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 HISTORY OF THE RENAISSANCECHAPTER II 
 THE NEW WORLD 
              
               
             THE story of the
            Age of Discovery naturally merges in that of the New World, the principal fruit
            of the strenuous labors to which that Age owes its name. The history, in the
            wider sense, of the New World begins in the remotest ages; for the habits of
            life and thought displayed among its aborigines at the time of the Discovery,
            and its indigenous languages, which stand nearer to the origin of speech than
            any group of languages in the Old World, carry the ethnologist back to a stage
            far more archaic than is indicated in any other quarter of the globe. Its
            history, in so far as history is a mere record of specific facts and events
            known to have taken place in particular districts, in a definite succession,
            and admitting of being distinctly connected with particular peoples and
            personages, is extremely limited. Its modern historical period, in fact,
            coincides very nearly with that of the Old World’s modern history, a circumstance
            partly due to the fact that its advanced peoples, though by no means devoid of
            the historical instinct, possessed but limited means of keeping historical
            records; and partly to the circumstance that their history, such as it was,
            consisted in changes of ascendancy happening in comparatively quick succession,
            in the course of which the memory of events connected with past dominations
            soon lapsed into oblivion, or dwelt but faintly and briefly in the remembrance
            of those peoples who happened to be dominant at the Spanish Conquest. Although
            the general series of American migrations, beginning with the entry of man into
            the New World from the Old in the remote age when Asia and America, afterwards
            parted by the shallow Strait of Behring, were continuous, has passed out of
            knowledge, it may be assumed to have proceeded on the principle of the stronger
            tribe expelling the weaker from districts yielding the more ample supplies of
            food. There is good reason to conclude that the peoples and tribes of low stature
            who still occur sporadically in various parts of America, represent the
            earliest immigrants. 
           At the Discovery
            tribes and nations of tall stature, great physical strength and endurance, and
            a certain degree of advancement in the arts of life, were dominant in all the
            districts most favorable for human habitation; and it is possible in some
            measure to trace the movements by which their migrations had proceeded, and the
            steps by which they acquired dominion over lower or less powerful peoples in
            whose midst they settled. Foremost among these dominant peoples stand the
            Nahuatlaca or Mexicans, who had their chief seat at Mexico on the plateau of
            Anahuac, and the Aymara-Quichua, or Peruvians, whose center of dominion was at
            Cuzco in the Andes. On the subjugation of these two peoples the
            Spanish-American Empire was founded. Next in importance, but of lower grade,
            come the Caribs of Venezuela and the West Indian archipelago, the first
            ethnological group encountered by Colombo, and the only one known to him; the Tupi-Guarani
            of Brazil, who had conquered and occupied most of the shore which fell to the
            lot of Portugal; the Iroquois, who held the district colonized by France; and
            the Algonquins, who occupied with less power of resistance to invasion that
            colonized by England. It is remarkable that all these nations appear once to
            have been maritime and fishing peoples, to have multiplied and developed their
            advancement in the immediate neighborhood of the sea, and thence to have
            penetrated and settled various tracts of the interior. We trace them to three
            maritime districts, all extremely favorable to practice in fishing, navigation,
            and exploration: (1) the Nahuatlaca, Iroquois, and Algonquins, to British
            Columbia; (2) the Aymara-Quichua and the Tupi-Guarani to the ancient “Argentine
            sea” - a vast body of salt water which at no very remote period filled the
            great plain of Argentina - and to the chain of great lakes which once existed
            to the north of it; (3) the Caribs to the Orinoco, whence they spread by a
            natural advance to the West Indian archipelago, and probably to the valley of
            the Mississippi, where one branch of them, at no very remote period before the
            Discovery, perhaps founded large agricultural pueblos, still traceable in the
            earthworks which in many places line the banks of that great river and its
            tributaries, and threw up the Animal Mounds which are among the most curious
            monuments of ancient America. 
           
             The Nahuatlaca and other aboriginal races. Their migrations. Mexican
            records
            
             The Nahuatlaca or
            ‘Civilised People’ appear to have originally dwelt at no great distance from
            the Iroquois and Algonquins, on the North American coast opposite Vancouver
            Island, where their peculiar advancement had its first development. With them
            the history, in the ordinary sense, of aboriginal America begins. The
            Nahuatlaca alone among American peoples possessed a true though inaccurate
            chronology, and kept painted records of contemporary and past events. Pinturas
            preserved at Tezcuco variously assigned the years 387 and 439 of the Christian
            era as the date of the earliest migration to the south from maritime lands far
            to the north of California. A more probable date -about A.D. 780- was furnished
            to the earliest Spanish enquirers as the time when the first swarm of the Aculhuaque,
            or ‘Strong Men’, arrived in Anahuac from Aculhuacan, their previous seat
            northward of Xalisco, founded the pueblos of Tollan and Tollantzinco, and
            entered the Mexican Valley, where they settled at Culhuacan and Cohuatlichan
            and built on an island in the Lake a few huts, which later grew into the pueblo
            of Mexico. By a long subsequent immigration were founded the Tecpanec pueblos
            in the Southwestern corner of the Lake, to which Mexico was once tributary, and
            on whose subjugation by Mexico the dominion found by the Conquistadores was
            established about a century before the Conquest. The Tecpanec pueblos, five in
            number, the principal one being Azcapozalco, subjugated a rival confederacy, on
            the opposite shore, headed by Tezcuco, about 1406. In this conquest they were
            materially assisted by the people of two villages (Tenochtitlan and
            Tlatelolco), founded on the island of Mexico nearly a century before by a
            wandering tribe of non-Nahuatlacan origin, to whom the Tecpanecs had given the
            name of Azteca, or ‘Crane-people’. Over these lake villages, after the
            Tezcucans had been subdued by their aid, the Tecpanecs maintained a relentless
            tyranny, which at length produced a revolt, in the course of which the Mexican
            villagers obtained a complete victory. The Tezcucans, who rose against their
            Tecpanec conquerors shortly afterwards (1431), regained their liberty; and the
            two Mexican pueblos entered into an alliance with Tezcuco, in which Tlacopan, a
            Tecpanec pueblo which had remained neutral during the struggle, was also
            included. This confederacy conquered and considerably enlarged the dominion
            acquired by the Tecpanec confederacy, and held in subjection a large and
            populous tract extending from the Atlantic to the Pacific, and containing all
            the best parts of the southern extremity of North America, where it narrows
            towards the Isthmus of Tehuantepec. One important district only was excluded
            from it. This was a highland tract held by Tlaxcallan, Huexo-tzinco, and
            Cholollan, pueblos of the Nahuatlaca, founded in early times, and never
            subjugated either by the Tecpanecs, or by the confederated pueblos who
            succeeded to their dominion. At the Spanish Conquest Cholollan, the largest and
            most prosperous of the three, was in alliance with the Lake pueblos; and there
            is little doubt that Tlaxcallan and Huexotzinco would have been admitted to the
            same status but for the Mexican Rule of Life, which demanded war every twenty
            days, ostensibly as a means of procuring sacrifices for the sun and other gods,
            but really to provide the material for the cannibal feasts by which each
            sacrifice was terminated. Had peace been made between the pueblos of the Lake
            and those of the highlands, both groups must have had recourse to distant
            frontiers for the means of fulfilling what was universally regarded by the
            Nahuatlaca as an imperative obligation. Human sacrifice, indeed, was understood
            to be necessary to the cosmic order, for without it the sun, who was conceived
            as a god of animal nature, subsisting by food and drink, would not merely cease
            to yield his warmth, but would perish out of the heavens. 
            
