be possessed.

I am under the doctors care  ---- Here he comes ----- & have had a weary month 
of pain from a crop of boils all over my head, then my eyes got bad & this is the 
first of my using them for writing or reading, so I can not make a decent letter to 
you, & it is such a selfish letter too, for I think being in the house so much is 
making me feel morbid, but it goes with a full heart & with much Xtian 
affection.

Here are the boys to take the letters to the Post.   The Dr has sat with me for an 
hour, so this must go as it is.

With thanks for Your Kindness & with Kindest regards
                                        I am Yours Sincerely
                                                  Mary MSlessor


EDITORIAL NOTE:    

1]  Surely intended to be "without".

TRANSCRIPTION BY:   Leslie A. Mackenzie, 1997

DATA ENTERED BY:   Ruth E. Riding,  1998