Abstract:
The Second Book of William Bradford's "Of Plymouth Plantation"
is an attempt to describe
business and its effects on the communtity. Bradford can
be seen as one of the first
economic historians.
William Bradford's Of Plymouth Plantation
remains both one of the most and one
of the least readable texts from early colonial New England.
Bradford receives
praise for his unusually personal and varied style, his humor,
his talent for
balancing piety and pragmatism; for these reasons, as well
as for the contributions
of Bradford's book to a particular form of American mythology,
Of Plymouth
Plantation is more often studied and taught than the works
of Bradford's
near-contemporaries in the Massachusetts Bay Colony. Yet
it is a difficult
work-difficult to read from end to end and difficult to comprehend
as a whole. It
hovers uneasily between history and memoir, public and private
discourse,
theological and secular narrative; its relation to genre
is always in question, since
it offers no very precise fit with most of the conventional
categories. The prevailing
critical view appears to be that it is a providentialist
history gone awry, that the
much longer Second Book reflects Bradford's disappointment
at the gradual
dissolution of the Pilgrim community and the loss of its
original mission. Robert
Daly's remark is typical: "Bradford's history,"
he says, "begins magnificently,
diminishes into a tedious account of unsorted administrative
details, and ends,
uncompleted, in silence" (557).1 The loose narrative
structures and convoluted
digressions of the annals are thus (so the argument goes)
a form of mimesis,
depicting not only the community's decline from an ideal
which is presented with
great passion and force in the First Book, but Bradford's
cumulative disquiet and
bewilderment as a witness to and participant in that decline.
Several of Bradford's
readers, including David Levin, Alan Howard, and Walter Wenska,
have argued
eloquently in defense of Bradford's method in the Second
Book, but the shadow of
the earlier interpretation falls over these efforts as well,
for they mainly defend
Bradford against the charge that for much of that book he
is not writing very good
providentialist history. Howard, Levin, and to an extent
Wayne Franklin (see esp.
165-78) represent the "Augustinian" school of Bradfordian
criticism, in which
Bradford is portrayed as deeply conscious, sometimes to the
point of melancholy,
of the incapacity of sinful humanity to fulfill God's purposes
on Earth; the Second
Book then becomes an inquiry into this very incapacity. Mark
Sargent draws on
the same strand in suggesting that the body of Bradford's
history constitutes a
"quiet confession" of the tensions within the separatist
movement (408), tensions
which had become more poignant due to the sea-change in English
attitudes
toward separatism following the Civil War, and which Bradford
tried to address
more fruitfully in his late Dialogues. But all such readings
assume that providential
design looms in the background of the Second Book, functioning
as a spiritual and
moral benchmark even if humanity fails to move toward it.2
In this essay, which will proceed from
a comparative look at the First Book to the
consideration of several features (as well as persons) of
the Second, and include
a side-glance at an important factor in the historical background
of the Pilgrims'
activities, I will argue that the case I have outlined above
has been greatly
overstated-that in the Second Book Bradford is not actually
attempting to write
providential history.3 The impatience that Bradford's readers
frequently betray
with the Second Book seems to arise from a misapprehension
of one of its most
obvious features, a feature that one of my students summed
up quite aptly when
he called Of Plymouth Plantation "a New England Bleak
House."4 It is an account,
that is, of a complicated, difficult, inconclusive business
enterprise carried out over
a period of many years. Its intrinsic interest is in the
details and intrigues of that
business and its effects on the community in which it was
transacted. John Griffith,
one of only a few critics to pay close attention to Bradford's
preoccupation with
commerce, believes that this preoccupation affects the style
of the book in a more
general way: "Bradford's work distills a great part
of human affairs into a kind of
semi-explicit bookkeeping, in which assets are weighed against
liabilities with an
eye primarily toward the total balance" (235). Griffith
wants to absorb Bradford's
economic concerns into another type of providentialist reading,
involving a
quasiWeberian triumph of godly capitalism. More conservatively
if also more
subtly, Kenneth Hovey perceives in the "mundane and
practical character" of the
Second Book a demonstration of the notion that, "[iln
a world devoid of miracles,
God can still be seen in the success of weak means"
(64, 61). But to describe
Bradford as yet another apologist for either a "hard"
or a "soft" Protestant work
ethic is to neglect the characteristic uneasiness of the
Second Book's organization
and tone. The Second Book does manage to provide moments
of reflection on the
ways of Providence; however, these moments cannot be extrapolated
to form a
satisfactory providentialist reading of the whole. Bradford
seems quite aware that
the providentialist perspective is not well-suited to the
material at hand; the most
obvious evidence for this is his presentation of this material
in annalistic form,
convenient for marking the exigencies and discontinuities
of worldly time but not
for observing the serene progression of "cosmic"
time towards the Apocalypse.5
Accounts of the vagaries of commercial activity rarely make
for rewarding reading
as evidence of God working out His plan in human history;
hence the conclusion
that the Second Book is both disappointed and disappointing.
But this may only
indicate the disappointment of readers at encountering the
inapplicability of a
favored thesis.
I will instead propose that the main problem
confronting Bradford, and
consequently Bradford's readers, in the Second Book of Of
Plymouth Plantation is
one which is endemic to the writing of secular history in
a colonial setting, and
could be considered a problem of modern history in general.
This is the problem
of describing what might be called "corporate life,"
accounting for a collective
entity and for the passage of that entity through time, as
well as through an
unfamiliar landscape in which the boundaries and interior
relations of particular
kinds of European communal life have to be defined anew in
the face of unusual
pressures from both without and within. Bradford as historian
must adjudicate
between an account that emphasizes the entity, the body politic
of the Plymouth
colony (a body with an implied interior life which can be
represented
metonymically through the lives of its individual members),
and an account that
emphasizes the outward activity of the entity, which extends
beyond the entity
itself and takes on a life of its own, though often in a
much less "personal" and
easily accessible sense. It is the character of this other
"life," and Bradford's
response to it, that I will try to explore in the discussion
that follows. First, though, I
want to consider in more detail the conventional understanding
of the First Book
as a benchmark of providentialist historiography.
PROVIDENTIALISM AND HISTORICAL FORM IN THE FIRST BOOK
The problem of describing Plymouth's corporate
life appears not to weigh very
heavily on Bradford in the First Book, which is more unified
and uniform, and
certainly more self-assured, in its presentation of a community
gathering itself
together "into a church estate, in the fellowship of
the gospel, to walk in all His
ways made known, or to be made known unto them, according
to their best
endeavours, whatsoever it should cost them, the Lord assisting
them. And that it
cost them something this ensuing history will declare"
(Bradford g; unless
otherwise noted, page numbers for Of Plymouth Plantation
are taken from the
1952 edition annotated by Samuel Eliot Morison). As this
last sentence suggests,
the evidence of narrative design is fairly obvious in the
First Book. Bradford orders
his material not only chronologically but teleologically,
into chapters that are
organized topically as well as in terms of sequences of events,
and he indicates in
numerous ways that his history is plotted and moving toward
a particular outcome.
He alludes to his "intendment" (8) and to his (sometimes
unsuccessful) efforts to
manage and prune his ample material: "it is not my purpose
to treat of the several
passages that befell this people whilst they thus lived in
the Low Countries (which
might worthily require a large treatise of itself), but to
make way to show the
beginning of this plantation, which is that I aim at"
(19). He also offers a general
rationale for his procedures: "I have been the larger
in these things, and so shall
crave leave in some like passages following (though in other
things I shall labour
to be more contract) that their children may see with what
difficulties their fathers
wrestled in going through these things in their first beginnings....
