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presents itself to the view of a later age, was his easiness of belief. Yet simply to tax him with credulity is to express no weighty censure; for what man may pretend that his reasons precisely fix the measure of his faith? To say that stories of monstrous marvels, to which so singular a condition of life gave rise, found in him an interested listener, or that successes or calamities were unreasonably construed by him as judicial rewards or penalties, is to say no more than that, in this respect, his habits of thought were the same as those of the wisest of his contemporaries, and did not anticipate the more cautious philosophy of later times. If the fact that he did not read the Bible with uniform good judgment is to be made the foundation of any correct inference, it must be coupled with the fact that he belonged to the second generation that came forward after the reform from Popery had placed the open Bible in the people's hands. Born and receiving his early education in the reign of Queen Elizabeth, he passed his life in an age when the science of Biblical interpretation was not far advanced beyond its rudiments.

Prosperous

He was greatly privileged in living so long. Just before he died, that ecclesiastical arrangement had been made, which he might naturally hope would preserve the churches of New England in purity, peace, and strength, to remote times.1 Religious and political dissensions, which had disturbed and threatened the in- condition of fant Church and the forming State, appeared to New Engbe effectually composed. The tribunals, carefully constituted for the administration of impartial and speedy justice, understood and did their duty, and commanded respect. The education of the generations which were to succeed had been provided for with an enlightened care.

land.

1 There were now about sixty minis- live without an able ministry, as for ters in New England. (See Winthrop, a smith to work his iron without a II. 331, note.) "It being as unnat- fire." (Wonder-Working Providence, ural for a right New-England man to 177.)

The College had bountifully contributed its ripe first-fruits to the public service; and the novel system of a universal provision of the elements of knowledge at the public cost, had been inaugurated with all circumstances of encouragement.

A generation was coming forward which remembered nothing of what Englishmen had suffered in New England for want of the necessaries and comforts of life. The occupations of industry were various and remunerative. Land was cheap, and the culture of it yielded no penurious reward to the husbandman; while he who chose to sell his labor was at last at liberty to place his own estimate upon it, and found it always in demand. The woods and waters were lavish of gifts which were to be had simply for the taking. The white wings of commerce, in their long flight to and from the settler's home, wafted the commodities which afford enjoyment and wealth to both sender and receiver. The numerous handicrafts, which, in its constantly increasing division of labor, a thriving society employs, found liberal recompense; and manufactures on a larger scale were beginning to invite accumulations of capital and associated labor.1

1 "The Lord hath been pleased to turn all the wigwams, huts, and hovels the English dwelt in at their first coming, into orderly, fair, and well-built houses, well furnished many of them, together with orchards filled with goodly fruit-trees, and gardens with variety of flowers. There are supposed to be in the Massachusetts government, at this day, near a thousand acres of land planted for orchards and gardens; besides, their fields are filled with garden fruit, there being, as is supposed, in this Colony, about fifteen thousand acres in tillage, and of cattle about twelve thousand neat, and about three thousand sheep. . . . . . There are many hundreds of laboring men, who had not

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enough to bring them over, yet now worth scores, and some, hundreds of pounds." (Johnson, Wonder-Working Providence, &c., 174, 175.)

"The Lord, whose promises are large to his Sion, hath blest his people's provision, and satisfied her poor with bread, in a very little space. Everything in the country proved a staple commodity, wheat, rye, oats, pease, barley, beef, pork, fish, butter, cheese, timber, mast, tar, sope, plank-board frames of houses, clabboard, and pipe-staves. Iron and lead is like to be also. And those who were formerly forced to fetch most of the bread they eat, and beer they drink, a hundred [thousand] leagues by sea, are, through the blessing of the Lord,

The Confederacy of the Four Colonies was an humble, but a substantial, power in the world. It was known to be such by its French, Dutch, and savage neighbors; by

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"Nor hath this Colony alone been actors in this trade of venturing by sea, but New Haven also, who were many of them well experienced in traffique, and had good estates to mannage it. Canectico did not linger behind, but put forth to sea with the other. . . . . . "Thus hath the Lord been pleased to turn one of the most hideous, boundless, and unknown wildernesses in the world in an instant, as 't were (in comparison of other work), to a well-ordered commonwealth, and all to serve his churches." (Ibid., 208-210.)

I think there can be no doubt that Johnson is describing the state of things at and soon after Winthrop's death. He speaks (191) of "Major Edward Gibbons, who hath now the office of MajorGeneral;" to which office Gibbons was elected in May, 1649. (Mass. Rec., III. 147.) And he records (215) the election, in 1650, of Dudley, to be Governor, and (216) the election of Endicott, which took place in 1651.

