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I Relate the Considerable Matters, that produced and attended the First Settlement of COLONIES, which have been Renowned for the Degree of RE5 FORMATION, Professed and Attained by Evangelical Churches, erected in those Ends of the Earth: And a Field being thus prepared, I proceed unto a Relation of the Considerable Matters which have been acted thereupon.

Even Good and Wise Men suffer them-
selves to fall into their Paroxysms; and
the shake which the Devil is now giving
us, fetches up the Dirt which before lay
still at the bottom of our sinful Hearts.
If we allow the Mad Dogs of Hell to
poyson us by biting us, we shall imagine
that we see nothing but such things
and like such things fly
upon all that we see. Were it not to
for that IN Us, for my part, I should
not fear a thousand Legions of Devils:
'tis by our Quarrels that we spoil our
Prayers; and if our humble, zealous, and
united Prayers are once hindered: Alas, 15
the Philistines, of Hell have cut our
locks for us; they will then blind us,
mock us, ruine us: In truth, I cannot
altogether blame it, if People are a little
transported, when they conceive all the 20
secular Interests of themselves and their
Families at the Stake; and yet at the
sight of these Heartburnings, I cannot
forbear the Exclamation of the Sweet-
spirited Austin, in
Pacificatory 25
Epistle to Jerom, on the Contest with
Ruffin, O misera & miseranda Conditio!

I first introduce the Actors, that have, in a more exemplary manner served those Colonies; and give Remarkable Occurrences, in the exemplary LIVES of many Magistrates, and of more Ministers, who so Lived, as to leave unto Posterity, Examples worthy of Everlasting Remembrance.

I add hereunto, the Notables of the only Protestant University, that ever shone in that Hemisphere of the New World; with particular Instances of Criolians, in our Biography, provoking the whole World, with vertuous Objects of Emulation.

I introduce then, the Actions of a more Eminent Importance, that have signalized those Colonies; Whether the Establishments, directed by their Syn30 ods; with a Rich Variety of Synodical and Ecclesiastical Determinations; or, the Disturbances, with which they have been from all sorts of Temptations and Enemies Tempestuated; and the Methods by which they have still weathered out each Horrible Tempest.

Condition, truly miserable! And what shall be done to cure these Distractions? It is wonderfully necessary, that some healing Attempts be made at this time and I must needs confess (if I may speak so much) like a Nazianzen, I am so desirous to share in them, that if, being thrown overboard, were needful 35 to ally the Storm, I should think Dying a Trifle to be undergone, for so great a Blessedness.

[1692]

THE CHURCHES OF NEW ENG

LAND

And into the midst of these Actions, I interpose an entire Book, wherein there is, with all possible Veracity, a Collec40 tion made, of Memorable Occurrences and amazing Judgments and Mercies, befalling many particular Persons among the People of New-England.

Let my Readers expect all that I have [From the General Introduction to the 45 promised them, in this Bill of Fair; and it Magnalia.]

I write the Wonders of the CHRISTIAN RELIGION, flying from the Depravations of Europe, to the American Strand: 50 And, assisted by the Holy Author of that Religion, I do, with all Conscience of Truth, required therein by Him, who is the Truth it self, report the Wonderful Displays of His Infinite Power, 55 Wisdom, Goodness, and Faithfulness, wherewith His Divine Providence hath Irradiated an Indian Wilderness.

may be that they will find themselves en tertained with yet many other Passages, above and beyond their Expectation, de serving likewise a room in History: I all which, there will be nothing, but the Author's too mean way of preparing sc great Entertainments, to Reproach the Invitation.