As also that some
use may be made hereof in after times by others in such like
weighty
employments" (46). In making this claim for the utility-both
retrospective and
prospective-of his history, Bradford assumes that his material
forms a whole,
bounded if not altogether complete, and that it is capable
of taking a lasting
shape. The Second Book, of course, can be understood as belying
these very
assumptions.
Yet the qualitative shift from one part
of the history to the other is not quite as
thoroughgoing as the evidence of designedness in the First
Book and the lack of
such evidence in the Second would seem to indicate. Bradford's
method in the
First Book appears to fit the providential model well in
the sense that the "good
form" and clear emplotment of the history reflects the
form of God's plan for the
Pilgrims; there is an implied ratio between logical narrative
and inevitable cosmic
progression. On the other hand, good form (as Hayden White
has often argued 6)
is a common feature of secular history as well, and can be
matched with other
kinds of progression besides the providential. Even the historical
accounts in the
Bible, surely the authoritative text for Bradford on matters
of narrative as on most
other matters, often lack a strong providentialist impulse.
There could hardly be a
starker tonal contrast in the Old Testament than between
the relentless
triumphalism of the Book of Joshua and the murky account
of interethnic politics in
the Book of Judges, though these two books together describe
a continuous
period in the history of Canaan.7 And the chronological longmarches
of the books
of Kings and Chronicles do not reveal much sense of an overarching
divine plan
when read outside of a broader scriptural context. This is
to say that Bradford as a
writer of providential history is not bound by an ironclad
definition of "the
providential historian." There are sections in the First
Book, for instance in the
description of the practical preparations for the journey
to New England in
chapters 5-7, that are as mundane as any similar material
in the Second Book. In
these sections the providentialist rhetoric largely disappears,
though it may
surface occasionally in the letters from John Robinson and
other writers that
Bradford interpolates as part of the history.
Where such rhetoric reaches its highest
pitch in the First Book is, strikingly
enough, in those parts of the narrative in which the Pilgrims
are not transacting
any business. Typically, these parts involve embarking upon,
being on board, or
disembarking from a ship. When the community is literally
at sea, its status as an
economic entity is temporarily suspended until it reaches
land once again. The
fact of the community's isolation from its external relations,
along with the sense of
peril normally associated with ocean voyages in this period,
provides Bradford with
a kind of generic cue to intensify the theological and typological
content of his
account. This occurs in the description of the "fearful
storm" that the first group of
emigrants encountered on the way to Holland:
But when man's hope and help wholly failed,
the Lord's power and mercy
appeared in their recovery. ... When the water ran into their
mouths and ears and
the mariners cried out, "We sink, we sink!" they
cried (if not with miraculous, yet
with a great height or degree of divine faith), `Yet Lord
Thou canst save! Yet Lord
Thou canst save!' with such other expressions as I will forbear.
Upon which the
ship did not only recover, but shortly after the violence
of the storm began to
abate, and the Lord filled their afflicted minds with such
comforts as everyone
cannot understand, and in the end brought them to their desired
haven . . . (13)
The familiar elements of providentialism
are here: the reflection on the mystery of
grace, the elevation of faith above works, the celebration
of the efficacy of prayer,
and the suggestion of a typological link with a scriptural
event, in this case Christ's
calming the wind and water while crossing the Sea of Galilee
with the apostles, as
recounted in all three of the synoptic Gospels.8 But this
is all in the context of a
radical containment which is also-paradoxically, given the
circumstances-a form of
stasis: the Pilgrim community functions here as a simple
and cohesive body, open
to the ways of providence (or at least to those of providentialist
interpretation),
because on a foreign vessel in the middle of a difficult
passage it can be very little
else.
Similar moments occur in Bradford's account
of the voyage to Cape Cod in
chapter 9. There is the cautionary tale of the "very
profane" and "haughty" sailor
who paid dearly for mocking his land-loving passengers on
the outward journey.
"But it pleased God. . to smite this young man with
a grievous disease, of which he
died in a desperate manner . . . and it was an astonishment
to all his fellows for
they noted it to be the just hand of God upon him" (Morison
58). More significantly
there is the description of the arrival itself, where Bradford
draws direct analogies
to Paul's shipwreck on Malta in Acts 27 and Moses's vision
of Canaan in
Deuteronomy 3, and goes so far as to substitute ocean-going
"Englishmen" for
Jacob's offspring in his paraphrase of two verses from Deuteronomy
26 (61, 62,
63). This entire passage has been treated as an early interpretation
of the
American landscape and an illustration of English preconceptions
about that
landscape as "wilderness" (see Laurence). What
I want to stress here, however, is
that the typological density of the passage is closely aligned
with the complete
absence of a social milieu: "they had now no friends
to welcome them nor inns to
entertain or refresh their weatherbeaten bodies; no houses
or much less towns to
repair to, to seek for succour.... which way soever they
turned their eyes (save
upward to the heavens) they could have little solace or content
in respect of any
outward objects" (61-62). The critical emphasis in this
description has tended to
fall on the "weatherbeaten face" and "wild
and savage hue" of the country (62),
but the lack of satisfactory "outward objects"
is just as crucially the absence of
friends, inns, houses, towns-in other words, of the normal
grounds for the
transactions of daily life as the Pilgrims had known it in
England and Holland. The
very last words of the First Book point to the establishment
of such grounds, "the
first house for common use to receive them and their goods"
(72).
These observations lead me to propose
that the First Book can best be treated as
a case of "loose providentialism," as against a
roughly contemporary Puritan
history like Edward Johnson's Wonder-Working Providence of
Sions Saviour in
New England (published 1653), where providentialist patterning
is consistently,
indeed monotonously, apparent (see Jameson). Bradford's providentialist
rhetoric
is suited to occasions, particularly to originating events
and periods of transition-to
situations of genesis and exodus, as it were. As the Pilgrims
settle into a way of
life in what is now often termed a "contact zone,"
a world more like that portrayed
in the book of Judges, these situations become fewer and
fewer. Bradford
neglects providentialist historiography in the Second Book
not because of the
perceived collapse of "the Pilgrim ideal" but because
the generic appropriateness
of providentialism to the material at hand is significantly
diminished. This would
imply as well that, early or late, Of Plymouth Plantation
is not as tightly wedded to
the forms of providential history as it is often thought
to be.
