forests of a savage land is well known to the subscribers
to the N. E. M., precludes the possibility of a mistake
being made in this matter, and yet they declare in
a letter which we publish this morning that the manner
in which Mr. Courtland pursued his so-called explorations
in the forests which line the banks of the Fly River
has practically made impossible all attempts at mission
work in that region. In several directions it
is not denied that Mr. Courtland entered into friendly
relations with some native tribes; but instead of endeavoring
to make the poor benighted creatures acquainted with
the Truth, he actually purchased as slaves over a
hundred of them to aid him in penetrating the Kallolu
forest, where, it will be remembered, he succeeded
in shooting the much illustrated meteor-bird, as well
as several other specimens which will delight the members
of the Ornithological Association rather than professing
Christians. Our distinguished correspondents
state, and we have no room to doubt their word, that
Mr. Courtland purchased his slaves by a promise to
assist the head man of their tribe against his enemies
belonging to another tribe—a promise which
he only too amply fulfilled, the result being an indiscriminate
slaughter of savages who, though avowed cannibals,
might eventually have embraced the truths of Nonconformity.
The elephant rifles of the explorer did their deadly
work only too efficiently; but we trust that, for
his own sake, Mr. Courtland will be able to bring
forward trustworthy evidence to rebut the suspicion
of his having upon at least one occasion induced even
the friendly natives to believe that he possessed
the power of the Deity to perform miracles, and upon
another occasion of having used dynamite against them
by which hundreds were destroyed in cold blood.
It is the evil influences of such irresponsible men
as Mr. Courtland, whose ill-directed enterprise we
cannot in justice to him refrain from acknowledging,
that retard the efforts of those noble pioneers of
Nonconformity who have already made such sacrifices
for the cause, and who rejoice at the difficulties
with which they find themselves beset. We understand
that a question will be put to the Minister for the
Annexation Department in the House of Commons toward
the latter end of the week, on the subject of the alleged
excesses of the most recent explorer (so-called) of
New Guinea—excesses which if committed
in Bulgaria or Armenia, or even Ireland, would have
called for an expression of the horror of Christian
Europe; and we may mention that subscriptions on behalf
of the Revs. Joseph Capper and Evans Jones will
be received at the office of this paper to enable them
to substantiate the truth of their statements.”
“It is quite ridiculous, besides being untrue, papa,” cried Phyllis; “and I hope that you will not fail to take his part and show the falsehood of such accusations. Could anything be more absurd than that about the slaves? Slaves! Dynamite!”