登陆注册
5285600000035

第35章 CHAPTER XI. COMMONWEALTH AND RESTORATION(1)

On the 30th of January, 1649, before the palace of Whitehall, Charles the First of England was beheaded. In Virginia the event fell with a shock.

Even those within the colony who were Cromwell's men rather than Charles's men seem to have recoiled from this act. Presently, too, came fleeing royalists from overseas, to add their passionate voices to those of the royalists in Virginia. Many came, "nobility, clergy and gentry, men of the first rate." A thousand are said to have arrived in the year after the King's death.

In October the Virginia Assembly met. Parliament men--and now these were walking with head in the air--might regret the execution of the past January, and yet be prepared to assert that with the fall of the kingdom fell all powers and offices named and decreed by the hapless monarch. What was a passionate royalist government doing in Virginia now that England was a Commonwealth? The passionate government answered for itself in acts passed by this Assembly. With swelling words, with a tragic accent, it denounced the late happenings in England and all the Roundhead wickedness that led up to them. It proclaimed loyalty to "his sacred Majesty that now is"--that is, to Charles Stuart, afterwards Charles the Second, then a refugee on the Continent. Finally it enacted that any who defended the late proceedings, or in the least affected to question "the undoubted and inherent right of his Majesty that now is to the Collony of Virginia" should be held guilty of high treason; and that "reporters and divulgers" of rumors tending to change of government should be punished "even to severity."

Berkeley's words may be detected in these acts of the Assembly. In no great time the Cavalier Governor conferred with Colonel Henry Norwood, one of the royalist refugees to Virginia. Norwood thereupon sailed away upon a Dutch ship and came to Holland, where he found "his Majesty that now is." Here he knelt, and invited that same Majesty to visit his dominion of Virginia, and, if he liked it, there to rest, sovereign of the Virginian people. But Charles still hoped to be sovereign in England and would not cross the seas. He sent, however, to Sir William Berkeley a renewal of his Governor's commission, and appointed Norwood Treasurer of Virginia, and said, doubtless, many gay and pleasant things.

In Virginia there continued to appear from England adherents of the ancient regime. Men, women, and children came until to a considerable degree the tone of society rang Cavalier. This immigration, now lighter, now heavier, continued through a rather prolonged period. There came now to Virginia families whose names are often met in the later history of the land. Now Washingtons appear, with Randolphs, Carys, Skipwiths, Brodnaxes, Tylers, Masons, Madisons, Monroes, and many more. These persons are not without means; they bring with them servants; they are in high favor with Governor and Council; they acquire large tracts of virgin land; they bring in indentured labor; they purchase African slaves; they cultivate tobacco.

>From being English country gentlemen they turn easily to become Virginia planters.

But the Virginia Assembly had thrown a gauntlet before the victorious Commonwealth; and the Long Parliament now declared the colony to be in contumacy, assembled and dispatched ships against her, and laid an embargo upon trade with the rebellious daughter. In January of 1652 English ships appeared off Point Comfort. Four Commissioners of the Commonwealth were aboard, of whom that strong man Claiborne was one. After issuing a proclamation to quiet the fears of the people, the Commissioners made their way to Jamestown. Here was found the indomitable Berkeley and his Council in a state of active preparation, cannon trained. But, when all was said, the Commissioners had brought wisely moderate terms: submit because submit they must, acknowledge the Commonwealth, and, that done, rest unmolested!

If resistance continued, there were enough Parliament men in Virginia to make an army. Indentured servants and slaves should receive freedom in exchange for support to the Commonwealth. The ships would come up from Point Comfort, and a determined war would be on. What Sir William Berkeley personally said has not survived. But after consultation upon consultation Virginia surrendered to the commonwealth.

Berkeley stepped from the Governor's chair, retiring in wrath and bitterness of heart to his house at Greenspring., In his place sat Richard Bennett, one of the Commissioners. Claiborne was made Secretary. King's men went out of office; Parliament men came in. But there was no persecution.

In the bland and wide Virginia air minds failed to come into hard and frequent collision. For all the ferocities of the statute books, acute suffering for difference of opinion, whether political or religious, did not bulk large in the life of early Virginia.

The Commissioners, after the reduction of Virginia, had a like part to play with Maryland. At St. Mary's, as at Jamestown, they demanded and at length received submission to the Commonwealth. There was here the less trouble owing to Baltimore's foresight in appointing to the office of Governor William Stone, whose opinions, political and religious, accorded with those of revolutionary England. Yet the Governor could not bring himself to forget his oath to Lord Baltimore and agree to the demand of the Commissioners that he should administer the Government in the ame of "the Keepers of the Liberties of England." After some hesitation the Commissioners decided to respect his scruples and allow him to govern in the name of the Lord Proprietary, as he had solemnly promised.

