
CHAPTER VIII
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 December 2011
Summary
“2nd. mo. 1st. Having concluded to go to Sierra-Leone, the last three days have been much occupied in preparations for our departure. In making these preparations I felt peace and quietness of mind. There does not appear to A. T. and myself anything in this climate to prevent every kind of business of a domestic nature from being effected without extreme fatigue, if attention be only given to right timing and arrangement of business.
“In looking out a suitable assortment of tracts to take with us to Sierra-Leone, I felt regret that we had not been more active stewards in their distribution, both here and on other parts of the coast, by means of vessels leaving. I trust, however, we shall be more prompt in future to avail ourselves of opportunities as they present themselves.
“In meeting to-day I thought I felt more as a pilgrim and stranger on the earth than I remembered to have felt before; and so decided a sense that there is much demanding our exertions, both here and elsewhere, that it seemed a time which called for entire resignation as to the future. I do, I think, feel thankful that Divine goodness has wonderfully opened our way thus far, and is preparing it also at the Cape.[…]”
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- Information
- Memoir of the Late Hannah KilhamChiefly Compiled from her Journal, and Edited by her Daughter-in-Law, Sarah Biller, pp. 202 - 229Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2010First published in: 1837