Then what kind of history is Bradford
trying to write? The answer is fairly simple, at
least initially: Bradford wants to write the genealogical
history of a people from its
first origins. Examples of such history, often dynastic in
content and patriotic in
theme, are manifold in the late medieval and early modern
periods, drawing on
both Greco-Roman and Judaeo-Christian influences and ranging
along various
points between the strictly providential and the strictly
secular. Bradford might
have had at least a passing acquaintance with the nationalistic
chronicle histories
of Edward Hall, Raphael Holinshed, and John Stow, all of
which fall more toward
the secular end (see Levy 167-201). Such histories are structured
by births,
deaths, and inheritances, but the matter within the frame
is chiefly occupied with
the deeds of individuals, deeds which are inseparable from
the identities of the
persons who enact them and which are conceived as having
a moral centrality,
suffusing the history with whatever values the historian
intends to promulgate. The
very ancient notion of history as a narrative of particular
deeds-generally res
gestae, the deeds of monarchs, generals, or other types of
"great men" (see
Ferguson 3-27)-lends itself well to histories constructed
upon simple, linear
movement in a clearly defined direction: to accounts of long
journeys to specific
places of refuge or settlement, of the rise or decline of
noble houses, of missions
of conversion, of single-minded military campaigns such as
the Crusades.9 This
kind of movement appears to be characteristic of both universal
history and
chronicle, the two medieval models for historiography that
Emory Elliott, in his
survey of Puritan writing in New England in the first volume
of the recent
Cambridge History of American Literature, identifies as primary
influences on
Bradford's practice. Universal history, following Augustine's
De Civitate Dei, may
reveal a "larger pattern of God's plan in the recorded
events," and chronicle may
be "a straightforward account of narrative details"
(215), but neither requires
complicated narrative strategies. In Elliott's view the Second
Book tells a familiar
Old Testament story about "the deaths of the first-generation
patriarchs, the
spread of sin, and the weakening of the church" (216)
while still functioning in
more mundane terms as "a practical man's sober accounting
of the trials,
pressures, and even fractures the colony had experienced"
(216-17).
As far as Bradford's "intendment"
goes, Of Plymouth Plantation is not especially
distinctive and could sit easily with Elliott's description
of its debts to both universal
and chronicle history. What renders the book unusual is that,
forced by the sheer
pressure of the "matter" with which Bradford has
to work, it moves rather rapidly
outside of these traditional sorts of historiography. Bradford's
history is
distinguished from its putative models by its awareness of-and
its willingness to
consider, if sometimes quite reluctantly-the possibility
that events are not
unilaterally determined but have multiple causes, causes
which cannot be
accounted for satisfactorily by a recording of res gestae
under either divine or
temporal authority. In other words, Bradford in Of Plymouth
Plantation is
effectively moving beyond an understanding of history as
a record of mere deeds
(whether or not he considers those deeds to involve God's
will and its
manifestations) toward an understanding of history as an
examination of a set of
relations, many of which do not register in genealogical
terms-or, for that matter,
in the terms of "a straightforward account of narrative
details." The project of the
Pilgrims, while it could be categorized after a fashion as
a journey, a mission, a
campaign, or even as the emergence (or decay) of a "family,"
resists being
simplified into any one of these things alone, and one of
the most salient
categories, that of the business venture, rarely finds a
place in the histories of
Bradford's era. Bradford is caught between the divergent
requirements for writing
genealogical history and what is now termed economic history,
at a time when the
requirements for the latter are largely invisible compared
to the former.lo Working
from a fairly restricted palette of scriptural, classical,
and ecclesiastical models for
the task he has set himself, he wants to write a history
of a community of
likeminded believers which is at the same time, and just
as significantly, the history
of a joint-stock company embarked on a colonial business
venture. Yet Bradford's
conception of the colonial polity-where the emphasis is on
self-containment and
the significant actions of the body's members-is at historiographical
cross
purposes with his incipient understanding of the colonial
business venture, where
individuals' actions lose their particularity as they are
fanned out onto the intricate
web of commerce, and where the Pilgrims come into ambiguous
contact with the
other sorts of communities that fall within this same web.
The microcosm of
Plymouth Plantation cannot be stretched to fit smoothly over
the macrocosm of
the New England colonial economy. The hesitations, inconsistencies,
and
longueurs of the Second Book suggest Bradford's difficulty
in superimposing one
over the other. As a way of approaching this difficulty,
I would like to offer
"macrocosmic" readings of material from the Second
Book concerning what I take
to be two of its representative figures, Thomas Morton and
Isaac Allerton.
OUTSIDERS: THOMAS MORTON, THE DUTCH, AND FRONTIER TRADE
The famous account of Morton's escapades
in the annals for I6z8 is generally
read in terms of its contrasts with Morton's competing account
of the same set of
events in New English Canaan." But the Morton episode
appears as part of a
larger narrative in which Bradford seeks to explain a significant
shift in the social
and economic relations-particularly in the trade relations-prevailing
in New
England in the 1630s and 1640s. The crisis that requires
an explanation involves,
very literally, the empowerment of the natives of Massachusetts
by way of
commerce with the colonists-an economic and, more troublesome
still, a
technological empowerment:
Hitherto the Indians of these parts had
no pieces nor other arms but their bows
and arrows, nor of many years after; neither durst they scarce
handle a gun, so
much were they afraid of them. And the very sight of one
(though out of kilter) was
a terror unto them. But those Indians to the east parts,
which had commerce with
the French, got pieces of them, and they in the end made
a common trade of it.
(204)
The rhetorical progression of the gun
from a frightening symbol-a totem, as it
were-representing the colonists' territorial power to a functional
tool among the
natives appears here to originate in "commerce with
the French" and "common
trade." But "common trade," as Bradford is
well aware, is not a closed system. The
trade in firearms has other, more abstract causes, causes
which, in the broad
outlines of Bradford's account, im licate the Dutch from
the south as well as the
French from the "east." For in 1627 the Dutch introduced
the manufacture and
trade of wampum to the English and thence to the tribes of
Massachusetts and
northern New England, "and strange it was to see the
great alteration it made in a
few years among the Indians." 12 Shell money, which
had once had only limited
use among the Narragansetts and Pequots, "grew thus
to be a commodity in
these parts" and "hath now continued . . about
this zo years, and . . . may prove a
drug in time" (203). Bradford falls readily here into
the language of trade,
employing a colloquial expression for slow-moving merchandise
which remains a
part of the merchant's lexicon to this day.
Among the stock the Dutch traded in 1627
to interested parties in New England
was not only wampum itself but an education in its uses:
"Neither did the English
of this Plantation or any other in the land, till now that
they had knowledge of it
from the Dutch, so much as know what it was, much less that
it was a commodity
of that worth and value" (203). There is an implicit
distinction in the passage
between the utility of a particular commodity, a utility
which Bradford treats as
more or less a priori, and the knowledge which actually allows
individuals and
groups to make use of that commodity within the sphere of
trade. Knowledge, in
other words, becomes one valuable commodity among others.
And in this
passage Bradford introduces another party to the commerce
in wampum: the
English, who become the beneficiaries of Dutch expertise
in this market, enabling
them to enter the market themselves.
Here I need to digress for an interval
to address Pilgrim attitudes toward the
Dutch, since these attitudes figure significantly in Bradford's
understanding of the
Morton episode and help to determine the symbolic function
of that episode within
Bradford's history. While French traders from Canada could
easily enough be
categorized as direct political, economic, and even theological
competitors with
the English, the Dutch occupied a much more ambiguous position
at the
boundaries of the Pilgrims' community life, having traded
many things (knowledge
included) with Bradford's compatriots over a long period.
Amsterdam and Leyden
had provided the earliest havens for the Scrooby expatriates,
who came over to
the Netherlands on the prospect, as Bradford says, of "freedom
of religion for all
men" (10). This freedom nonetheless had its threatening
aspects. The unusually
open character of the Dutch market (relative at least to
its counterparts elsewhere
in Europe) made for a distinctly polyglot environment in
the Low Countries.