             The importance of
            the New World to Europe, in the first century after the Discovery, chiefly
            rested on the fact that it was found to be a huge storehouse of gold and
            silver. To a large extent its resources in this respect had already been worked
            by the aborigines. Gold is the only metal which occurs in its native or unmixed
            state, and is largely found in the debris of those rocks which are most exposed
            to atmospheric action. It therefore early attracts the attention of savages,
            who easily apply it to purposes both of use and ornament; and more elaborate
            working in gold is one of the first arts of advanced life. Silver attracts
            attention and acquires value from its similarity, in most qualities, to gold;
            in Mexico both metals were regarded as of directly divine origin. The Toltecs,
            or people of Tollan, were reputed the earliest workers in gold and silver; and
            as this pueblo was understood to have been founded by a Nahuatlacan tribe at
            least as early as AD 780, these metals had been sought and wrought in
            the Mexican district for at least 700 years. There is no reason for concluding
            that after being manufactured they were largely, or indeed at all, exported;
            hence the immense accumulations of metallic wealth which were found in the
            Mexican district-accumulations greedily seized by the Conquistadores, and
            poured through Spanish channels into the mints of Europe, where the stock of
            gold had probably not been substantially increased since the fall of the Roman
            Empire. Still larger accessions to the mineral wealth of Europe followed the
            discovery and conquest of Peru -especially after the Spaniards became masters
            of the mines of Potosi- and of New Granada, where an almost savage people had
            laid up great quantities of the precious metals in the form of utensils and
            rude works of art: and from the discovery and conquest of these richly endowed
            countries, and the plunder of their stored-up wealth, date the serious efforts
            of European nations other than Spain and Portugal to acquire territory in the
            New World. 
           Twenty-five years
            passed between Colombo’s discovery and the first intelligence of Mexico. During
            this period Spanish America was limited to the four greater Antilles-Espanola,
            Cuba, Puerto Rico, and Jamaica. On the northern shore of the South American
            continent, in what is now Venezuela, attempts had been made to effect a
            lodgment, but in vain; this district, and indeed the continent generally, was
            long regarded as a mere field for slave-raiding, the captives being sold in
            Espanola and Cuba. The smaller islands, and the other adjacent continental
            coasts, remained unconquered and uncolonized; much as on the opposite side of
            the Atlantic the Canaries and the Madeira group were parceled into feudal
            estates and parishes, while the neighboring shore of Africa remained
            unattempted. The Spaniards, wholly new to their task, had to gain experience as
            colonists in a savage land. Often their settlements were founded on ill-chosen
            sites. When Isabella, Colombo’s first colony in Espanola, had to be abandoned,
            San Domingo was founded on the opposite side of the island (1494); the site of
            this, again, was changed by Ovando, the successor of Colombo after his removal
            from the administration (1502); and the same thing happened at Santiago de los
            Caballeros. Of the eighteen towns founded in the early years of colonization a
            century later only ten survived. A few towns were founded in Puerto Rico by
            Ovando; Cuba was colonized by Diego Velasquez, and Jamaica by Juan de Esquivel.
            But the settlements in both were few and unprosperous, Santiago de Cuba having
            in the course of a few years become almost deserted. Sugar was the only crop
            yielding profits; gold was procured in the smallest quantities; the best
            investment was to take over horned cattle, turn them loose to breed, and hunt
            the savage herd for its hides and tallow, which were shipped for sale to
            Europe. 
           By such means,
            and by mercilessly tasking the Indians as laborers in field and mine, many
            emigrants in time became rich men, and looked eagerly round for new and wider
            fields of adventure. Slave-raiding on the continental coasts was a favorite
            employment, and a certain quantity of gold was readily bartered for trifles by
            the natives, wherever the Spaniards landed; and by these pursuits the Cuban
            colonists at length reached the coast pueblos of Yucatan, which were
            comparatively recent outposts of Nahuatlacan advancement. Velasquez, the
            governor of Cuba, in 1518 sent a squadron of vessels to reconnoiter this coast
            more fully; Grijalva, who commanded, traced the shore-line as far as the tierra
              caliente of Mexico, and reached Vera Cruz, then as now the port of Mexico.
            Here Carib seamen shipped the surplus tributes and manufactured products of the
            Lake pueblos for barter in the southern parts of their extensive field of
            navigation. From Vera Cruz Grijalva coasted northwards as far as the Panuco
            river. Many large pueblos were descried in the distance; the names of Mexico
            and of Motecuhzoma, its Tlatohuani (‘Speaker’, in the sense of ‘Commander’ or
            Supreme Chief), first fell on Spanish ears; and the description of the great
            Lake pueblo was listened to with more interest, because in these parts
            the exploring party obtained by barter an immense quantity of gold. Here, at
            length, signs of civilized life were found; large hopes of wealth, whether by
            commerce or plunder, were excited; and on the return of the expedition
            Velasquez ordered a new one to proceed thither without delay. His design was
            simply to prosecute the remunerative trade which Grijalva had begun. Others
            formed bolder schemes; and his secretary and treasurer, probably in collusion
            with the schemers, persuaded him to entrust the command to Hernan Cortes, who
            had conceived the plan of employing the whole military force of Santiago de
            Cuba at his disposal in invading Mexico and subjugating it at one blow. This
            Cortes accomplished only by fortune’s favor; for he knew nothing of the
            imminent peril he was rashly encountering, and his force barely escaped
            annihilation. 
            
             Conquest
            of Mexico, 1522. Its civilization 
             
             The landing of
            Cortes, and his safe progress through a difficult country to the frontier of
            Tlaxcallan, were facilitated by the circumstance that the people of the
            country, who had groaned for the greater part of a century under the cruel
            tyranny of Mexico, welcomed him everywhere as a deliverer. The coast tribes
            mistook him for the ancient Toltec god Quetzalcohuatl. The Tlaxcaltecs, who had
            never beheld a friendly force on their borders, at first mistook him for an
            ally of the Mexicans; but on learning the true aspect of affairs they joined
            him as allies. Thus Cortes, from the territory of Tlaxcallan as his base,
            conducted his campaign against the Lake pueblos with the help of auxiliaries
            who possessed a complete knowledge of the country, and a military experience
            gained by a century’s constant fighting. At first he posed as a friendly
            emissary of the great European monarch his master. Having on these terms
            obtained admittance to Mexico for himself and his armed force, he seized the
            Tlatohuani’s person, put him in chains, and assumed the government. These
            proceedings naturally led to a rising on the part of the Mexican warriors, who
            attacked the Spaniards and drove them from the pueblo with great loss, taking
            many prisoners and sacrificing them to the Nahuatlacan gods. Driven
            ignominiously from Mexico, and chased by an infuriated enemy through and out of
            the Valley, Cortes retired by a circuitous route to Tlaxcallan, and laid his
            plans anew. Having refreshed his troops and renewed his supplies, he built two
            brigantines for action on the Lake; launched them from Tezcuco, which he
            occupied with little difficulty; assaulted Mexico by water; gained possession
            of its streets and buildings by slow degrees; and at length broke the resolute
            resistance of its warriors, and rased its clay-built edifices to the ground. He
            had won for the Castilian Crown the dominion of the confederated Lake pueblos -
            a tract of country extending from the Pacific to the Mexican gulf, 800 miles in
            length on the Pacific shore, and somewhat less on the other, comprising many
            large towns and above five hundred agricultural villages, and the seat of the
            most advanced communities of the New World. 
           This conquest was
            no barren victory over mere barbarians. Though no ethnologist would concede to
            the Nahuatlacan polity the title of a civilization, it possessed the
            foundations on which all civilization is built : a numerous and docile
            peasantry, an organized system of labor, and physical elements adequate to
            wealth-production. In these circumstances an unique social state had been
            evolved, to which the nearest analogue in the Old World is the gross barbarism
            of Ashanti or Dahomey. It was lower than these in that, except man himself,
            there were no animals kept for labor, nor were any kept for food except man and
            the dog. In other respects the arts of life were better developed: and to the
            superficial observation of the Conquistadores the large territory dominated by
            the Lake pueblos had an aspect sufficiently civilized to justify them in giving
            it the name of New Spain. What was of most importance in the eye of the
            European invaders, it possessed stores of the precious metals, which had been
            accumulating in the hands of dominant tribes for seven centuries. Immense
            quantities of treasure steadily poured henceforth into Spain; and America
            assumed an entirely new aspect for the nations of Western Europe. Almost from
            the first Spain perceived that other European powers would dispute with her,
            and perhaps one day wrest from her, the possession of the rich New World which
            accident had given to her. The conquest of Mexico nearly corresponded with the
            opening of a period of hostility between Spain and France, which lasted, though
            with considerable intermissions, from 1521 to 1556. Cortes, who entered Mexico
            in the former year, dispatched at the end of 1522 two vessels to Spain laden
            with Mexican treasure; Giovanni da Verrazzano, a Florentine in the French
            service, captured these near the Azores, and about the same time took a large
            vessel homeward bound from Espanola, laden with treasure, pearls, sugar, and
            hides. Enriched by these prizes, he gave large complimentary presents to the
            French King and High Admiral; and general amazement was felt at the wealth
            which was pouring into Spain from its transatlantic possessions. The Emperor
            Francis I exclaimed, “can carry on the war against me by means of the riches he
            draws from the West Indies alone!” Of the immense inheritance obtained by Spain
            in America the only parts actually reduced to possession by the Spanish monarch
            were the four great Antilles, and those portions of the continent which had
            been settled by the Nahuatlaca. Southward, the shores from Yucatan as far as
            the Plate River had been explored by Spain and Portugal; and all that seemed to
            remain to the future adventurer was the North American shore from the Mexican
            Gulf to Newfoundland. Jocosely refusing to acknowledge the claim of the
            peninsular powers to make a bipartite division of the sphere between them until
            they should “produce the will of Adam, constituting them his universal heirs”,
            Francis commissioned the successful Florentine captain to reconnoiter the whole
            shore from Florida to Newfoundland. This being done, he intimated to Europe
            that he claimed it, by right of discovery, as the share of France in the great
            American heritage. He called it New France, a term familiar in French ears
            since the beginning of the thirteenth century as the title of the Latin Empire
            of Constantinople, and now less inappropriately applied by transfer to the New
            World. 
           The commission
            thus entrusted to and accomplished by Verrazzano was masked under the pretence
            of seeking a North-west passage to the Far East. But its real object was to lay
            a foundation for the claim of France to the whole of America north of Mexico,
            put forward in the belief, which ultimately proved well warranted, that this
            tract would, like Mexico, prove rich in the precious metals. Having completed
            the voyage by which his name is chiefly remembered, Verrazzano resumed the profitable
            practice of plundering the Spanish homeward-bound ships, and took some prizes
            between Spain and the Canaries. On his return he fell in with a squadron of
            Spanish war vessels, surrendered to them after a severe engagement, and in 1527
            was hanged as a pirate at Colmenar de Arenas. 
           France
            strenuously maintained, and sought by repeated efforts to substantiate, the
            right to North America which Verrazzano’s coasting-voyage was supposed to have
            acquired. In periods of war no attempts at possession were made; but in the
            intervals of peace expeditions were undertaken to the Gulf of St Lawrence, with
            the view of exploring the passage to the Far East of which it was imagined to
            be the beginning. Cartier made two voyages for this purpose in 1534 and 1535;
            and in 1540 he sailed up the great river of Canada, and selected a site for the
            colony which in 1542 Roberval attempted to establish. Cartier brought to France
            news of the two principal native nations of North America-nations on which
            later French settlers bestowed the names Iroquois and Algonquin, each being a
            purely French word embodying a peculiarity in the sound of their respective
            languages. The Algonquins, who were the earlier immigrants, were partially
            cultivators of the soil, but chiefly relied for subsistence on hunting and
            fishing. The more advanced Iroquois, who appear to have driven the Algonquins
            from the choicest parts of their territory, had nearly reached the stage in
            which agriculture is the main source of subsistence, though they were
            accomplished hunters and formidable warriors: and their compact territory was
            parceled out among five tribes, who formed the confederation so well known in
            later history as the Five Nations. Though Hoberval’s attempt failed, the
            example thus set was followed in a later generation in other latitudes, and
            other nations were encouraged to imitate it. Meanwhile the aspect of American
            enterprise was greatly modified, and the effect produced by the discovery of
            the treasures of Mexico greatly enhanced, by the discovery and conquest of
            Peru, the richest district of the New World hitherto revealed. 
           Here, again, we
            are struck by the comparatively modern date of the aboriginal dominion which
            the Spanish adventurers found established along the coast and in the valleys of
            the Andes. This dominion, of which the center was at Cuzco, was very much more
            extensive than that of the federated Mexican pueblos. Unlike the Nahuatlaca,
            the Peruvian people had no reckoning of years; nor can the date of any fact in
            Peruvian history anterior to the conquest be accurately ascertained. All that
            we know is that the settlement of the nation or people who then dominated the
            sierra and the coast from Cuzco, where the traditions of their arrival were
            still fresh, was of comparatively modern date. They called themselves Inca, or
            “people of the sun” (Inti). They were probably an offshoot from a large group
            of warlike tribes, in which the Tupi-Guarani were included, long settled on the
            margins of the vanished Argentine sea and of a chain of great lakes to the
            north of it, where they subsisted by fishing and hunting. From this district
            they ascended to the sierra, where the huanaco and vicuna, two small cognate
            species of the camel genus, furnished abundant food and material for clothing.
            These they domesticated as the llama and paco, both being Quichua words
            implying subjugation; they propagated by art the pulse and food-roots of the
            Cordillera, and established many permanent pueblos in and near the great lake
            basin of Titicaca, the earliest seat of Peruvian advancement. From this
            district they advanced northwards, and occupied a canton almost impregnably
            situated in the midst of immense mountains and deep gorges, known to
            geographers as the Cuzco district. In historical times they had separated into
            two branches, speaking two languages, evidently divergent forms of a single
            original, called by Spanish grammarians Aymara and Quichua; names which it has
            been found convenient to use as ethnical terms for the peoples who spoke them.
            Tradition carried back the history of the Aymara-Quichua in Cuzco and its
            neighborhood about three hundred years, during which eleven Apu-Capac-Incas, or
            “head-chiefs of the Inca (people)” were enumerated; but it was generally
            considered, and is almost conclusively shown by balancing evidence, that not
            much more than a century had elapsed since they made their first conquests
            beyond the limited Cuzco district, and that only the last five of the
            Apu-Capac-Incas-Huiracocha-Inca, Pachacutic-Inca, Tupac-Inca-Yupanqui,
            Huaina-Capac-Inca, and Tupac-atau-huallpa-all forming a chain of succession
            from father to son, had ruled over an extensive territory. The great expansion
            took place in the time of Pachacutic-Inca, and is traceable to an invasion by
            an alliance of tribes from the north, who had long dominated Middle Peru, and
            now sought to conquer the Cuzco district and the valley of Lake Titicaca. Under
            Pachacutic this invasion was repelled; the allies were defeated at Yahuarpampa,
            and the war was carried into the enemy's country: the dominion of the invading
            tribes now fell almost at one blow into the hands of the chiefs of Cuzco. These
            victories were rapidly followed by the conquest of the northern or Quito
            district, now forming the republic of Ecuador, and of the coast-valleys, where
            a remarkable and superior advancement, founded on fishing and agriculture, had
            existed probably from an earlier date than that of the stronger tribes of the
            sierra. 
            