同类推荐
  • 郴江百咏

    郴江百咏

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 脉诀

    脉诀

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 诗学禁脔

    诗学禁脔

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 黄帝阴符经集解

    黄帝阴符经集解

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 会稽三赋

    会稽三赋

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 仙古洪荒之寻仙

    仙古洪荒之寻仙

    【白龙渊文学社,编辑饶安推荐】(寻仙之路,漫长而激情,一次收藏,一次点击,一次推荐,都是你对仙古最大的支持)叶云,地球上华夏古国一位先天境武者,却被莫名其妙的带到了一个陌生大陆,他为了寻找回地球的星空古路,毅然走上了修者一途,在途中,他听到地球上那些远古神话中出现的人物传说,证明这里曾经留下过他们的足迹,只是,这些人最终去了哪里?后来,他决定,追寻前人的脚步,寻找那虚无缥缈的永恒-----仙!
  • 三国4:刘备入川

    三国4:刘备入川

    《三国(第4部):刘备入川》是日本文学巨擘吉川英治的长篇历史小说《三国》第四部。主要讲述了刘备势力和孙权势力联合抵抗曹操势力的赤壁之战,到刘备攻入川蜀之地,再到孙权和刘备因荆州问题产生争端的历史故事。作者用颇具个性的现代手法对中国古典名著《三国演义》进行了全新演绎,简化了战争场面,巧妙地加入原著中所没有的精彩对白,着墨重点在刘、关、张、曹操等经典人物的颠覆重塑和故事情节的丰富变幻,在忠于原著的基础上极大成功地脱胎换骨,将乱世群雄以天地为舞台而上演的一出逐鹿天下的人间大戏气势磅礴地书写出来。
  • 你的工资和奖金从哪里来

    你的工资和奖金从哪里来

    本书客观实际出发,引用大量鲜活的事例,为逐步揭开工资和奖金来源的同时,更多地给出提升自身价值的思路与行动方略。
  • 恶魔王子,你别跑!

    恶魔王子,你别跑!

    “你,说喜欢的人,只能是我。”“为什么?”“因为我是你的主子,我是你的少爷!”含着金汤匙出生的王子就可以这样霸道、不讲道理吗?梁茶在飞机上偶遇帝王集团的继承人欧阳清濯,一贯冷酷、倨傲的欧阳清濯居然和梁茶很有话说,欺负她、捉弄她,甚至把她的初吻都夺走了,还总是和她针锋相对,这使得梁茶见了欧阳清濯就禁不住皱眉头。
  • 摇身一变花美男

    摇身一变花美男

    她家闺蜜大人太彪悍,吓的大姨妈都不敢光临。她家闺蜜大人力大如牛、健步如飞,没办法,这个世界有一种人叫女汉子。她家闺蜜大人很护短,谁欺负她的下场都没有好结果,比她亲爹妈对她都好。她家闺蜜大人会变身,彪悍女汉子摇身一变腹黑花美男,还捧花向她单膝跪地求婚:“夏安婷,嫁给我。”尼玛啊!谁能告诉她这是多大的恶作剧!
  • 我的青春高中鸽子笼

    我的青春高中鸽子笼

    如题,是两部写我高中时代故事的合辑,不过写好时早已过了高中好多年……因为时移事往,里面的一些情节还让一些年轻朋友感到困惑:什么是发禁呀?什么是大盘帽?不过,就像我们不会去问康熙为什么要留辫子头,韦小宝为什么要穿清朝僵尸装一样,那都是细节啦……故事只要好听就行了。
  • 吃药小窍门

    吃药小窍门

    日常生活中,食疗吃药小窍门。如:治感冒发烧:生嚼大蒜治感冒:可把鲜蒜瓣含于口中,生嚼不咽下,直至大蒜无辣味时吐掉。连续用3瓣大蒜即可见效。一般用于感冒初起、鼻流清涕、风寒咳嗽等病症。
  • 一纸忘情

    一纸忘情

    一纸婚约,一段情缘。她与他的人生就此绑到了一起,却亦将她带入了尔虞我诈的泥潭。姐姐的算计,私生女的风波。一切的一切彻底的击垮了她内心的防线。就在他勇敢的拉起她的手的时候,说一切有我的时候,她却怕了。再归来,却是他和别的女人的婚礼……有人曾问林逸凡今生最怕什么,他答:我不害怕一无所有流落街头,我只害怕没有她,一向不喜形于色的大男人,竟在这一刻红了眼,最后,他还是丢了她。……尹诺说,你从未对我说过爱,我却一厢情愿,把你待我的好当做了爱,最后才发现,我不过是你眼中那个合适的人,是你的责任罢了……他酩酊大醉,我总以为她是爱我的,所以我把她控在我身边,最后蹉跎了她的人生,我该放过她了……
  • 众经目录

    众经目录

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 重生小娘子的美味人生

    重生小娘子的美味人生

    前后两世嫁给同一个人,前一世,向云欢还没过门就成了寡妇,这一世,她立志成为宠妻!只是宋长平这个病痨子啊……宠起她来,也是蛮拼的。