Amsterdam housed an assortment of political, religious, and
economic immigrants
from many different places, including a significant number
of Jews. Leyden, as
home to one of the most prestigious-and liberal-universities
in Europe, had a
diverse population, with students coming from as far away
as Russia (Dexter
413-14, 497). An anonymous English satirist of the I66os
linked Dutch prosperity
to this peculiar diversity: "They countenance only Calvinism,
but for Trades sake
they Tolerate all others, except the Papists; which is the
reason why the treasure
and stock of most Nations is transported thither, where there
is full Liberty of
Conscience: you may be what the Devil you will there, so
you be but peaceable"
(qtd. in Dexter 419).13 Bradford vividly describes the disorienting
effect of Dutch
cultural life on the Pilgrim settlers: "they heard a
strange and uncouth language,
and beheld the different manners and customs of the people,
with their strange
fashions and attires; all so far differing from that of their
plain country villages
(wherein they were bred and had so long lived) as it seemed
they were come into
a new world" (16). The explicit contrast here is between
the exotic pluralism of the
Netherlands and the communal stability of "plain country
villages," villages which
Bradford renders as both centers of origin and emblems of
continuity for the
Pilgrims, "wherein they were bred and had so long lived."
One of the subtle historical ironies of
the Pilgrims' arrival in the other "new world"
across the Atlantic is that the milieu which prompted their
departure from Europe
soon reappeared in a recognizably similar form in North America.
New Netherland
was an unsuccessful and relatively short-lived colonial experiment,14
yet its
influence reached northward and certainly touched the Plymouth
settlers, for from
an early point New Netherland displayed a diversity not unlike
what the Pilgrims
would have remembered in Amsterdam and Leyden. Twenty years
after the
colony was first settled, the Jesuit Isaac Jogues (perhaps
exaggerating) noted that
eighteen languages were spoken there (Kammen 37) 15 The linguistic
melange
had its religious counterpart. In 1655 the conservative Dutch
Reformed minister
Johannes Megapolensis complained that "we have here
Papists, Mennonites and
Lutherans among the Dutch; also many Puritans or Independents,
and many
Atheists and various other servants of Baal among the English
under this
Government, who conceal themselves under the name of Christians."
He went on
to inveigh against Jews, some of whom had already settled
in New Netherland (by
way of Brazil!) the previous year (Kammen 61-62; quotation
on 61. The colony
also contained more than a few freed slaves, thanks to the
absence there of
racially discriminatory laws, as well as the West India Company's
unusually lax
regulation of the slave trade (Kammen 58-60).
Given their tolerance for the plural and
the polyglot in their social affairs, the Dutch
in their renewed proximity presented the Pilgrims with complexities
which may
have been familiar from past experience but remained difficult
to untangle.16
From Bradford's point of view there were excellent reasons
for keeping the Dutch
at arm's length, in spite of any felt obligations to the
Pilgrims' former "hosts." New
Netherland might offer to the Pilgrims (just as the "old"
Netherlands had) the
potential, at least, for participation in a productive mercantile
network; at the same
time it offered near at hand an antithetical, if in some
ways tantalizing, model of
what a colonial community could be: an economic body, paradoxically
disembodied, active but nebulous and contradictory, full
of life but always verging
on chaos-"a Babel of Confusion," as Johannes Megalopolensis
believed it was
becoming (qtd. in Kammen 37).17 Such a body was perceived,
at least, to have a
dangerous talent for assimilating and dissolving within itself
the identity of other
bodies, including the identity of the plain country village
of like-minded believers
which Bradford at one level imagined Plymouth Colony to be.18
The Tower of Babel is the last monument
that Bradford would want erected in the
environs of Massachusetts Bay, yet the Second Book often
suggests that such a
tower is already built up to a point that invites divine
intervention-that New England
is on the verge of a violent cosmopolitanism based on trade,
in which various
"speakers" struggle (and usually fail) to rise
above the hubbub in order to
establish a lingua franca (or a common currency) for the
entire region. The
wampum trade itself offers a compact illustration of the
emerging state of affairs:
the primary consequence of the development of this market
is that, Bradford says,
"it makes the Indians of these parts rich and powerful
and also proud thereby, and
fills them with pieces, powder and shot, which no laws can
restrain" (204). The
sentence is built upon a nice parallelism between "rich"/"powerful"/"proud"
and
"pieces"/"powder"/"shot" (with
the parallelism reinforced by a partial rhyme in the
middle terms), which allows Bradford to suggest a close relationship
between the
trade in wampum and the trade in guns. Bradford also implies
here the
working-out of a clear causal sequence, but one which moves
in an interesting
direction: wampum makes one wealthy, wealth makes one powerful,
power makes
one proud, and pride makes one enter into further commerce.
The lack of
"restraint" here relates not to the Indians but
to the "pieces, powder, and shot,"
and by extension to the trade in those goods, a trade enabled
by "the baseness of
sundry unworthy persons, both English, Dutch and French"
(204). This cause is
also a consequence: trade, whether in wampum or guns, dissolves
the distinctions
between these national groups into a general category of
"baseness," a category
which seems to involve class as much as it does moral standards.
The vanguard
of baseness as far as the English are concerned is represented
for Bradford by
the ever-suspect fishermen, participants in a commercial
enterprise in which the
markers of class and national origin had not been observed
with much rigor for
many years.
The discussion then turns to Morton, and
the reader's initial impression may be
that Bradford, having addressed the emergence of the Dutch
as trading partners
in New England, has now moved on to other matters of concern
in the year 1628.
But there is no actual break in the historical narrative;
Bradford continues to trace
the issue of the native trade in guns back to what he views
as its source. The
section on Morton begins retrospectively: "About some
three or four years before
this time. ." (204). There is nothing very portentous
about Morton's arrival in the
country in the company of one Captain Wollaston (whom Bradford
describes
rather cryptically as "a man of pretty parts").
Other than having pretensions to
being a colonial projector in his own right, with "some
small adventure of his own
or other men's amongst them," Morton's main distinction
is his character as an
untouchable, so to speak, unable to maintain the perquisites
of class: he "had little
respect among them [i.e., his fellow planters], and was slighted
by the meanest
servants" (204). What enables Morton to begin to cut
a figure in New England is a
decision based, again, on commercial interests; Wollaston
and company, "not
finding things to answer their expectations nor profit to
arise as they looked for"
(204-05) decamp for Virginia, where Wollaston finds a better
trade-this time in
human labor. He markets his servants "at good rates,
selling their time to other
men" (205). Morton gains his opportunity among those
of Wollaston's group who
remain behind, under the apparently ineffectual stewardship
of Lieutenant Fitcher.
The critical emphasis at this point tends
to fall on Morton, the "Lord of Misrule"
with his "School of Atheism" (205), as either a
carnivalesque or a demonic figure,
depending on one's point of view. All the drinking, dancing,
and frisking that goes
on at Mount Dagon, however, should not obscure the fact that
Bradford presents
Morton as a businessman, whose first saleable commodity,
other than "strong
drink and other junkets," happens to be the "good
counsel" he says he can
provide to Wollaston's men (205). The counsel, as Bradford
imagines Morton
offering it, is in effect a proposal to form a corporation:
"'I, having a part in the
Plantation, will receive you as my partners and consociates;
so you may be free
from service, and we will converse, plant, trade, and live
together as equals and
support and protect one another" (205). This is less
the prospect of Utopia than of
a joint-stock company which does not limit its subscription
to the upper classes.