             Pizarro
            in Peru, 1532 
            
             The Spaniards,
            who obtained information of the Inca people and their dominion soon after
            crossing the isthmus of Panama, reconnoitered the Peruvian coast in 1525,
            during the head-chieftaincy of Huaina-Capac. But this chief had died, and a
            civil war, in which the succession was contested between his two sons
            Tupac-cusi-huallpa (the sun makes joy), commonly known by the epithet Huascar
            (the chosen one), and Tupac-atau-huallpa (the sun makes good fortune), had been
            terminated in favor of the latter, when Pizarro invaded the country in 1532
            with a party of 183 soldiers. Everywhere large accumulations of treasure were
            found; for gold and silver had been mined both in the coast-pueblos and in the
            sierra from remote times, and the whole of the produce still remained, largely
            accumulated in the numerous burial-places of a people who preserved with almost
            Egyptian care the corpses of the dead, depositing with them the gold and silver
            which had belonged to them when alive. 
           The facilities
            for marching, which a century of well-organized aboriginal rule had established
            from one end of the dominion to the other, and in several places between the
            coast and the mountains, made Pizarro’s progress easy. So soon as the supreme
            chief had been seized and imprisoned or put to death, the submission of his
            followers, and the subjugation of his territory, quickly followed. But it was
            an easier task for the vile and sordid adventurers who invaded Peru to destroy
            the tyranny of its aboriginal conquerors and sack its pueblos, than for the
            Spanish government to assert the authority of the Crown, and provide the Inca
            dominion with a suitably organized administration. After much bloodshed,
            extending over many years, this was at length accomplished; the lands which had
            belonged to the Inca, the sun, or the native chiefs, and the peasantry, were,
            with their peasant inhabitants, chiefly serfs attached to the soil, granted by
            the Crown to gentlemen immigrants, and held on similar terms to those annexed
            to the ‘commends’ of the military Orders-the name ‘commend’, indeed, becoming
            the technical term for estates so held. Here, as in Mexico, churches were built
            and endowed, diocesan organizations were established, and the difficult work of
            converting the Indians was begun and earnestly carried on by a devoted clergy;
            superior courts of justice were constituted, and law was administered in the
            village by alcaldes; the aboriginal population, freed from the grinding
            tyranny of their old masters, increased and throve; new mines, especially of
            silver, were discovered and wrought. Both Peru and Mexico gradually assumed the
            resemblance of civilized life; and their prosperity testified to the benefits
            conferred on them by conquests which, however unjustifiable on abstract
            grounds, in both cases redeemed the populations affected by them from cruel and
            oppressive governments, and bloody and senseless religions. 
           After the
            conquest of Peru the treasure sent by America to Spain was trebled; the silver
            mines of Europe were practically abandoned, and before long Europe’s entire
            gold-supply was obtained from the New World. In these circumstances the naval
            enterprise not only of the enemies, but of the political rivals of Spain was
            stimulated to assume the form of piracy; and in this connection a peculiar
            cause came into operation about this time, which had a strongly modifying
            effect on the destinies of the New World. Both Charles V and his son and
            successor in Spain, Philip II, had constituted themselves the champions of the
            Catholic Church; and they freely employed the gold of America in the pursuit of
            intrigues favorable to their policy in every European country. Hence, to cut
            off the supply at its source became the universal policy of Protestantism, now
            struggling for life throughout Western Europe. The persecution of the Huguenots
            drove large numbers of French Protestants to join the roving captains who
            harassed Spanish commerce; and their efforts, begun in time of war, were
            continued in time of peace. Thus did the French wars with Spain developed into
            a general war on the part of the Protestants of Western Europe against Spain as
            the champion of the Papacy and the author of the Inquisition. In the New World
            this movement resulted in the plundering of Spanish vessels, attacks on the
            Spanish ports with the object of holding them to ransom, and finally attempts,
            unsuccessful at first, but effectual when experience in colonization had once
            been gained, to found new European communities, in the teeth of all opposition,
            on the soil of a continent which the Spaniards regarded as most justly their
            own, and as before all things entrusted to them for the diffusion, and the
            ultimate extension over the whole globe, of the Catholic faith. 
           Here, at length,
            we reach a point of view from which the general bearing of the New World on the
            parallel growth of European economics and politics on the one hand, and of
            religious theory, philosophical thought, and scientific advancement on the
            other, might be brought under observation. Our remarks must be confined to the
            latter group of topics. For during the period covered by this chapter the
            political system of Europe was not sensibly disturbed, while the economic
            changes produced by the discovery and conquest of the New World were as yet
            imperfectly developed. But the sudden shattering of the old geography produced
            by the Discovery reacted at once in a marked way on European habits of thought.
            Religion is man's earliest philosophy; and what affects his habits of thought
            and alters his intellectual points of view cannot but modify his religious
            conceptions. The discovery of the New World, and its prospective employment as
            a place for the planting of new communities of European origin, greatly
            contributed to substitute for the medieval law of religious intolerance the
            modern principle of toleration. In the Old World the former theory had hitherto
            enjoyed general acceptance, and it rested on a logical basis. There was
            Scriptural warranty for the doctrine that the Supreme Being was a jealous God,
            visiting the sins of men not only upon their descendants to the third and
            fourth generation, but also upon the nation to which such men belonged; and it
            followed that to believe or conceive of Him, or to worship Him, otherwise than
            in accordance with the revelation graciously made by Him for the guidance of
            man, was something more than an offence against Himself. It was an intolerable
            wrong to society, for it exposed the pious many to the penalty incurred by an
            impious minority. Plague and pestilence, famine and destruction in war, were
            brought on a nation by religious apostasy; and it was therefore not merely
            lawful, but a national duty, to stamp out apostasy in its beginnings. The
            history of Christendom down to the Discovery of America is in the main one long
            series of more or less successful applications of this perfectly intelligible
            principle to the general conduct of human affairs. Had it not been for the New
            World, the Old World might perhaps to this day have been governed in accordance
            with it. 
           But the New World
            was virgin soil. All Christendom, with the approbation even of Jew and
            Islamite, would readily have united in the opinion that its gross aboriginal
            idolatries should be extinguished, and the worship of the One God introduced
            into it, in whatever form. And in the plantation or creation of new Christian
            communities in America the reason for intolerance as a necessary social
            principle no longer existed. Each colony, and colonies in this practically
            vacant continent could be planted at considerable distances from each other,
            could now settle its religious principles for itself, for it did so at its own
            risk. In this way the Old World found the solution of what in France and
            elsewhere had, by the middle of the sixteenth century, become a serious social
            and political difficulty. In France, in Germany, in England, the nation was
            coming to be divided into two hostile camps, Catholic and Protestant. Was the
            one half in each case to be extinguished by the other, in an internecine war?
            The banishment of the weaker party by migration, and already expatriation was
            substituted for the death penalty in the case of greater moral crimes than
            heresy, was a wise and merciful alternative. 
            
