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their lands, but what they had from the natives. They entered therefore into a voluntary combination, and formed themselves into a body politic, after the manner of those of Connecticut. Thus they continued, till the year 1664, when King Charles II. united the two colonies, and by a charter settled their liberties on a solid foundation.” *

Settled their liberties on a solid foundation! But God had settled them before. The Historian seems to imagine that they had no solid foundation, till the King of England chartered them; and such a King to charter the liberty of the Pilgrims! The Historian seems to be marvelling in his mind how could the poor, unprotected, ungoverned, because unchartered, adventurers, possibly get on from 1637 to 1664, without the King's broad seal, and with their lands only purchased from the natives! How they could live and prosper, with the mere voluntary framing of themselves into a body politic, with their own laws and magistrates, after the manner of those of Connecticut, seemed a riddle to the royalist spectators. And even Mr. Neal appears to think that their title to their lands was really better, signed with the name of King Charles, than with the arrowheads of the Sachems from whom they were purchased.

The only use of a charter, that we can think of, was to give them the privileges of an incorporation by law, and to secure them from the intrusion of other companies or individuals. But as to the security of their liberties under such Monarchs as the Stuarts, if they were not secured by their own virtue, firmness, and voluntary combination, a charter was worth nothing. Besides, in the view of the royalists, the people chartered by the Monarch were bound to be of his sentiments in their religious as well as their civil polity, and every ordinance and institution of the Church of England was binding upon them. Even in our own day, by distinguished historians, a grave charge has been brought against our Pilgrim Fathers, for daring to *Neal's Hist. N. Eng, Vol i., pages 152, 153.

disregard the sentiments of the Monarch under whose authority they settled in America, so far as even to adopt in their infant church the Independent form of Ecclesiastical policy! One can hardly read such sober accusations without a smile; but the Historian Grahame devotes several of his excellent pages to their refutation.*

* Grahame's Colonial History of the United States, Vol. i. 208–211.

CHAPTER X.

THE FIRST SETTLEMENT, FOLLOWING THE FIRST COMPACT.— DISCOVERY OF PLYMOUTH.-THE HARBOR, THE LOCALITIES, THE ASSOCIATIONS.-PLYMOUTH ROCK, AND THE BEAUTY OF THE HIGH-TIDE SCENERY.

THE Capes of New England are regions both of material and spiritual grandeur, for the sea-scenery is glorious, and the historical associations are full of interest. Take a favorable season of the year, and a clear bright day, a day, for example, in the Indian summer, and earth has not anything to show more fair, in a mood of harmony between the atmosphere and ocean, than the sea-views all along the New England coast. Some of its harbors are of the finest in the world; but others, if they can be called such, receive unprotected the whole broadside of the Atlantic. There is an inexhaustible and most romantic variety in the bays, capes, beaches, inlets, islands, promontories, crags, and marsh-meadows of its rock-bound shores.

The sweep of Cape Cod is a most remarkable formation. Since the creation of the world we know not what use was ever made of it, till the May Flower was stopped by it in her voyage, and compelled there to come to anchor. An enthusiastic mind wanders over that whole region with delight; for here was the opening of a new dispensation in the great things that connect earth with heaven; a new

scene in the History of Redemption; a new school, a free school, of discipline and instruction for God's church. Here the imaginative and romantic are combined with the sternest realities, in the circle of Christian life, labor, and experience, in the unfolding of God's plan. In process of time there may be a new Christian Epic, and these rude names and places of Cape Cod, Pakanokit, Patuxet, Naumkeag, will be among the central points of a region invested with imaginative beauty, and fraught with rich and powerful associations; so that by and by the Islands of the Homeric seas, and the coasts of Palinurus' navigation, will not possess a more poetic and classic interest.

From Cape Cod Harbor, leaving the May Flower there, the Pilgrims set out on their exploring expeditions to find a place of permanent settlement. They were anxious and hurried, not only by the lateness of the season, on the verge of winter, but by the actual danger of being set ashore anywhere, at the will of the Captain of the little ship, and abandoned of all human aid to their fate, even before they had a single roof for shelter. There are one or two passages in the Journal, which, combined with some historical hints from other sources, have a great deal of meaning in them, to open fully to our minds the hazardous position of the Pilgrims. Of this nature is that note among their reasons urged for a hasty settlement at Cape Cod, namely: "it was also conceived, whilst we had competent victuals, that the ship would stay with us; but when that grew less, they would be gone, and let us shift as we could." It is quite evident from this, and from some other indications, that they feared the ship-master, and had no confidence in him; which inclines us to give some credit to the affirmation of Mr. Morton in his memorial, that the May Flower was forced into Cope Cod harbor "more especially by the fraudulency and contrivance of Mr. Jones, the master of the ship; for their intention, as is before noted, and his engagement, was to Hudson's river.

But some of the Dutch having notice of their intentions, and having thoughts about the same time of erecting a plantation there likewise, they fraudulently hired the said Jones, by delays while they were in England, and now under pretence of the danger of the shoals, &c., to disappoint them of their going thither. But God outshoots Satan oftentimes in his own bow."*

Be this as it may, they were in anxious haste for settlement, and came near settling on the Cape itself.

"The master of the ship," says Mr. Morton, "and his company, pressed them with speed to look out a place for their settlement, at some near distance; for the season was such that he would not stir from thence, till a safe harbor was discovered by them with the boat. Yea, it was sometimes threatened that if they did not get a place in time, they and their goods should be turned on shore, and the ship should leave them. The master also expressed himself that provisions were spending apace, and that he would keep sufficient for himself and company for their return (to England).”

By the 10th of December, they had come in their explorings as far as Clark's Island, in Plymouth harbor; so called, because Thomas Clark, the mate of the May Flower, first set foot upon it. They described this harbor as a bay greater than Cape Cod, compassed with a goodly land, and in the bay two fine Islands uninhabited, wherein are nothing but woods, oaks, pines, walnuts, beech, sassafras, vines, and other trees which we know not. This bay is a most hopeful place; innumerable store of fowl, and excellent food, and cannot but be of fish in their seasons." Such was Plymouth then, to their view very hopeful, and there they determined to settle, and there landed on the Rock. In the space of two hundred years, the localities have so far changed, at least in the mantle thrown over them by time and cultivation, that if the Pilgrims could rise from their * Morton, New England's Memorial.

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