Law
Offic
For
}
←
early as 1841. He writes "The trials " which caused these spread over a per <rind of six years, began to cease in or
about the year 1847, and
my barrassments began also gradually " lessen : He has thus been in heavy pecuniary embarrassments for thir- teen years.
4
a matter
ети
alletor
cineer
2. . He speaks of the amount of his debts being tacuty to him on his leaving his parish. Does not this argue a very culpable laxity of principle in a
clergyman whose Rectory amounts of 1849 to only to 226 by Clergy list He before voluntarily admitted to one that £ 200 a year of his chaplaincy for three
years had been by a legal.
appropriated for the benefit
document-
މ
me
of his creditors before leaving Fyfield, his salary was Office
in advance.
"that morconer £ 150
-paid at the Colonial
and that he has arrived in the Colony
丢
with the first portion of his salary cable here to the extent of £ 70 due
payable
to the Captain of the vessel for his pas
to China; - a
sage
heavy
debt
his
wad of for a Colonial chaplain to bear on entrance upon his situation.
خه
His defence to me has been
that he has been "» "improvident but not " "dishonest; unfortunate but not wicked":
In his written defence he appears.
admission of improvidence.
to make no
359
Probably by inquiries in his late
barish it could be ascertained whether his seale and style of expenditure was morally right
whose Clergyman amounted to £226 a year.
rectory
In a
It appears that Mr Baxter left Fyfield at 71⁄2 P. M. after evening. and not after morning
have formed
regret to state that
-
service.
the opinion that this is the only par ticular in Mr Fortal's publie statement which appears to be incorrect. I have cacefully inquired into all the state. ments respecting his departure on that Funday from Fryfield; _ and while I await the Bishop of Winchester's fi_
nal and decisive reply to my of last mail before I give my final refusal to license, I regret to state that with the facts
before me, and : the admissions of Mr Baster himself,
I cannot regard
than open to
a
hasty
creditors.
non
letter
him as otherwire
- great suspicion of taking or clandestine departure from
In reply to
my questions he
admitted that it is unusual,
for a
clergyman to set off
on a
journey on
Sunday evening, and that he re- membered at the time that a clergy- man could not be arrested for debt
Sunday, and that his recollection. this at the time made him feel that his departure in a Sunday
ou a
of
was