             French
            Protestants to Brazil under Durand, 1555 
            
             The French
            Protestants, who felt that the course of God’s dealings with man must on the
            whole be in their favor, were the first to think of a new career, in a new
            world perhaps revealed for the purpose, as the beginning of a better order of
            things, if not as the fulfillment of the destiny of the Reformed faith; and, as
            the triumph of the Catholic party in France became more and more probable.
            Protestant leaders cast anxious eyes towards the American shore, as a possible
            place of refuge for their people, should they be worsted in the struggle. An
            attempt of this nature was made, with the sanction and help of Coligny, the
            head of the Protestant party, by Nicolas Durand, better known by his assumed
            name of Villegagnon, a Knight of the Maltese Order who had served in the
            expedition of Charles V against Algiers, and who also distinguished himself as
            an author and an amateur theologian. Durand had resided at Nantes, where the
            propriety of providing a transatlantic refuge for Protestants, and the
            capabilities of the Brazilian coast, now frequently visited for commercial
            purposes by French seamen, were matters of common discussion. He resolved to be
            the first to carry such a scheme into effect; and he found ample support among
            the partisans of the Reformed religion, including Coligny, through whose
            influence he obtained a large pecuniary grant from the French King. 
           In May 1555 he
            sailed with two ships for the coast of South Brazil, where he settled on an
            island, still known as Ilha de Villagalhao, near the mouth of the bay of Rio de
            Janeiro, two miles from the mainland. Durand named the country he proposed to
            occupy Antarctic France. The voyage was understood to mark, and did in
            fact mark, a new era in history. It was the actual beginning of the movement
            which brought to the New World, as a place where they might worship God in
            their own way, the Puritans of New England, the Quakers of Pennsylvania and the
            Catholics of Maryland. Scholars called it the Expedition of the Indonauts; and
            a French pedant, after the fashion of the time, celebrated its departure in an
            indifferent Greek epigram. God looked down, he said, from heaven, and saw that
            the corrupt Christians of Europe had utterly forgotten both Himself and His
            Son. He therefore resolved to transfer the Christian Mysteries to a New World,
            and to destroy the sinful Old World to which they had been entrusted in vain. 
           Preoccupied with
            the task of establishing themselves in India and the Far East, the Portuguese
            had for thirty years after the discovery of Brazil done almost nothing by way
            of reducing this district into possession. A few ships frequented the coast for
            the purpose of trading with the natives, and setting ashore criminals to take
            their chance of being adopted or eaten by them. The success of Madeira as a
            sugar-growing island suggested the extension of this form of enterprise in
            Brazil, to which attention had been drawn by a recent discovery of gold; and
            the soil, as in Madeira, was granted out in hereditary captaincies, each
            grantee receiving exclusive rights over 50 leagues of sea-board. Martin Affonso
            de Sousa, afterwards viceroy in India, obtained the first of the fiefs, and
            took possession in 1531. Eleven others followed, and in 1549 the direction of
            the whole colony was vested in a Governor-general, whose seat was fixed at
            Bahia. The Portuguese settlements were in North and Middle Brazil, and by
            choosing an insular site far to the south Durand expected to escape
            disturbance. His first care was to build a fort and mount his guns. He
            announced his arrival to the Church of Geneva, by whom two pastors were duly
            ordained and sent out with the next batch of emigrants. 
           Durand began by
            sharing with these ministers the conduct of divine worship; and specimens of
            his extemporaneous prayers, in the course of which he gave thanks to God for
            mercifully visiting the mainland with a depopulating pestilence, whereby the
            enemies of the elect were destroyed, and the Lord’s path made straight, have
            come down to us. He devoted to theological studies the abundant leisure left
            him by his administration. Convinced by the arguments of Cyprian and Clement,
            he ordered that water should be mingled with the sacramental wine, directed salt
            and oil to be poured into the baptismal font, and forbade the second marriage
            of a pastor, fortifying himself in the position he thus assumed by
            argumentative appeals to Holy Scripture, When he at last publicly announced his
            adherence to the doctrine of transubstantiation, a breach between him and his
            Calvinist flock was inevitable. Only one among them, a voluble doctor of the
            Sorbonne whom he associated with himself in the office of the pulpit, supported
            his pretensions. When the scandalized colonists absented themselves from public
            worship, he proceeded to severe disciplinary measures; and in the end they
            quitted the island, threw themselves on the kindness of the savages of the
            mainland, and made their way to trading vessels in which they sailed for Europe.
            Thus the Indonaut colony, the first Protestant community in the New World,
            ended in a ludicrous failure. 
           As the struggle
            between the Catholics and Protestants of France became more and more desperate,
            the idea of founding a Protestant colony in America was revived: and it was now
            resolved to use for this purpose the immense tract which Verrazzano’s voyage
            was understood to have acquired for the French Crown. Coligny, with the assent
            of Charles IX, equipped two vessels which he despatched on February 18, 1562,
            under the command of Jean Ribault, to found the first colony attempted in North
            America since the return of Roberval in 1540. After exploring the coast,
            Ribault chose Port Royal Sound in the present State of South Carolina, as the
            most promising site for a colony; began the construction of a fort, to which he
            gave the name of Charles-fort, for the protection of those whom he intended to
            leave behind; and returned to Europe. Their supplies being exhausted, the
            colonizing party fell into dissensions, mutinied against the rigorous
            discipline enforced by their captain, and assassinated him. No reinforcements
            arriving from Europe, they built a pinnace, intending to return, put to sea,
            suffered indescribable hardships, and put back again, more dead than alive,
            towards the American shore. They were picked up by a homeward-bound English
            barque, one of whose crew had been with Ribault on the outward voyage. Some
            were landed in France; while those who were not too exhausted to continue the
            voyage were taken on to England, where the liveliest interest was by this time
            felt in the question of North American colonization. How this revived interest
            arose, may now be briefly explained. 
           It was
            practically forgotten, when, nearly sixty years afterwards, Englishmen began
            once more to turn their attention to America. From the untroubled early years
            of Henry VIII, when America, as yet wholly savage, and its discovery received
            conspicuous notice in a serious philosophical drama, to the marriage of Philip
            and Mary, when it stood forth in the eyes of Europe as the source of more
            wealth than the world had ever seen, the New World is scarcely mentioned in
            English literature, though the continental press teemed with accounts of it and
            allusions to it. But an old dramatist's picture of the new continent, as it
            presented itself to English eyes about 1515, becomes all the more striking
            through its isolation. The play, or “interlude”, is entitled The Four Elements;
            the leading personage, named Experience, discourses at some length- on the
            ‘Great Ocean’- so great that never man could tell it, since the world began,
            till now these twenty year- and the new continent lately found beyond it; a
            continent “so large of room” as to be “much longer than all Christendom”, for
            its coast has been traced above 5000 miles. The inhabitants, from the south,
            where they “go naked always”, to the north, where they are clad in the skins of
            beasts, are everywhere savages, living in woods and caves, and knowing nothing
            of God and the devil, of heaven and hell, but worshipping the sun for his great
            light. The fisheries, the timber, and the copper of America are named as its
            chief sources of wealth; and the speaker laments, in stanzas perfectly
            rhythmical, though the accent is somewhat forced, that England should have
            missed the opportunity of discovering and colonizing this vast country: 
             
             O what a [great]
            thing had been then, 
           If that they that
            be Englishmen 
           Might have been
            the first of all 
           That there should
            have taken possession, 
           And made first
            building and habitation, 
           A memory
            perpetual! 
           And also what an
            honorable thing, 
           Both to the
            realm, and to the king, 
           To have had his
            dominion extending 
           There into so far
            a ground, 
           Which the noble
            king of late memory, 
           The most wise
            prince the seventh Harry, 
           [Had] caused
            first for to be found! 
             