The democratic thrust of the agreement, a kind of parody
of the Mayflower
Compact,19 is particularly vexing to Bradford, who remarks
later that settlers in
the vicinity "saw that they should keep no servants,
for Morton would entertain
any, how vile soever, and all the scum of the country or
any discontents would
flock to him from all places, if this nest were not broken"
(208). Mount Wollaston
becomes Merrymount, with all its attendant amusements, only
after Morton and
his new partners "had got some goods into their hands,
and got much by trading
with the Indians" (205). One of Bradford's chief complaints
against Morton is that
this trade leads to scandalously lavish expenditure on the
wrong sort of
commodities: "both wine and strong waters in great excess
(and, as some
reported) L10 worth in a morning" (205). To avoid running
his operation into the
red, Morton makes a momentous-in Bradford's view, a catastrophic-business
decision: "Now to maintain this riotous prodigality
and profuse excess, Morton,
thinking himself lawless, and hearing what gain the French
and fishermen made
by trading of pieces, powder and shot to the Indians, he
as the head of this
consortship began the practice of the same in these parts"
(206).
Bradford is careful to state that Morton's
decision, made in his role "as the head of
this consortship," represents, so to speak, a corporate
goal. Yet Morton
contributes a very individual sort of initiative to the new
trade: once again
knowledge surfaces as among the most valuable of commodities.
"And first he
taught . . . [the Indians] how to use . . . [the guns], to
charge and discharge, and
what proportion of powder to give the piece, according to
the size or bigness of
the same; and what shot to use for fowl and what for deer"
(206). The natives
subsequently become part of Morton's corporation as well:
"having thus instructed
them, he employed some of them to hunt and fowl for him,
so as they became far
more active in that employment than any of the English"
(207). As in the case of
those other formerly innocent knowers, Adam and Eve, the
natives' eyes are
opened: "when they saw the execution that a piece would
do, and the benefit that
might come by the same, they became mad (as it were) after
them and would not
stick to give any price they could attain for them; accounting
their bows and
arrows but baubles in comparison of them" (207). Bradford's
narrative proceeds
by way of reversals: as the once nondescript Morton becomes
a figure to be
reckoned with, so the natives come to view their once formidable
weapons as
"baubles"-a word, interestingly enough, used quite
often by seventeenth-century
colonists to describe the kinds of items they liked to trade
with the Indians.
Now one might say that knowledge is the
devil's stock in trade, and Bradford goes
some distance to portray Morton as the original sinner in
this particular ordeal:
"here I may take occasion to bewail the mischief that
this wicked man began in
these parts, and which since, base covetousness prevailing
in men that should
know better [my emphasis], has now at length got the upper
hand and made this
thing common, notwithstanding any laws to the contrary"
(207). There is a
conspicuous effort here to attribute the responsibility for
a large-scale crisis to one
individual, and the reader is aware that the narrative possesses
a certain
allegorical force here. Yet there are aspects of the Bradford's
account that
forestall its interpretation as a New England version of
the third chapter of Genesis
with Morton figuring as the serpent in a New World Eden,
and these relate to the
commercial character of Morton's activity. Here it may be
necessary to distinguish
in a rough-and-ready way between Bradford as a storyteller
and Bradford as an
explicator.2 Both roles are proper to his activity as a historian,
indeed they
overlap, but they also reflect rather different generic requirements.
As a storyteller
Bradford aims for a simplicity of effect and employs limited
means to achieve that
effect: a small cast of characters, a linear plot, an obvious
goal to be reached. The
"story" of Thomas Morton is one of a wicked man,
a tempter, who disrupts the
prevailing order of the community and is suitably punished
by the forces of good,
represented by Captain Standish. But this story is in turn
embedded in an
explication of a complex phenomenon which resists being broken
down and
reassembled with the familiar tools of the storyteller. Bradford's
account of the
arming of the natives moves on multiple planes, and the relations
between those
planes are not always clear. A consequence of this is that
the account takes on
the quality that A. P. Rossiter, in several of his great
lectures on Shakespeare,
called "two-eyedness" (62; see also 51, 292). The
reader perceives an oscillation
between the perspective of the story, where Morton is unquestionably
the primary
source of the problem, and the perspective of the explication,
where Morton is
merely an agent in a lengthy causal chain that neither begins
nor ends with him.
Rather than attempt further, by way of explanation, to sort
out Morton's actual
responsibility for a disturbing state of affairs, Bradford
concludes the account by
reverting to storytelling, with the comical episode of the
siege of Merrymount and
Morton's blustering defense and (nearly) bloodless defeat.
Bradford then bids
farewell to the entire matter: "I have been too long
about so unworthy a person,
and bad a cause" (210).
Yet the shadow of this "bad cause"
extends beyond the shadow cast by the
"unworthy person" and involves actors who do not
fit readily into the story, about
whom Bradford speaks with difficulty. These actors are shadowy
presences in the
Bradford's commentary on the current state of the arms trade
in New England:
in a time of war or danger, as experience
hath manifested, . . . when lead hath
been scarce and men for their own defense would gladly have
given a groat a
pound. . . yet hath it been bought up and sent to other places
and sold to such as
trade it with the Indians at 12d-the pound. And it is like
they give 3s or 4s the
pound, for they will hive it at any rate. And these things
have been done in the
same times when some of their neighbours and friends are
daily killed by the
Indians, or are in danger thereof and live but at the Indians'
mercy. Yea some, as
they have acquainted them with all other things, have told
them how gunpowder is
made, and all the materials in it, and they are to be had
in their own land; and I
am confident, could they attain to make saltpeter, they would
teach them to make
powder. (207)
The passage presents the reader with a
thicket of passive constructions and
ungrounded pronouns. The lead for shot "hath . . . been
bought up and sent . . .
and sold"; "these things have been done."
The culprits are "such" and "some."
Neither buyers, senders, sellers, nor traders assume a specific
identity, though
Bradford implies that the activity is seriatim and involves
more than a few hands.
The use of "they" and "their" is ambiguous
throughout; in the last sentence it
seems to apply alternately to "some," to materials
for gunpowder, and to the
Indians (or possibly back to "some" again). The
meaning of "them," however, is
straightforward; it always refers to the Indians, who are,
after all, the ones at the
receiving end. This referential trauma in Bradford's prose
occurs because
commerce, and the participation in commerce, has collapsed
the boundary
between the Pilgrim community at Plymouth and "such
as trade. . . with the
Indians." The passage erases distinctions between one
community and another,
suggesting the inescapably porous character of trading relations
in New England.
Here as elsewhere, knowledge is a significant commodity:
before the natives can
produce gunpowder of their own, "some" must "teach"
them. A difficult question
bubbles to the surface of this strangely anonymous melting
pot: who knows?
Bradford evokes a cloud of witnesses but is not prepared
to single out any one of
them. While Morton may be presented as a literal scapegoat,
one whose
expulsion has a corrective or cathartic effect on the community
at large, the
account raises the prospect of agents other than Morton moving
about on the
periphery of Merrymount, perhaps even in the heart of Plymouth
itself.