§ 3. It is the History of these PROTESTANTS, that is here attempted: PROTESTANTS that highly honoured and affected The Church of ENGLAND. and

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humbly Petition to be a Part of it: But
by the Mistake of a few powerful Breth-
ren, driven to seek a place for the
Exercise of the Protestant Religion, ac-
cording to the Light of their Consciences, 5
in the Desarts of America. And in this
Attempt I have proposed, not only to
of
secure the Interest
preserve and
Religion, in the Churches of that little
Country NEW-ENGLAND, SO far as the 10
Lord Jesus Christ may please to Bless it
for that End, but also to offer unto the
Churches of the Reformation, abroad in
the World, some small Memorials, that

over unto the other side of the Atlantick Ocean. But we must therewithal ask your Prayers, that these Golden Candlesticks may not quickly be Removed out [1702] of their place!

THE LIFE OF MR. RALPH
PARTRIDGE

[Chap. XI, Book III, of the Magnalia.]

When David was driven from his Friends into the Wilderness, he made

Condition, 'Twas as when one doth hunt a Partridge in the Mountains. Among the many worthy Persons who were persecuted into an American Wilderness, for their Fidelity to the Ecclesiastical Kingdom of our true David, there was one that bore the Name, as well as the State, of an hunted Partridge. What befel him, was, as Bede saith of what was done by Fælix, Juxta nominis sui Sacramentum.

This was Mr. Ralph Partridge, who for no Fault but the Delicacy of his good Spirit, being distress'd by the Ecclesiastical Setters, had no Defence, neither of Beak, nor Claw, but a Flight over the Ocean.

The Place where he took Covert, was the Colony of Plymouth, and the Town of Duxbury in that Colony.

may be serviceable unto the Designs of 15 this Pathetical Representation of his Reformation, whereto, I believe, they are In short, quickly to be awakened. The First Age was the Golden Age: To return unto That, will make a Man a Protestant, and I may add, a Puritan. 20 'Tis possible, that our Lord Jesus Christ carried some Thousands of Reformers into the Retirements of an American Desart, on purpose, that, with an opportunity granted unto many of his Faithful 25 Servants, to enjoy the precious Liberty of their Ministry, tho' in the midst of many Temptations all their days, He might there, To them first, and then By them, give a Specimen of many Good 30 Things, which He would have His Churches elsewhere aspire and arise unto: And This being done, He knows not whether there be not All done, that New-England was planted for; and 35 whether the Plantation may not, soon after this, Come to Nothing. Upon that Expression in the Sacred Scripture, Cast the unprofitable Servant into Outer Darkness, it hath been imagined by some, 40 That the Regiones Extera of America, are the Tenebræ Exteriores, which the Unprofitable are there condemned unto. No doubt, the Authors of those Ecclesiastical Impositions and Severities, which 45 drove the English Christians into the Dark Regions of America, esteemed those Christians to be a very unprofitable sort of Creatures. But behold, ye European Churches, There are Golden Candlesticks [more than twice Seven times Seven!] in the midst of this Outer Darkness; Unto the Upright Children of Abraham, here hath arisen Light in Darkness. And let us humbly speak it, 55 it shall be Profitable for you to consider the Light, which from the midst of this Outer Darkness, is now to be Darted

50

This Partridge had not only the Innocency of the Dove, conspicuous in his blameless and pious Life, which made him very acceptable in his Conversation; but also the Loftiness of an Eagle, in the great Soar of his intellectual Abilities. There are some Interpreters, who understanding Church Officers by the living Creatures, in the Fourth Chapter of the Apocalypse, will have the Teacher to be intended by the Eagle there, for his quick Insight into remote and hidden things. The Church of Duxbury had such an Eagle in their Partridge, when they enjoy'd such a Teacher.

By the same Token, when the Platto be form of Church-Discipline was compos'd, the Synod at Cambridge appointed three Persons to draw up each of them, A Model of Church-Government, according to the Word of God, unto the end, that out of those, the Synod might form what should be found

most agreeable; which three Persons were Mr. Cotton, and Mr. Mather, and Mr. Partridge. So that in the Opinion of that Reverend Assembly, this Person did not come far behind the first three, for some of his Accomplishments.

After he had been Forty Years a faithful and painful Preacher of the Gospel, rarely, if ever, in all that while interrupted in his Work, by any Bodily to Sickness, he dy'd in a good Old Age about the Year 1658.