             Nor is this all
            that England has lost. Hers would have been the privilege of introducing
            civilization and preaching the Gospel in this dark continent-of leading its
            brute-like tribes "to know of men the manner, and also to know God their
            Maker. This task, it is evidently felt, would more fittingly have fallen to the
            lot of England than of Castile and Portugal. 
           The American
            coast was doubtless occasionally sighted from English vessels. But it was only
            gazed on as a curious spectacle. 
           The Northern
            shore, the only part accessible to English adventurers without encroachment on
            the transatlantic possessions of a friendly power, yielded little or nothing to
            commerce which could not be obtained with less trouble in Europe itself. During
            these sixty years, which saw no break in the friendly relations between England
            and Spain, many English merchants resided in the latter country, who must have
            heard with astonishment, and probably a certain envy, of the rich
            treasure-districts which exploration revealed in quick succession, and
            occasionally visited them, or some of them, in person. Not until the marriage
            of the English Queen with the Spanish heir-apparent was it ever suggested that
            England should aspire to share in the wealth which the fortune of events had
            poured into the lap of Spain. About this time Mexico and Potosi shone forth
            with tempting luster in the eyes of Europe. These districts were mere patches
            on the map of a continent which probably contained gold and silver in all its
            parts, and which had been designed by nature to be the treasure-house of the
            world. Nine-tenths of it remained unexplored. The events of the Franco-Spanish
            wars had proved the Spaniards incapable of excluding from it other nations
            whose seamen were better than their own; and English seamen, then as now,
            acknowledged no superiors. Other Mexicos and Potosis doubtless awaited the
            first adventurer bold enough to strike the blow that should secure them. Why
            should England again neglect her opportunity? 
            
             America
            for the English. Richard Eden 
            
             It was not,
            however, exactly in this aspect that the suggestion of “America for the
            English” was first put forward. The writer who earned the credit of it, one
            Richard Eden, Hakluyt’s precursor, who to book-learning added a keen personal
            interest in sailors and sailors’ tales, was a clerk in Philip’s English
            Treasury. Possibly he owed this post to a volume published by him in the year
            preceding that of Philip’s marriage, containing a translation of a somewhat meager
            account of the New World compiled by a German geographer. The object of this
            volume, in his own words, was to persuade Englishmen to “make attempts in the
            New World to the glory of God and the commodity of our country”, and the sole
            inducement held out was America’s wealth in the precious metals. Only a few
            years had elapsed since the produce of the mines of Potosi was first registered
            in the books of the Spanish King. Had Englishmen, writes Eden, been awake to
            their interests, “that Rich Treasury called PEEDLAEIA (the bullion-warehouse of
            Seville) might long since have been in the Tower of London!” 
           At this date
            Edward VI, a Protestant, with whom Spain’s papal title to the New World was not
            likely to find recognition, was on the throne. His future marriage remained
            undecided; but it was anticipated that he would intermarry with a French
            princess, and that England and France, henceforth in strict alliance, would
            continue the process of despoiling Spain, which France alone had so
            successfully begun. By the death of Edward and the succession of Mary the
            political outlook was changed. On July 19, although such ideas were doubtless
            widely entertained, the short reign of Mary afforded no scope for realizing
            them; and the new Anglo-Spanish connection left in the. New World but a single
            and fleeting trace. A South-American official, when planning a town in a remote
            valley of the Argentine Andes, named it Londres, or London, in honor of the
            union of Philip and Mary. This was the first place in America named after an
            English city. Its existence was of short duration; the Indians expelled the
            colonists, who were fain to choose another site. The only noteworthy fact
            during this reign bearing upon the present subject was, that a remarkable
            maritime project was disastrously proved to be impracticable. Its aim was the
            discovery of a North-eastern passage to the Far East, answering to the
            South-eastern passage that was now commonly made by the Portuguese round the
            Cape of Good Hope.
           Shortly before
            Edward’s death Sir Hugh Willoughby sailed for this purpose with three vessels.
            Winter came suddenly on; Willoughby laid up his ships in a harbor of Russian
            Lapland, where he and the crews of two of his vessels were frozen to death;
            while Chancellor, the captain of the third, with difficulty reached the White
            Sea, landed at Archangel, and returned by Moscow. This disaster stopped further
            search for the passage; seamen and traders henceforth turned in the opposite
            direction, and speculated on the discovery of a North-west passage. Elizabeth
            had been on the throne eighteen years, when Frobisher, a Yorkshireman who had
            constituted himself the pioneer of this project, obtained the means of bringing
            it to the test, and commenced a fruitless search, which lasted two centuries
            and a half, for a passage first proved in our own generation to have a
            geographical existence, but to be nautically impossible. Frobisher’s voyages
            did little towards effecting their ostensible purpose. Led astray by the quest
            of the precious metals, he loaded his ships with immense quantities of a
            deceptive pyrites, which contained a small proportion of gold, but far less
            than enough to pay the cost of extracting it; and the scheme, which had
            degenerated into a mere mining adventure, was quietly abandoned. 
           Meanwhile the
            attention of Western Europe was still concentrated on Florida, a term
            denoting all the North American continent as far northward as the Newfoundland
            fishery, and bestowed on it by its discoverer Ponce de Leon, who reached it on
            Easter Day (Pascua Florida), 1513. Eden’s preface conveys the impression that
            the Spaniards had neglected this vast tract of the continent; nothing however
            could be less true. The most strenuous efforts had been made to penetrate it,
            in the confident expectation that it would prove as rich in treasure as Mexico
            itself; and Pamphilo de Narvaez, chiefly known to fame by his futile mission to
            arrest the campaign of Cortes, had landed here in 1528 with the object of
            emulating that supremely fortunate adventurer's exploits. Repulsed and forced
            back to the coast, he took refuge in his ships and perished in a storm. Five
            only of his three hundred men regained Mexico, where they published the
            exciting news that Florida was simply the richest country in the world. This
            statement was probably made in irony rather than in seriousness; yet it was not
            without foundation in fact, for the Appalachian mountains contain mines of gold
            and silver which are profitably worked to this day. By the conquest of Peru
            adventure to Florida received for the second time a powerful stimulus. Hernan
            de Soto, a lieutenant of Pizarro, who had been appointed Governor of Cuba,
            undertook to annex it to the Spanish dominions (1538). His ill-fated
            expedition, commenced in the next year, forms a well-known episode in American
            history. During four years De Soto persevered in a series of zigzag marches
            through a sparsely peopled country, containing no pueblos larger than the
            average village of hunting tribes, and showing no trace whatever of either gold
            or silver. In descending the Mississippi he sickened and died; the miserable
            remnant of his troops sailed from its mouth to the, Panuco river in Mexico,
            bringing back tidings of a failure more disheartening, because the result of a
            more protracted effort, than that of Narvaez. In 1549 some friars of the
            Dominican order, elsewhere so successful in dealing with the American
            aborigines, landed in Florida, only to be at once set upon and massacred. By
            this time the Indians knew the general character and aims of the new-comers who
            styled themselves ‘Christians’, and dealt with them accordingly. Outside Spain
            it was generally thought that Providence had prescribed limits to Spanish
            conquest, and reserved the Northern continent for some other European people
            obviously either the French or the English. 
           Hence, when in
            1558 a Protestant princess succeeded to the English throne, she found the
            policy which she was expected to pursue in this direction defined for her in
            public opinion. Here was Florida, the “richest country in the world”, still without
            any owner, or even any pretender to its ownership, though sixty years had
            passed since Colombo discovered the continent of which it formed a large and
            prominent part. A whole generation had passed away since the heroic period of
            Spanish-American history : the conquest of Mexico and Peru; and that period had
            evidently closed. Clearly Providence forbade Spain to cherish the hope of
            succeeding in any further attempt to subjugate Florida. France, though
            ambitious as ever, was hopelessly entangled in civil broils. Everyone expected
            Elizabeth, who was in truth no bigot, to found colonies in this vast and
            fertile tract, so near to England and so easily reached from it; where,
            perhaps, her Catholic and her Protestant subjects might settle in peace, each
            group respectively occupying some large and well-defined district of its own.
            The name itself, bandied about for half a century, had by this time become a
            household word which was not without humorous suggestions. Satirists travestied
            it as ‘Stolida’, or land of simpletons, and ‘Sordida’, or land of muckworms;
            pirates, arrested on suspicion and examined, mockingly avowed themselves bound
            for Florida. In France experiences of a certain kind-unedifying transactions of
            gallantry in the base sense of the word-were called ‘adventures of Florida’.
            The world was eagerly expecting the impending revelation, which should disclose
            the future fate of the temperate regions of North America. To the pretensions
            of France the fortune of events soon gave a negative answer. Nothing daunted by
            the failure of Ribault’s party, Coligny in 1565 despatched Rene Laudonniere, a
            captain who had served under Ribault, to make a second effort. Laudonniere
            chose as the site of his settlement the mouth of the river called by Ribault
            the River of May (St John’s River), from its discovery by him on the first day
            of that month in 1562; and here he arrived in the midsummer of 1564, with a
            strong and well-armed party, built a fort, and began exploring the country.
            Most of the intending settlers had been pirates, whom, in the close proximity
            of St Domingo and Jamaica, it was impossible to keep from resuming their old
            trade; others joined an Indian chief, and followed him to war with a
            neighboring tribe in hope of plunder. The stores of Fort Caroline were soon
            exhausted; and, but for the timely relief obtained from John Hawkins, who
            passed the Florida coast on his homeward way, the emigrants must have starved,
            or have returned to Europe, or have been dispersed among the wild aborigines.
            In the next year (1565) the Spaniards destroyed what was in effect a mere den
            of pirates, and built the fort of St Augustine to protect their own settlements
            and commerce, as well as the still unspoiled treasures of Appalachia, and to
            prevent the heretics of France from gaining a footing on American soil; and in
            a few years (1572) the massacre of St Bartholomew put an end to the Huguenot
            designs on Florida. 
            
