This lonely clergyman is a Presbyterian minister,
who has a very large and respectable congregation;
the other is composed of Quakers, who you know admit
of no particular person, who in consequence of being
ordained becomes exclusively entitled to preach, to
catechise, and to receive certain salaries for his
trouble. Among them, every one may expound the
Scriptures, who thinks he is called so to do; beside,
as they admit of neither sacrament, baptism, nor any
other outward forms whatever, such a man would be
useless. Most of these people are continually
at sea, and have often the most urgent reasons to
worship the Parent of Nature in the midst of the storms
which they encounter. These two sects live in
perfect peace and harmony with each other; those ancient
times of religious discords are now gone (I hope never
to return) when each thought it meritorious, not only
to damn the other, which would have been nothing,
but to persecute and murther one another, for the
glory of that Being, who requires no more of us, than
that we should love one another and live! Every
one goes to that place of worship which he likes best,
and thinks not that his neighbour does wrong by not
following him; each busily employed in their temporal
affairs, is less vehement about spiritual ones, and
fortunately you will find at Nantucket neither idle
drones, voluptuous devotees, ranting enthusiasts,
nor sour demagogues. I wish I had it in my power
to send the most persecuting bigot I could find in——to
the whale fisheries; in less than three or four years
you would find him a much more tractable man, and
therefore a better Christian.
Singular as it may appear to you, there are but two
medical professors on the island; for of what service
can physic be in a primitive society, where the excesses
of inebriation are so rare? What need of galenical
medicines, where fevers, and stomachs loaded by the
loss of the digestive powers, are so few? Temperance,
the calm of passions, frugality, and continual exercise,
keep them healthy, and preserve unimpaired that constitution
which they have received from parents as healthy as
themselves; who in the unpolluted embraces of the
earliest and chastest love, conveyed to them the soundest
bodily frame which nature could give. But as no
habitable part of this globe is exempt from some diseases,
proceeding either from climate or modes of living;
here they are sometimes subject to consumptions and
to fevers. Since the foundation of that town
no epidemical distempers have appeared, which at times
cause such depopulations in other countries; many of
them are extremely well acquainted with the Indian
methods of curing simple diseases, and practise them
with success. You will hardly find anywhere a
community, composed of the same number of individuals,
possessing such uninterrupted health, and exhibiting
so many green old men, who show their advanced age
by the maturity of their wisdom, rather than by the
wrinkles of their faces; and this is indeed one of