Roger wrote:Wade:
Am I correct in concluding that everyone here is at least in agreement that the Book of Mormon was not plagarized from the extant Spalding manuscript (call it what you will: "Roman Story" or "Oberline Manuscript" or "Manuscript Found")?
It's difficult to get a room full of people to agree on anything. It is possible that the Roman story (or a copy of it) was directly used to produce the Book of Mormon, but I don't think there are many people who would argue that. I sure wouldn't. So the answer is probably "yes."
If so, then I am not sure what value there is in identifying similarities between the extant manuscript and the Book of Mormon,
Good question. Short answer... because the testimony has it that Spalding wrote a similar ms to the Roman story; one that told a similar story but used a Biblical style and went farther back in history. If one can identify similarities between the Roman story and the Book of Mormon, then it lends weight to that testimony.
except perhaps to underscore the point that the two works may contain similarites even when not plagerized (a point that tends to work against Spalding theories). Right?
No, because the testimony by those who actually heard Spalding read from his manuscript was that MF was similar to the Roman story. It was written by the same author using a similar premise. The parallels between Spalding's Roman story and Smith's plate-discovery narrative supports the witnesses when they claim there was another Spalding manuscript.
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I am not sure why you assume the premises are similar. Let's look what the Conneaut witnesses have said regarding the multiple manuscripts:
1. Aron Wright, Aug 1833: "Spalding had many other manuscripts". Dec. 1833: "I have examined the writings which he [Hurlbut] has obtained from sd Spaldings widowe I recognise them to be the hand writing of sd Spalding but not the manuscript I had refferance to in my statement before alluded to as he informed me he wrote in the first place he wrote for his own amusement and then altered his plan and commenced writing a history of the first Settlement of America the particulars you will find in my testimony Dated August 1833.
2. John Miller, Sept. 1833" Spalding. . .He had written two or three books or pamphlets on different subjects". Miller's daughter, Rachel Derby, commented in Dec. 1884: "Father told him [Hurlbut] that the 'Manuscript Found' was not near all of Spaldings writings."
3. Matilda Mckinstry, April 1880: "There were sermons and other papers, and I saw a manuscript, about an inch thick, closely written, tied with some of the stories my father had written for me, one of which he called, 'The Frogs of Wyndham.'"
According to Wright, then, Spalding had "altered his plan" and wrote about the first settlement in America, and Miller said the manuscripts were "on different subjects". McKinstry differentiated between sermons, papers, manuscripts, and stories. So, even if one grants (for the sake of argument) that the extant manuscript is not the manuscript the Conneaut witness had in mind, I don't see it as accurate for you to claim that the "premises are similar". As such, the question I asked above is still in play.
My question becomes all the more salient when one considers that when doing a textual critical analysis, writing styles as well as subject matter factor in heavily, and according the witness statements, the writing style they described (i.e. "old style", "old obsolete style", "ancient scripture style of writing", "written in Biblical phraseology", etc.) is dissimilar from that found in the extant manuscript. In fact, this dissimilarity and others are used by Spaldingist to argue in favor of a second manuscript.
In short, you can't have it both ways. it doesn't make sense to examine similarities between the Book of Mormon text and the text of a book you agree wasn't plagerized, and which was allegedly written on a different subject and written in a different writing style.
or the discovery narrative for that matte,
The discovery narrative is a different matter. When people first began connecting Spalding to the Book of Mormon there was no "discovery narrative." Spalding's Roman story was also not accessible until 1833-34. Therefore there was an asserted link between Spalding and Smith well before 1838. The parallels between Smith's 1838 account and Spalding's Roman story are an indication that Smith had access to Spalding's writings, and lend further support to the testimony that had already been given.
This is an excellent point, but unfortunately, it works against your theory in multiple ways. Since the Conneaut witnesses testimonies predate publication of the Book of Mormon discovery narrative, and since the Book of Mormon did not, itself, contain the discovery narrative; and since the witness testimonies mention a discovery narrative ("represented as being found in this town", "recovered from the earth", "...opened a great mound, where there were human bones. There he found a written history...", "dug up out of one of the mounds in the region", "Spaulding's romance professed to find the Record where the Recorder concealed it, in one of those mounds, one of which was but a few rods from Spaulding's residence"), then at least this aspect of the witness testimony is inconsistent with what they had heard about or read regarding the Book of Mormon at the time, though certainly cnsistent with what one may read in the extant Spalding manuscript. In short, the witness testimonies on this point don't fit what was written in the Book of Mormon, but do fit the extant manuscript (which you agree was not plagerized). It, thus, is evidence against the Book of Mormon being plagerized, and evidence in favor of a single "Manuscript Found". Sorry.
Thanks, -Wade Englund-