Title: Index of the Project Gutenberg Works of John Fiske
Author: John Fiske
Editor: David Widger
Release date: February 20, 2019 [eBook #58925]
                Most recently updated: February 25, 2021
Language: English
Credits: 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 |