I quite agree in the principle of giving the Colony some spiritual
                     assistance but on grounds of expediency I am afraid it is questionable.
                     For this last reason 
Sir E. Lytton decided against a Colonial Chaplain &
                     only agreed to the free passage in the 
Thames City because though
                     indirectly it was equivalent to pecuniary aid it was not actually a grant
                     of money 
wh wd appear on the Estimates.  I do not see how, if the
                     £100 suggested or any sum be allowed to the Col. Ch. S., pecuniary

 aid to
                     the S.P.G. or to other religious bodies can be refused, or why we s
d
                     confine ourselves to so small a sum.  I 
wd for my own part gladly
                     adopt a different course and give effective aid towards a religious
                     establishment in the new Colony but modern policy has condemned this &
                     rendered it impossible, and the difference between £100 and £1000 is
                     merely I apprehend a question of degree.  I am afraid that we cannot
                     comply with the application but it is for 
Sir E. Lytton to decide.