The Project Gutenberg EBook of Index of the Project Gutenberg Works of John Fiske, by John Fiske This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook. Title: Index of the Project Gutenberg Works of John Fiske Author: John Fiske Editor: David Widger Release Date: February 20, 2019 [EBook #58925] Language: English Character set encoding: UTF-8 *** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK INDEX OF THE PG WORKS OF FISKE *** Produced by David Widger
PREFACE. | |
DETAILED CONTENTS. | |
THE BEGINNINGS OF NEW ENGLAND. | |
CHAPTER I. | THE ROMAN IDEA AND THE ENGLISH IDEA. |
CHAPTER II. | THE PURITAN EXODUS. |
CHAPTER III. | THE PLANTING OF NEW ENGLAND. |
CHAPTER IV. | THE NEW ENGLAND CONFEDERACY. |
CHAPTER V. | KING PHILIP'S WAR. |
CHAPTER VI. | THE TYRANNY OF ANDROS. |
BIBLIOGRAPHICAL NOTE. | |
NOTES: |
chap | page | |
Biographical Sketch. | vii | |
I. | Introduction. | 1 |
II. | The Colonies In 1750. | 4 |
III | The French Wars, and the First Plan of Union. | 26 |
IV. | The Stamp Act, and the Revenue Laws. | 39 |
V. | The Crisis. | 78 |
VI. | The Struggle for the Centre. | 104 |
VII. | The French Alliance. | 144 |
VIII. | Birth of the Nation. | 182 |
Collateral Reading. | 195 | |
Index. | 197 |
Facing Page | |
Invasion of Canada | 92 |
Washington's Campaigns in New Jersey and Pennsylvania. | 119 |
Burgoyne's Campaign | 130 |
The Southern Campaign | 172 |
CHAPTER I. |
page |
The American aborigines 1 |
Question as to their origin 2, 3 |
Antiquity of man in America 4 |
Shell-mounds, or middens 4, 5 |
The Glacial Period 6, 7 |
Discoveries in the Trenton gravel 8 |
Discoveries in Ohio, Indiana, and Minnesota 9 |
Mr. Cresson's discovery at Claymont, Delaware 10 |
The Calaveras skull 11 |
Pleistocene men and mammals 12, 13 |
Elevation and subsidence 13, 14 |
Waves of migration 15 |
The Cave men of Europe in the Glacial Period 16 |
The Eskimos are probably a remnant of the Cave men 17-19 |
There was probably no connection or intercourse by water between ancient America and the Old World 20 |
There is one great American red race 21 |
Different senses in which the word "race" is used 21-23 |
No necessary connection between differences in culture and differences in race 23 |
Mr. Lewis Morgan's classification of grades of culture 24-32 |
Distinction between Savagery and Barbarism 25 |
Origin of pottery 25 |
Lower, middle, and upper status of savagery 26 |
Lower status of barbarism; it ended differently in the two hemispheres; in ancient America there was no pastoral stage of development 27 |
(p. xx) Importance of Indian corn 28 |
Tillage with irrigation 29 |
Use of adobe-brick and stone in building 29 |
Middle status of barbarism 29, 30 |
Stone and copper tools 30 |
Working of metals; smelting of iron 30 |
Upper status of barbarism 31 |
The alphabet and the beginnings of civilization 32 |
So-called "civilizations" of Mexico and Peru 33, 34 |
Loose use of the words "savagery" and "civilization" 35 |
Value and importance of the term "barbarism" 35, 36 |
The status of barbarism is most completely exemplified in ancient America 36, 37 |
Survival of bygone epochs of culture; work of the Bureau of Ethnology 37, 38 |
Tribal society and multiplicity of languages in aboriginal America 38, 39 |
Tribes in the upper status of savagery; Athabaskans, Apaches, Shoshones, etc. 39 |
Tribes in the lower status of barbarism; the Dakota group or family 40 |
The Minnitarees and Mandans 41 |
The Pawnee and Arickaree group 42 |
The Maskoki group 42 |
The Algonquin group 43 |
The Huron-Iroquois group 44 |
The Five Nations 45-47 |
Distinction between horticulture and field agriculture 48 |
Perpetual intertribal warfare, with torture and cannibalism 49-51 |
Myths and folk-lore 51 |
Ancient law 52, 53 |
The patriarchal family not primitive 53 |
"Mother-right" 54 |
Primitive marriage 55 |
The system of reckoning kinship through females only 56 |
Original reason for the system 57 |
The primeval human horde 58, 59 |
Earliest family-group; the clan 60 |
"Exogamy" 60 |
(p. xxi) Phratry and tribe 61 |
Effect of pastoral life upon property and upon the family 61-63 |
The exogamous clan in ancient America 64 |
Intimate connection of aboriginal architecture with social life 65 |
The long houses of the Iroquois 66, 67 |
Summary divorce 68 |
Hospitality 68 |
Structure of the clan 69, 70 |
Origin and structure of the phratry 70, 71 |
Structure of the tribe 72 |
Cross-relationships between clans and tribes; the Iroquois Confederacy 72-74 |
Structure of the confederacy 75, 76 |
The "Long House" 76 |
Symmetrical development of institutions in ancient America 77, 78 |
Circular houses of the Mandans 79-81 |
The Indians of the pueblos, in the middle status of barbarism 82, 83 |
Horticulture with irrigation, and architecture with adobe 83, 84 |
Possible origin of adobe architecture 84, 85 |
Mr. Cushing's sojourn at Zuñi 86 |
Typical structure of the pueblo 86-88 |
Pueblo society 89 |
Wonderful ancient pueblos in the Chaco valley 90-92 |
The Moqui pueblos 93 |
The cliff-dwellings 93 |
Pueblo of Zuñi 93, 94 |
Pueblo of Tlascala 94-96 |
The ancient city of Mexico was a great composite pueblo 97 |
The Spanish discoverers could not be expected to understand the state of society which they found there 97, 98 |
Contrast between feudalism and gentilism 98 |
Change from gentile society to political society in Greece and Rome 99, 100 |
(p. xxii) First suspicions as to the erroneousness of the Spanish accounts 101 |
Detection and explanation of the errors, by Lewis Morgan 102 |
Adolf Bandelier's researches 103 |
The Aztec Confederacy 104, 105 |
Aztec clans 106 |
Clan officers 107 |
Rights and duties of the clan 108 |
Aztec phratries 108 |
The tlatocan, or tribal council 109 |
The cihuacoatl, or "snake-woman" 110 |
The tlacatecuhtli, or "chief-of-men" 111 |
Evolution of kingship in Greece and Rome 112 |
Mediæval kingship 113 |
Montezuma was a "priest-commander" 114 |
Mode of succession to the office 114, 115 |
Manner of collecting tribute 116 |
Mexican roads 117 |
Aztec and Iroquois confederacies contrasted 118 |
Aztec priesthood; human sacrifices 119, 120 |
Aztec slaves 121, 122 |
The Aztec family 122, 123 |
Aztec property 124 |
Mr. Morgan's rules of criticism 125 |
He sometimes disregarded his own rules 126 |
Amusing illustrations from his remarks on "Montezuma's Dinner" 126-128 |
The reaction against uncritical and exaggerated statements was often carried too far by Mr. Morgan 128, 129 |
Great importance of the middle period of barbarism 130 |
The Mexicans compared with the Mayas 131-133 |
Maya hieroglyphic writing 132 |
Ruined cities of Central America 134-138 |
They are probably not older than the twelfth century 136 |
Recent discovery of the Chronicle of Chicxulub 138 |
Maya culture very closely related to Mexican 139 |
The "Mound-Builders" 140-146 |
The notion that they were like the Aztecs 142 |
Or, perhaps, like the Zuñis 143 |
(p. xxiii) These notions are not well sustained 144 |
The mounds were probably built by different peoples in the lower status of barbarism, by Cherokees, Shawnees, and other tribes 144, 145 |
It is not likely that there was a "race of Mound Builders" 146 |
Society in America at the time of the Discovery had reached stages similar to stages reached by eastern Mediterranean peoples fifty or sixty centuries earlier 146, 147 |
CHAPTER II. |
Stories of voyages to America before Columbus; the Chinese 148 |
The Irish. 149 |
Blowing and drifting; Cousin, of Dieppe 150 |
These stories are of small value 150 |
But the case of the Northmen is quite different 151 |
The Viking exodus from Norway 151, 152 |
Founding of a colony in Iceland, A. D. 874 153 |
Icelandic literature 154 |
Discovery of Greenland, A. D. 876 155, 156 |
Eric the Red, and his colony in Greenland, A. D. 986 157-161 |
Voyage of Bjarni Herjulfsson 162 |
Conversion of the Northmen to Christianity 163 |
Leif Ericsson's voyage, A. D. 1000; Helluland and Markland 164 |
Leif's winter in Vinland 165, 166 |
Voyages of Thorvald and Thorstein 167 |
Thorfinn Karlsefni, and his unsuccessful attempt to found a colony in Vinland, A. D. 1007-10 167-169 |
Freydis, and her evil deeds in Vinland, 1011-12 170, 171 |
Voyage into Baffin's Bay, 1135 172 |
Description of a Viking ship discovered at Sandefiord, in Norway 173-175 |
(p. xxiv) To what extent the climate of Greenland may have changed within the last thousand years 176, 177 |
With the Northmen once in Greenland, the discovery of the American continent was inevitable 178 |
Ear-marks of truth in the Icelandic narratives 179, 180 |
Northern limit of the vine 181 |
Length of the winter day 182 |
Indian corn 182, 183 |
Winter weather in Vinland 184 |
Vinland was probably situated somewhere between Cape Breton and Point Judith 185 |
Further ear-marks of truth; savages and barbarians of the lower status were unknown to mediæval Europeans 185, 186 |
The natives of Vinland as described in the Icelandic narratives 187-193 |
Meaning of the epithet "Skrælings" 188, 189 |
Personal appearance of the Skrælings 189 |
The Skrælings of Vinland were Indians,—very likely Algonquins 190 |
The "balista" or "demon's head" 191, 192 |
The story of the "uniped" 193 |
Character of the Icelandic records; misleading associations with the word "saga" 194 |
The comparison between Leif Ericsson and Agamemnon, made by a committee of the Massachusetts Historical Society, was peculiarly unfortunate and inappropriate 194, 197 |
The story of the Trojan War, in the shape in which we find it in Greek poetry, is pure folk-lore 195 |
The Saga of Eric the Red is not folk-lore 196 |
Mythical and historical sagas 197 |
The western or Hauks-bók version of Eric the Red's Saga 198 |
The northern or Flateyar-bók version 199 |
Presumption against sources not contemporary 200 |
Hauk Erlendsson and his manuscripts 201 |
The story is not likely to have been preserved to Hauk's time by oral tradition only 202 |
Allusions to Vinland in other Icelandic documents 202-207 |
(p. xxv) Eyrbyggja Saga 203 |
The abbot Nikulas, etc. 204 |
Ari Fródhi and his works 204 |
His significant allusion to Vinland 205 |
Other references 206 |
Differences between Hauks-bók and Flateyar-bók versions 207 |
Adam of Bremen 208 |
Importance of his testimony 209 |
His misconception of the situation of Vinland 210 |
Summary of the argument 211-213 |
