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[beginning of page 1 of the original manuscript]
Anglo-Chinese College
Deed.
I, Robert Morrison, D. D. of the University of Glasgow, having been sent to China in the
year of our Lord One Thousand Eight Hundred and Seven, by a Society of Christians, meeting
in London, and composed of members of various British Churches, for the purpose of learning
the Chinese language, rendering the Sacred Scriptures into the said tongue, and composing an
English-Chinese Dictionary, with the ulterior view of the diffusion of the Christian Religion in
China, and the Extra-Ganges nations; and having, in the year 1818, nearly brought these
several works to a conclusion, my mind was led to pray to God for direction, and to meditate
on what farther means could be used to bring about the final object of my Mission.
The Divine Providence having increased my personal property in a small degree, I
determined to appropriate One Thousand Pounds sterling to found a College, to be called the
Anglo-Chinese College, the object of which should be the cultivation of English and Chinese
literature, in order to the spread of the gospel of Jesus Christ.
As the above preamble shows, the cultivation of literature is not to be considered the
final object of the Institution, but attended to as a means of effectuating, under the blessing of
God's Holy Spirit, the conversion to the faith of Christ of the Extra-Ganges nations, who read
or speak the Chinese language; so, on the other hand, the College must never be considered
as a mere dwelling-house for Christian missionaries, but as a place devoted to study, with
apartments only for the Principal of College, and such other persons engaged in tuition, or the
appropriate studies of the College, as it can accommodate with rooms.
Having entrusted the building of the College to the Rev. William Milne, my first associate
in the Chinese Mission, and we, unitedly, having laid our views and wishes before the public,
soliciting their pecuniary aid, and they
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