INSIDERS: ISAAC ALLERTON AND PLYMOUTH S DEBTS
As a piece of historical reconstruction,
the Morton episode reveals a conceptual
discomfort that appears in many other places in the Second
Book, most noticeably
in Bradford's lengthy efforts to make sense of Isaac Allerton's
behavior as agent
for the colony in England. It should be said that Bradford
is under no illusions
about Allerton, making him the butt of much proverbial and
scriptural wisdom
about the dangers of seeking after riches at the hazard of
one's soul (see, for
instance, 239). In many ways Allerton, even more than Morton,
emerges as the
archvillain of the history, disastrously compromising the
colony's finances while
stubbornly pursuing "his own particular" and "private
benefit" (211). Bradford
recalls that it was in fact Allerton who "for base gain"
brought Morton back to the
colony from England after the first expulsion, using him
"as a scribe" until he was
forced "to pack him away," largely due to Morton's
propensity for trading guns with
the natives (216).21 This is only one of many sorts of malfeasance
on Allerton's
part which preoccupy Bradford throughout the annals from
1628 to 1633. Yet
Bradford also shows a deep and initially puzzling reluctance
to condemn Allerton
absolutely, despite the extensive (and extensively recorded)
damage he does to
the plantation's interests: "though private gain I do
persuade myself was some
cause to lead Mr. Allerton aside in these beginnings; yet
I think or at least charity
carries me to hope, that he intended to deal faithfully with
them [i.e., the Pilgrims]
in the main" (218). This is a severely qualified form
of excuse, but it does suggest
the nature of the problem: while Morton can be readily demonized,
Allerton
cannot. As the commentators to the Massachusetts Historical
Society edition
tactfully note, "Bradford has on the whole dealt kindly
with one who seems to have
been unsuccessful in all his ventures" (Bradford, History
1: 45in.).
Some of the reasons for this forebearance
require no great detective work. For
instance, Bradford had close personal and administrative
connections with Allerton
that rarely emerge in the text.22 Allerton had also become
the son-in-law of
William Brewster, one of the most respected members of the
colony (218). Both of
these facts point to what probably weighs most heavily on
Bradford's account of
the man: Allerton, passenger on the Mayflower and signer
of the Compact (see
441), is a member of the Pilgrim community in a way that
Morton never could be.
It is possible to see Bradford's ambivalence about Allerton
resulting from conflict of
interest, from the common tendency to "forgive one's
own," or even from an
attempt to maintain a Christ-like tolerance of the individual
sinner. But in terms of
Bradford's effort to write history, the ambivalence appears
to spring from his
difficulty in placing Allerton appropriately in the narrative
of Plymouth's fortunes.
Allerton's situation in this regard is close to the reverse
of Morton's. Where Morton
becomes a personification of the dangerously porous boundary
between the
community and the outer world, Allerton is very much in medias
res.23 The
majority of his transactions are not with Dutch, French,
or native outsiders but with
the colonists and their backers in England. He is, in other
words, a significant
representative of the Pilgrim community as a community. At
the same time he is a
source of confusion not only to Plymouth but to Bradford
in his chosen role as
historian of the colony. Noting Allerton's ultimate discharge
as Plymouth's agent in
the annal for 1630, Bradford continues, "But these businesses
were not ended till
many years after, nor well understood of a long time, but
folded up in obscurity
and kept in the clouds, to the great loss and vexation of
the Plantation, who in the
end were (for peace sake) forced to bear the unjust burden
of them, to their
almost undoing. As will appear if God give life to finish
this history" (233-34).
This last sentence finds Bradford mindful
of a story to be told, indeed to be
completed. But what kind of story? Often the "accounting"
in the annals
concerning Allerton is less of res gestae than of monies
disbursed, received,
loaned, repaid, lost. The climax of this narrative, as it
were, occurs in the annal for
1631 when Bradford turns to Allerton's actual accounts: "They
were so large and
intricate as they [the Plymouth examiners] could not well
understand them, much
less examine and correct them without a great deal of time
and help and his own
presence, which was now hard to get amongst them. And it
was two or three
years before they could bring them to any good pass, but
never make them
perfect" (241-42). This serves as a precis of the historiographical
problem that
Allerton presents: his narrative, like his accounts, can
never be made "perfect,"
can never be fully sorted out. Bradford does make gestures
at bringing Allerton's
history to closure along providential lines, showing how
"God crossed him mightily"
in his later ventures and how he was "called to account
for these and other his
gross miscarriages" by the Plymouth church: "He
confessed his fault and
promised better walking, and that he would wind himself out
of these courses so
soon as he could, etc" (244, 245). But Allerton-as Bradford's
wry "etc."
implies-keeps surfacing as a nuisance and distraction for
several more pages,
until he abruptly fades away as an active participant in
the history of Plymouth
when Bradford says, near the beginning of the annal for I633,
"I leave these
matters and come to other things" (256).
The Allerton material is likely to be
vexing for the present-day reader, not only
because Allerton himself is portrayed so colorlessly-Bradford
manages to make
Morton more vivid in a few pages than he does Allerton over
the course of several
annals-but because of the general abstractness of this part
of the narrative, in
which the two trading-cum-fishing ships that become the vehicles
for many of
Allerton's financial machinations, the inauspiciously named
Friendship and White
Angel, figure almost as prominently as "characters"
as do regularly mentioned
individuals like Allerton, Winslow, James Sherley, or Timothy
Hatherley. This
abstract quality makes better sense, however, if it is understood
as reflecting
Bradford's uncertainty about attributing responsibility for
the extraordinarily messy
crisis of indebtedness among the Pilgrims during the early
1630s. Allerton is, after
all, mainly a functionary of the colony, following (albeit
often in a very distorted
form) the instructions of his colleagues at Plymouth and
in London. In a telling
passage from the annal for 1629, Bradford recounts Allerton's
purchase on the
colony's account of a large quantity of salt from a fishing
station at a good price:
"And shortly after he might have had L30 clear profit
for it, without any more
trouble about it." But a group led by none other than
Allerton's father-in-law
Edward Winslow "stayed him from selling the salt"
with the idea, apparently
improvised on the spot, that they could contract at Bristol
or elsewhere for a
fishing ship that could also be laded with merchandise instead
of the salt that they
already had in hand. "And so they might have a full
supply of goods without paying
freight, and in due season, which might turn greatly to their
advantage."
The only objection to this scheme came
from Bradford himself, "who had no mind
to it, seeing they had always lost by fishing"; but
even he, "seeing their
earnestness, . . . gave way" (221).
The responsibility for what Bradford obviously
views as a harebrained scheme is
fairly well-distributed here, even though Allerton, by buying
the salt in the first
place, is in some fashion the "cause."24 Allerton's
deeds provide Bradford with a
way of outlining dimensions of collective activity at Plymouth
for which Bradford's
historiographical vocabulary lends him no very precise descriptive
terms and
which cannot be subsumed under the metaphor of the community
as a simple,
self-contained body going about its individual "business."
It is not that Bradford
elides the personal contribution of Allerton, or anyone else,
to Plymouth's financial
quandary. But what concerns him most, and what he struggles
to illuminate, is the
dynamic and overdetermined economic life of the colony, dense
with multiple and
competing interests as well as uncontrollable elements (weather,
costs of
shipping, seasonal variations in price, supply and demand,
and so on) which
Bradford generally neglects to assign to the workings of
Providence. He can afford
to be relatively light-handed in his treatment of Allerton
because it is not the man
himself but his accounts that matter in the history of Plymouth.
