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John G. Paton, missionary to the New Hebrides, volume 1 (of 3) cover

John G. Paton, missionary to the New Hebrides, volume 1 (of 3)

Chapter 4: NOTE TO SECOND EDITION.
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About This Book

The author recounts a life that moves from a humble rural upbringing and religious formation through demanding urban mission work to pioneering service among South Pacific island communities. He describes learning local languages, facing violent resistance and tragic losses, confronting practices including warfare and cannibalism, and building relationships that yielded conversions and native teachers. Episodes include perilous landings, epidemics, and cultural misunderstandings, balanced with moments of pastoral care, prayerful perseverance, and reflective commentary on faith, sacrifice, and the practical challenges of cross‑cultural mission work.

PREFACE.

The Manuscript of this Volume, put together in a rough draft amid ceaseless and exacting toils, was placed in my hands and left absolutely to my disposal by my beloved brother, the Missionary.

It has been to me a labour of perfect love to re-write and revise the same, pruning here and expanding there, and preparing the whole for the press. In the incidents of personal experience, constituting the larger part of the book, the reader peruses in an almost unaltered form the graphic and simple narrative as it came from my brother’s pen. But, as many sections have been re-cast and largely modified, especially in those Chapters of whose events I was myself an eye-witness, or regarding which I had information at first hand from the parties concerned therein,—and as circumstances make it impossible to submit these in their present shape to my brother before publication,—I must request the Public to lay upon me, and not on him, all responsibility for the final shape in which the Autobiography appears.

I publish it, because Something tells me there is a blessing in it.

January, 1889. James Paton.

NOTE TO SECOND EDITION.

The Editor desires very gratefully to acknowledge his joy in receiving, not only through Press Notices, but from Correspondents in every rank, most ample confirmation of the assurance expressed by him in the last sentence of the Original Preface—“There is a blessing in it.”

He has been urging his Brother to complete, as soon as he possibly can, Part Second of the Autobiography; and he hopes that the call for this Second Edition of Part First at so early a date will successfully enforce his appeal.

February, 1889.