The Kacháris

The KachárisIt is with some diffidence that I comply with Colonel Gurdons request that I should add...
€6,26 EUR
€6,26 EUR
SKU: gb-50008-ebook
Product Type: Books
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Author: Endle, Sidney,1840?-1907
Format: eBook
Language: Bodo
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The Kacháris

The Kacháris

€6,26

The Kacháris

€6,26
Author: Endle, Sidney,1840?-1907
Format: eBook
Language: Bodo

The Kacháris

It is with some diffidence that I comply with Colonel Gurdons request that I should add a few words of preface and explanation to the last literary work of an old friend and pastor, whose loss will long be lamented in the Assam Valley, where he laboured as a missionary and planters chaplain for upwards of forty years. Mr. Endles interest in his Kachri flock was that of an evangelist rather than that of a linguist or ethnologist, and this preoccupation has coloured his style and affected the matter of his book in a way that, however pleasant and natural it may seem to those who had the privilege of his acquaintance, may perhaps require a few words of explanation for the benefit of those who look for anthropology only, or linguistics, in his pages. My first duty, then, is to say a few words about the authors life and character. Sidney Endle was born about 1840 at Totnes in Devon, of sturdy yeoman parentage. His grandfather was, it seems, proud of being an armiger, and it is a family tradition that many Endles figured in the ranks of the Catholic clergy of the West country. Mr. Endle was educated at Totnes Grammar School, under the Rev. James Powney, and early conceived a wish to enter the ministry of the Church of England, and serve abroad as a missionary. With this view he entered St. Augustines College at Canterbury. Unfortunately the College seems to have kept no written record of the dates at which one of the most distinguished and devoted of its pupils entered and left its roof. It was in February, 1864, however, that he was sent by the Society for the Propagation of the Gospel to Tezpur, in Assam, to be the assistant of Mr. Hesselmyer, then in charge of the Kachri mission at that place. In 1865 he was ordained deacon by the Bishop of [xii]Calcutta, and in the following year he was admitted to priests orders. Soon after he was transferred to the independent charge of the S.P.G. mission among the tea-garden coolies at Dibrugarh in Upper Assam. In 1869, on Mr. Hesselmyers death, Mr. Endle was made chaplain of the important tea-planting district of Darrang, with the charge of the Kachri mission in that district, having his head-quarters at Tezpur. His pastoral duties were thus two-fold. On the one hand, he became the pastor of an European community scattered over an area some 100 miles in length by 30 or 40 in breadth. It was his duty to gather his flock round him at some convenient tea-garden, or at the pretty little rustic church at Tezpur itself, where his congregation included the small band of officials. He was everywhere welcome, and it was not long before he was as popular as he was respected. One of the most unworldly and simple of men, almost an ascetic in his personal tastes and habits, he could sympathise with and understand men whose training and ideas were different from his. He had a native shrewdness and quiet sense of humour which stood him in good stead in his dealings with men probably as varied in their origins and temperament as are to be found in any collection of Englishmen beyond the seas. His sermonsand he could preach with equal ease and eloquence in English, Assamese, and Kachriwere ever those of a man who to shrewd observation of the various life about him, native and European, added an unwavering devotion to the responsibilities of his calling. Authoritative, and even stern, he could be when he thought it needful to assert his responsibility as a priest. But, somehow, the occasion rarely occurred, since his was not the disposition that demands impossible perfection of ordinary human nature. There was no touch of intolerance in his gentle and (there is no other word to describe him) saintly nature. I think he would have liked to have it said of him that, like Chaucers Parson, He was a shepherd and no mercenerie, ......Buy Now (To Read More)

Product details

Ebook Number: 50008
Author: Endle, Sidney
Release Date: Sep 19, 2015
Format: eBook
Language: Bodo

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