His significance
lies, for instance, in the L113 expended on the salt and
the loss of L30 of easy
profit, since the expense and profit belong to the community
and help to form an
index of its successes and failures. Like Morton, Allerton
is a character who invites
"two-eyedness" across the divide between storytelling
and explication, though the
emphases fall rather differently in the Allerton sequences
than they do in the
Morton episode. Bradford seems aware throughout these sequences
that
explication (analysis, that is, of the complex conditions
that lead to specific
economic consequences for the colony) is the most important
historical task
before him, but up to a point he continues to rely on the
old familiar tools of history
understood as stories about the deeds of prominent men-up
to a point. Bradford's
reconstruction of events gradually moves away from such stories
toward a stress
on the data in the financial records of the colony, data
that proves to be more
useful in dealing with the historical problems raised by
the Pilgrims' fiscal crisis in
the early 1630s. At some level Bradford recognizes that the
numbers tell the story.
A NEW HISTORY?
As I have suggested earlier in this essay,
the experience of reading Of Plymouth
Plantation becomes less troublesome if one thinks of Bradford
as moving not so
much away from one kind of history as toward another. The
movement is tentative
because this other kind of history is still so ill-defined
in the seventeenth century,
and is one that Bradford writes almost in spite of himself.
The impulse is always
present to transform Plymouth into a closed community, a
simulacrum of John
Robinson's primal flock, whose "outside relations"
are mainly typological and
turned toward the past. Yet Bradford remains mindful at the
same time of the fact
that the colony is an adventure, that its supporters in London
are looking to the
"books" with other ideas in mind, that the Pilgrims
have competitors (Dutch,
French, natives, Bay Colonists, fishermen), that the project
is necessarily an
openended one, faced toward a future where the years succeed
one another in
the normal way but never turn out to mean precisely the same
thing. In other
words, Bradford confronts as both an obstacle and an obligation
what over the last
three centuries has become a commonplace: the notion that
human events have
an economic context.
Is Bradford one of the first economic
historians? To answer this question
affirmatively may seem unduly bold, until one considers how
few histories of the
period are actually like Bradford's. Perhaps the closest
thematic analogue is
Richard Hakluyt the Younger's compendium The Principall Navigations,
Voiages
and Discoveries of the English Nation, first published in
1589, greatly expanded in
the second edition of 1598-1600, and continued to massive
proportions in the
seventeenth century by Samuel Purchas under the title Purchas
his Pilgrimes.
Richard Helgerson has argued that the novelty of the Principall
Navigations lies in
Hakluyt's treatment of merchants as significant, even heroic,
actors in English
history and his placement of commerce at the center of English
national life
(Helgerson 163-91). Hakluyt's magnum opus is not, strictly
speaking, a historical
narrative; it is instead an anthology which contains narratives
along with many
other kinds of documents. It would also be difficult to say
with certainty that
Hakluyt's work influenced Bradford's project in any way.
Even so, there is a
connection to be drawn between Hakluyt and Bradford, for
both the Principall
Navigations and Of Plymouth Plantation form part of the descriptive
literature of
English colonial expansion at its beginnings. It may be that,
as Helgerson has
claimed in Hakluyt's case, the sheer necessity of commercial
activity to the
process of colonization forces economic concerns into prominence
in Bradford's
narrative in a way which might not otherwise occur if he
were simply writing
"domestic" history.
In any event, this sort of problem cannot
be raised satisfactorily if Bradford's work
is simply assigned to the circumscribed region of providentialist
history. I have
tried to suggest at different points in this essay that Of
Plymouth Plantation's
generic affiliations are fairly wide-ranging, and that they
lead in unusual directions.
This is not to say that Bradford means to be unusual. He
seems to accept the role
of a historian of economic contexts only grudgingly, because
he recognizes how
damaging such history is to his commemoration of the interior
life of his
community, and how distant he is from the hermetic self-assurance
of, say, the
author of the Book of Joshua or John Foxe in the Book of
Martyrs. The
"incompleteness" of the Second Book of Of Plymouth
Plantation has less to do
with Bradford's final gesture of resignation over the failure
of the Pilgrim dream
than with his recognition that the history he is attempting
to write has no real
ending, because it is no longer the history of a body that
either clearly lives or
clearly dies. The Second Book is a testimony to the difficulty
of serving two
masters-not only God and Mammon, but God and Clio.
[Footnote]
NOTES
1. This memorable sentence also provides the point of departure
for Sargent's essay (390).
2. Howard (237--42) offers a pungent historical summary of
the standard views on Bradford; Wenska,
within a broadly providentialist reading filtered (dubiously)
through Eriksonian psychology, makes the
very sensible point that the two parts of the history were
written at widely separated intervals and thus
reflect different levels of Bradford's experience with the
fortunes of the colony.
3. For a definition of providential history I look no farther
than the one provided by Francis Bacon in book
z of The Advancement of Learning (1605): History of Providence.
. . containeth that excellent
correspondence which is between God's revealed will and his
secret will; which though it be so obscure
as for the most part it is not legible to the natural man;
no, nor many times to those that behold it from
the tabernacle; yet at some times it pleaseth God, for our
better establishment and the confuting of
those which are as without God in the world, to write it
in such text and capital letters that, as the
prophet saith, `he that runneth by may read it' . . . (Vickers
185)
4. Thanks to Peter Weed for this bon mot.
5. Jesper Rosenmeier notes as part of his largely providentialist
interpretation of Bradford that "The
annals are filled with extraordinary scenes from the history
of Plymouth's salvation; but they do not
stand as parts of a great and coherent whole, as actions
in an evolving drama. The years are shining but
isolated moments, beads of revelation that remain unstrung"
(98).
6. "The Historical Text as Literary Artifact" (White
8I-100) offers a nicely compressed presentation of
White's ideas on this topic.
7. The concluding verse of Judges is as follows: "In
those days there was no king in Israel; every man
did that which was right in his own eyes" (Judges ZI:
25, KJV). I am grateful to Haskell Hinnant and an
anonymous reader for reminding me of what I ought to have
noticed in the first place. 8. Matt. 8:
23--27; Mark 4: 35-4I; Luke 8: 22-ZS .
9. These are, not surprisingly, also the central topoi of
epic poetry. On the links between the epic genre
and colonial activity, see Quint.
to. For example, Bacon in book z of The Advancement of Learning
divides history into four categories,
"Natural, Civil, Ecclesiastical, and Literary"
(Vickers I75 ). There is no obvious place in this scheme for
historical accounts of commercial activity. Bacon does create
a subcategory under natural history
called "History of Nature Wrought or Mechanical"
which would include agriculture and manual arts as
two of its subjects (Vickers I77), but he seems to have in
mind nothing more ab
[Footnote]
stract than a history of material technologies. The other
possible niche for matters of business would be
in one of the minor partitions under civil history, "Journals,"
which consider "accidents of a meaner
nature" (Vickers i83). That the historical dimension
of commerce failed to impress itself on one of the
greatest analytical minds of the era should help to indicate
the extent of the problem faced by Bradford
in writing Of Plymouth Plantation. 11. See, most recently,
Cartelli.
Iz. Cronon uses this quotation from Bradford to illustrate
the point that "wampum was part of the
reorganization of Indian economic and political life in the
wake of the epidemics: competition for its
acquisition established new leaders, promoted dependence
on European traders, and helped shift the
tribute obligations which had previously existed among Indian
villages" (97).