Absurd speculations of zealous antiquarians 213-215 |
The Dighton inscription was made by Algonquins, and has nothing to do with the Northmen 213, 214 |
Governor Arnold's stone windmill 215 |
There is no reason for supposing that the Northmen founded a colony in Vinland 216 |
No archæological remains of them have been found south of Davis strait 217 |
If the Northmen had founded a successful colony, they would have introduced domestic cattle into the North American fauna 218 |
And such animals could not have vanished and left no trace of their existence 219, 220 |
Further fortunes of the Greenland colony 221 |
Bishop Eric's voyage in search of Vinland, 1121 222 |
The ship from Markland, 1347 223 |
The Greenland colony attacked by Eskimos, 1349 224 |
Queen Margaret's monopoly, and its baneful effects 225 |
Story of the Venetian brothers, Nicolò and Antonio Zeno 226 |
Nicolò Zeno wrecked upon one of the Færoe islands 227 |
He enters the service of Henry Sinclair, Earl of the Orkneys and Caithness 228 |
Nicolò's voyage to Greenland, cir. 1394 229 |
Voyage of Earl Sinclair and Antonio Zeno 229, 230 |
Publication of the remains of the documents by the younger Nicolò Zeno, 1558 231 |
The Zeno map 232, 233 |
Queer transformations of names 234-236 |
(p. xxvi) The name Færoislander became Frislanda 236 |
The narrative nowhere makes a claim to the "discovery of America" 237 |
The "Zichmni" of the narrative means Henry Sinclair 238 |
Bardsen's "Description of Greenland" 239 |
The monastery of St. Olaus and its hot spring 240 |
Volcanoes of the north Atlantic ridge 241 |
Fate of Gunnbjörn's Skerries, 1456 242 |
Volcanic phenomena in Greenland 242, 243 |
Estotiland 244 |
Drogio 245 |
Inhabitants of Drogio and the countries beyond 246 |
The Fisherman's return to Frislanda 247 |
Was the account of Drogio woven into the narrative by the younger Nicolò? 248 |
Or does it represent actual experiences in North America? 249 |
The case of David Ingram, 1568 250 |
The case of Cabeza de Vaca, 1528-36 251 |
There may have been unrecorded instances of visits to North America 252 |
The pre-Columbian voyages made no real contributions to geographical knowledge 253 |
And were in no true sense a discovery of America 254 |
Real contact between the eastern and western hemisphere was first established by Columbus 255 |
CHAPTER III. |
Why the voyages of the Northmen were not followed up 256 |
Ignorance of their geographical significance 257 |
Lack of instruments for ocean navigation 257 |
Condition of Europe in the year 1000 258, 259 |
It was not such as to favour colonial enterprise 260 |
The outlook of Europe was toward Asia 261 |
Routes of trade between Europe and Asia 262 |
(p. xxvii) Claudius Ptolemy and his knowledge of the earth 263 |
Early mention of China 264 |
The monk Cosmas Indicopleustes 265 |
Shape of the earth, according to Cosmas 266, 267 |
His knowledge of Asia 268 |
The Nestorians 268 |
Effects of the Saracen conquests 269 |
Constantinople in the twelfth century 270 |
The Crusades 270-274 |
Barbarizing character of Turkish conquest 271 |
General effects of the Crusades 272 |
The Fourth Crusade 273 |
Rivalry between Venice and Genoa 274 |
Centres and routes of mediæval trade 275, 276 |
Effects of the Mongol conquests 277 |
Cathay, origin of the name 277 |
Carpini and Rubruquis 278 |
First knowledge of an eastern ocean beyond Cathay 278 |
The data were thus prepared for Columbus; but as yet nobody reasoned from these data to a practical conclusion 279 |
The Polo brothers 280 |
Kublai Khan's message to the Pope 281 |
Marco Polo and his travels in Asia 281, 282 |
First recorded voyage of Europeans around the Indo-Chinese peninsula 282 |
Return of the Polos to Venice 283 |
Marco Polo's book, written in prison at Genoa, 1299; its great contributions to geographical knowledge 284, 285 |
Prester John 285 |
Griffins and Arimaspians 286 |
The Catalan map, 1375 288, 289 |
Other visits to China 287-291 |
Overthrow of the Mongol dynasty, and shutting up of China 291 |
First rumours of the Molucca islands and Japan 292 |
The accustomed routes of Oriental trade were cut off in the fifteenth century by the Ottoman Turks 293 |
Necessity for finding an "outside route to the Indies" 294 |
(p.
xxviii) CHAPTER IV. |
Question as to whether Asia could be reached by sailing around Africa 295 |
Views of Eratosthenes 296 |
Opposing theory of Ptolemy 297 |
Story of the Phœnician voyage in the time of Necho 298-300 |
Voyage of Hanno 300, 301 |
Voyages of Sataspes and Eudoxus 302 |
Wild exaggerations 303 |
Views of Pomponius Mela 304, 305 |
Ancient theory of the five zones 306, 307 |
The Inhabited World, or Œcumene, and the Antipodes 308 |
Curious notions about Taprobane (Ceylon) 309 |
Question as to the possibility of crossing the torrid zone 309 |
Notions about sailing "up and down hill" 310, 311 |
Superstitious fancies 311, 312 |
Clumsiness of ships in the fifteenth century 312 |
Dangers from famine and scurvy 313 |
The mariner's compass; an interesting letter from Brunetto Latini to Guido Cavalcanti 313-315 |
Calculating latitudes and longitudes 315 |
Prince Henry the Navigator 316-326 |
His idea of an ocean route to the Indies, and what it might bring 318 |
The Sacred Promontory 319 |
The Madeira and Canary islands 320-322 |
Gil Eannes passes Cape Bojador 323 |
Beginning of the modern slave-trade, 1442 323 |
Papal grant of heathen countries to the Portuguese crown 324, 325 |
Advance to Sierra Leone 326 |
Advance to the Hottentot coast 326, 327 |
Note upon the extent of European acquaintance with (p. xxix) savagery and the lower forms of barbarism previous to the fifteenth century 327-329 |
Effect of the Portuguese discoveries upon the theories of Ptolemy and Mela 329, 330 |
News of Prester John; Covilham's journey 331 |
Bartholomew Dias passes the Cape of Good Hope and enters the Indian ocean 332 |
Some effects of this discovery 333 |
Bartholomew Columbus took part in it 333 |
Connection between these voyages and the work of Christopher Columbus 334 |
CHAPTER V. |
Sources of information concerning the life of Columbus; Las Casas and Ferdinand Columbus 335 |
The Biblioteca Colombina at Seville 336, 337 |
Bernaldez and Peter Martyr 338 |
Letters of Columbus 338 |
Defects in Ferdinand's information 339, 340 |
Researches of Henry Harrisse 341 |
Date of the birth of Columbus; archives of Savona 342 |
Statement of Bernaldez 343 |
Columbus's letter of September, 1501 344 |
The balance of probability is in favour of 1436 345 |
The family of Domenico Colombo, and its changes of residence 346, 347 |
Columbus tells us that he was born in the city of Genoa 348 |
His early years 349-351 |
Christopher and his brother Bartholomew at Lisbon 351, 352 |
Philippa Moñiz de Perestrelo 352 |
Personal appearance of Columbus 353 |
His marriage, and life upon the island of Porto Santo 353, 354 |
The king of Portugal asks advice of the great astronomer Toscanelli 355 |
(p. xxx) Toscanelli's first letter to Columbus 356-361 |
His second letter to Columbus 361, 362 |
Who first suggested the feasibleness of a westward route to the Indies? Was it Columbus? 363 |
Perhaps it was Toscanelli 363, 364 |
Note on the date of Toscanelli's first letter to Columbus 365-367 |
The idea, being naturally suggested by the globular form of the earth, was as old as Aristotle 368, 369 |
Opinions of ancient writers 370 |
Opinions of Christian writers 371 |
The "Imago Mundi" of Petrus Alliacus 372, 373 |
Ancient estimates of the size of the globe and the length of the Œcumene 374 |
Toscanelli's calculation of the size of the earth, and of the position of Japan (Cipango) 375, 376 |
Columbus's opinions of the size of the globe, the length of the Œcumene, and the width of the Atlantic ocean from Portugal to Japan 377-380 |
There was a fortunate mixture of truth and error in these opinions of Columbus 381 |
The whole point and purport of Columbus's scheme lay in its promise of a route to the Indies shorter than that which the Portuguese were seeking by way of Guinea 381 |
Columbus's speculations on climate; his voyages to Guinea and into the Arctic ocean 382 |
He may have reached Jan Mayen island, and stopped at Iceland 383, 384 |
The Scandinavian hypothesis that Columbus "must have" heard and understood the story of the Vinland voyages 384, 385 |
It has not a particle of evidence in its favour 385 |
It is not probable that Columbus knew of Adam of Bremen's allusion to Vinland, or that he would have understood it if he had read it 386 |
It is doubtful if he would have stumbled upon the story in Iceland 387 |
If he had heard it, he would probably have classed it with such tales as that of St. Brandan's isle 388 |
(p. xxxi) He could not possibly have obtained from such a source his opinion of the width of the ocean 388, 389 |
If he had known and understood the Vinland story, he had the strongest motives for proclaiming it and no motive whatever for concealing it 390-392 |
No trace of a thought of Vinland appears in any of his voyages 393 |
Why did not Norway or Iceland utter a protest in 1493? 393 |
The idea of Vinland was not associated with the idea of America until the seventeenth century 394 |
Recapitulation of the genesis of Columbus's scheme 395 |
Martin Behaim's improved astrolabe 395, 396 |
Negotiations of Columbus with John II. of Portugal 396, 397 |
The king is persuaded into a shabby trick 398 |
Columbus leaves Portugal and enters into the service of Ferdinand and Isabella, 1486 398-400 |
The junto at Salamanca, 1486 401 |
Birth of Ferdinand Columbus, August 15, 1488 401 |
Bartholomew Columbus returns from the Cape of Good Hope, December, 1487 402, 403 |
Christopher visits Bartholomew at Lisbon, cir. September, 1488, and sends him to England 404 |
Bartholomew, after mishaps, reaches England cir. February, 1490, and goes thence to France before 1492 405-407 |
The duke of Medina-Celi proposes to furnish the ships for Columbus, but the queen withholds her consent 408, 409 |
Columbus makes up his mind to get his family together and go to France, October, 1491 409, 410 |
A change of fortune; he stops at La Rábida, and meets the prior Juan Perez, who writes to the queen 411 |
Columbus is summoned back to court 411 |
The junto before Granada, December, 1491 412, 413 |
Surrender of Granada, January 2, 1492 414 |
