Glenn:
Okay, I have been over this with Dale. We do not have a copy of this statement supposedly signed by Robert Patterson. It is in the third person. We have no idea who really is the author of that statement or that it was actually signed by Robert Patterson. This was in a pamphlet By Samuel Williams called "Mormonism Exposed". The authenticity and accuracy of that statement cannot be determined by the extant evidence.
From E. D. Howe's "Mormonism Unvailed", page 289, "Mr. Patterson says he has no recollection of any such manuscript being brought there for publication, neither would he have been likely to have seen it, as the business of printing was conducted wholly by Lambdin at that time."
This directly contradicts the first statement.
It doesn't directly contradict it. It simply shows that Robert Patterson was not impressed with Spalding's novel and he never thought he would be interrogated on it decades later. He had more important matters to attend to and delegated responsibilities to others.
So, we still have no prima facie case for a manuscript resembling the Book of Mormon ever being at the printer's establishment.
Opportunity is what we have. A Spalding novel of some sort was submitted for consideration. No one disputes that. Your only contention was that we demonstrate
it wasn't the Roman story. Overlooking the
obvious fact that the Roman story is not at all even close to being ready to submit for publication, I provided you with additional evidence in the form of a statement by Patterson indicating the language was "chiefly in the style of our English translation of the Bible" which you don't accept. No surprise there.
I can't help it if you choose to refuse the evidence. I already mentioned the other reasons to conclude that the Roman story was not the manuscript submitted, but in order for your theory to hold, it has to have been the one submitted, therefore you refuse to accept that evidence as well. Again, no surprise.
But I'm interested in how you see this all playing out.....
Yay!!! Your're beginning to get it. Now apply that same reasoning to the Hurlbut witnesses and you're almost there.
Okay... let's do it. Tell me how this all goes down. Let's start with John and Martha. How much of their statements do you accept?
You note that the missionaries mentioned unspecified uproars in their diaries. That was a given just about anywhere they preached. Noting the published uproar that was occasioned by Hurlbut, it defies logic to assert that there would have been no reason to write about it until Hurlbut came along with his allegations.
No what defies logic is your demand that someone write about it within the time frame you demand and that those writings should still exist.
Benjamin Winchester and Daniel Tyler both assert that there was nothing being noised about until Hurlbut brought it up.
Because he was out to prove that Hurlbut started the whole thing! Even Dan Vogel doesn't accept that.
As I mentioned in another post, One of the witnesses, Henry Lake, that Hurlbut coached stated that he had borrowed a copy of the Book of Mormon and realized that it contained material from Spalding's romance after his wife started reading it to him. Yet he said nothing about it at the time. None of the other witnesses mentioned Henry spilling the beans to them.
You can't possibly know what he "said nothing about" at the time! That's an absurd claim. In the first place, you're not even sure of what "time" you are referring to. Lake only says: "Some months ago...." What does that mean? Two months? Four months? Eight months? The fact is, you don't know. And you also don't know who he did and did not mention it to! But we can be sure if Hurlbut had gotten a statement from Mrs. Lake you would now be complaining that their statements agree too much!
So lets' see what Henry actually says:
Some months ago I borrowed the Golden Bible, put it into my pocket, carried it home, and thought no more of it. -- About a week after, my wife found the book in my coat pocket, as it hung up, and commenced reading it aloud as I lay upon the bed. She had not read 20 minutes till I was astonished to find the same passages in it that Spalding had read to me more, than twenty years before, from his "Manuscript Found." Since that, I have more fully examined the said Golden Bible, and have no hesitation in saying that the historical part of it is principally, if not wholly taken from the "Manuscript Found."
Now this is quite interesting when we consider it from your perspective, because, we have to wonder
how Hurlbut--that master false-memory implanter--implanted this
whole episode--which occurred "some months"
before he even arrived on the scene and took the statements--into the brain of Henry Lake? Not only is Hurlbut so slick as to convince Lake that Fabius and Lobaska are Lehi and Nephi, but then, outdoing himself, he
also convinces Lake that when his wife read the borrowed Gold Bible to him (assuming Hurlbut didn't implant
that false memory also!), that he (Lake) had actually
thought he recognized a resemblance at that time--some months ago! But, of course, since Glenn is convinced false memories are really at play here,
we know that
can't be true, because
Hurlbut is the bad guy here who implants all these false memories into the innocent but suggestible minds of these Conneaut simpletons!
How could I not see it?!
Oh, and because "none of the other witnesses mentioned Henry spilling the beans to them" we can conclude what? That he must
never have discussed it with any other living soul, because
surely every pre-Hurlbut conversation in the Conneaut area would have been recorded for posterity--and signed and notarized of course, in anticipation that Glenn wouldn't accept it otherwise.
Like I said, stick with "they were all anti-Mormon liars out to destroy Mormonism" and the logic will work out much better.
All the best.
"...a pious lie, you know, has a great deal more influence with an ignorant people than a profane one."
- Sidney Rigdon, as quoted in the Quincy Whig, June 8, 1839, vol 2 #6.