| Number of | Vicarages or | Number of | Total Income | ||
| Counties. | Parishes. | Rectories. | Perpetual | Glebe | of Clergy from |
| Curacies. | Houses. | Benefices. | |||
| £ | |||||
| Carmarthenshire, | 77 | 16 | 72 | 26 | 9,974 |
| Glamorganshire, | 125 | 53 | 83 | 33 | 18,101 |
| Pembrokeshire, | 140 | 58 | 85 | 34 | 17,418 |
| The three Counties, | 342 | 127 | 240 | 93 | 45,493 |
| Average | Number of | Average area | ||||
| Income of | Parishes on | Average | of square | |||
| Counties | Clergy per | which the | population | miles | ||
| Parish. | average Income | per Parish. | per Parish. | |||
| is taken. | ||||||
| £ | s. | d. | ||||
| Carmarthenshire, | 119 | 13 | 0 | 75 | 1,380 | 12 |
| Glamorgenshire, | 153 | 7 | 11 | 118 | 1,364 | 6 |
| Pembrokeshire, | 129 | 0 | 5 | 135 | 255 | 4 |
| The three Counties, | 133 | 0 | 4 | 328 | 1,068 | 6 |
Whatever deficiencies there may be in the system of daily and secular education, much more zeal and energy is shown in the Sunday schools; the causes and objects of which are so graphically and accurately described by Mr Lingen, that we must again quote his own words:—observing that the two other reports tell the same tale exactly, only in different language—
"The type of such Sunday schools is no more than this. A congregation meets in its chapel. It elects those whom it considers to be its most worthy members, intellectually and religiously, to act as 'teachers' to the rest, and one or more to 'superintend' the whole. Bible classes, Testament classes, and classes of such as cannot yet read, are formed. They meet once, generally from 2 to 4 P.M., sometimes in the morning also, on each Sunday. The superintendent, or one of the teachers, begins the school by prayer; they then sing; then follows the class instruction, the Bible and Testament classes reading and discussing the Scriptures, the others learning to read; school is closed in the same way as it began. Sections of the same congregation, where distance or other causes render it difficult for them to assemble in the chapel, establish similar schools elsewhere. These are called branches. The constitution throughout is purely democratic, presenting an office and some sort of title to almost every man who is able and willing to take an active part in its administration, without much reference to his social position during the other six days of the week. My returns show 11,000 voluntary teachers, with an allowance of about seven scholars to each. Whatever may be the accuracy of the numbers, I believe this relative proportion to be not far wrong. The position of teacher is coveted as a distinction, and is multiplied accordingly. It is not unfrequently the first prize to which the most proficient pupils in the parochial schools look. For them it is a step towards the office of preacher and minister. The universality of these schools, and the large proportion of the persons attending them who take part in their government, have very generally familiarised the people with some of the more ordinary terms and methods of organisation, such as committee, secretary, and so forth.
"Thus, there is every thing about such institutions which can recommend them to the popular taste. They gratify that gregarious sociability which animates the Welsh towards each other. They present the charms of office to those who, on all other occasions, are subject; and of distinction to those who have no other chance of distinguishing themselves. The topics current in them are those of the most general interest; and are treated in a mode partly didactic, partly polemical, partly rhetorical, the most universally appreciated. Finally, every man, woman, and child feels comfortably at home in them. It is all among neighbours and equals. Whatever ignorance is shown there, whatever mistakes are made, whatever strange speculations are started, there are no superiors to smile and open their eyes. Common habits of thought pervade all. They are intelligible or excusable to one another. Hence, every one that has got any thing to say is under no restraint from saying it. Whatever such Sunday-schools may be as places of instruction, they are real fields of mental activity. The Welsh working man rouses himself for them. Sunday is to him more than a day of bodily rest and devotion. It is his best chance, all the week through, of showing himself in his own character. He marks his sense of it by a suit of clothes regarded with a feeling hardly less Sabbatical than the day itself. I do not remember to have seen an adult in rags in a single Sunday school throughout the poorest districts. They always seemed to me better dressed on Sundays than the same classes in England."
As a specimen of the relative number of Sunday schools belonging to the different religious persuasions in North Wales, we will take Mr Johnson's summary, which gives the following tabular result; and which is nearly in the same proportion in the rest of the principality:—
SUNDAY SCHOOLS.
| Church of England, | 124 |
| Baptists, | 73 |
| Calvinistic Methodists, | 545 |
| Independents, | 232 |
| Wesleyan Methodists, | 183 |
| Other Denominations, | 4 |
| —— | |
| Total, | 1161 |
But if we take the returns of the daily schools for the same six counties, the proportions will be found to, be greatly changed:—
DAY SCHOOLS FOR THE POOR.
| Schools. | Scholars. | |
| Church, | 269 | 18,732 |
| Baptists, | 0 | 0 |
| Calvinistic Methodists, | 3 | 140 |
| Independents, | 6 | 275 |
| Roman Catholics, | 2 | 55 |
| Wesleyans, | 2 | 285 |
| British and Foreign, | 42 | 4,979 |
| Schools, not British and Foreign, | 29 | 1,726 |
| Workhouse Schools, | 8 | 463 |
| Factory, | 1 | 30 |
| Private adventure, | 216 | 5,348 |
| —— | ——— | |
| Total, | 578 | 32,033 |