Columbus negotiates with the queen, who considers his terms exorbitant 414-416 |
Interposition of Luis de Santangel 416 |
(p. xxxii) Agreement between Columbus and the sovereigns 417 |
Cost of the voyage 418 |
Dismay at Palos 419 |
The three famous caravels 420 |
Delay at the Canary islands 421 |
Martin Behaim and his globe 422, 423 |
Columbus starts for Japan, September 6, 1492 424 |
Terrors of the voyage:—1. Deflection of the needle 425 |
2. The Sargasso sea 426, 427 |
3. The trade wind 428 |
Impatience of the crews 428 |
Change of course from W. to W. S. W 429, 430 |
Discovery of land, October 12, 1492 431 |
Guanahani: which of the Bahama islands was it? 432 |
Groping for Cipango and the route to Quinsay 433, 434 |
Columbus reaches Cuba, and sends envoys to find a certain Asiatic prince 434, 435 |
He turns eastward and Pinzon deserts him 435 |
Columbus arrives at Hayti and thinks it must be Japan 436 |
His flag-ship is wrecked, and he decides to go back to Spain 437 |
Building of the blockhouse, La Navidad 438 |
Terrible storm in mid-ocean on the return voyage 439 |
Cold reception at the Azores 440 |
Columbus is driven ashore in Portugal, where the king is advised to have him assassinated 440 |
But to offend Spain so grossly would be imprudent 441 |
Arrival of Columbus and Pinzon at Palos; death of Pinzon 442 |
Columbus is received by the sovereigns at Barcelona 443, 444 |
General excitement at the news that a way to the Indies had been found 445 |
This voyage was an event without any parallel in history 446 |
The Discovery of America was a gradual process 447, 448 |
The letters of Columbus to Santangel and to Sanchez 449 |
Versification of the story by Giuliano Dati 450 |
Earliest references to the discovery 451 |
The earliest reference in English 452 |
The Portuguese claim to the Indies 453 |
Bulls of Pope Alexander VI. 454-458 |
The treaty of Tordesillas 459 |
Juan Rodriguez Fonseca, and his relations with Columbus 460-462 |
Friar Boyle 462 |
Notable persons who embarked on the second voyage 463 |
Departure from Cadiz 464 |
Cruise among the Cannibal (Caribbee) islands 465 |
Fate of the colony at La Navidad 466 |
Building the town of Isabella 467 |
Exploration of Cibao 467, 468 |
Westward cruise; Cape Alpha and Omega 468-470 |
Discovery of Jamaica 471 |
Coasting the south side of Cuba 472 |
The "people of Mangon" 473 |
Speculations concerning the Golden Chersonese 474-476 |
A solemn expression of opinion 477 |
Vicissitudes of theory 477, 478 |
Arrival of Bartholomew Columbus in Hispaniola 478, 479 |
Mutiny in Hispaniola; desertion of Boyle and Margarite 479, 480 |
The government of Columbus was not tyrannical 481 |
Troubles with the Indians 481, 482 |
Mission of Juan Aguado 482 |
Discovery of gold mines, and speculations about Ophir 483 |
Founding of San Domingo, 1496 484 |
The return voyage to Spain 485 |
Edicts of 1495 and 1497 486, 487 |
Vexatious conduct of Fonseca; Columbus loses his temper 487 |
(p. xxxiv) Departure from San Lucar on the third voyage 488 |
The belt of calms 489-491 |
Trinidad and the Orinoco 491, 492 |
Speculations as to the earth's shape; the mountain of Paradise 494 |
Relation of the "Eden continent" to "Cochin China" 495 |
Discovery of the Pearl Coast 495 |
Columbus arrives at San Domingo 496 |
Roldan's rebellion and Fonseca's machinations 496, 497 |
Gama's voyage to Hindustan, 1497 498 |
Fonseca's creature, Bobadilla, sent to investigate the troubles in Hispaniola 499 |
He imprisons Columbus 500 |
And sends him in chains to Spain 501 |
Release of Columbus; his interview with the sovereigns 502 |
How far were the sovereigns responsible for Bobadilla? 503 |
Ovando, another creature of Fonseca, appointed governor of Hispaniola 503, 504 |
Purpose of Columbus's fourth voyage, to find a passage from the Caribbee waters into the Indian ocean 504, 506 |
The voyage across the Atlantic 506 |
Columbus not allowed to stop at San Domingo 507 |
His arrival at Cape Honduras 508 |
Cape Gracias a Dios, and the coast of Veragua 509 |
Fruitless search for the strait of Malacca 510 |
Futile attempt to make a settlement in Veragua 511 |
Columbus is shipwrecked on the coast of Jamaica; shameful conduct of Ovando 512 |
Columbus's last return to Spain 513 |
His death at Valladolid, May 20, 1506 513 |
"Nuevo Mundo;" arms of Ferdinand Columbus 514, 515 |
When Columbus died, the fact that a New World had been discovered by him had not yet begun to dawn upon his mind, or upon the mind of any voyager or any writer 515, 516 |
page |
Portrait of the author Frontispiece |
View and ground-plan of Seneca-Iroquois long house reduced from Morgan's Houses and House-Life of the American Aborigines 66 |
View, cross-section, and ground-plan of Mandan round house, ditto 80 |
Ground-plan of Pueblo Hungo Pavie, ditto 86 |
Restoration of Pueblo Hungo Pavie, ditto 88 |
Restoration of Pueblo Bonito, ditto 90 |
Ground-plan of Pueblo Peñasca Blanca, ditto 92 |
Ground-plan of so-called "House of the Nuns" at Uxmal, ditto 133 |
Map of the East Bygd, or eastern settlement of the Northmen in Greenland, reduced from Rafn's Antiquitates Americanæ 160, 161 |
Ruins of the church at Kakortok, from Major's Voyages of the Zeni, published by the Hakluyt Society 222 |
Zeno Map, cir. 1400, ditto 232, 233 |
Map of the World according to Claudius Ptolemy, cir. A. D. 150, an abridged sketch after a map in Bunbury's History of Ancient Geography Facing 265 |
Two sheets of the Catalan Map, 1375, from Yule's Cathay, published by the Hakluyt Society 288, 289 |
Map of the World according to Pomponius Mela, cir. A. D. 50, from Winsor's Narrative and Critical History of America 304 |
Map illustrating Portuguese voyages on the coast of Africa, from a sketch by the author 324 |
Toscanelli's Map, 1474, redrawn and improved from a sketch in Winsor's America Facing 357 |
(p. xxxvi) Annotations by Columbus, reduced from a photograph in Harrisse's Notes on Columbus 373 |
Sketch of Martin Behaim's Globe, 1492, preserved in the city hall at Nuremberg, reduced to Mercator's projection and sketched by the author 422, 423 |
Sketch of Martin Behaim's Atlantic Ocean, with outline of the American continent superimposed, from Winsor's America 429 |
Map of the discoveries made by Columbus in his first and second voyages, sketched by the author 469 |
Map of the discoveries made by Columbus in his third and fourth voyages, ditto 493 |
Arms of Ferdinand Columbus, from the title-page of Harrisse's Fernand Colomb 515 |
CHAPTER I. | |
RESULTS OF YORKTOWN. | |
PAGE | |
Fall of Lord North's ministry | 1 |
Sympathy between British Whigs and the revolutionary party in America | 2 |
It weakened the Whig party in England | 3 |
Character of Lord Shelburne | 4 |
Political instability of the Rockingham ministry | 5, 6 |
Obstacles in the way of a treaty of peace | 7, 8 |
Oswald talks with Franklin | 9–11 |
Grenville has an interview with Vergennes | 12 |
Effects of Rodney's victory | 13 |
Misunderstanding between Fox and Shelburne | 14 |
Fall of the Rockingham ministry | 15 |
Shelburne becomes prime minister | 16 |
Defeat of the Spaniards and French at Gibraltar | 17 |
French policy opposed to American interests | 18 |
The valley of the Mississippi; Aranda's prophecy | 19 |
The Newfoundland fisheries | 20 |
Jay detects the schemes of Vergennes | 21 |
And sends Dr Vaughan to visit Shelburne | 22 |
John Adams arrives in Paris and joins with Jay in insisting upon a separate negotiation with England | 23, 24 |
The separate American treaty, as agreed upon: | |
1. Boundaries | 25 |
2. Fisheries; commercial intercourse | 26 |
3. Private debts | 27 |
4. Compensation of loyalists | 28–32 |
Secret article relating to the Yazoo boundary | 33 |
Vergennes does not like the way in which it has been done | 33 |
On the part of the Americans it was a great diplomatic victory | 34 |
Which the commissioners won by disregarding the instructions of Congress and acting on their own responsibility | 35 |
The Spanish treaty | 36 |
The French treaty | 37 |
Coalition of Fox with North | 38–42 |
They attack the American treaty in Parliament | 43 |
And compel Shelburne to resign | 44 |
Which leaves England without a government, while for several weeks the king is too angry to appoint ministers | 44 |
Until at length he succumbs to the coalition, which presently adopts and ratifies the American treaty | 45 |
The coalition ministry is wrecked upon Fox's India Bill | 46 |
Constitutional crisis ends in the overwhelming victory of Pitt in the elections of May, 1784 | 47 |
And this, although apparently a triumph for the king, was really a death-blow to his system of personal government | 48, 49 |
CHAPTER II. | |
THE THIRTEEN COMMONWEALTHS. | |
Cessation of hostilities in America | 50 |
Departure of the British troops | 51 |
Washington resigns his command | 52 |
And goes home to Mount Vernon | 53 |
His "legacy" to the American people | 54 |
The next five years were the most critical years in American history | 55 |
Absence of a sentiment of union, and consequent danger of anarchy | 56, 57 |
European statesmen, whether hostile or friendly, had little faith in the stability of the Union | 58 |
False historic analogies | 59 |
Influence of railroad and telegraph upon the perpetuity of the Union | 60 |
Difficulty of travelling a hundred years ago | 61 |
Local jealousies and antipathies, an inheritance from primeval savagery | 62, 63 |
Conservative character of the American Revolution | 64 |
State governments remodelled; assemblies continued from colonial times | 65 |
Origin of the senates in the governor's council of assistants | 66 |
Governors viewed with suspicion | 67 |
Analogies with British institutions | 68 |
The judiciary | 69 |
Restrictions upon suffrage | 70 |
Abolition of primogeniture, entails, and manorial privileges | 71 |
Steps toward the abolition of slavery and the slave-trade | 72–75 |
Progress toward religious freedom | 76, 77 |
Church and state in Virginia | 78, 79 |
Persecution of dissenters | 80 |
Madison and the Religions Freedom Act | 81 |
Temporary overthrow of the church | 82 |
Difficulties in regard to ordination; the case of Mason Weems | 83 |
Ordination of Samuel Seabury by non-jurors at Aberdeen | 84 |
Francis Asbury and the Methodists | 85 |
Presbyterians and Congregationalists | 86 |
Roman Catholics | 87 |
