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moted. Our brethren and fathers of the English Church all look with the greatest interest and affection on the state of the Church of the Apostle St. Thomas in Malabar; all desire earnestly to see it in peace and prosperity, and its connexion with Syria unimpaired, and they all will hear with sorrow of the violent removal of your Legate from this country. I am now engaged, as is my bounden duty, in giving an account of these transactions, with the whole of the wishes of our blessed Father concerning them, to our venerable Father and Lord Mar Carolus, Primate of England.

&c. &c. &c.

THOMAS ROBINSON, Priest and Ramban of Mar Reginald

the blessed.

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OUR dear Father, the late revered Bishop Heber, arrived here early on the 25th of March, and on the day following, which was Easter Sunday, he preached at the Mission Church in the Little Fort a most impressive sermon on Rev. i. 18: "I am he that liveth and was dead, and behold I am alive for evermore.' The powerful truths that proved the glory of the Saviour, and the most affecting arguments to prevail on every one to trust in Him, and to love and honour Him, made a deep impression on the hearts of the hear

ers.

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His lordship then administered the Holy Sacrament to thirty persons of the English, and fifty-seven of the Tamul congregation. A great part of our native congregation, who understood English, attended the Divine service, and although they could not have understood every particular of the learned yet very awakening sermon of his lordship's, being, however, much

affected by it, after Divine service they unanimously prayed his lordship to grant them a copy of the same; most condescendingly he told them that he would send them a copy of it with some alterations, that they might be We able to understand it better. greatly lament that this kind promise cannot now be accomplished!

In

After Divine service, his lordship also signified his intention of seeing the Tamul congregation in the evening, and appointed the day following for the Confirmation of the English and Tamul young people who were presented to him after church. the evening Divine service was performed in Tamul at the Mission Church in the Little Fort. It commenced at half-past six. The church was illuminated by the kindness of our resident, Captain Fyfe. The Liturgy was read by the Rev. Mr. Bahrenbruck, and Nullatambi, native priests. The Rev. Dr. Cæmmerer preached on St. John xi. 25. After the conclusion of the sermon, his lordship pronounced the blessing in Tamul from the altar, correct and distinct, to the great surprise and joy of the whole native congregation.

On Easter Monday in the forenoon, after the reading of the service, twelve young persons of the English, and fifty of the native congregation, were confirmed by his lordship, the former in the English, and the latter in the Tamul language. The correctness with which his lordship pronounced every word in Tamul was not only striking, but will be always remembered by our native Christians as a proof of the Apostolic spirit which was in him, a proof of his fervent zeal and benevolent disposition to promote the eternal welfare, not only of Europeans, but also of the poor natives.

In the evening, after the sermon, his lordship delivered a most affecting address from the altar, to the missionaries and the native priests who were present, animating them to zeal and diligence in the discharge of their important work, under all trials and difficulties, according to the example of the holy Apostle and of Schwartz, the

founder of this and of the Trichinopoly Mission. The address was delivered near the remains of the venerable Schwartz, and thereby rendered more affecting to every one present. It was delivered extempore. It seems his lordship had no thought of delivering this address when he entered the chapel, and the thought struck him only at the sight of the number of missionaries and native priests whom he saw before him. Although it was delivered with remarkable plainness, yet every word of it came with power, and went through the heart. Oh how glad would I be if I had a copy of that excellent address! May a merciful God help us by his Holy Spirit, that we may always remember and do what has been told us by our dear Father!

me know, by his chaplain, that as the English and Tamul Confirmations could not conveniently be performed at the same time, he was purposed to confirm the young people of the Tamul congregation early the following morning at the Mission Church in the Fort. In the evening his lordship confirmed about seventy persons of St. John's Parish, and delivered afterwards from the pulpit a most affectionate address to the young people in particular who were confirmed, to be faithful to their sacred engagements, and to watchfulness and prayer.

