Sickness
in the Smith household. Oliver Cowdery
is hired to teach school in Manchester.
Oliver becomes acquainted with the history
of Joseph Smith Jr. and desires to become
a scribe for him. Smiths are forced
to move to their old cabin. Oliver and
Samuel Smith go to Harmony, Pennsylvania,
to see Joseph. Oliver acts as scribe
for Joseph in the translation of the
Book of Mormon. Joseph and Oliver receive
the Aaronic Priesthood and the ordinance
of baptism.
January
1829 to May 15, 1829
As had
always been the case, our season of
rejoicing was soon mingled with anxiety
and distress. When we arrived at home,
we found Sophronia and Samuel lying
at the point of death. Hyrum had shut
up his own house and quitted business
in order to take care of the children
during our absence. Sophronia lay very
sick for two months, in which time she
was dreadfully salivated by the doctor
who attended her.
[1]
Soon after
we returned, there came a man into our
neighborhood by the name of Lyman Cowdery.
He went to Hyrum (as he was one of the
principal trustees) and applied for
the school. A meeting of the trustees
was called, and it was settled that
Mr. Cowdery should be employed. But
the next day, this Mr. Cowdery brought
his brother Oliver
[2]
to the trustees and requested
them to receive him in his place, as
business had arisen that would oblige
him to disappoint them. But he would
warrant the prosperity of the school
in Oliver’s hands, if the trustees would
accept of his services. All parties
were satisfied, and Oliver requested
my husband to take him as a boarder,
at least for a little while until he
should become acquainted with his patrons
in the school.
He had
not been in the place long until he
began to hear about the plates from
all quarters and immediately commenced
importuning Mr. Smith upon the subject.
He did not succeed in eliciting any
information from him for a long time.
At length, however, he gained my husband’s
confidence so far as to get a sketch
of the facts which related to the plates.
One day,
Oliver came home from school in quite
a lively manner. As soon as he had an
opportunity of conversing with Mr. Smith,
he told him that he (Oliver) had been
in a deep study all day, and it had
been put into his heart that he would
have the privilege of writing for Joseph. [3] And when the term of school which he
was then teaching was closed, he would
go and pay Joseph a visit.
The next
day was so very stormy as to render
it almost impossible to travel the road
between the schoolhouse and our place.
The rain fell in torrents all the evening,
so I supposed that Oliver would certainly
stop with some neighbor who lived nearer
the schoolhouse than we did. But he
was not to be deterred from coming by
any common difficulty, for his mind
was now fully set upon a subject which
he could not converse upon anywhere
else.
When he
came in, he said, “I have now resolved
what I will do — for the thing which
I told you about yesterday seems working
in my very bones, insomuch that I cannot
for a moment get rid of it. My plan
is this: My term of school will be out
in March, and I want Hyrum, as he is
one of the trustees, to manage to have
my school money ready for me as soon
as the school closes, that I may be
able to set off for Pennsylvania immediately
upon making the necessary preparations.
Samuel, I understand, is going to stay
with Joseph through the spring. I will
endeavor to be ready to go by the time
he recovers his health again. I have
made it a subject of prayer, and I firmly
believe that if it is the will of the
Lord that I should go, and that there
is a work for me to do in this thing,
I am determined to attend to it.”
We told
him that we thought it was his privilege
to know whether this was the case and
advised him to seek for a testimony
for himself. He did so and received
the witness spoken of in the book of
Doctrine and Covenants, section 8. [4]
From this
time Oliver was so entirely absorbed
in the subject of the record, that it
seemed impossible for him to think or
converse about anything else.
As the
time for which we had agreed for our
place was now drawing to a close, we
began to make preparations to remove
our family and effects to the log house
which was now occupied by Hyrum.
[5] When we gave to the
new landlord full and entire possession
of the last vestige of real estate which
we could call our own, we began to feel
more seriously than ever before the
effects of our lot. Before this, we
had the use of our property, although
it was not nominally ours. Now the time
had come for us to feel the stroke most
sensibly.
I thought
that it would be impossible in the crowded
situation in which we would now have
to live for us to make Mr. Cowdery comfortable
and mentioned to him the necessity of
seeking another boarding place. [6] I also thought this would be a good
occasion to bring to his mind the cause
of all our present privations, as well
as the misfortune that he himself was
liable to if he turned his back upon
the world and set out in the service
of God.