There was one singular instance of a weaned Spirit, whereby he signalized himself unto the Churches of God. That 15 was this: There was a time, when most of the Ministers in the Colony of

Plymouth, left the Colony, upon the Discouragement which the want of a competent Maintenance among the needy and froward Inhabitants, gave unto them. 5 Nevertheless, Mr. Partridge was, notwithstanding the Paucity and the Poverty of his Congregation, so afraid of being any thing that look'd like a Bird wandring from his Nest, that he remained with his poor People, till he took Wing to become a Bird of Paradise, along with the winged Seraphim of Heaven.

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WILLIAM BYRD (1674-1744)

The most accomplished literary man of the South during Colonial days, though he published nothing and though his chief work was not put into print until nearly a century after his death, was William Byrd of Virginia. Sent to England in his youth for careful training in all the accomplishments of a gentleman, he was given distinguished tutors, he "was called to the bar in the Middle Temple; studied for some time in the Low Countries; visited the court of France; and was chosen Fellow of the Royal Society." Returning to Virginia, to his father's large estate which he inherited in due time, he became one of the most admirably balanced and most influential men of his generation in the South. In 1729 he was chosen as a member of the expedition sent to determine the dividing line between Virginia and North Carolina. He was appointed journalist of the expedition and his work in the form in which he finally left it, prefaced with a brief history of Virginia, is a rare document, one according to Tyler "almost unique in our Colonial age; and it is, without question, one of the most delightful of the literary legacies which that age has handed down to ours." The work was not published until 1841, when it appeared with the author's title The History of the Divid ing Line.

THE GREAT DISMAL SWAMP

dren to lie, like us, in the open field. 13. Early this Morning our Chaplain

[From The History of the Dividing repair'd to us with the Men we had left Line.]

at Mr. Wilson's. We had sent for them 5 the Evening before to relieve those who had the Labour Oar from CorotuckInlet. But to our great surprise, they petition'd not to be reliev'd, hoping to gain immortal Reputation by being the first of Mankind that Ventur'd thro' the great. Dismal. But the rest being equally Ambitions of the same Honour, it was but fair to decide their Pretensions by Lot. After Fortune had declar'd herself,

Our Landlord had a tolerable good House and Clean Furniture, and yet we cou'd not be tempted to lodge in it. We chose rather to lye in the open Field, for fear of growing too tender. A clear 10 Sky, spangled with Stars, was our Canopy, which being the last thing we saw before we fell asleep, gave us Magnificent Dreams. The Truth of it is, we took so mucch pleasure in that natural 15 those which she had excluded offer'd kind of Lodging, that I think at the foot of the Account Mankind are great Losers by the Luxury of Feather-Beds and warm apartments.

The curiosity of beholding so new and 20 withal so Sweet a Method of encamping, brought one of the Senators of N Carolina to make us a Midnight Visit. But he was so very Clamorous in his Commendations of it, that the Centinel, not 25 seeing his Quality, either thro' his habit or Behaviour, had like to have treated him roughly.

After excusing the Unseasonableness of his Visit, and letting us know he was a Parliament Man, he swore he was so taken with our Lodging, that he would set Fire to his House as soon as he got Home, and teach his Wife and Chil

30

Money to the Happy Persons to go in their Stead. But Hercules would have as soon sold the Glory of cleansing the Augean Stables, which was pretty near the same Sort of Work.

No sooner was the Controversy at_an end, but we sent them unfortunate Fellows back to their Quarters, whom Chance had Condemn'd to remain upon Firm Land and Sleep in a whole Skin. In the mean while the Surveyors carry'd the Line 3 Miles, which was no Contemptible day's work, considering how cruelly they were entangled with Bryars and Gall Bushes. The Leaf of this last Shrub bespeaks it to be of the Alaternus Family.

Our Work ended within a Quarter of a Mile of the Dismal above-mention'd,

where the Ground began to be already full of Sunken Holes and Slashes, which had, here and there, some few Reeds growing in them.