Except in the instance of slavery, all the changes described in this chapter were favourable to the union of the states | 88 |
But while the state governments, in all these changes, are seen working smoothly, we have next to observe, by contrast, the clumsiness and inefficiency of the federal government | 89 |
CHAPTER III. | |
THE LEAGUE OF FRIENDSHIP. | |
The several states have never enjoyed complete sovereignty | 90 |
But in the very act of severing their connection with Great Britain, they entered into some sort of union | 91 |
Anomalous character of the Continental Congress | 92 |
The articles of confederation; they sought to establish a "league of friendship" between the states | 93–97 |
But failed to create a federal government endowed with real sovereignty | 98–100 |
Military weakness of the government | 101–103 |
Extreme difficulty of obtaining a revenue | 104, 105 |
Congress, being unable to pay the army, was afraid of it | 106 |
Supposed scheme for making Washington king | 107 |
Greene's experience in South Carolina | 108 |
Gates's staff officers and the Newburgh address | 109 |
The danger averted by Washington | 110, 111 |
Congress driven from Philadelphia by mutinous soldiers | 112 |
The Commutation Act denounced in New England | 113 |
Order of the Cincinnati | 114–117 |
Reasons for the dread which it inspired | 118 |
Congress finds itself unable to carry out the provisions of the treaty with Great Britain | 119 |
Persecution of the loyalists | 120, 121 |
It was especially severe in New York | 122 |
Trespass Act of 1784 directed against the loyalists | 123 |
Character and early career of Alexander Hamilton | 124–126 |
The case of Rutgers v. Waddington | 127, 128 |
Wholesale emigration of Tories | 129, 130 |
Congress unable to enforce payment of debts to British creditors | 131 |
England retaliates by refusing to surrender the fortresses on the northwestern frontier | 132, 133 |
CHAPTER IV. | |
DRIFTING TOWARD ANARCHY. | |
The barbarous superstitions of the Middle Ages concerning trade were still rife in the eighteenth century | 134 |
The old theory of the uses of a colony | 135 |
Pitt's unsuccessful attempt to secure free trade between Great Britain and the United States | 136 |
Ship-building in New England | 137 |
British navigation acts and orders in council directed against American commerce | 138 |
John Adams tried in vain to negotiate a commercial treaty with Great Britain | 139, 140 |
And could see no escape from the difficulties except in systematic reprisal | 141 |
But any such reprisal was impracticable, for the several states imposed conflicting duties | 142 |
Attempts to give Congress the power of regulating commerce were unsuccessful | 143, 144 |
And the several states began to make commercial war upon one another | 145 |
Attempts of New York to oppress New Jersey and Connecticut | 146 |
Retaliatory measures of the two latter states | 147 |
The quarrel between Connecticut and Pennsylvania over the possession of the valley of Wyoming | 148–150 |
The quarrel between New York and New Hampshire over the possession of the Green Mountains | 151–153 |
Failure of American diplomacy because European states could not tell whether they were dealing with one nation or with thirteen | 154, 155 |
Failure of American credit; John Adams begging in Holland | 156, 157 |
The Barbary pirates | 158 |
American citizens kidnapped and sold into slavery | 159 |
Lord Sheffield's outrageous pamphlet | 160 |
Tripoli's demand for blackmail | 161 |
Congress unable to protect American citizens | 162 |
Financial distress after the Revolutionary War | 163, 164 |
State of the coinage | 165 |
Cost of the war in money | 166 |
Robert Morris and his immense services | 167 |
The craze for paper money | 168 |
Agitation in the southern and middle states | 169–171 |
Distress in New England | 172 |
Imprisonment for debt | 173 |
Rag-money victorious in Rhode Island; the "Know Ye" measures | 174–176 |
Rag-money defeated in Massachusetts; the Shays insurrection | 177–181 |
The insurrection suppressed by state troops | 182 |
Conduct of the neighbouring states | 183 |
The rebels pardoned | 184 |
Timidity of Congress | 185, 186 |
CHAPTER V. | |
GERMS OF NATIONAL SOVEREIGNTY. | |
Creation of a national domain beyond the Alleghanies | 187, 188 |
Conflicting claims to the western territory | 189 |
Claims of Massachusetts and Connecticut | 189, 190 |
Claims of New York | 190 |
Virginia's claims | 191 |
Maryland's novel and beneficent suggestion | 192 |
The several states yield their claims in favour of the United States | 193, 194 |
Magnanimity of Virginia | 195 |
Jefferson proposes a scheme of government for the northwestern territory | 196 |
Names of the proposed ten states | 197 |
Jefferson wishes to prohibit slavery in the national domain | 198 |
North Carolina's cession of western lands | 199 |
John Sevier and the state of Franklin | 200, 201 |
The northwestern territory | 202 |
Origin of the Ohio company | 203 |
The Ordinance of 1787 | 204–206 |
Theory of folkland upon which the ordinance was based | 207 |
Spain, hearing of the secret article in the treaty of 1783, loses her temper and threatens to shut up the Mississippi River | 208, 209 |
Gardoqui and Jay | 210 |
Threats of secession in Kentucky and New England | 211 |
Washington's views on the political importance of canals between east and west | 212 |
His far-sighted genius and self-devotion | 213 |
Maryland confers with Virginia regarding the navigation of the Potomac | 214 |
The Madison-Tyler motion in the Virginia legislature | 215 |
Convention at Annapolis, Sept 11, 1786 | 216 |
Hamilton's address calling for a convention at Philadelphia | 217 |
The impost amendment defeated by the action of New York; last ounce upon the camel's back | 218–220 |
Sudden changes in popular sentiment | 221 |
The Federal Convention meets at Philadelphia, May, 1787 | 222 |
Mr. Gladstone's opinion of the work of the convention | 223 |
The men who were assembled there | 224, 225 |
Character of James Madison | 226, 227 |
The other leading members | 228 |
Washington chosen president of the convention | 229 |
CHAPTER VI. | |
THE FEDERAL CONVENTION. | |
Why the proceedings of the convention were kept secret for so many years | 230 |
Difficulty of the problem to be solved | 231 |
Symptoms of cowardice repressed by Washington's impassioned speech | 232 |
The root of all the difficulties; the edicts of the federal government had operated only upon states, not upon individuals, and therefore could not be enforced without danger of war | 233–233 |
The Virginia plan, of which Madison was the chief author, offered a radical cure | 236 |
And was felt to be revolutionary in its character | 237–239 |
Fundamental features of the Virginia plan | 240, 241 |
How it was at first received | 242 |
The House of Representatives must be directly elected by the people | 243 |
Question as to the representation of states brings out the antagonism between large and small states | 244 |
William Paterson presents the New Jersey plan; not a radical cure, but a feeble palliative | 245 |
Straggle between the Virginia and New Jersey plans | 246–249 |
The Connecticut compromise, according to which the national principle is to prevail in the House of Representatives, and the federal principle in the Senate, meets at first with fierce opposition | 250, 251 |
But is at length adopted | 252 |
And proves a decisive victory for Madison and his methods | 253 |
A few irreconcilable members go home in dudgeon | 254 |
But the small states, having been propitiated, are suddenly converted to Federalism, and make the victory complete | 255 |
Vague dread of the future west | 255 |
The struggle between pro-slavery and anti-slavery parties began in the convention, and was quieted by two compromises | 256 |
Should representation be proportioned to wealth or to population? | 257 |
Were slaves to be reckoned as persons or as chattels? | 258 |
Attitude of the Virginia statesmen | 259 |
It was absolutely necessary to satisfy South Carolina | 260 |
The three fifths compromise, suggested by Madison, was a genuine English solution, if ever there was one | 261 |
There was neither rhyme nor reason in it, but for all that, it was the best solution attainable at the time | 262 |
The next compromise was between New England and South Carolina as to the foreign slave-trade and the power of the federal government over commerce | 263 |
George Mason calls the slave-trade an "infernal traffic" | 264 |
And the compromise offends and alarms Virginia | 265 |
Belief in the moribund condition of slavery | 266 |
The foundations of the Constitution were laid in compromise | 267 |
Powers granted to the federal government | 268 |
Use of federal troops in suppressing insurrections | 269 |
Various federal powers | 270 |
Provision for a federal city under federal jurisdiction | 271 |
The Federal Congress might compel the attendance of members | 272 |
Powers denied to the several states | 272 |
Should the federal government he allowed to make its promissory notes a legal tender in payment of debts? powerful speech of Gouverneur Morris | 273 |
Emphatic and unmistakable condemnation of paper money by all the leading delegates | 274 |
The convention refused to grant to the federal government the power of issuing inconvertible paper, but did not think an express prohibition necessary | 275 |
If they could have foreseen some recent judgments of the supreme court, they would doubtless have made the prohibition explicit and absolute | 276 |
Debates as to the federal executive | 277 |
Sherman's suggestion as to the true relation of the executive to the legislature | 278 |
There was to be a single chief magistrate, but how should he be chosen? | 279 |
Objections to an election by Congress | 280 |
Ellsworth and King suggest the device of an electoral college, which is at first rejected | 281 |
But afterwards adopted | 282 |
Provisions for an election by Congress in the case of a failure of choice by the electoral college | 283 |
Provisions for counting the electoral votes | 284 |
It was not intended to leave anything to be decided by the president of the Senate | 285 |
The convention foresaw imaginary dangers, but not the real ones | 286 |
Hamilton's opinion of the electoral scheme | 287 |
How it has actually worked | 288 |
In this part of its work the convention tried to copy from the British Constitution | 289 |