“Now, Oliver,”
said I, “just look upon this thing.
See what a comfortable home we have
had here and what pains each child that
we have has taken to provide for us
everything necessary to make our old
age comfortable, and long life desirable.
Here I have to look upon the handiwork
of that dear son whom death has removed
from our sight. Everything which meets
my eyes reminds me of my beloved Alvin. [7] Even
upon his deathbed, in his last moments,
his dying injunction to his brothers
was that they should not, by any means,
neglect to finish his work of preparing
a place of earthly rest for us — that
if possible, through the exertions of
our children, our last days might be
our best days. There is scarcely anything
that I see that has not passed through
the hands of that faithful boy and,
afterwards, been carefully arranged
precisely according to his plan by his
brothers who survived him. This shows
me in every particular their faithful
and affectionate remembrance both of
their parents and the brother whom they
loved.
“All these
tender recollections render our present
trial doubly severe, for these relics
must now pass into the hands of wicked
men who fear not God, neither do they
regard man. And upon what righteous
principle has all this been brought
about? They have never raised a hand
to earn any part of that of which they
are now to reap the benefit. In consequence
of these things, Oliver, we cannot make
you comfortable any longer and you will
be under the necessity of taking boarding
somewhere else, for we shall have to
crowd ourselves together in a log house
where we shall have none of the convenience
that we have here.”
“Mother,”
exclaimed the young man with much feeling,
“only let me stay with you, and I can
live in any log hut where you and Father
live, but I cannot go away from you,
so say no more about convenience.”
“Well,”
I continued, “now look around me upon
all these things that have been gathered
together for my happiness, which has
cost the toil of years. You mark. I
now give this up for the sake of Christ
and salvation, and I pray God to help
me do so without a murmur or a tear.
In the strength of God I give these
up from this time, and I will not cast
one longing look upon anything which
I leave behind me.”
In April,
all Mr. Cowdery’s affairs being arranged
according to his mind, he and Samuel
set out for Pennsylvania.
[8] The weather, for some
time previous, had been very wet and
disagreeable — raining, freezing, and
thawing alternately, which had made
the roads almost impassable, particularly
during the middle of the day. But Mr.
Cowdery was determined not to be detained
by wind or weather and persevered until
they arrived at Joseph’s house, although
Oliver froze one of his toes and he
and Samuel suffered much on the road
from fatigue.
When they
arrived there, Joseph was not at home. [9] He had been so hurried with business
and writing, etc., that he could not
proceed with the work as fast as it
was necessary for him to do. There was
also another disadvantage under which
he had to labor. Emma had so much of
her time taken up with the care of her
house that she could write but little
for him. Accordingly, two or three days
before the arrival of Oliver and Samuel, [10] Joseph called upon his Heavenly Father
to send him a scribe as the angel had
promised, and he was informed that the
same should be forthcoming in a few
days.
When Oliver
was introduced to Joseph, he said, “Mr.
Smith, I have come for the purpose of
writing for you.” This was not at all
unexpected to Joseph, for although
he had never seen Mr. Cowdery before,
he knew that the Lord was able to perform,
and that he had been faithful to fulfill,
all his promises.
They then
sat down and conversed together until
late, and Joseph told Oliver his entire
history as far as it was necessary for
his information in those things which
concerned him. The next morning they
commenced the work of translation and
were soon deeply engaged. Now the work
of writing and translation progressed
rapidly.
One morning,
however, they sat down to their usual
work, when the first thing that presented
itself to Joseph was a commandment from
God that he and Oliver should repair
to the water and each of them be baptized. [11] They immediately went down to the
Susquehanna River and obeyed the mandate
given them through the Urim and Thummim.
As they were on their return to the
house, they overheard Samuel, in a secluded
spot, engaged in secret prayer. They
had now received the authority to baptize,
and Joseph said that he considered it
a sufficient testimony of Samuel’s honesty
of heart and zeal for religion that
they had found him privately bowing
before the Lord in prayer, and that
he thought it was an evidence of readiness
for baptism. Oliver was of the same
opinion, and they spoke to Samuel, who
went with them straightway to the water
and was baptized. [12] After
this, they again went on with the translation
as before.
[13]
Notes