Page:Twenty years before the mast - Charles Erskine, 1896.djvu/221

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Twenty Years Before the Mast.
195

nestle in the bosom of the Italian Alps; where brooks and fountains send forth unrestrained their unceasing melody; where the breezes are soft and balmy, and the perfumed breath of an unending summer fills the air with its intoxicating odor, — man alone is debased. Nature displays her brightest charms and revels in her gayest attire; but God’s own image is loathsome and deformed. Here is indeed a field for the missionary: and laborers are not wanting in fulfilment of the Divine command, ‘Go ye into all the world and preach the gospel.’ The humble, self-denying followers of Wesley have found their way to this group."

Looking backward fifty years to these islands, one of the loveliest spots on this huge globe, and visiting them in my imagination to-day, and listening to the cries and sighs of the natives, perhaps I may be pardoned for thinking it would have been better if the islands had never been discovered by Europeans; not that Christianity is a failure, but that our civilization is. Nations are like individuals — selfish, selfish, selfish. The more they get, the more they want.

The Fiji Islands to-day are an English colony, and the Fiji cannibals are British subjects to Her Most Gracious Britannic Majesty, Victoria, Queen of England, Ireland, Scotland, and Wales, that kingdom whose unity, it is claimed, has never been broken. Yes, it is "rule, Britannia." She rules in the north, in the south, in the east, and in the west. How did she come into possession of these lovely islands? In the same way, no doubt, that she acquired New Zealand — through the treachery of the American consul, who was an Englishman.