             More's
            Utopia 
            
             At this point,
            where France retires for a time from the stage, leaving England to enter upon
            it and open the drama of Anglo-American history, we drop the thread of events
            to resume our survey of the effect produced by the discovery and unveiling of
            the New World on European ideas and intellectual habits. The complete
            revolution in geography, which now suddenly revealed to man his gross ignorance
            in the most elementary field of knowledge-the earth beneath his feet-had a
            wider effect. It shook the existing system of the sciences, though it had not
            as yet the effect of shattering it, much less of replacing it by something more
            nearly in accordance with the truth of things. It produced in many-over and
            above the suspicion already long harbored in logical minds, that neither the
            accepted doctrine and practice of the Catholic Church nor any modification of it
            likely to meet with acceptance in its place, could possibly represent the true
            construction of God’s will revealed in Scripture that sense of general
            intellectual insecurity which is best named ‘skepticism’. Charron’s future
            motto, “Que sais-je?”, became the leading motive in intellectual conduct. It is
            impossible to attempt here to trace this movement in its entirety; we can but
            select three writers, belonging to three successive generations, and all
            prominent among their contemporaries as pioneers of new paths of thought, and
            all of whom avowedly derived much of their inspiration from the events briefly
            noticed above. All three were laymen; a fact not in itself devoid of
            significance. The writings of ecclesiastics during this period, even in the
            case of distinguished humanists such as Bembo or Erasmus, show scarcely a trace
            of the same influence. The control of thought was passing away from the Church.
            All three, too, were lawyers, and two of them were Lord Chancellors of England.
            Sir Thomas More, born ten years before the voyage of Colombo, wrote and
            published his Utopia in 1516, soon after the Pacific had been first descried
            from a mountain in Darien, and while the Spaniards in the Antilles were
            gathering the information which led to the conquest of Mexico and Peru, both as
            yet unknown. This admirable classic of the Renaissance, too keen in its satire
            and too refined in its feeling to have any practical effect commensurate with
            the acceptance which it instantly won among cultivated and thoughtful contemporaries,
            was avowedly suggested by the discovery and settlement of the new Western
            World. What possibilities of discovery, not merely in the realm of geography,
            but in that of social organization, morals, and politics, were laid open by
            this amazing revelation of a strange world of oceans, islands and continents,
            covering one-third of the sphere! The extent of America to the westward, with
            all that lay beyond, was as yet unknown; and More was not exceeding the limits
            of those possibilities when he described a traveler, who had accompanied
            Vespucci in his last voyage, as remaining in South America with a few
            companions and making their way westwards home by shore and sea, thus
            anticipating the circumnavigation of the globe which a few more years were to
            see achieved. The traveller’s name is Hythlodaeus, or Expert in Nonsense; and
            none among the countries visited by him so strongly arrests his attention as
            the island of Utopia, or Nowhere, where the traditional absurdities dominant in
            the Old World are unknown, and society is constituted on a humane and
            reasonable basis.
           Utopia is an
            aristocratic republic, in which the officers of government, elected annually,
            are presided over by a chief magistrate elected for life. Everyone is engaged
            in agriculture, and drones are banished from the hive; it is an accepted
            principle that every man has a natural right to so much of the earth as is
            necessary for his subsistence, and may lawfully dispossess of his land any
            possessor who leaves it untilled. Even the generous imagination of More did not
            rise to the conception of a state of society in which slavery was unknown: and
            the laboring population of Utopia are still slaves. Not that they are held as
            private property, for private property is unknown. Whatever is valuable is held
            as it were on lease from the community, on condition of making such use of it
            as shall enure for the public benefit. The family is patriarchally governed;
            there is no coinage; gold and silver are not used as ornaments, but are only
            applied to the basest purposes, and precious stones serve only to adorn
            children. The energies of the Utopians, released from the empty employments of
            Old World life, are concentrated on the development of learning and science.
            Many of them worship the heavenly bodies and the distinguished dead, but the
            majority are theists. Their priests are chosen by popular election: they have
            few and excellent laws, but no professional lawyers; they detest war, but are
            well armed, and fight intrepidly when necessary, though by preference they employ
            a neighboring nation of herdsmen as mercenaries. The temples of the Utopians
            are private buildings, and there is no worship of images. No living thing is
            offered in sacrifice, though incense is burned, and wax candles are lighted
            during the service of God, and vocal and instrumental music is practiced in
            connection with it. But in all religious matters there is absolute toleration.
            There is indeed a limited exception in favor of the immortality of the soul,
            and a future state of rewards and punishments, belief in both of which is
            thought to be essential to good citizenship. Yet even those who reject these
            doctrines are tolerated, on the principle that a man cannot make himself
            believe that which he might desire to believe, but which his reason compels him
            to reject: these, however, are regarded as base and sordid natures, and
            excluded from public offices and honors. The attitude of the Utopians towards
            Christianity, of which they hear for the first time from Hythlodaeus, is
            described as favorable: what chiefly disposes them to receive it is its
            original doctrine of community of goods. Before the strangers quit Utopia, many
            of the inhabitants have embraced Christianity and received baptism. The
            question of the Christian priesthood presents a difficulty. All the European
            travelers are laymen; how then can the Utopian Christians obtain the services
            of duly qualified pastors? They settle this question for themselves. Applying
            the established principle of popular election, they hold that one so chosen
            could effectually do all things pertaining to the priestly office,
            notwithstanding the lack of authority derived through the successors of St
            Peter. Although Christianity is thus permitted and even encouraged, its
            professors are forbidden to be unduly zealous for its propagation; a Christian
            convert who condemns other religions as profane, and declares their adherents
            doomed to everlasting punishment, is found guilty of sedition and banished. The
            Utopia, it will be seen, is no mere academic imitation of Plato's Republic.
            Specifically, the New World has little to do with its details. It was the mere
            possibilities suggested by the New World which occasioned this remarkable
            picture of a state of society diametrically opposed to the aspect of
            contemporary Europe. More's romance lost its hold on public attention, as soon
            as headstrong enthusiasts on the Continent endeavored to realize some of its
            fundamental principles; but at a later date, through the founders of New Jersey
            and Pennsylvania, it had some ultimate effect on, as it took its motive from,
            the New World which was beginning to stir European minds to their depths at the
            time when it was written. 
            