Tis hardly credible how little the Bor- 5 dering inhabitants were acquainted with this mighty Swamp, notwithstanding_they had liv'd their whole lives within Smell of it. Yet, as great Strangers as they were to it, they pretended to be very 10 exact in their Account of its Dimensions, and were positive it could not be above 7 or 8 Miles wide, but knew no more of the Matter than Star-gazers know of the Distance of the Fixt Stars. At the 15 Same time, they were Simple enough to amuse our Men with Idle Stories of the Lyons, Panthers and Alligators, they were like to encounter in that dreadful Place.

ger under more. As it was, their Loads weigh'd from 60 to 70 Pounds, in just Proportion to the Strength of those who were to bear them.

Twou'd have been unconscionable to have Saddled them with Burthens heavier than that, when they were to lugg them thro' a filthy Bogg, which was hardly practicable with no Burthen at all.

Besides this Luggage at their Backs, they were oblig'd to measure the distance, mark the Trees, and clear the way for the Surveyors every Step they went. It was really a Pleasure to see with how much Cheerfulness they undertook, and with how much Spirit they went thro' all this Drudgery. For their Greater Safety, the Commissioners took care to furnish them with Peruvian20 Bark, Rhubarb and Hipocoacanah, in case they might happen, in that wet Journey, to be taken with fevers or Fluxes.

In short, we saw plainly there was no Intelligence of this Terra Incognita to be got, but from our own Experience. For that Reason it was resolv'd to make the requisite Dispositions to enter it next 25 Morning. We allotted every one of the Surveyors for this painful Enterprise, with 12 Men to attend them. Fewer than that cou'd not be employ'd in clearing the way, carrying the Chain, marking 30 the Trees, and bearing the necessary Bedding and Provisions. Nor wou'd the Commissioners themselves have Spared their Persons on this Occasion, but for fear of adding to the poor men's Burthen, 35 while they were certain they cou'd add nothing to their Resolution.

We quarter'd with our Friend and Fellow Traveller, William Wilkins, who had been our faithful Pilot to Coratuck, 40 and liv'd about a mile from the Place where the Line ended. Every thing lookt so very clean, and the Furniture so neat, that we were tempted to Lodge within Doors. But the Novelty of being shut up so close quite spoil'd our rest, nor did we breathe so free by abundance, as when we lay in the open Air.

Altho' there was no need of Example to inflame Persons already so cheerful, yet to enter the People with better grace, the Author and two more of the Commissioners accompanied them half a Mile into the Dismal. The Skirts of it were thinly Planted with Dwarf Reeds and Gall-Bushes, but when we got into the Dismal itself, we found the Reeds grew there much taller and closer, and, to mend the matter was so interlac'd with bamboe-briars, that there was no scuffling thro' them without the help of Pioneers. At the same time, we found the Ground moist and trembling under our feet like a Quagmire, insomuch_that it was an easy Matter to run a Ten-FootPole up to the Head in it, without exerting any uncommon Strength to do it.

Two of the Men, whose Burthens were the least cumbersome, had orders to 45 march before, with their Tomahawks, and clear the way, in order to make an Opening for the Surveyors. By their Assistance we made a Shift to push the Line half a Mile in 3 Hours, and then reacht a small piece of firm Land, about 100 Yards wide, Standing up above the rest like an Island. Here the people were glad to lay down their Loads and take a little refreshment, while the happy

14. Before nine of the Clock this Morning, the Provisions, Bedding and 50 other Necessaries, were made up into Packs for the Men to carry on their Shoulders into the Dismal. They were victuall'd for 8 days at full Allowance, Nobody doubting but that wou'd be 55 man, whose lot it was to carry the Jugg

abundantly Sufficient to carry them thro' that Inhospitable Place; nor Indeed was it possible for the Poor Fellows to Stag

of Rum, began already, like Aesop's Bread-Carriers, to find it grow a good deal lighter.

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