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A BRIEF MEMOIR
WITH PORTIONS OF THE
DIARY,
LETTERS, AND OTHER REMAINS,
OF
ELIZA SOUTHALL,
LATE OF BIRMINGHAM, ENGLAND.
1869.
"For to me to live is Christ, and to die is gain."--PHIL. 1. 21.
INTRODUCTION
The first edition of this volume appeared in England in 1855, where it was printed for private circulation only. Many expressions of the interest that has been felt in its perusal, and of the value that has been attached to the record it contains, have reached the editor and the family of the departed. Several applications to allow its publication in America have also been received; and, after serious consideration, the editor feels that he ought not to withhold his consent.
In order that it may be more interesting and worthy of the largely-extended circulation that it is now likely to obtain, additions have been made, and particulars inserted, which a greater lapse of time from the occurrence of the events narrated, seems now to permit. A slight thread of biographical notice has also been introduced.
But it is not to this part, which merely serves to render the volume more complete, by enabling the reader to understand the circumstances by which the writer of the Diary was surrounded, but to the Diary itself, that the editor desires to commend attention, believing that those who enjoy to trace the operations and effects of Divine grace on the heart will find much that is interesting and valuable therein, and that the young may reap instruction and encouragement from the spiritual history of one who early and earnestly sought the Lord.
WILLIAM SOUTHALL, JR.
EDGBASTON, BIRMINGHAM, 2d mo. 12th, 1861.
BRIEF MEMOIR
OF
ELIZA SOUTHALL.
Eliza Southall, wife of William Southall, Jr., of Birmingham, England, and daughter of John and Eliza Allen, was born at Liskeard, on the 9th of 6th month, 1823.
As she felt a strong attachment to the scenes of her childhood, and an interest in the people among whom she spent the greater part of her short life,--an attachment which is evinced many times in the course of her memoranda,--it may interest the American reader to know that Liskeard is an ancient but small town in Cornwall. The country around is broken up into hill and dale, sloping down to the sea a few miles distant, the rocky shores of which are dotted with fishing-villages; in an opposite direction it swells into granite hills, in which are numerous mines of copper and lead. There is a good deal of intelligence, and also of religious feeling, to be met with among both the miners and fishermen, Cornwall having been the scene of a great revival in religion in the time of John Wesley, the effects of which have not been suffered to pass away. A meeting of Friends has been held at Liskeard from an early period in the history of the Society; but, as in many other country places in England, the numbers seem gradually to diminish, various attractions drawing the members to the larger towns. Launceston Castle, so well known in connection with the sufferings of George Fox, is a few miles distant.
Table of contents (by pages)
- 1: A Brief Memoir with Portions of the Diary, Letters
- 2: In a little memoir of John Allen
- 3: Eliza Southall possessed a mind of no common order
- 4: Whatever might be the nature of her pursuit
- 5: Which joins the two eternities
- 6: Still this little spark of love that remains
- 7: It is but occasional sensibility
- 8: And felt how untold was the price
- 9: And love's lamp brightly burns
- 10: She thus writes in her Journal 6th Mo
- 11: I would ask of Him who seeth in secret
- 12: To receive the essential gospel of salvation
- 13: Sliding from feeling to composition
- 14: To obey is better than sacrifice
- 15: When will the blessing come like dewdrops pearly
- 16: This natural conscientiousness
- 17: Because I feel benevolence towards the poor
- 18: Threw His arms of mercy round me
- 19: In allusion to the appointment
- 20: My scruple is not against poetry
- 21: Not Christ to oppose Antichrist
- 22: That the covenant cannot be broken
- 23: Surely I am united to Christ my Saviour
- 24: His countenance doth behold the upright
- 25: It is presumptuous to put off
- 26: Alluding to a meeting at Devonshire House
- 27: Which is more of practical than of theoretical faith
- 28: And still does He continue to heal my backslidings
- 29: The exceeding broad commandment
- 30: Would think it presumption to profess
- 31: To hold in heaven communion sweet
- 32: There may and ought to be a perfect infant
- 33: Be that image watchfully prized
- 34: And that as to uphold an immoral system is immoral
- 35: Could not overcome a sad sense of spiritual deficiency
- 36: And feel anxious for the salvation of others
- 37: For strangely confused were long my ideas of usefulness
- 38: Very clearly an evangelical spirit
- 39: It was hoped that the cactus which had belonged to J
- 40: But for my obstinacy in trying to light farthing candles
- 41: He spoke solemnly on the tares and the wheat
- 42: The Lord sitteth on the flood
- 43: Oh to be more like my Saviour
- 44: Respecting my spiritual state at Ipswich
- 45: It is indeed a sweet and easy yoke
- 46: A solitary walk in the garden at Totness
- 47: Blest chiefly with humiliation
- 48: It must be unbent when it is not wanted
- 49: We who have tried our heavenly Father's patience so long
- 50: Yesterday morning when I awoke
- 51: Were those that held thee fast
- 52: Nor quite resign their hearts
- 53: There is danger in fleshly confidence
- 54: Thou wilt be led through green pastures
- 55: At another time the precious promise
- 56: Whose covenant is an everlasting covenant
- 57: The tendency to what is evil
- 58: Alluding to various engagements
- 59: Now early ripened for the heavenly garner
- 60: In a tenderly affectionate note
- 61: Passed from waterfall to waterfall
- 62: We set off for a treat indeed a canter up Borrowdale
- 63: After returning from Swarthmore
- 64: And requested her sister to repeat the hymn
- 65: Her petitions were mercifully granted
- 66: And affectionately greeted him when he came
- 67: 'Why should we fear youth's draught of joy