The

The

Agreeably to his lordship's desire, the Tamul congregation assembled very early on Monday morning, the 3rd of April, at the Mission Church in the Fort. His lordship arrived at sunrise, and after On the three following days his the reading of usual prayers, he conlordship spent a great part of the fore-firmed in Tamul eleven young persons noon and afternoon in inquiring into of the Trichinopoly Mission. the various concerns of the Tanjore service was solemn and affecting, and and Tinnevelly Missions, gave neces- I sincerely hope that every one of those sary directions to the missionaries to be who were confirmed by the hands of observed by them for the good of those our late dear Father, were deeply immissions, and had the kindness to sig-pressed with a lively sense of the sonify to them those directions in a letter lemn act performed by them. written with his own hand, on Friday service was concluded by the blessing the 31st of March, the day he left pronounced by his lordship in Tamul. Tanjore for Trichinopoly. Petitions were also presented to his lordship by native priests, catechists, and poor. He received them with great condescension, granted the relief solicited for, and promised to do what could not have been done immediately. Two of the native teachers at this place were presented to his lordship as fit subjects for being ordained, and were approved of by him.

The Rev. G. Sperschneider, who had been lately on a visit to the mission at Trichinopoly, having made mention, among other particulars, about eleven young people there who wished to be confirmed, I set out for that place, in order to present them to his lordship for Confirmation, and arrived on the 2nd of April with the Rev. Mr. Schreyvogel. We attended Divine service at St. John's, and had the happiness of hearing another very impressive sermon preached. by his lordship on 1 John v. 6, 7, 8. His lordship then let

After service his lordship took a view of the Mission Church, and expressed his regret at the decayed state it was in, and the distress of the mission, adding that, after deliberation, he would communicate his thoughts for the repair of the church, and the good of the Trichinopoly Mission; he also took a view of the English and Tamul schools, and the missionary's house, which are all built near the church. A great part of the Tamul congregation being still present, his lordship exhorted them to be Christians not only in name but in reality, to shine as lights before the heathen among whom they lived. He promised to send them soon a missionary, and wished that God would pour down his blessings upon them. He then very kindly took leave of me, and returned to the house of Mr. Bird, circuit judge. Little did I think that that was the last farewell— and never to see him again in this world!

God can alone make up.
May He
graciously grant that we may not be
wholly disappointed!

Three hours had hardly elapsed | lost a Father, and this is a loss which since his lordship left the church, when a rumour was spread in the Fort that his lordship had been taken dead out of the bath in which he went after his return from the Fort. The first notice was brought to me by one of the catechists, who came running out of breath, and delivered the mournful news with bitter cries and lamentations. I could give no credit to the melancholy report, till it was confirmed by a note from the Rev. Mr. Wright, which informed me that our dear Father was no more an inhabitant of this world.

In the afternoon I called on Mr. Robinson; we shed our tears over the smiling countenance of our late dear departed Father, and comforted ourselves with the thoughts of a better world, where there will be no sorrow, and where all tears will be wiped away. It is mournful, indeed, to reflect upon the sudden and abrupt manner in which our dear Father was removed from our

eyes, when we were admiring the grace of God that appeared in him. To himself, however, death was gain. He died like a good servant of his Lord, who found him engaged in his proper work. But our loss by his departure seems irreparable. We have

Early the following morning I attended the funeral of our late reverend Father, which was conducted with all the honours due to his blessed remains. It was a mournful and afflicting scene, indeed, which I have not witnessed since the death of the venerable Schwartz.

On the 9th of April I preached to the Tamul congregation, and exhorted the Christians to consider the late mournful event as a warning from God to repent, and to show their gratitude to God by a holy life. After the Tamul service I attended Divine service at St. John's, and heard the excellent sermon preached by the Rev. T. Robinson, in memory of our late Father. It impressed on our minds not only that esteem and veneration due to the memory of our late beloved Bishop, but awakened us also to endeavour that we may be approved of the Lord when he shall be pleased to call us away.

