Nathaniel Willis believes that Joseph pretended to have a vision and pretended to find spectacles.

Date
Oct 10, 1832
Type
News (traditional)
Source
Nathaniel Willis
Critic
Non-LDS
Hearsay
Unsourced
Secondary
Reference

"Mormonism," Boston Recorder (Boston, Massachusetts) 17, no. 41 (October 10, 183): 17

Scribe/Publisher
Boston Recorder
People
Joseph Smith, Jr., Oliver Cowdery, Nathaniel Willis
Audience
Reading Public
Transcription

About two years since, Smith pretended to have been directed, in a dream, or vision, to a certain spot located between the village of Palmyra and Manchester. A slight excavation of the earth, enabled him to arrive at this new revelation, written in mysterious characters upon gold plates. A pair of spectacles, of strange and peculiar construction were found with the plates, to aid the optics of the prophet. Soon after another very fortunate circumstance occurred. This was the introduction of Oliver Cowdery, to whom, and whom only, was given the ability—with the aid of spectacles-to translate the mysterious characters . . .

Citations in Mormonr Qnas
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