登陆注册
26324800000051

第51章 CHAPTER XV. ALEXANDER SPOTSWOOD(3)

It was as Governor of these people that, in succession to Nicholson, Edward Nott came to Virginia, the deputy of my Lord Orkney. Nott died soon afterward, and in 1710 Orkney sent to Virginia in his stead Alexander Spotswood. This man stands in Virginia history a manly, honorable, popular figure. Of Scotch parentage, born in Morocco, soldier under Marlborough, wounded at Blenheim, he was yet in his thirties when he sailed across the Atlantic to the river James. Virginia liked him, and he liked Virginia. A man of energy and vision, he first made himself at home with all, and then after his own impulses and upon his own lines went about to develop and to better the colony. He had his projects and his hobbies, mostly useful, and many sounding with a strong modern tone. Now and again he quarreled with the Assembly, and he made it many a cutting speech. But it, too, and all Virginia and the world were growing modern. Issues were disengaging themselves and were becoming distinct. In these early years of the eighteenth century, Whig and Tory in England drew sharply over against each other. In Virginia, too, as in Maryland, the Carolinas, and all the rest of England-in-America, parties were emerging. The Virginian flair for political life was thus early in evidence. To the careless eye the colony might seem overwhelmingly for King and Church. "If New England be called a Receptacle of Dissenters, and an Amsterdam of Religion, Pennsylvania the Nursery of Quakers; Maryland the Retirement of Roman Catholicks, North Carolina the Refuge of Runaways and South Carolina the Delight of Buccaneers and Pyrates, Virginia may be justly esteemed the happy Retreat of true Britons and true Churchmen for the most Part." This "for the most part" paints the situation, for there existed an opposition, a minority, which might grow to balance, and overbalance. In the meantime the House of Burgesses at Williamsburg provided a School for Discussion.

At the time when Parson Jones with his shrewd eyes was observing society in the Old Dominion, Williamsburg was still a small village, even though it was the capital. Towns indeed, in any true sense, were nowhere to be found in Virginia. Yet Williamsburg had a certain distinction. Within it there arose, beneath and between old forest trees, the college, an admirable church--Bruton Church--the capitol, the Governor's house or "palace," and many very tolerable dwelling-houses of frame and brick. There were also taverns, a marketplace, a bowling-green, an arsenal, and presently a playhouse. The capitol at Williamsburg was a commodious one, able to house most of the machinery of state. Here were the Council Chamber, "where the Governor and Council sit in very great state, in imitation of the King and Council, or the Lord Chancellor and House of Lords, " and the great room of the House of Burgesses, "not unlike the House of Commons." Here, at the capitol . met the General Courts in April and October, the Governor and Council acting as judges. There were also Oyer and Terminer and Admiralty Courts. There were offices and committee rooms, and on the cupola a great clock, and near the capitol was "a strong, sweet Prison for Criminals; and on the other side of an open Court another for Debtors . . . but such Prisoners are very rare, the Creditors being generally very merciful . . .

. At the Capitol, at publick Times, may be seen a great Number of handsome, well-dressed, compleat Gentlemen. And at the Governor's House upon Birth-Nights, and at Balls and Assemblies, I have seen as fine an Appearance, as good Diversion, and as splendid Entertainments, in Governor Spotswood's Time, as I have seen anywhere else."

It is a far cry from the Susan Constant, the Goodspeed, and the Discovery, from those first booths at Jamestown, from the Starving Time, from Christopher Newport and Edward-Maria Wingfield and Captain John Smith to these days of Governor Spotswood. And yet, considering the changes still to come, a century seems but a little time and the far cry not so very far.

Though the Virginians were in the mass country folk, yet villages or hamlets arose, clusters of houses pressing about the Court House of each county. There were now in the colony over a score of settled counties. The westernmost of these, the frontier counties, were so huge that they ran at least to the mountains, and, for all one knew to the contrary, presumably beyond. But "beyond" was a mysterious word of unknown content, for no Virginian of that day had gone beyond. All the way from Canada into South Carolina and the Florida of that time stretched the mighty system. of the Appalachians, fifteen hundred miles in length and three hundred in breadth.

Here was a barrier long and thick, with ridge after ridge of lifted and forested earth, with knife-blade vales between, and only here and there a break away and an encompassed treasure of broad and fertile valley. The Appalachians made a true Chinese Wall, shutting all England-in-America, in those early days, out from the vast inland plateau of the continent, keeping upon the seaboard all England-in-America, from the north to the south. To Virginia these were the mysterious mountains just beyond which, at first, were held to be the South Sea and Cathay. Now, men's knowledge being larger by a hundred years, it was known that the South Sea could not be so near. The French from Canada, going by way of the St. Lawrence and the Great Lakes, had penetrated very far beyond and had found not the South Sea but a mighty river flowing into the Gulf of Mexico. What was the real nature of this world which had been found to lie over the mountains? More and more Virginians were inclined to find out, foreseeing that they would need room for their growing population. Continuously came in folk from the Old Country, and continuously Virginians were born. Maryland dwelt to the north, Carolina to the south. Virginia, seeking space, must begin to grow westward.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 日月

    日月

    苏胜勇先生的长篇小说《日月》,以新中国成立前后直至改革开放初期晋南某地城乡生活为背景,以复转军人石永成一家及其所在皂荚树底下村为中心,交织了家、村、县各色人等政治、经济、情感生活错综复杂的矛盾纠葛,演绎了中国二十世纪中后期社会进程中一出人间悲欢离合的曲折而悲怆的悲喜剧。
  • 轮回追忆

    轮回追忆

    女主出生人间大户人家,假身世遭曝光之后偶然重生,入了青丘老狐狸的门下修炼成狐仙,而后得知,需要找到晶魂才能继续活下去。在寻找过程中,她遇到了一个个不同身份的人,有的萍水相逢,有的影响一生。随着晶魂逐渐找齐,她的真实身份也随之浮出水面。向来无情,只因未遇见你,一生不短,唯爱一人足矣。
  • 妖色回忆录

    妖色回忆录

    在一次普通的采访任务中,我意外的和大妖精迦罗帝签订了契约并解救了一只小妖狐,让她寄身在我身上,之后怪事连连,我踏入了一个普通人从未了解过的真实世界……
  • 狂傲决

    狂傲决

    年青少年的一路追逐。面对刀光剑影爱恨情仇,只要活着就要面对一切。
  • 雷破苍穹

    雷破苍穹

    雷霆大陆风起云涌,少年雷羽破九幽,战雷霆,独领天下,逆天而行,走出自己的雷道,成就无上雷帝!
  • 老鼠急了会咬猫

    老鼠急了会咬猫

    她说:人贱的最终结果是:不会被弄死,而是被玩死。
  • 佛说阿弥陀经疏

    佛说阿弥陀经疏

    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。
  • 情颠三世之二皇城风云

    情颠三世之二皇城风云

    昏君,囚禁,魔教,仇恨,威胁,所有的一切都与九泉门密切相关,她又能否逃此一劫……爱恨情仇,江湖恩怨,仁义忠孝,只因欲独霸江山,而不惜牺牲一切。这场争斗之中,究竟还能相信什么人?
  • 盛开的紫丁香原野

    盛开的紫丁香原野

    友友们多多支持。感谢你们的支持,你们的支持就是我的动力。
  • 空间站之窗

    空间站之窗

    空间站之窗空间站之窗空间站之窗空间站之窗空间站之窗空间站之窗