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ABRAHAM, MAR, ii. 257–259.
Abdullah made Jemautdar, i. 65; makes
pannels for mules, 261.

Abdul Musseeb, a convert, ii. 9; or-
dained, 10; his death, ib.
Abel, Dr., i. 60.
Ablution, i. 32.
Aboo town, ii. 57.

Acbar, tomb of, ii. 8; his palace, 9;
makes pilgrimage to Ajmere, 49.
Acland, Sir Thomas Dyke, i. 204.
Adam, Mr. John, i. 260; meets the
Bishop, 272; his character, ii. 223.
Adam's Peak, ii. 161; tradition, ib.
Adansonia tree, i. 40.

Adawlut courts, ii. 107; at Kairah, 114;
besieged, ib.

Adlington, Mr., Benares, i. 161.
Adlington, Mr., Catechist, ii. 257.
Agra, judge of, sends escort, ii. 5; ruins
of, 9; court of justice, ib.
Ajmere town, ii. 48.
Allahabad, i. 187; nick -1
-name, ib.;
buildings, 188, 189; confirmation, ib.
Alligators, i. 35; again, 121, 136; again,
ii. 167.
Alexander, Colonel, i. 173; drives the
Bishop to a tomb. 176; compares
outward marks of devotion, ib.; let-
ter to, ii. 213.

Ally poor village, i. 32.

Almorah city, reasons for visiting, i.
245; preparations for journey to, 260;
approach to, 270; description of, 272;
Divine service, ib.; fort, 273; hopes
respecting missionaries, ii. 217.
Ambera village, ii. 74.
Amblangodde, bungalow, ii. 150; again,
169.

Ambowlee village, ii. 132.
Ameer Khan, his character, ii. 23; again,
26; horrors inflicted by, 28; offers to
invade Jyepoor, 38; turns Saint, 61.
Amherst, Lord, introduction to, i. 31;
his letter to the King of Oude, 212;
visits the Emperor of Delhi, 310;
anxious for peace, ii. 199.

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Amherst, Lady. kindness of, ii. 213.
Amroah town, i. 290.

Amrut Row, i. 163; inquiries concern-
ing Christianity, 171.

Anass river, ii. 84.

Animal food not forbidden to Hindoos,
i. 23.

Anson, Mr. and Mrs., i. 145.
Ant-hills, i. 116.

Antioch, patriarch of, ii. 262.
Anund Musseeh, i. 195, 298.
Ape, sacred, i. 110.

Aqueduct at Delhi, i. 301.
Arab ships, i. 23, 32; brig shipwrecked,

ii. 143.

Architecture, Oriental, ii. 220; of pa-
laces, ib.; antiquities of, 231; modern,
231, 232.
Ariosto, ii. 39.

Armenians in Dacca, i. 92; visit of arch-
bishop, 99; in Madras, ii. 176.
Ass from Cape of Good Hope, i. 35;
from Cutch, ii. 134.

Assam, custom in, ii. 29.

Athanass, Mr., a Greek, follows the
Bishop, ii. 52.

Athanasius, Mar, ii. 259.

Ava, King of, ii. 198; his demands, ib. ;
war with, 199.

Avdal, Mr., Armenian, ii. 257.
Aurungzebe, mosque of, i. 168.
Azeem Khan, visit to Prince, ii. 176.

B.

;

Babington, Mr. C. R., ii. 143.
Baboon alarms sentry, ii. 85; anecdote
of in Ceylon, 162.
Baboos, houses of, i. 31.
Baddagame, ii. 149; again, 169; con-
firmation, 170; departure from, ib.
account of, 245.
Baghee-fish described, i. 181.
Bahar, people of, i. 124; ugly country,
ii. 215; differs from the Dooab, ib.
Bahrenbruck, Rev. Mr., Tanjore, ii. 280,
Baillie, Mr. Evan Hamilton, Tannah, ii.
144.