             Montaigne
            and the New World 
            
             From More we turn
            to a writer of a later generation, remarkable for the freedom and independence
            of his mental attitude towards contemporary ideas and institutions, and who
            avows in more than one place that the New World profoundly modified his habits
            of thought. No close reader of Montaigne will dispute that the contemplation of
            the New World, in connection with the events which happened after its
            discovery, greatly contributed to give him that large grasp of things, that
            mental habit of charity and comprehensiveness, something of which passed from
            him to Bacon and to Shakespeare, both diligent students of his writings. Michel
            de Montaigne, a French advocate and country gentleman, who may be called the
            Plato of modern philosophical literature, was born in 1533, when Pizarro was
            overrunning Peru. During his life the New World was growing ever larger in the
            eyes of mankind; and as it drew him to itself, by a species of intellectual
            gravitation, it detached him from the standing-ground of his time, and raised
            him in a corresponding degree far above it. The facts of aboriginal American
            history and ethnology, narrated by the Conquistadores and by other travelers,
            sank deeply into his mind; and his knowledge of the New World was not mere
            book-learning. As a counselor of Bordeaux, he often came in contact with
            merchants and seamen who were familiar with America; but his chief source of
            information was a man in his own service, who had lived ten or twelve years in
            Brazil, whom he describes as a plain ignorant fellow, but from whom he seems
            never to have been weary of learning at first hand. Before Colombo's voyage the
            savage or "brute man" had been as little known in Europe, and was in
            fact as much of a myth, as the unicorn or griffin. When Montaigne wrote, he had
            become as well known as the Moor, the Berber, or the Guinea negro, and the spectacle
            of a new transatlantic continent, scarcely less extensive than the aggregate of
            those Old World countries of which Europe possessed any definite knowledge, and
            peopled by men scarcely above the state of nature, seized the French
            philosopher with a strange fascination. By its contrast with European life it
            suggested some startling reflections. What if civilization, after all, were a
            morbid and unnatural growth? What if the condition of man in America were that
            for which the Creator designed him? What if those omnipotent powers, law and
            custom, as at present constituted, were impudent usurpers, destined one day to
            decline under the influence of right reason, and to give place, if not to the
            original rule of beneficent Nature, at least to something essentially very
            different from the systems which now passed under their names? Montaigne puts
            these questions very pointedly. In the Tupi-Guarani of Brazil, as described by
            one who had known them long and intimately, he recognized nothing of the
            character associated with the words “barbarous” and “savage”. They were rather
            a people permanently enjoying the fabled Golden Age of ancient poetry;
            strangers to the toils, diseases, social inequalities, vices, and trickeries
            which chiefly made up civilized life; dwelling together in vast common houses,
            though the institutions of the family were strictly preserved, and enjoying
            with little or no labor, and no fears for the future, all the reasonable
            commodities and advantages of human life, while knowing nothing of its superfluities;
            refined in their taste for poetry, specimens of which were recited to him by
            his domestic informant, and which appeared to him Anacreontic in their grace
            and beauty: and employed chiefly in the chase, the universal pleasure of the
            human race, even in the highest state of refinement. This they carried,
            perhaps, a stage too far. They hunted their neighboring tribesman for his
            flesh, and, like others among the more advanced American peoples, were
            cannibals, a name which Montaigne used as the title of the laudatory tractate
            here quoted. What of that? Civilized man, says the philosopher, who practically
            enforces servitude on nine-tenths of the human race, consumes the flesh and
            blood of his fellow-man alive. Is it not worse to eat one’s fellow-man alive, than
            to eat him dead? These Americans torture their prisoners, it is true; worse
            tortures are inflicted in civilized Europe, in the sacred names of justice and
            religion. We Europeans regard these our fellow-men with contempt and aversion.
            Are we, in the sight of God, much better than they ? Have we done, are we
            doing, by our fellow-man at home, according to the light which is, or should
            be, within us? 
           Montaigne was
            perhaps only half serious. Yet such views commended themselves more or less to
            perfectly serious thinkers in other European countries; and they accorded with
            a feeling, which had long been gaining ground, of revolt against the hollow
            pageantry, the rigid social and political forms, the grasping at an empty show
            of power and dignity, which marked medieval life, and of expectation advancing
            towards more of simplicity, sincerity, and accordance with truth and nature.
            These views affected men's religious conceptions, and had something to do with
            the Protestant and Puritan views of religious duty and theory. They were more
            amply represented in the Quakerism of a later age; and while they originated in
            the Old World, they had their freest and fullest development, as will appear
            later on in this History, in the New. Held in check in Europe, where power tenaciously
            clung to the machinery of feudalism, they fermented in, and began to permeate,
            social strata on which that machinery rested with crushing weight, and produced
            those revolutionary and socialistic doctrines which have so largely affected
            modern European society, but have found less favor in America. The emigrant in
            the New World was conscious of breathing different air. In this spacious
            continent much seemed trifling, and even ridiculous, which had commanded his
            respect, and even devotion, at home. Much of the burden of the Past seemed to
            fall from his shoulders. Industry ensured subsistence, even to the poorest:
            security of subsistence led by an easy transition to competence, and often to
            affluence. In all these stages a general sense of independence was fostered,
            felt in different degrees in different parts, but common, to some extent, to
            the Spanish landowner among his Indian serfs, the sugar-planter among his
            slaves, the missionary among the converts he was reclaiming from savagery, and
            the peasant wrestling with the forest and turning it into an expanse of fertile
            fields. The political tie which bound the emigrant to the European power
            commanding his allegiance was scarcely felt. The merchant made large profits:
            capital earned high interest. There was everywhere a large measure of freedom
            in local government. Even in Spanish America the European distinction between
            the noble and the plebeian was never introduced, nor could the Courts of
            justice exercise jurisdiction of hidalguia. Such a condition of things
            necessarily had its reaction on the mother countries : and Europe almost from
            the first felt that reaction, in however slight a degree. 
           In one respect
            the medieval constitution of Europe received from the New World, in the period
            immediately subsequent to the Discovery, a decided accession of strength. The
            conquest and settlement of Spanish and Portuguese America opened an immense
            field of operations to the Catholic Church; and this field was forthwith
            entered upon with extraordinary vigor and success. During the sixteenth century
            Rome was gaining in the New World more than she was losing in the Old. In
            Mexico, in Peru, and in New Granada foundations already existed from which the
            missionary had but to sweep away an effete superstructure to erect a loftier
            and more durable one. The aborigines were deeply imbued with religious ideas,
            and trained from childhood to regular habits of worship and ritual; the houses
            of the gods, numerous and often magnificent, were held in deep veneration, and
            endowed with extensive estates; the superiority of the great “Dios” of the
            Spaniards (a title understood by the Indians to be the proper name of a deity
            to whose worship the people of Europe were especially devoted) had been
            abundantly manifested in the military successes of his votaries; conversion was
            insisted on by the conquerors; and as the images of the old deities were
            destroyed, their shrines defaced, and their rites forbidden, compliance was
            dictated by the very spirit of aboriginal paganism. In Mexico, where the
            ancient rites demanded human sacrifices in vast numbers, and in a cruel and
            repulsive form, their abolition was effected with comparative ease. In Peru,
            where human sacrifice was chiefly limited to infant victims, who were simply
            strangled and buried, the Indians were more firmly attached to their old
            religion; and a serious obstacle to its abandonment lay in their devotion to
            the practice of ancestor-worship. Long after the mass of them had accepted the
            doctrine and practice of Christianity, they secretly offered sacrifice to the
            desiccated bodies, of the dead; and a rigorous and prolonged inquisition had to
            be organized and carried into effect before the idolatry of Peru was
            extirpated. Meanwhile the settlement of the Church proceeded on the general lines
            recognized in Europe; but in America, as in the Spanish districts conquered
            from the Moors, the Holy See forbore some of its prescriptive rights in favor
            of the Crown. Notwithstanding the ordinances of the Lateran Council, Alexander
            VI in 1501 granted to the Crown all tithes and first fruits in the Indies. The
            consideration for this ‘temporalisation’ of property which of right belonged to
            the Church was the conquest of territory from infidels, and their conversion to
            Christianity. The right of patronage in all sees and benefices was also vested
            by the Pope in the Spanish sovereigns, as fully as had already been done in the
            case of the Kingdom of Granada, subject only to the condition that it should
            remain in the Crown inalienably. The Crown was further appointed the Pope's
            legate in America. The limits of dioceses were at first laid down by the Popes;
            but even this right, together with the power of dividing and consolidating
            them, was granted to the Crown, and no American Bishop could return to Europe
            without the Viceroy's license. The Church in America held its own Councils,
            under the direction of the metropolitans of Mexico and Lima; and no appeal in
            ecclesiastical matters was carried to Rome. The Crown obtained the income of
            vacant sees, a part of which was assigned to the defence of the coasts against
            heretic pirates. These concessions were amply justified by the immense revenue
            which poured into Rome from Spanish America in the form of donations, of
            proceeds of bulls for the Holy Crusade, and of the sale of indulgences and
            dispensations. What the Holy See bestowed with one hand it received back, in
            larger measure, with the other. 
           Outside the
            limits of settled life the work of evangelization was vigorously pursued by
            Franciscan, Dominican, and Augustinian friars, who from the first nocked to the
            New World in all its parts; but the chief share in this labor was borne by the
            newly-founded Company of Jesus. Among the exigencies which led to its
            establishment may certainly be reckoned the need of adequately grappling with
            the task of preaching Christianity in America, as well as in India and the Far
            East; and the numerous Reductions in the savage districts of North and
            South America abundantly testify to the devotion and energy of the Jesuit
            Fathers. At first the regular clergy greatly outnumbered the secular. In many
            cases they received, by dispensation, valuable benefices; and being in all
            respects better educated and trained than the secular clergy, they more easily
            acquired the American languages. The surplus incomes of these regularized
            benefices were remitted to the superiors of their incumbents in Europe, and
            were ultimately applied to the foundation of houses of the several Orders in
            the New World. The Franciscan, Augustinian and Jesuit colleges in Peru were in
            effect the chief centers of European civilization; and the Jesuits have left a
            durable monument of their zeal in the Republic of Paraguay. To those members of
            these Orders who engaged in missionary work the ethnologist and historian are
            greatly indebted. But for their labors the deeply interesting history and
            folk-lore of Mexico and Peru would have been inadequately preserved, and the
            languages of many tribes outside the pale of settled life must have perished.
            Together with the fine churches attached to the mission settlements, the
            cathedral and parish churches of Spanish America, often built on the sites of
            ancient temples, form an unique series of historical monuments. Entirely built
            by native labor, and largely by voluntary contributions from native sources,
            they were to a great extent served by pastors of Indian or partly Indian
            descent, a class whom it was the policy of Spain to foster, and through which
            her control of her vast American dominions was in some measure maintained. 
            