In which they supposed the legislative and executive departments to be distinct and separate | 290 |
Here they were misled by Montesquieu and Blackstone | 291 |
What our government would be if it were really like that of Great Britain | 292–294 |
In the British government the executive department is not separated from the legislative | 295 |
Circumstances which obscured the true aspect of the case a century ago | 296–298 |
The American cabinet is analogous, not to the British cabinet, but to the privy council | 299 |
The federal judiciary, and its remarkable character | 300–301 |
Provisions for amending the Constitution | 302 |
The document is signed by all but three of the delegates | 303 |
And the convention breaks up | 304 |
With a pleasant remark from Franklin | 305 |
CHAPTER VII. | |
CROWNING THE WORK. | |
Franklin lays the Constitution before the legislature of Pennsylvania | 306 |
It is submitted to Congress, which refers it to the legislatures of the thirteen states, to be ratified or rejected by the people in conventions | 307 |
First American parties, Federalists and Antifederalists | 308, 309 |
The contest in Pennsylvania | 310 |
How to make a quorum | 311 |
A war of pamphlets and newspaper squibs | 312, 313 |
Ending in the ratification of the Constitution by Delaware, Pennsylvania, and New Jersey | 314 |
Rejoicings and mutterings | 315 |
Georgia and Connecticut ratify | 316 |
The outlook in Massachusetts | 317, 318 |
The Massachusetts convention meets | 319 |
And overhauls the Constitution clause by clause | 320 |
On the subject of an army Mr. Nason waxes eloquent | 321 |
The clergymen oppose a religious test | 322 |
And Rev. Samuel West argues on the assumption that all men are not totally depraved | 323 |
Feeling of distrust in the mountain districts | 324 |
Timely speech of a Berkshire farmer | 325, 326 |
Attitude of Samuel Adams | 326, 327 |
Meeting of mechanics at the Green Dragon | 327 |
Charges of bribery | 328 |
Washington's fruitful suggestion | 329 |
Massachusetts ratifies, but proposes amendments | 330 |
The Long Lane has a turning and becomes Federal Street | 331 |
New Hampshire hesitates, but Maryland ratifies, and all eyes are turned upon South Carolina | 332 |
Objections of Rawlins Lowndes answered by Cotesworth Pinckney | 333 |
South Carolina ratifies the Constitution | 334 |
Important effect upon Virginia, where thoughts of a southern confederacy had been entertained | 335, 336 |
Madison and Marshall prevail in the Virginia convention, and it ratifies the Constitution | 337 |
New Hampshire had ratified four days before | 338 |
Rejoicings at Philadelphia; riots at Providence and Albany | 339 |
The struggle in New York | 340 |
Origin of the "Federalist" | 341–343 |
Hamilton wins the victory, and New York ratifies | 344 |
All serious anxiety is now at an end; the laggard states, North Carolina and Rhode Island | 345 |
First presidential election, January 7, 1789; Washington is unanimously chosen | 346 |
Why Samuel Adams was not selected for vice-president | 347 |
Selection of John Adams | 348 |
Washington's journey to New York, April 16–23 | 349 |
His inauguration | 350 |
The Mystery of Evil | ||
I. | The Serpent's Promise to the Woman | 3 |
II. | The Pilgrim's Burden | 8 |
III. | Manichæism and Calvinism | 14 |
IV. | The Dramatic Unity of Nature | 22 |
V. | What Conscious Life is made of | 27 |
VI. | Without the Element of Antagonism there could be no Consciousness, and therefore no World | 34 |
VII. | A Word of Caution | 40 |
VIII. | The Hermit and the Angel | 43 |
IX. | Man's Rise from the Innocence of Brutehood | 48 |
X. | The Relativity of Evil | 54 |
The Cosmic Roots of Love and Self-Sacrifice |
||
I. | The Summer Field, and what it tells us | 59 |
II. | Seeming Wastefulness of the Cosmic Process | 65 |
III.[Pg xiv] | Caliban's Philosophy | 72 |
IV. | Can it be that the Cosmic Process has no Relation to Moral Ends? | 74 |
V. | First Stages in the Genesis of Man | 80 |
VI. | The Central Fact in the Genesis of Man | 86 |
VII. | The Chief Cause of Man's lengthened Infancy | 88 |
VIII. | Some of its Effects | 96 |
IX. | Origin of Moral Ideas and Sentiments | 102 |
X. | The Cosmic Process exists purely for the Sake of Moral Ends | 109 |
XI. | Maternity and the Evolution of Altruism | 117 |
XII. | The Omnipresent Ethical Trend | 127 |
The Everlasting Reality of Religion |
||
I. | Deo erexit Voltaire | 133 |
II. | The Reign of Law, and the Greek Idea of God | 147 |
III. | Weakness of Materialism | 152 |
IV. | Religion's First Postulate: the Quasi-Human God | 163 |
V. | Religion's Second Postulate: the undying Human Soul | 168 |
VI. | Religion's Third Postulate: the Ethical Significance of the Unseen World | 171 |
VII. | Is the Substance of Religion a Phantom, or an Eternal Reality? | 174 |
VIII.[Pg xv] | The Fundamental Aspect of Life | 177 |
IX. | How the Evolution of Senses expands the World | 182 |
X. | Nature's Eternal Lesson is the Everlasting Reality of Religion | 186 |
PAGE | |
I. A Century of Science | 1 |
II. The Doctrine of Evolution: its Scope and Purport | 39 |
III. Edward Livingston Youmans | 64 |
IV. The Part played by Infancy in the Evolution of Man | 100 |
V. The Origins of Liberal Thought in America | 122 |
VI. Sir Harry Vane | 154 |
VII. The Arbitration Treaty | 166 |
VIII. Francis Parkman | 194 |
IX. Edward Augustus Freeman | 265 |
X. Cambridge as Village and City | 286 |
XI. A Harvest of Irish Folk-Lore | 319 |
XII. Guessing at Half and Multiplying by Two | 333 |
XIII. Forty Years of Bacon-Shakespeare Folly | 350 |
XIV. Some Cranks and their Crotchets | 405 |
Note | 461 |
Index |
467 |
CHAPTER
I THE BEGINNINGS |
|
---|---|
PAGE | |
Relations between the American colonies and the British government in the first half of the eighteenth century | 1 |
The Lords of Trade | 2 |
The governors’ salaries | 3 |
Sir Robert Walpole | 4 |
Views of the Lords of Trade as to the need for a union of the colonies | 5 |
Weakness of the sentiment of union | 6 |
The Albany Congress | 6 |
Franklin’s plan for a federal union (1754) | 7, 8 |
Rejection of Franklin’s plan | 9 |
Shirley recommends a stamp act | 10 |
The writs of assistance | 11 |
The chief justice of New York | 12 |
Otis’s “Vindication” | 13 |
Expenses of the French War | 14 |
Grenville’s resolves | 15 |
Reply of the colonies | 16 |
Passage of the Stamp Act | 17 |
Patrick Henry and the Parsons’ Cause | 18 |
Resolutions of Virginia concerning the Stamp Act | 19, 20 |
The Stamp Act Congress | 20-22 |
Declaration of the Massachusetts assembly | 22 |
Resistance to the Stamp Act in Boston | 23 |
And in New York | 24 |
Debate in the House of Commons | 25, 26 |
Repeal of the Stamp Act | 26, 27 |
The Duke of Grafton’s ministry | 28 |
Charles Townshend and his revenue acts | 29-31 |
Attack upon the New York assembly | 32 |
Parliament did not properly represent the British people | 32, 33 |
Difficulty of the problem | 34 |
Representation of Americans in Parliament | 35 |
Mr. Gladstone and the Boers | 36 |
Death of Townshend | 37 |
His political legacy to George III. | 37 |
Character of George III. | 38, 39 |
English parties between 1760 and 1784 | 40, 41 |
George III. as a politician | 42 |
His chief reason for quarrelling with the Americans | 42, 43 |
CHAPTER
II THE CRISIS |
|
Character of Lord North | 44 |
John Dickinson and the “Farmer’s Letters” | 45 |
The Massachusetts circular letter | 46, 47 |
Lord Hillsborough’s instructions to Bernard | 48 |
The “Illustrious Ninety-Two” | 48 |
Impressment of citizens | 49 |
Affair of the sloop Liberty | 49-51 |
Statute of Henry VIII. concerning “treason committed abroad” | 52 |
Samuel Adams makes up his mind (1768) | 53-56 |
Arrival of troops in Boston | 56, 57 |
Letters of “Vindex” | 58 |
Debate in Parliament | 59, 60 |
All the Townshend acts, except the one imposing a duty upon tea, to be repealed | 61 |
Recall of Governor Bernard | 61 |
Character of Thomas Hutchinson | 62 |
Resolutions of Virginia concerning the Townshend acts | 63 |
Conduct of the troops in Boston | 64 |
Assault on James Otis | 64 |
The “Boston Massacre” | 65-68 |
Some of its lessons | 69-72 |
Lord North becomes prime minister | 72 |
Action of the New York merchants | 73 |
Assemblies convened in strange places | 74 |
Taxes in Maryland | 74 |
The “Regulators” in North Carolina | 74 |
Affair of the schooner Gaspee | 75, 76 |
The salaries of the Massachusetts judges | 76 |
Jonathan Mayhew’s suggestion (1766) | 77 |
The committees of correspondence in Massachusetts | 78 |
Intercolonial committees of correspondence | 79 |
Revival of the question of taxation | 80 |
The king’s ingenious scheme for tricking the Americans into buying the East India Company’s tea | 81 |
How Boston became the battle-ground | 82 |
Advice solemnly sought and given by the Massachusetts towns | 82-84 |
Arrival of the tea; meeting at the Old South | 84, 85 |
The tea-ships placed under guard | 85 |
Rotch’s dilatory manœuvres | 86 |
Great town meeting at the Old South | 87, 88 |
The tea thrown into the harbour | 88, 89 |
Moral grandeur of the scene | 90, 91 |
How Parliament received the news | 91-93 |
The Boston Port Bill | 93 |
The Regulating Act | 93-95 |
Act relating to the shooting of citizens | 96 |
The quartering of troops in towns | 96 |
The Quebec Act | 96 |
General Gage sent to Boston | 97, 98 |
CHAPTER
III THE CONTINENTAL CONGRESS |
|
Protest of the Whig Lords | 99 |
Belief that the Americans would not fight | 100 |
Belief that Massachusetts would not be supported by the other colonies | 101 |
News of the Port Bill | 101, 102 |
Samuel Adams at Salem | 103, 104 |
Massachusetts nullifies the Regulating Act | 105 |
John Hancock and Joseph Warren | 106, 107 |
The Suffolk County Resolves | 108 |
Provincial Congress in Massachusetts | 109 |
First meeting of the Continental Congress (September 5, 1774) | 110, 111 |
Debates in Parliament | 112, 113 |
William Howe appointed commander-in-chief of the forces in America | 113 |
Richard, Lord Howe, appointed admiral of the fleet | 114 |
Franklin returns to America | 115 |
State of feeling in the middle colonies | 116 |
Lord North’s mistaken hopes of securing New York | 117 |
Affairs in Massachusetts | 101 |
Dr. Warren’s oration at the Old South | 119 |
Attempt to corrupt Samuel Adams | 120 |
Orders to arrest Adams and Hancock | 121 |
