Brother Gibson:
Dear Sir:
I received your two letters of
June 15th, and Aug. 7th, respectively; both of which were highly
interesting and edyfying. I read them to Prisident Young and
council, your daughter, Captn. Hooper and many other friends,
who were all highly pleased to hear from you. Your daughter
says she writes you very often.
Your letters please me they shew plainly that the
spirit of your mission is upon you. Your labor in searching
out and stirring up the cold and lukewarm saints in the
various branches through the country was a good work.
Oceanicus' letter to the mountaineer was published
and read with much interest.
That the Japanese ambassadors to the proud
high-minded Americans, could not find a linguist among the
literate of this great nation, who could speak to them without
an interpreter till they met a Latter-day Saint, is rather sig
nificant and adds to the signs that Israel is to be head and
not the tail, and the mighty nations of the earth are begin-
ning to feel a little of the forebodings of this truth, notwith-
standing the present smallness of the little stone or kingdom
which Daniel saw. [Daniel 2:26-47]
The openings in New York for public lecturing, which
you name, and also publishing truth in such extensive
public works as the new America cy[c]lopedia, rejoices my heart
Brother Gibson:
Dear Sir:
I received your two letters of
June 15th, and Aug. 7th, respectively; both of which were highly
interesting and edyfying. I read them to Prisident Young and
council, your daughter, Captn. Hooper and many other friends,
who were all highly pleased to hear from you. Your daughter
says she writes you very often.
Your letters please me they shew plainly that the
spirit of your mission is upon you. Your labor in searching
out and stirring up the cold and lukewarm saints in the
various branches through the country was a good work.
Oceanicus' letter to the mountaineer was published
and read with much interest.
That the Japanese ambassadors to the proud
high-minded Americans, could not find a linguist among the
literate of this great nation, who could speak to them without
an interpreter till they met a Latter-day Saint, is rather sig
nificant and adds to the signs that Israel is to be head and
not the tail, and the mighty nations of the earth are beginning to feel a little of the forebodings of this truth, notwithstanding the present smallness of the little stone or kingdom
which Daniel saw.
The openings in New York for public lecturing, which
you name, and also publishing truth in such extensive
public works as the new America clopedia, rejoices my heart
Select a date to see more documents from that day.
"Letter to Walter Murray Gibson, 7 September 1860," p. 1, The Wilford Woodruff Papers, accessed January 15, 2025, https://wilfordwoodruffpapers.org/p/OrG