Baker, Rev. Henry, ii. 271.
Bali, city of the great, ii. 178.

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Banyan-tree, ii. 93; one on the Nerbud-
da, 121.

Baptist missionaries, i. 48; minister at
Dacca, 93; at Monghyr, 135; again,
ii. 208.

Bareilly town, i. 243; professional du-
ties, ib.; female convert, ib.
Barley, threshing, i. 136; reaping, ii. 88.
Barnes, Sir Edward, i. 61; ii. 151; din-
ner with, ib.; lends his horses, 152;
makes new roads, 159, 160; and tun-
nel, 165.

Barnes, Lady, kindness from, ii. 169;
again, 244.

Barnes, Archdeacon, meets the Bishop,
ii. 95; accompanies him, 103; to
Poonah, 135; proposes to resign, 207;
character, 247.

Baroda, march towards, ii. 96; Guicwar
of, meets the Bishop, 97; his charac-
ter, 98, 99; Bishop visits him, 99,
100; visit returned, 102; town and
residency, 97; church, 98; escort in-
creased, 103.

Barrack poor, i. 33, 34; again, 43; again,
ii. 183; mutiny at, 240.
Barreah, Raja of, sends kamdar and
guides, ii. 89; visits the Bishop, 90;
presents a horse, 91; town, ib.; fa-
mine, ib.; misery, 92; superstition of
inhabitants, ib.

Bassein, pass by, ii. 121; ruins, 128;
again, 130.

Bats, large, i. 25; vampire, 37, 49; bats,
ii. 183.

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caste of, 116; distribution of money
to, 218.

Begumabad, i. 299.

Begum Sumroo, history of, i. 297,
298; writes to the Bishop, 299.
Begum of Delhi, presents from, i. 309.
Belagary village, i. 285.
Belgaram, i. 230.

Bell, Mr., Moradabad, ii. 17.
Belt of Death, i. 245.

Benares, Raja of, visit from, i. 171.
Benares town, i. 162; sacred bulls, ib. ;
monkeys and beggars, ib.; Baboo's
house, 163; pagoda, 164; population,
166; not many converts at, 171; re-
ligious tumults, 166, 167, 183; house-
tax, 185; "dhurna," 185, 186; po-
pularity of governors. 187; stables
blown down, ii. 205; proposal to live
at, 219.

Benderlee, Don Solomon Dias, his in-
genuity, ii. 158.

Bengal, timid character of the natives, i.
52; not part of Hindostan, 117; flat,
ib.; cultivation of laud, ii. 200;
language, 214; natives fond of sing-
ing, ib.

Bengal vessels described, i. 27; again,
62; servants, account of the Bishop's
journey, ii. 12.

Ben Totte, ii. 150; again, 169.
Betel tree, i. 84.

Bhadrinath, i. 249; pilgrimage to, 265;
height, 271; temples at, 285.
Bhât, poetry of, ii. 53; account of, ib, ;
anecdote of a, 54.

Bheels, their mode of catching fish, ii.
58 bows, ib.; depredations, ib.; ori-
ginal inhabitants of Rajpootana, 69;
their character, 69, 70; corps raised
by Sir John Malcolm, 70; village,
75; described, ib. ; robbers, 76; huts,
ib.; signals, ib.; suffer from drought,
77; guides, 80; huts, 83; mock bat-
tle between, 86, 87; plunder and beat
a woman, 87; hired as an escort,
88; anecdote of chief, 90; lowland,
92; guides across the Mhye, 103,
104; watchmen, 104.
Bheelwarra town, ii. 56; robbers near, 60.
Bhooteas, tribe of, i. 271; horses, 275.
Bhurtpoor, Raja of, ii. 2, 18; rampart
of, visible, 15; sends vakeel and letter,
17; government described, ib.; Bishop
returns answer, 23; siege of, 234, 248.
Biccanere town, ii. 55.

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