             Francis
            Bacon 
            
             What was the
            effect of the New World in the realm of learning and science? Here, on the
            whole, the New World, at least in the first eighty years of its history,
            figures rather as a consequence than a cause. At Montaigne’s death Francis
            Bacon, designing to reconstruct the system of the sciences, was meditating and
            elaborating the great series of books and tractates in which his views were
            given to the world; and in many of his writings it is clear that America with
            its physical features, its plants and animals, and its aboriginal race, was
            largely the subject of his meditation, and that the vast array of facts
            associated with it enlarged and modified his opinions and forecasts. To some
            extent Bacon was the scholar of Montaigne, whose conception of America as the
            middle one of three island, continents which once lay westward of the Old
            World, the vanished Atlantis which gave its name to the Atlantic, the new-found
            America beyond it, and a third, still undiscovered, but probably soon to be
            revealed in the unknown expanses of the Pacific, and called by Bacon “New
            Atlantis”, as bearing the same geographical relation to the New World which the
            earlier Atlantis had borne to the Old, underlies his noble philosophical
            romance bearing that name as its title. Bacon’s habit of thought and study had
            induced in him a broader and profounder conception of the New World than that
            presented in the pages of his French predecessor. The phenomena of society,
            which chiefly attracted Montaigne, had for him only a secondary interest.
            Thirsting to know the Causes of Things, he aspired to comprehend nature in her
            entirety, to penetrate her secret, and to interpret her message: and the New
            World lent him opportune and unexpected help. The configuration of sea and land
            surfaces, the mountains, the tides and winds, the animals and plants of the New
            World, opened for the first time an enormous field of physical enquiry. The New
            World, for example, threw new light on the distribution of terrestrial and
            maritime areas. Like the continents of the Old World (Europe and Asia for the
            purpose of this comparison counting as one) both North and South America
            broadened out towards the north and tapered towards the south, the alternative
            principle of termination by variously shaped peninsulas being found here also
            to recur. What, Bacon asked, was the shape of that supposed continent lying
            south of the Strait of Magalhaes, and commonly called Terra Australis? The
            conflicting or according phenomena of the tides in different places; the
            water-spouts; the refrigeration of the air by icebergs on the Canadian coast;
            the balmy breezes blowing to seaward from Florida; the trade-winds, which had
            lent Europe wings to carry her across the Atlantic: the constant westerly or
            anti-trade winds blowing towards the Portuguese shore, from which, it was
            sometimes said, Colombo had inferred the existence of a western continent
            generating them; the comparatively cold climate of North America, the frozen
            expanse of Labrador being in the latitude of Britain, and the contradictory
            phenomena of the Peruvian coast, which lay almost under the Equator, while its
            ocean breezes, blowing hardest at the full moons, were said to produce a
            climate like that of Southern Europe; the strange inequalities of temperature
            experienced in different parts of the Peruvian Cordilleras; the alleged
            phenomenon that the peaks of the Andes remain destitute of snow, while it
            thickly covers their lower elevations, with the effects produced on man by
            their attenuated air, not so much cold as keen, piercing the eyes and purging
            the stomach; such enquiries as these, never previously formulated, make Bacon
            the founder of modern physical geography. American man, in his physical and
            ethnological aspect, strongly attracted Bacon’s attention. 
            
             Prospects
            of European civilization in America
            
             Was the
            extraordinary longevity of the Brazilian and Virginian tribes, who retained
            manly vigour at the age of 120 years, connected with their practice of painting
            the skin? What was the cause of a similar phenomenon in Peru? Was it true, as
            some alleged, that the fearful morbus gallicus, then for the first time
            raging in Europe, and supposed, though erroneously, to have been imported from
            America, had its origin in the loathsome practice of cannibalism? What was the
            effect on American man of maize, as his staple diet? In America, where flint
            was scarce, fire was universally kindled by the wooden drill. The American
            Prometheus, then, in Bacon’s words, “had no intelligence with the
            European”,  and the arts of life must have originated independently in the
            New World; an inference somewhat boldly made from a single pair of facts, but
            which accorded, though Bacon knew it not, with the traditions of Mexico and
            Peru, and is amply confirmed in our own well-informed age, by everything known
            as to the general progress of the American aborigines. By an effort of judgment
            for which the materials scarcely existed, and which had certainly never been
            made before his time, Bacon mentally arrayed against each other the polished
            nations of Europe and the barbarous or savage ones of America, and asked
            himself the reason of the contrast. Was it to be sought in the soil, in the
            sky, in the physical constitution of man? These suggestions he answered
            negatively; the difference, he concluded, lay solely in the fact that the
            American peoples, for some as yet unknown reason, had made less progress in the
            arts of life. We know the reason to be Nature's parsimony in furnishing the
            western continent with animals capable of labor and amenable to domestication. 
           Here another
            question presented itself to this prince among thinkers. Was the project of
            planting the civilization of Europe among the American savages, a project
            widely entertained in Western Europe, a feasible one? Bacon answered this also
            in the negative. Nor is it doubtful that, having regard to the contemporary
            idea of “planting”, Bacon was right. The idea of teaching the Indians “to live
            virtuously, and know of men the manner, and also to know God their Maker”, was
            not yet obsolete; and the Spaniards, according to their lights, were vigorously
            prosecuting the task in Mexico and elsewhere. It has been reserved for a later
            age, in most respects more advanced, to acquiesce in a system of colonization
            which dispossesses the aboriginal owners of the soil, and deals with them as
            with vermin to be hunted down, or stamped out, or deported to holes and corners
            of the land, to dwindle and die out under the effect of poverty, chagrin, and
            vices introduced by their civilized conquerors. From the Discovery to the time
            when European nations adopted a commercial policy and a commercial morality
            -from Colombo to Penn- those of the natives who submitted to European rule were
            regarded as men to be civilized and Christianized, and ultimately to be blended
            in one race with their European brethren. Bacon discountenanced this view so
            far as concerned the savages of Florida or North Eastern America, and the
            foundation of English colonies there on a corresponding footing. He bade
            Englishmen throw aside ideas which to his thinking savored less of reality than
            of antiquated romances like Amadis de Gaula, and take up Caesar’s Commentaries.
            If Englishmen must perforce colonize, he pointed out to them as the proper
            field of colonial enterprise, the adjacent island of Ireland, whose aboriginal
            people were sunk in a barbarism more shameful than American savagery, because
            of their immediate proximity to, and close relations with, one of the most
            civilized nations on the globe. 
           These instances
            by no means represent the full influence exercised by the New World on the most
            powerful mind of modern times, and through him on ages which have realized his
            ideas without adding anything to their transcendent scope and penetration.
            There can be little doubt that Bacon’s whole scheme for the reconstitution of
            knowledge on a broader basis and firmer foundation, in accordance with the
            truth of things and without regard to the routine of scholastic tradition, and
            with such fullness that, in his own words, the “crystalline globe” of the
            understanding should faithfully reflect all that the “material globe”, or
            external world, offers to his apprehension, was suggested to him by the facts
            briefly sketched in the foregoing pages. Truth, he wrote, was not the daughter
            of Authority, but of Time. America was certainly “the greatest birth of time”;
            Bacon applied these words to the philosophic system of which he was the
            founder. The discovery of America gave the human intellect what is known to
            mechanics as a “dead lift”. It dispelled a secular illusion; it destroyed the
            old blind reverence for antiquity, which Spenser might well have depicted as a
            sightless monster, stifling mankind in its serpentine embraces. Truth, to
            borrow from Milton an allegory worthy of Bacon, had been hewn, like the body of
            Osiris, into a thousand pieces. Philosophy, like Isis, the disconsolate spouse,
            wandered over the earth in quest of them: and the time would come when they
            should be “gathered limb to limb, and molded into an immortal feature of
            loveliness and perfection”. What “grounds of hope”, to use Bacon’s phrase, for
            that glorious reunion, or rather, what certain auguries of its ultimate
            attainment, he gathered from the New Cosmography, his writings abundantly
            testify. His own vast survey of knowledge, attained or that ought to be attained,
            he modestly described as a coasting voyage or periegesis of the “New
            Intellectual World”. He loved to compare his own conjectures and anticipations
            of the boundless results which he knew his method destined to achieve in the
            hands of posterity with the faint indications which had inspired Colombo to
            attempt that mirabilis navigatio, that daring six weeks’ voyage westward
            across the Atlantic. Feebly, indeed, and through the darkness of night, he
            says, blew the breeze of hope from the shores of the New Continent of knowledge
            and power towards him, as from his lonely elevation he eagerly watched for
            those cheering signals which he knew would sooner or later greet the patient
            eye of expectant philosophy, though he himself might not be destined to behold them.
            Those signals, he wrote, must one day come, unless his own faith in the future
            should prove vain, and men were content to remain intellectual abjects.
            Humanity had waited long ages for the accomplishment of Seneca's prophecy, a
            prophecy which was in every mouth at the Discovery, and of which Bacon, like
            all his contemporaries, hailed the Discovery as the destined fulfillment; 
             
             Venient annis
            saecula seris 
           Quibus Oceanus
            vincula rerum 
           Laxet, et ingens
            pateat tellus, 
           Tiphysque
            novos detegat orbes, 
           Nec
            sit terris ultima Thule. 
             
             Possibly he had
            pondered over a less-known passage in the prose writings of the same author,
            who predicts that the time shall come when knowledge shall be vastly increased,
            and men shall look back with amazement at the ignorance of the Greeks and
            Romans. There was confirmation for such hopes in Holy Scripture. The
            anticipation of the Chaldean seer that in the latest times “many should run to
            and fro, and knowledge be increased” he interpreted as foreshadowing the
            opening of five-sixths of the globe, hitherto closed, to man’s travel, study,
            and reinvigorated powers of reasoning. Into the future of history in the narrow
            sense of the word, Bacon ventured only by one memorable forecast, since
            abundantly verified, and more abundantly by momentous events of quite recent
            occurrence. He prophesied that the great inheritances of the East and the West,
            both at the time ready to slip from the feeble grasp of Spain, must alike fall
            to those who commanded the ocean to that Anglo-Saxon race of which he will
            remain to all time one of the most illustrious representatives. 
           
             
 CHAPTER III
             
 
 
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