the age of eighty he went over to Holland, visited the Brethren's
beautiful settlement at Zeist, met there his old friend, Bishop
Anthony Seifferth, and asked to hear some Moravian music and
singing. The day was Wesley's birthday. As it happened, however,
to be "Children's Prayer-Day" as well, the minister, being busy with
many meetings, was not able to ask Wesley to dinner; and, therefore,
he invited him instead to come to the children's love-feast. John
Wesley went to the chapel, took part in the love-feast, and heard
the little children sing a "Birth-Day Ode" in his honour {June 28th,
1783.}. The old feud between Moravians and Methodists was over. It
ended in the children's song.145
One instance will show La Trobe's reputation in England {1777.}. At
that time there lived in London a famous preacher, Dr. Dodd; and
now, to the horror of all pious people, Dr. Dodd was accused and
convicted of embezzlement, and condemned to death. Never was London
more excited. A petition with twenty-three thousand signatures was
sent up in Dodd's behalf. Frantic plots were made to rescue the
criminal from prison. But Dodd, in his trouble, was in need of
spiritual aid; and the two men for whom he sent were John Wesley and
La Trobe. By Wesley he was visited thrice; by La Trobe, at his own
request, repeatedly; and La Trobe was the one who brought comfort to
his soul, stayed with him till the end, and afterwards wrote an
official account of his death.
And yet, on the other hand, the policy now pursued by La Trobe was
the very worst policy possible for the Moravians in England. For
that policy, however, we must lay the blame, not on the man, but on
the system under which he worked. As long as the Brethren's Church
in England was under the control of the U.E.C., it followed, as a
matter of course, that German ideas would be enforced on British
soil; and already, at the second General Synod, the Brethren had
resolved that the British work must be conducted on German lines.
Never did the Brethren make a greater blunder in tactics. In
Germany the system had a measure of success, and has flourished till
the present day; in England it was doomed to failure at the outset.
La Trobe gave the system a beautiful name. He called it the system
of "United Flocks." On paper it was lovely to behold; in practice
it was the direct road to consumption. In name it was English
enough; in nature it was Zinzendorf's Diaspora. At no period had
the Brethren a grander opportunity of extending their borders in
England than during the last quarter of the eighteenth century. In
Yorkshire, with Fulneck as a centre, they had four flourishing
congregations, societies in Bradford and Leeds, and preaching places
as far away as Doncaster and Kirby Lonsdale, in Westmoreland. In
Lancashire, with Fairfield as a centre, they were opening work in
Manchester and Chowbent. In Cheshire, with Dukinfield as a centre,
they had a number of societies on the "Cheshire Plan," including a
rising cause at Bullock-Smithy, near Stockport. In the Midlands,
with Ockbrook as a centre, they had preaching places in a dozen
surrounding villages. In Bedfordshire, with Bedford as a centre,
they had societies at Riseley, Northampton, Eydon, Culworth and
other places. In Wales, with Haverfordwest as a centre, they had
societies at Laughharne, Fishguard, Carmarthen and Carnarvon. In
Scotland, with Ayre146 as a centre, they had societies at Irvine and
Tarbolton, and preaching-places at Annan, Blackhall, Dumfries,
Edinburgh, Glasgow, Kilsyth, Kilmarnock, Ladyburn, Prestwick,
Westtown, and twenty smaller places. In the West of England, with
Bristol and Tytherton as centres, they had preaching-places at