Paul Revere’s ride | 122, 123 |
Pitcairn fires upon the yeomanry at Lexington | 124, 125 |
The troops repulsed at Concord; their dangerous situation | 126, 127 |
The retreating troops rescued by Lord Percy | 128 |
Retreat continued from Lexington to Charlestown | 129 |
Rising of the country; the British besieged in Boston | 130 |
Effects of the news in England and in America | 130-133 |
Mecklenburg County Resolves | 133 |
Legend of the Mecklenburg “Declaration of Independence” | 133-135 |
Benedict Arnold and Ethan Allen | 135 |
Capture of Ticonderoga and Crown Point | 136-140 |
Second meeting of the Continental Congress | 141 |
Appointment of George Washington to command the Continental army | 142-144 |
The siege of Boston | 145 |
Gage’s proclamation | 145 |
The Americans occupy Bunker’s and Breed’s hills | 146 |
Arrival of Putnam, Stark, and Warren | 147 |
Gage decides to try an assault | 148, 149 |
First assault repulsed | 149 |
Second assault repulsed | 150 |
Prescott’s powder gives out | 150 |
Third assault succeeds; the British take the hill | 151 |
British and American losses | 151, 152 |
Excessive slaughter; significance of the battle | 153 |
Its moral effects | 154 |
CHAPTER
IV INDEPENDENCE |
|
Washington’s arrival in Cambridge | 155 |
Continental officers: Daniel Morgan | 156 |
Benedict Arnold, John Stark, John Sullivan | 157 |
Nathanael Greene, Henry Knox | 158 |
Israel Putnam | 159 |
Horatio Gates and Charles Lee | 160 |
Lee’s personal peculiarities | 161, 162 |
Dr. Benjamin Church | 163 |
Difficult work for Washington | 164 |
Absence of governmental organization | 165 |
New government of Massachusetts (July, 1775) | 166 |
Congress sends a last petition to the king | 167 |
The king issues a proclamation, and tries to hire troops from Russia | 168-170 |
Catherine refuses; the king hires German troops | 170 |
Indignation in Germany | 171 |
Burning of Falmouth (Portland) | 171 |
Effects of all this upon Congress | 172, 173 |
Montgomery’s invasion of Canada and capture of Montreal | 174, 175 |
Arnold’s march through the wilderness of Maine | 176 |
Assault upon Quebec (December 31, 1775) | 177 |
Total failure of the attempt upon Canada | 178 |
The siege of Boston | 179 |
Washington seizes Dorchester Heights (March 4, 1776) | 180, 181 |
The British troops evacuate Boston (March 17) | 182, 183 |
Movement toward independence; a provisional flag (January 1, 1776) | 184 |
Effect of the hiring of “myrmidons” | 185 |
Thomas Paine | 185 |
His pamphlet entitled “Common Sense” | 186, 187 |
Fulminations and counter-fulminations | 188 |
The Scots in North Carolina | 188 |
Sir Henry Clinton sails for the Carolinas | 189 |
The fight at Moore’s Creek; North Carolina declares for independence | 189 |
Action of South Carolina and Georgia | 190 |
Affairs in Virginia; Lord Dunmore’s proclamation | 190 |
Skirmish at the Great Bridge, and burning of Norfolk | 191 |
Virginia declares for independence | 192 |
Action of Rhode Island and Massachusetts | 192 |
Resolution adopted in Congress May 15 | 193 |
Instructions from the Boston town meeting | 194 |
Richard Henry Lee’s motion in Congress | 194 |
Debate on Lee’s | 195, 196 |
Action of the other colonies; Connecticut and New Hampshire | 196 |
New Jersey | 197 |
Pennsylvania and Delaware | 197-199 |
Maryland | 199 |
The situation in New York | 200 |
The Tryon plot | 201 |
Final debate on Lee’s motion | 202 |
Vote on Lee’s motion | 203 |
Form of the Declaration of Independence | 204 |
Thomas Jefferson | 204, 205 |
The declaration was a deliberate expression of the sober thought of the American people | 206, 207 |
CHAPTER
V FIRST BLOW AT THE CENTRE |
|
Lord Cornwallis arrives upon the scene | 208 |
Battle of Fort Moultrie (June 28, 1776) | 209-211 |
British plan for conquering the valley of the Hudson, and cutting the United Colonies in twain | 212 |
Lord Howe’s futile attempt to negotiate with Washington unofficially | 213, 214 |
The military problem at New York | 214-216 |
Importance of Brooklyn Heights | 217 |
Battle of Long Island (August 27, 1776) | 218-220 |
Howe prepares to besiege the Heights | 220 |
But Washington slips away with his army | 221 |
And robs the British of the most golden opportunity ever offered them | 221-223 |
The conference at Staten Island | 223, 224 |
General Howe takes the city of New York September 15 | 224 |
But Mrs. Lindley Murray saves the garrison | 225 |
Attack upon Harlem Heights | 225 |
The new problem before Howe | 225, 226 |
He moves upon Throg’s Neck, but Washington changes base | 227 |
Baffled at White Plans, Howe tries a new plan | 228 |
Washington’s orders in view of the emergency | 228 |
Congress meddles with the situation and muddles it | 229 |
Howe takes Fort Washington by storm (November 16) | 230 |
Washington and Greene | 231 |
Outrageous conduct of Charles Le | 231, 232 |
Greene barely escapes from Fort Lee (November 20) | 233 |
Lee intrigues against Washington | 233, 234 |
Washington retreats into Pennsylvania | 234 |
Reinforcements come from Schuyler | 235 |
Fortunately for the Americans, the British capture Charles Lee (December 13) | 235-238 |
The times that tried men’s souls | 238, 239 |
Washington prepares to strike back | 239 |
He crosses the Delaware, and pierces the British centre at Trenton (December 26) | 240, 241 |
Cornwallis comes up to retrieve the disaster | 242 |
And thinks he has run down the “old fox" at the Assunpink (January 2, 1777) | 242 |
But Washington prepares a checkmate | 243 |
And again severs the British line at Princeton (January 3) | 244 |
General retreat of the British upon New York | 245 |
The tables completely turned | 246 |
Washington’s superb generalship | 247 |
Effects in England | 248 |
And in France | 249 |
Franklin’s arrival in France | 250 |
Secret aid from France | 251 |
Lafayette goes to America | 252 |
Efforts toward remodelling the Continental army | 252-255 |
Services of Robert Morris | 255 |
Ill feeling between the states | 256 |
Extraordinary powers conferred upon Washington | 257-258 |
CHAPTER
VI SECOND BLOW AT THE CENTRE |
|
Invasion of New York by Sir Guy Carleton | 259 |
Arnold’s preparations | 260 |
Battle of Valcour Island (October 11, 1776) | 260-262 |
Congress promotes five junior brigadiers over Arnold (February 19, 1777) | 262 |
Character of Philip Schuyler | 263 |
Horatio Gates | 264 |
Gates intrigues against Schuyler | 265 |
His unseemly behaviour before Congress | 266 |
Charges against Arnold | 267, 268 |
Arnold defeats Tryon at Ridgefield (April 27, 1777) | 269 |
Preparations for the summer campaign | 269 |
The military centre of the United States was the state of New York | 270 |
A second blow was to be struck at the centre; the plan of campaign | 271 |
The plan was unsound; it separated the British forces too widely, and gave the Americans the advantage of interior lines | 272-274 |
Germain’s fatal error; he overestimated the strength of the Tories | 274 |
Too many unknown quantities | 275 |
Danger from New England ignored | 276 |
Germain’s negligence; the dispatch that was never sent | 277 |
Burgoyne advances upon Ticonderoga | 277, 278 |
Phillips seizes Mount Defiance | 279 |
Evacuation of Ticonderoga | 279 |
Battle of Hubbardton (July 7) | 280 |
One swallow does not make a summer | 280-282 |
The king’s glee; wrath of John Adams | 282 |
Gates was chiefly to blame | 282 |
Burgoyne’s difficulties beginning | 283 |
Schuyler wisely evacuates Fort Edward | 284 |
Enemies gathering in Burgoyne’s rear | 285 |
Use of Indian auxiliaries | 285 |
Burgoyne’s address to the chiefs | 286 |
Burke ridicules the address | 286 |
The story of Jane McCrea | 287, 288 |
The Indians desert Burgoyne | 289 |
Importance of Bennington; Burgoyne sends a German force against it | 290 |
Stark prepares to receive the Germans | 291 |
Battle of Bennington (August 16); nearly the whole German army captured on the field | 292, 293 |
Effect of the news; Burgoyne’s enemies multiply | 294 |
Advance of St. Leger upon Fort Stanwix | 295 |
Herkimer marches against him; Herkimer’s plan | 296 |
Failure of the plan | 297 |
Thayendanegea prepares an ambuscade | 298 |
Battle of Oriskany (August 6) | 298-300 |
Colonel Willett’s sortie; first hoisting of the stars and stripes | 300-301 |
Death of Herkimer | 301 |
Arnold arrives at Schuyler’s camp | 302 |
And volunteers to retrieve Fort Stanwix | 303 |
Yan Yost Cuyler and his stratagem | 304 |
Flight of St. Leger (August 22) | 305 |
Burgoyne’s dangerous situation | 306 |
Schuyler superseded by Gates | 306 |
Position of the two armies (August 19-September 12) | 307 |
CHAPTER
VII SARATOGA |
|
Why Sir William Howe went to Chesapeake Bay | 308 |
Charles Lee in captivity | 308-310 |
Treason of Charles Lee | 311-314 |
Folly of moving upon Philadelphia as the “rebel capital” | 314, 315 |
Effect of Lee’s advice | 315 |
Washington’s masterly campaign in New Jersey (June, 1777) | 316, 317 |
Uncertainty as to Howe’s next movements | 317, 318 |
Howe’s letter to Burgoyne | 318 |
Comments of Washington and Greene | 319, 320 |
Howe’s alleged reason trumped up and worthless | 320 |
Burgoyne’s fate was practically decided when Howe arrived at Elkton | 321 |
Washington’s reasons for offering battle | 321 |
He chooses a very strong position | 322 |
Battle of the Brandywine (September 11) | 322-326 |
Washington’s skill in detaining the enemy | 326 |
The British enter Philadelphia (September 26) | 326 |
Significance of Forts Mercer and Mifflin | 327 |
The situation at Germantown | 327, 328 |
Washington’s audacious plan | 328 |
Battle of Germantown (October 4) | 329-332 |
Howe captures Forts Mercer and Mifflin | 333 |
Burgoyne recognizes the fatal error of Germain | 333 |
Nevertheless he crosses the Hudson River | 334 |
First battle at Freeman’s Farm (September 19) | 335 |
Quarrel between Gates and Arnold | 336-337 |
Burgoyne’s supplies cut off | 338 |
Second battle at Freeman’s Farm (October 7); the British totally defeated by Arnold | 338-340 |
The British army is surrounded | 341 |
Sir Henry Clinton comes up the river, but it is too late | 342 |
The silver bullet | 343 |
Burgoyne surrenders (October 17) | 343, 344 |
Schuyler’s magnanimity | 345 |
Bad faith of Congress | 346-349 |
The behaviour of Congress was simply inexcusable | 350 |
What became of the captured army | 350, 351 |
VOLUME I.
CHAPTER I.
THE SEA KINGS.