Johnson's book contains some descriptions of the towns, as they appeared at the time when he wrote: Charlestown "hath a large market

place near the water-side, built round with houses comely and fair, forth of which there issues two streets orderly built with some very fair houses, beautified with pleasant gardens and orchards. The whole town consists, in its extent, of about a hundred and fifty dwelling-houses. Their meeting-house for Sabbath assembly stands in the market-place, very comely built and large...... Their corn land in tillage in this town is about twelve hundred acres; their great cattle are about four hundred head; sheep near upon four hundred." (Ibid., 41.) — In Dorchester, the "houses for dwelling are about one hundred and forty; orchards and gardens full of fruit-trees; plenty of corn land; although much of it hath been long in tillage, yet hath it ordinarily good crops; the number of trees are near upon fifteen hundred; cows and other cattle of that kind about four hundred and fifty." (Ibid., 42.) — Roxbury is "filled with a very laborious people, whose labors the Lord hath so blest that, in the room of dismal swamps and tearing bushes, they have very goodly fruittrees, fruitful fields and gardens; their herd of cows, oxen, and other young cattle of that kind, about three hundred and fifty, and dwelling-houses near upon a hundred and twenty. Their streets are large, and some fair houses." (Ibid., 44.) — Cambridge "is compact closely within itself, till of late years some few straggling houses have been built...... It hath well-ordered streets and comely completed with the fair building of Harver College." (61.) - But Boston is "the centre town and metropolis of this wilderness work,

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the alienated communities on Narragansett Bay; and by the rulers of the mother country.1

During Winthrop's last ten years, nowhere else in the world had Englishmen been so happy as under the generous government which his mind inspired and regulated. What one life could do for a community's wellbeing, his had done. The prosecution of the issues he had wrought for was now to be committed to the wisdom and courage of a younger generation, and to the course of events under the continued guidance of a propitious Providence.

store of great artillery well mounted; the other hath a very strong battery built of whole timber, and filled with earth, at the descent of the hill, in the extreme poynt thereof; betwixt these two strong armes lies a large cove or bay, on which the chiefest part of this town is built, overtopped with a third hill. All three like over-topping towers keepe a constant watch to foresee the approach of forrein dangers, being furnished with a beacon and loud-babbling guns, to give notice by their redoubled eccho to all their sister-towns. The chief edifice of this city-like towne is crowded on the sea-bankes, and wharfed out with great industry and cost, the buildings beautifull and large, some fairly set forth with brick, tile, stone, and slate, and orderly placed with comely streets, whose continuall enlargement presages some sumptuous city. . . . . . Behold the admirable acts of Christ. At this his people's landing, the hideous thickets in this place were such, that wolves and bears nurst up

their young from the eyes of all beholders, in those very places where the streets are full of girles and boys sporting up and downe, with a continued concourse of people..... This town is the very mark of the land. French, Portugalls, and Dutch come hither for traffic." (Ibid., 42, 43.)

In 1659, when Ferdinando Gorges, grandson of Sir Ferdinando, was hoping to recover his American property, he published his "America painted to the Life." A considerable part of it is but an abridgment from Johnson's book. (Comp. the passages just quoted with Gorges, 28-30.)

1 The population of Massachusetts was now nearly twice as great as the aggregate population of the other confederated Colonies. The basis of assessment being a numerical one, Massachusetts, in 1647, was assessed £ 670. 3. 4, Plymouth, £ 128. 13. 4, Connecticut £140. 2. 5, and New Haven £104. 11. (Records, &c., in Hazard, II. 95.)

CHAPTER VII.

WINTHROP died before tidings of the great tragedy that had been enacted in England could reach his ears. From the time of the execution of the King to the end of his own life, Oliver Cromwell, the head of the Independents, was the ruler of England; at first, by his controlling influence with the governing powers, and, later, as acknowledged monarch.

By a vote of Parliament, or rather of the small fraction of the House of Commons elected nine years before, which called itself by that name,1 the execu- Parliamentive power was intrusted to a Council of State, tary Council consisting of forty-one persons, of whom six were noblemen, and most of the others were members Feb. 15. of the House.

of State.

1649.

The reduction of Ireland was the business most urgently demanding the attention of the new government. The Marquis of Ormond, acting there for the King, War in had concluded an agreement with the Irish Cath- Ireland. olics, by which they engaged to contribute ten thousand men for the restoration of the royal authority in England. The Pope's Nuncio interfered; the engagement was broken; and Ormond, not only deserted but threatened by his recent allies, found himself obliged to surrender Dublin and other garrisons to Colonel Jones, who commanded for the Parliament. The tide, however, soon turned. The arrogance of the Nuncio occasioned disgust;

1 When the Long Parliament met in November, 1640, the House of Commons consisted of 506 members. It was now reduced to about 100. In Febru

ary, 1649, the largest number that appeared at a division was 77, and the smallest was 46. (Journal of the Commons, VI. 132, 128.)

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