I3. The original source for the quotation is The Dutch Drawn
to the Life (London, 1664) 48. I have
modernized the spelling in a single instance. I4. The colony
lasted for forty years, from the arrival of the
first civilians in1624 until it was ceded to the Duke of
York in i664, and was underpopulated and
undercapitalized during most of that period, largely due
to the parsimony of the Dutch West India
Company.
I5. This proliferation of languages was the result of the
West India Company's strategy of recruiting
colonists from other parts of Europe, since Dutch citizens,
enjoying considerable prosperity at home,
were reluctant to immigrate to New Netherland. See Kammen
36-38.
Ii. The nature of the dynamic between the Pilgrims and the
Dutch colonists is quietly suggested by an
exchange of formal correspondence from 1627which Bradford
includes in his narrative. The first letter is
addressed to Bradford from Isaack de Rasieres, secretary
to the Council of New Netherland. De
Rasieres, citing common interests (namely "our common
enemy the Spaniards") asks for an opportunity
to trade with Plymouth: "if it so fall out that any
good that come to our hands from our native country
may be serviceable to you, we shall take ourselves bound
to help and accommodate you therewith,
either for beaver or any other wares or merchandise that
you should be pleased to deal for." If the
Pilgrims do not wish to buy, perhaps they will be willing
to sell "beaver or otter or such like commodities
as may be useful to us" (Bradford 378, 379). In his
reply Bradford cites the alliance of the English and
Dutch against Spain as "sufficient to unite us together
in love and good neighbourhood in all our
dealings," and expresses gratitude for "the good
and courteous entreaty we have found in your country,
having lived there many years with freedom and good content."
Bradford claims that De Rasieres's offer
"is to us very acceptable, and we doubt not but in short
time we may have profitable commerce and
trade together." He then goes on, however, to demur
firmly, if politely: "But for this year we are fully
supplied with all necessaries, both for clothing and other
things. But hereafter it is like we shall deal with
you if your rates be reasonable" (38o). The notion of
"good neighbourhood" here seems to involve
maintaining a respectful distance from one's neighbors. 17.
New Netherland, as many historians have
noted, displays interesting parallels with the Virginia colony
during its first fifty years. The Pilgrims'
relations with the Virginians were marked by a similar sort
of ambivalence. See, for instance, Bradford's
account of the stranded Virginia-bound traveler Mr. Fells
(Bradford i9I-9Z). Concerns about the Virginia
enterprise (most of them probably justified) surface early
on in the Pilgrims' transactions; see Robert
Cushman's letter of 8 May i6i9 (Bradford 355-57).
[Footnote]
I8. The danger of dissolution, portrayed in the familiar
terms of a "generation gap," figures prominently
in Bradford's account of "the Reasons and Causes of.
. [the Pilgrims'] Removal" to New England:
But that which was more lamentable. . . was that many of
their children. . . were drawn away by evil
examples and dangerous courses, getting the reins off their
necks and departing from their parents.
Some became soldiers, others took upon them far voyages by
sea, and others some worse courses
tending to dissoluteness and the danger of their souls, to
the great grief of their parents and dishonour of
God. So that they saw their posterity would be in danger
to degenerate and be corrupted. (Morison z5)
Here personal "dissoluteness" and communal dissolution
are readily conflated; Bradford locates the
cause of this particular problem both in the general waywardness
of youth and in the economic
pressures of the Pilgrims' Dutch environmentpressures which
forced the newest members of the body
outward to fend for themselves.
ig. "[We] . . . solemnly and mutually in the presence
of God and one of another, Covenant and Combine
ourselves together into a Civil Body Politic, for our better
ordering and preservation and furtherance of
the ends aforesaid" (Bradford 76). Even so the founders
of this new body politic acknowledge
themselves as "loyal subjects of our dread Sovereign
Lord King James" (Bradford 75). The
representatives of Plymouth later threaten Morton with a
"penalty" that will be "more than he could be
could bear-His Majesty's displeasure" (Bradford zog).
zo. With the very specific sense of someone who
unfolds things, and, secondarily, develops or expands them-one
who teases out the strands to render
something upon a larger field. See the definition for "explicate"
in the OED. Another appropriate notion
here would be what the late William Walsh called "colligation."
Walsh applied this term, borrowed from
the nineteenth-century Cambridge philosopher William Whewell,
to a common mode of historical
explanation: when asked to explain a particular event. .
. [historians] will begin by tracing connections
between that event and others with which it stands in inner
relationship .... The underlying assumption
here is that different historical events can be regarded
as going together to constitute a single process,
a whole of which they are all parts and in which they belong
together in a specially intimate way. And the
first aim of the historian, when he is asked to explain some
event or other, is to see it as part of such a
process, to locate it in its context by mentioning other
events with which it is bound up. (z4-z5; see also
59-63)
With its emphasis on relationships and the analysis of relationships,
colligation as a "style" of
historiography is thus not limited by the conventions of
linear narrative; a "colligator" would not
necessarily be a storyteller, at least not in any simple
sense of telling a story.
ZI. Allerton and Morton appear to be linked to one another
in Bradford's thinking: the detailed
examination of Allerton's actions begins immediately after
Bradford closes his discussion of the "battle"
at Merrymount (210). zz. In the annal for i6zs, Bradford
describes (in the third person) his election as
governor: "and [Bradford] being not recovered of his
illness, in which he had been near the point of
death, Isaac Allerton was chosen to be an assistant unto
him who, by renewed election every year,
continued sundry years together. Which I here note once for
all" (86). In fact Bradford never again refers
to Allerton as his assistant.
[Footnote]
He implies here that had he not been so ill he would never
have needed an assistant at all; it was other
members of the community who kept electing Allerton to the
position.
R. G. Usher in his article on Allerton in the Dictionary
of American Biography calls him "third in
importance during the first ten years at Plymouth" and
notes that he was the only officer of the colony
other than Bradford from 1621to I6z4. After his disgrace
at Plymouth he eventually settled in New
Haven, where he built up a trade on "his own particular"
with New Netherland, Virginia, and English
interests in the Caribbean.
23. The idea of Allerton being "in the middle"
takes a sinister turn in Bradford's description of the
controversy over whether Plymouth should cooperate with the
London partners in supporting Edward
Ashley's dubious fur-trading venture at Penobscot: "they
[at Plymouth] considered that if they joined
not in the business, they knew Mr. Allerton would be with
them [i.e., the London partners] in it, and so
would swim as it were between both to the prejudice of both,
but of themselves [at Plymouth] especially"
(Bradford zzo).
24. Bradford continues the story in the annal for i63o: the
ship in question-apparently the
Friendship-encountered bad weather and returned to port,
failing to reach New England that year
(226-z7).
[Reference]
WORKS CITED
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by William Bradford Sometime Governor
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New York: Knopf, I952.
Cartelli, Thomas. "Transplanting Disorder: The Construction
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[Reference]
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Usher, Roland Greene. "Allerton,
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Wenska, Walter P. "Bradford's Two Histories: Pattern
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[Author note]
DAVID READ
University of Missouri-Columbia
Volume:
33
Issue:
3
Start Page:
291-314
ISSN:
00128163
Subject Terms:
History
Economics
Literary criticism
Personal Names:
Bradford, William (1590-1657)
Reproduced with permission of the copyright
owner. Further reproduction or distribution is prohibited
without permission.