PAGE | |
Tercentenary of the Discovery of America, 1792 | 1 |
The Abbé Raynal and his book | 2 |
Was the Discovery of America a blessing or a curse to | |
mankind? | 3 |
The Abbé Genty's opinion | 4 |
A cheering item of therapeutics | 4 |
Spanish methods of colonization contrasted with English | 5 |
Spanish conquerors value America for its supply of precious | |
metals | 6 |
Aim of Columbus was to acquire the means for driving the | |
Turks from Europe | 7 |
But Spain used American treasure not so much against Turks | |
as against Protestants | 8 |
Vast quantities of treasure taken from America by Spain | 9 |
Nations are made wealthy not by inflation but by production | 9 |
Deepest significance of the discovery of America; it opened | |
up a fresh soil in which to plant the strongest type of | |
European civilization | 10 |
America first excited interest in England as the storehouse | |
of Spanish treasure | 11 |
After the Cabot voyages England paid little attention to | |
America | 12 |
Save for an occasional visit to the Newfoundland fisheries | 13 |
Earliest English reference to America | 13 |
Founding of the Muscovy Company | 14 |
Richard Eden and his books | 15 |
[Pg x] | |
John Hawkins and the African slave trade | 15, 16 |
Hawkins visits the French colony in Florida | 17 |
Facts which seem to show that thirst is the mother of invention | 18 |
Massacre of Huguenots in Florida; escape of the painter Le | |
Moyne | 18 |
Hawkins goes on another voyage and takes with him young | |
Francis Drake | 19 |
The affair of San Juan de Ulua and the journey of David | |
Ingram | 20 |
Growing hostility to Spain in England | 21 |
Size and strength of Elizabeth's England | 21, 22 |
How the sea became England's field of war | 22 |
Loose ideas of international law | 23 |
Some bold advice to Queen Elizabeth | 23 |
The sea kings were not buccaneers | 24 |
Why Drake carried the war into the Pacific Ocean | 25 |
How Drake stood upon a peak in Darien | 26 |
Glorious voyage of the Golden Hind | 26, 27 |
Drake is knighted by the Queen | 27 |
The Golden Hind's cabin is made a banquet-room | 28 |
Voyage of the half-brothers, Gilbert and Raleigh | 28 |
Gilbert is shipwrecked, and his patent is granted to Raleigh | 29 |
Raleigh's plan for founding a Protestant state in America | |
may have been suggested to him by Coligny | 30 |
Elizabeth promises self-government to colonists in America | 31 |
Amidas and Barlow visit Pamlico Sound | 31 |
An Ollendorfian conversation between white men and red men | 32 |
The Queen's suggestion that the new country be called in | |
honour of herself Virginia | 32 |
Raleigh is knighted, and sends a second expedition under | |
Ralph Lane | 32 |
Who concludes that Chesapeake Bay would be better than | |
Pamlico Sound | 33 |
Lane and his party on the brink of starvation are rescued by | |
Sir Francis Drake | 33 |
Thomas Cavendish follows Drake's example and circumnavigates | |
the earth | 34 |
How Drake singed the beard of Philip II. | 34 |
Raleigh sends another party under John White | 35 |
The accident which turned White from Chesapeake Bay to | |
Roanoke Island | 35 |
Defeat of the Invincible Armada | 36, 37 |
[Pg xi] | |
The deathblow at Cadiz | 38 |
The mystery about White's colony | 38, 39 |
Significance of the defeat of the Armada | 39, 40 |
CHAPTER II
A DISCOURSE OF WESTERN PLANTING
Some peculiarities of sixteenth century maps | 41 |
How Richard Hakluyt's career was determined | 42 |
Strange adventures of a manuscript | 43 |
Hakluyt's reasons for wishing to see English colonies planted | |
in America | 44 |
English trade with the Netherlands | 45 |
Hakluyt thinks that America will presently afford as good a | |
market as the Netherlands | 46 |
Notion that England was getting to be over-peopled | 46 |
The change from tillage to pasturage | 46, 47 |
What Sir Thomas More thought about it | 47 |
Growth of pauperism during the Tudor period | 48 |
Development of English commercial and naval marine | 49 |
Opposition to Hakluyt's schemes | 49 |
The Queen's penuriousness | 50 |
Beginnings of joint-stock companies | 51 |
Raleigh's difficulties | 52, 53 |
Christopher Newport captures the great Spanish carrack | 53 |
Raleigh visits Guiana and explores the Orinoco River | 54 |
Ambrosial nights at the Mermaid Tavern | 54 |
Accession of James I | 55 |
Henry, Earl of Southampton, Shakespeare's friend, sends | |
Bartholomew Gosnold on an expedition | 55 |
Gosnold reaches Buzzard's Bay in what he calls North Virginia, | |
and is followed by Martin Pring and George | |
Weymouth | 55, 56 |
Performance of "Eastward Ho," a comedy by Chapman and | |
Marston | 56 |
Extracts from this comedy | 57-59 |
Report of the Spanish ambassador Zuñiga to Philip III | 59 |
First charter to the Virginia Company, 1606 | 60 |
"Supposed Sea of Verrazano" covering the larger part of the | |
area now known as the United States | 61 |
Northern and southern limits of Virginia | 62 |
The twin joint-stock companies and the three zones | 62, 63 |
[Pg xii] | |
The three zones in American history | 63 |
The kind of government designed for the two colonies | 64 |
Some of the persons chiefly interested in the first colony | |
known as the London Company | 65-67 |
Some of the persons chiefly interested in the second colony | |
known as the Plymouth Company | 67, 68 |
Some other eminent persons who were interested in western | |
planting | 68-70 |
Expedition of the Plymouth Company and disastrous failure | |
of the Popham Colony | 70, 71 |
The London Company gets its expedition ready a little | |
before Christmas and supplies it with a list of instructions | 71, 72 |
Where to choose a site for a town | 72 |
Precautions against a surprise by the Spaniards | 73 |
Colonists must try to find the Pacific Ocean | 73 |
And must not offend the natives or put much trust in them | 74 |
The death and sickness of white men must be concealed from | |
the Indians | 75 |
It will be well to beware of woodland coverts, avoid malaria, | |
and guard against desertion | 75 |
The town should be carefully built with regular streets | 75, 76 |
Colonists must not send home any discouraging news | 76 |
What Spain thought about all this | 76, 77 |
Christopher Newport starts with a little fleet for Virginia | 77 |
A poet laureate's farewell blessing | 77-79 |
CHAPTER III
THE LAND OF THE POWHATANS
One of Newport's passengers was Captain John Smith, a | |
young man whose career had been full of adventure | 80 |
Many persons have expressed doubts as to Smith's veracity, | |
but without good reason | 81 |
Early life of John Smith | 82 |
His adventures on the Mediterranean | 83 |
And in Transylvania | 84 |
How he slew and beheaded three Turks | 85 |
For which Prince Sigismund granted him a coat-of-arms | |
which was duly entered in the Heralds' College | 86 |
The incident was first told not by Smith but by Sigismund's | |
secretary Farnese | 87 |
[Pg xiii] | |
Smith tells us much about himself, but is not a braggart | 88 |
How he was sold into slavery beyond the Sea of Azov and | |
cruelly treated | 88, 89 |
How he slew his master and escaped through Russia and | |
Poland | 89, 90 |
The smoke of controversy | 90 |
In the course of Newport's tedious voyage Smith is accused | |
of plotting mutiny and kept in irons | 91 |
Arrival of the colonists in Chesapeake Bay, May 13, 1607 | 92 |
Founding of Jamestown; Wingfield chosen president | 93 |
Smith is set free and goes with Newport to explore the James | |
River | 93, 94 |
The Powhatan tribe, confederacy, and head war-chief | 94 |
How danger may lurk in long grass | 95 |
Smith is acquitted of all charges and takes his seat with the | |
council | 96 |
Newport sails for England, June 22, 1607 | 96 |
George Percy's account of the sufferings of the colonists from | |
fever and famine | 97 |
Quarrels break out in which President Wingfield is deposed | |
and John Ratcliffe chosen in his place | 99 |
Execution of a member of the council for mutiny | 100 |
Smith goes up the Chickahominy River and is captured by | |
Opekankano | 101 |
Who takes him about the country and finally brings him to | |
Werowocomoco, January, 1608 | 102 |
The Indians are about to kill him, but he is rescued by the | |
chief's daughter, Pocahontas | 103 |
Recent attempts to discredit the story | 103-108 |
Flimsiness of these attempts | 104 |
George Percy's pamphlet | 105 |
The printed text of the "True Relation" is incomplete | 105, 106 |
Reason why the Pocahontas incident was omitted in the | |
"True Relation" | 106, 107 |
There is no incongruity between the "True Relation" and | |
the "General History" except this omission | 107 |
But this omission creates a gap in the "True Relation," and | |
the account in the "General History" is the more intrinsically | |
probable | 108 |
The rescue was in strict accordance with Indian usage | 109 |
The ensuing ceremonies indicate that the rescue was an ordinary | |
case of adoption | 110 |
The Powhatan afterward proclaimed Smith a tribal chief | 111 |
[Pg xiv] | |
The rescue of Smith by Pocahontas was an event of real historical | |
importance | 111 |
Captain Newport returns with the First Supply, Jan. 8, 1608 | 112 |
Ratcliffe is deposed and Smith chosen president | 113 |
Arrival of the Second Supply, September, 1608 | 113 |
Queer instructions brought by Captain Newport from the | |
London Company | 113 |
How Smith and Captain Newport went up to Werowocomoco, | |
and crowned The Powhatan | 114 |
How the Indian girls danced at Werowocomoco | 114, 115 |
Accuracy of Smith's descriptions | 116 |
How Newport tried in vain to search for a salt sea behind the | |
Blue Ridge | 116 |
Anas Todkill's complaint | 117 |
Smith's map of Virginia | 118 |
CHAPTER IV.
THE STARVING TIME.
How puns were made on Captain Newport's name | 119 |
Great importance of the Indian alliance | 120 |
Gentlemen as pioneers | 121 |
All is not gold that glitters | 122 |
Smith's attempts to make glass and soap | 123 |
The Company is disappointed at not making more money | 124 |
Tale-bearers and their complaints against Smith | 124 |
Smith's "Rude Answer" to the Company | 125 |
Says he cannot prevent quarrels | 125 |
And the Company's instructions have not been wise | 126 |
From infant industries too much must not be expected while | |
the colonists are suffering for want of food | 127 |
And while peculation and intrigue are rife and we are in sore | |
need of useful workmen | 128 |
Smith anticipates trouble from the Indians, whose character | |
is well described by Hakluyt | 129 |
What Smith dreaded | 130 |
How the red men's views of the situation were changed | 131 |
Smith's voyage to Werowocomoco | 132 |
His parley with The Powhatan | 133 |
A game of bluff | 134 |
The corn is brought | 135 |
Suspicions of treachery | 136 |
[Pg xv] | |
A wily orator | 137 |
Pocahontas reveals the plot | 138 |
Smith's message to The Powhatan | 138, 139 |
How Smith visited the Pamunkey village and brought Opekankano | |
to terms | 139, 140 |
How Smith appeared to the Indians in the light of a worker | |
of miracles | 141 |
What our chronicler calls "a pretty accident" | 141 |
How the first years of Old Virginia were an experiment in | |
communism | 142 |
Smith declares "He that will not work shall not eat," but | |
the summer's work is interrupted by unbidden messmates | |
in the shape of rats | 143 |
Arrival of young Samuel Argall with news from London | 143, 144 |
Second Charter of the London Company, 1609 | 144 |
The council in London | 145 |
The local government in Virginia is entirely changed and | |
Thomas, Lord Delaware, is appointed governor for life | 146 |
A new expedition is organized for Virginia, but still with a | |
communistic programme | 147, 148 |
How the good ship Sea Venture was wrecked upon the Bermudas | 149 |
How this incident was used by Shakespeare in The Tempest | 150 |
Gates and Somers build pinnaces and sail for Jamestown, | |
May, 1610 | 151 |
The Third Supply had arrived in August, 1609 | 151 |
And Smith had returned to England in October | 152 |
Lord Delaware became alarmed and sailed for Virginia | 152 |
Meanwhile the sufferings of the colony had been horrible | 153 |
Of the 500 persons Gates and Somers found only 60 survivors, | |
and it was decided that Virginia must be abandoned | 154 |
Dismantling of Jamestown and departure of the colony | 154, 155 |
But the timely arrival of Lord Delaware in Hampton Roads | |
prevented the dire disaster | 155 |
CHAPTER V.
BEGINNINGS OF A COMMONWEALTH.
To the first English settlers in America a supply of Indian | |
corn was of vital consequence, as illustrated at Jamestown | |
and Plymouth | 156 |
Alliance with the Powhatan confederacy was of the first importance | |
to the infant colony | 157 |
[Pg xvi] | |
Smith was a natural leader of men | 157 |
With much nobility of nature | 158 |
And but for him the colony would probably have perished | 159 |
Characteristic features of Lord Delaware's administration | 160 |
Death of Somers and cruise of Argall in 1610 | 161 |
Kind of craftsmen desired for Virginia | 162 |
Sir Thomas Dale comes to govern Virginia in the capacity of | |
High Marshal | 163 |
A Draconian code of laws | 164 |
Cruel punishments | 165 |
How communism worked in practice | 166 |
How Dale abolished communism | 167 |
And founded the "City of Henricus" | 167, 168 |
How Captain Argall seized Pocahontas | 168 |
Her marriage with John Rolfe | 169 |
How Captain Argall extinguished the Jesuit settlement at | |
Mount Desert and burned Port Royal | 170 |
But left the Dutch at New Amsterdam with a warning | 171 |
How Pocahontas, "La Belle Sauvage," visited London and | |
was entertained there like a princess | 171, 172 |
Her last interview with Captain Smith | 172 |
Her sudden death at Gravesend | 173 |
How Tomocomo tried to take a census of the English | 173 |
How the English in Virginia began to cultivate tobacco in | |
spite of King James and his Counterblast | 174 |
Dialogue between Silenus and Kawasha | 175 |
Effects of tobacco culture upon the young colony | 176, 177 |
The London Company's Third Charter, 1612 | 177, 178 |
How money was raised by lotteries | 178 |
How this new remodelling of the Company made it an important | |
force in politics | 179 |
Middleton's speech in opposition to the charter | 180 |
Richard Martin in the course of a brilliant speech forgets | |
himself and has to apologize | 181 |
How factions began to be developed within the London Company | 182 |
Sudden death of Lord Delaware | 183 |
Quarrel between Lord Rich and Sir Thomas Smith, resulting | |
in the election of Sir Edwin Sandys as treasurer of the | |
Company | 184 |
Sir George Yeardley is appointed governor of Virginia while | |
Argall is knighted | 185 |
How Sir Edwin Sandys introduced into Virginia the first | |
American legislature, 1619 | 186 |
[Pg xvii] | |
How this legislative assembly, like those afterwards constituted | |
in America, were formed after the type of the | |
old English county court | 187 |
How negro slaves were first introduced into Virginia, 1619. | 188 |
How cargoes of spinsters were sent out by the Company in | |
quest of husbands | 189 |
The great Indian massacre of 1622 | 189, 190 |
CHAPTER VI.
A SEMINARY OF SEDITION.
Summary review of the founding of Virginia | 191-194 |
Bitter hostility of Spain to the enterprise | 194 |
Gondomar and the Spanish match | 195 |
Gondomar's advice to the king | 196 |
How Sir Walter Raleigh was kept twelve years in prison | 197 |
But was then released and sent on an expedition to Guiana | 198 |
The king's base treachery | 199 |
Judicial murder of Raleigh | 200 |
How the king attempted to interfere with the Company's | |
election of treasurer in 1620 | 201 |
How the king's emissaries listened to the reading of the | |
charter | 202 |
Withdrawal of Sandys and election of Southampton | 203 |
Life and character of Nicholas Ferrar | 203-205 |
His monastic home at Little Gidding | 205 |
How disputes rose high in the Company's quarter sessions | 206, 207 |
How the House of Commons rebuked the king | 207, 208 |
How Nathaniel Butler was accused of robbery and screened | |
himself by writing a pamphlet abusing the Company | 208 |
Some of his charges and how they were answered by Virginia | |
settlers | 209 |
As to malaria | 209 |
As to wetting one's feet | 210 |
As to dying under hedges | 211 |
As to the houses and their situations | 211, 212 |
Object of the charges | 212 |
Virginia assembly denies the allegations | 213 |
The Lord Treasurer demands that Ferrar shall answer the | |
charges | 214 |
A cogent answer is returned | 214, 215 |
[Pg xviii] | |
Vain attempts to corrupt Ferrar | 215, 216 |
How the wolf was set to investigate the dogs | 216 |
The Virginia assembly makes "A Tragical Declaration" | 217 |
On the attorney-general's advice a quo warranto | |
is served | 217, 218 |
How the Company appealed to Parliament, and the king refused | |
to allow the appeal | 217, 218 |
The attorney-general's irresistible logic | 219 |
Lord Strafford's glee | 220 |
How Nicholas Ferrar had the records copied | 221, 222 |
The history of a manuscript | 221, 222 |
CHAPTER VII.
THE KINGDOM OF VIRGINIA.
A retrospect | 223 |
Tidewater Virginia | 224 |
A receding frontier | 224, 225 |
The plantations | 225 |
Boroughs and burgesses | 226 |
Boroughs and hundreds | 227, 228 |
Houses, slaves, indentured servants, and Indians | 229 |
Virginia agriculture in the time of Charles I | 230 |
Increasing cultivation of tobacco | 231 |
Literature; how George Sandys entreated the Muses with | |
success | 232 |
Provisions for higher education | 233 |
Project for a university in the city of Henricus cut short by | |
the Indian massacre | 234 |
Puritans and liberal churchmen | 235 |
How the Company of Massachusetts Bay learned a lesson | |
from the fate of its predecessor, the London Company | |
for Virginia | 236,237 |
Death of James I | 238 |
Effect upon Virginia of the downfall of the Company | 238-240 |
The virus of liberty | 240 |
How Charles I. came to recognize the assembly of Virginia | 241-243 |
Some account of the first American legislature | 243, 244 |
How Edward Sharpless had part of one ear cut off | 245 |
The case of Captain John Martin | 245 |
How the assembly provided for the education of Indians | 246 |
And for the punishment of drunkards | 246 |
[Pg xix] | |
And against extravagance in dress | 246 |
How flirting was threatened with the whipping-post | 247 |
And scandalous gossip with the pillory | 247 |
How the minister's salary was assured him | 247 |
How he was warned against too much drinking and card-playing | 248 |
Penalties for Sabbath-breaking | 248 |
Inn-keepers forbidden to adulterate liquors or to charge too | |
much per gallon or glass | 249 |
A statute against forestalling | 249, 250 |
How Charles I. called the new colony "Our kingdom of | |
Virginia" | 251 |
How the convivial governor Dr. Pott was tried for stealing | |
cattle, but pardoned for the sake of his medical services | 253 |
Growth of Virginia from 1624 to 1642 | 253, 254 |
CHAPTER VIII.
THE MARYLAND PALATINATE.
The Irish village of Baltimore | 255 |
Early career of George Calvert, first Lord Baltimore | 255, 256 |
How James I. granted him a palatinate in Newfoundland | 256 |
Origin of palatinates | 256, 257 |
Changes in English palatinates | 258, 259 |
The bishopric of Durham | 259, 260 |
Durham and Avalon | 260 |
How Lord Baltimore fared in his colony of Avalon in Newfoundland | 261 |
His letter to the king | 262 |
How he visited Virginia but was not cordially received | 263, 264 |
How a part of Virginia was granted to him and received the | |
name of Maryland | 265 |
Fate of the Avalon charter | 266 |
Character of the first Lord Baltimore | 267 |
Early career of Cecilius Calvert, second Lord Baltimore | 268 |
How the founding of Maryland introduced into America a | |
new type of colonial government | 269, 270 |
Ecclesiastical powers of the Lord Proprietor | 271 |
Religious toleration in Maryland | 272 |
The first settlement at St. Mary's | 273 |
Relations with the Indians | 274 |
[Pg xx] | |
Prosperity of the settlement | 275 |
Comparison of the palatinate government of Maryland with | |
that of the bishopric of Durham | 275-285 |
The constitution of Durham; the receiver-general | 276 |
Lord lieutenant and high sheriff | 276 |
Chancellor of temporalities | 277 |
The ancient halmote and the seneschal | 277 |
The bishop's council | 278 |
Durham not represented in the House of Commons until | |
after 1660 | 278 |
Limitations upon Durham autonomy | 279 |
The palatinate type in America | 280 |
Similarities between Durham and Maryland; the governor | 281 |
Secretary; surveyor-general; muster master-general; sheriffs | 282 |
The courts | 282, 283 |
The primary assembly | 283 |
Question as to the initiative in legislation | 284 |
The representative assembly | 284, 285 |
Lord Baltimore's power more absolute than that of any king | |
of England save perhaps Henry VIII | 285 |
CHAPTER IX.
LEAH AND RACHEL.
William Claiborne and his projects | 286 |
Kent Island occupied by Claiborne | 287 |
Conflicting grants | 288 |
Star Chamber decision and Claiborne's resistance | 289 |
Lord Baltimore's instructions | 290 |
The Virginia council supports Claiborne | 290, 291 |
Complications with the Indians | 291, 292 |
Reprisals and skirmishes | 293 |
Affairs in Virginia; complaints against Governor Harvey | 293, 294 |
Rage of Virginia against Maryland | 294, 295 |
How Rev. Anthony Panton called Mr. Secretary Kemp a | |
jackanapes | 295 |
Indignation meeting at the house of William Warren | 296 |
Arrest of the principal speakers | 296 |
Scene in the council room | 296, 297 |
How Sir John Harvey was thrust out of the government | 297 |
[Pg xxi] | |
How King Charles sent him back to Virginia | 298 |
Downfall of Harvey | 299 |
George Evelin sent to Kent Island | 299 |
Kent Island seized by Leonard Calvert | 300 |
The Lords of Trade decide against Claiborne | 301 |
Puritans in Virginia | 301, 302 |
The Act of Uniformity of 1631 | 303 |
Puritan ministers sent from New England to Virginia | 303 |
The new Act of Uniformity, 1643 | 304 |
Expulsion of the New England ministers | 304 |
Indian massacre of 1644 | 305 |
Conflicting views of theodicy | 306 |
Invasion of Maryland by Claiborne and Ingle | 306-308 |
Expulsion of Claiborne and Ingle from Maryland | 308 |
Lord Baltimore appoints William Stone as governor | 308 |
Toleration Act of 1649 | 309-311 |
Migration of Puritans from Virginia to Maryland | 312 |
Designs of the Puritans | 313 |
Reluctant submission of Virginia to Cromwell | 314 |
Claiborne and Bennett undertake to settle the affairs of | |
Maryland | 315 |
Renewal of the troubles | 316 |
The Puritan Assembly and its notion of a toleration act | 316 |
Civil war in Maryland; battle of the Severn, 1655 | 317 |
Lord Baltimore is sustained by Cromwell and peace reigns | |
once more | 318 |
MAPS.
Tidewater Virginia, from a sketch by the author | Frontispiece |
Michael Lok's Map, 1582, from Hakluyt's Voyages to America | 60 |
The Palatinate of Maryland, from a sketch by the author | 274 |
I. | Difficulty of expressing the Idea of God so that it can be readily understood | 35 |
II. | The Rapid Growth of Modern Knowledge | 46 |
III. | Sources of the Theistic Idea | 62 |
IV. | Development of Monotheism | 72 |
V. | The Idea of God as immanent in the World | 81 |
VI. | The Idea of God as remote from the World | 87 |
VII. | Conflict between the Two Ideas, commonly misunderstood as a Conflict between Religion and Science | 97 |
VIII. | Anthropomorphic Conceptions of God | 111 |
IX. | The Argument from Design | 118 |
X. | Simile of the Watch replaced by Simile of the Flower | 128 |
XI. | The Craving for a Final Cause | 134 |
XII. | Symbolic Conceptions | 140 |
XIII. | The Eternal Source of Phenomena | 144 |
XIV. | The Power that makes for Righteousness | 158 |
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