登陆注册
5192100000009

第9章

Canada, in spite of its scanty population, was better equipped for war than was any of the English colonies.The French were largely explorers and hunters, familiar with hardship and danger and led by men with a love of adventure.The English, on the other hand, were chiefly traders and farmers who disliked and dreaded the horrors of war.There was not to be found in all the English colonies a family of the type of the Canadian family of Le Moyne.Charles Le Moyne, of Montreal, a member of the Canadian noblesse, had ten sons, every one of whom showed the spirit and capacity of the adventurous soldier.They all served in the time of Frontenac.The most famous of them, Pierre Le Moyne d'Iberville, shines in varied roles.He was a frontier leader who made his name a terror in the English settlements; a sailor who seized and ravaged the English settlements in Newfoundland, who led a French squadron to the remote and chill waters of Hudson Bay, and captured there the English strongholds of the fur trade;and a leader in the more peaceful task of founding, at the mouth of the Mississippi, the colony of Louisiana.Canada had the advantage over the English colonies in bold pioneers of this type.

Canada was never doubtful of the English peril or divided in the desire to destroy it.Nearly always, a soldier or a naval officer ruled in the Chateau St.Louis, at Quebec, with eyes alert to see and arms ready to avert military danger.England sometimes sent to her colonies in America governors who were disreputable and inefficient, needy hangers-on, too well-known at home to make it wise there to give them office, but thought good enough for the colonies.It would not have been easy to find a governor less fitted to maintain the dignity and culture of high office than Sir William Phips, Governor of Massachusetts in the time of Frontenac.Phips, however, though a rough brawler, was reasonably efficient, but Lord Cornbury, who became Earl of Clarendon, owed his appointment as Governor of New Jersey and New York in 1701, only to his necessities and to the desire of his powerful connections to provide for him.Queen Anne was his cousin.He was a profligate, feeble in mind but arrogant in spirit, with no burden of honesty and a great burden of debt, and he made no change in his scandalous mode of life when he represented his sovereign at New York.There were other governors only slightly better.Canada had none as bad.Her viceroys as a rule kept up the dignity of their office and respected the decencies of life.

In English colonies, governors eked out their incomes by charging heavy fees for official acts and any one who refused to pay such fees was not likely to secure attention to his business.In Canada the population was too scanty and the opportunity too limited to furnish happy hunting-grounds of this kind.The governors, however, badly paid as they were, must live, and, in the case of a man like Frontenac, repair fortunes shattered at court.To do so they were likely to have some concealed interest in the fur trade.This was forbidden by the court but was almost a universal practice.Some of the governors carried trading to great lengths and aroused the bitter hostility of rival trading interests.The fur trade was easily controlled as a government monopoly and it was unfair that a needy governor should share its profits.But, after all, such a quarrel was only between rival monopolists.Better a trading governor than one who plundered the people or who by drunken profligacy discredited his office.

While all Canada was devoted to the Roman Catholic Church, the diversity of religious beliefs in the English colonies was a marked feature of social life.In Virginia, by law of the colony, the Church of England was the established Church.In Massachusetts, founded by stern Puritans, the public services of the Church of England were long prohibited.In Pennsylvania there was dominant the sect derisively called "Quakers," who would have no ecclesiastical organization and believed that religion was purely a matter for the individual soul.Boston jeered at the superstitions of Quebec, such as the belief of the missionaries that a drop of water, with the murmured words of baptism, transformed a dying Indian child from an outcast savage into an angel of light.Quebec might, however, deride Boston with equal justice.Sir William Phips believed that malignant and invisible devils had made a special invasion of Massachusetts, dragging people from their houses, pushing them into fire and water, and carrying them through the air for miles over trees and hills.

These devils, it was thought, took visible form, of which the favorite was that of a black cat.Witches were thought to be able to pass through keyholes and to exercise charms which would destroy their victims.While Phips and Frontenac were struggling for the mastery of Canada, a fever of excitement ran through New England about these perils of witchcraft.When, in 1692, Phips became Governor of Massachusetts, he named a special court to try accused persons.The court considered hundreds of cases and condemned and hanged nineteen persons for wholly imaginary crimes.Whatever the faults of the rule of the priests at Quebec, they never equaled this in brutality or surpassed it in blind superstition.In New England we find bitter religious persecution.In Canada there was none: the door was completely closed to Protestants and the family within were all of one mind.

There was no one to persecute.

The old contrast between French and English ideals still endures.

At Quebec there was an early zeal for education.In 1638, the year in which Harvard College was organized, a college and a school for training the French youth and the natives were founded at Quebec.In the next year the Ursuline nuns established at Quebec the convent which through all the intervening years has continued its important work of educating girls.In zeal for education Quebec was therefore not behind Boston.But the spirit was different.Quebec believed that safety lay in control by the Church, and this control it still maintains.Massachusetts came in time to believe that safety lay in freeing education from any spiritual authority.Today Laval University at Quebec and Harvard University at Cambridge represent the outcome of these differing modes of thought.Other forces were working to produce essentially different types.The printing-press Quebec did not know; and, down to the final overthrow of the French power in 1763, no newspaper or book was issued in Canada.Massachusetts, on the other hand, had a printing-press as early as in 1638 and soon books were being printed in the colony.Of course, in the spirit of the time, there was a strict censorship.But, by 1722, this had come to an end, and after that the newspaper, unknown in Canada, was busy and free in its task of helping to mold the thought of the English colonies in America.

同类推荐
  • 小问

    小问

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • Days with Sir Roger de Coverley

    Days with Sir Roger de Coverley

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • The Historyof John Bull

    The Historyof John Bull

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 送柳使君赴袁州

    送柳使君赴袁州

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 佛吉祥德赞

    佛吉祥德赞

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 一生必读的悬疑文学经典(大全集)

    一生必读的悬疑文学经典(大全集)

    赵凡禹编著的《一生必读的悬疑文学经典大全集(超值金版)》讲述了:推理惊悚小说距今有近两百年的历史,之所以风靡全世界,就在于它拥有让人充分发挥逻辑思维找到事件真相的空间,让人在阅读时沉迷于扑朔迷离的故事情节中不能自拔,最终却是在得知难以预料的结局时恍然大悟,继而获得阅读快感。《一生必读的悬疑文学经典大全集(超值金版)》精心甄选全世界各地著名的推理惊悚大师之著作,让读者在这些大师诡秘奇异的文字当中,获得难以忘怀的阅读体验。
  • 无瑕

    无瑕

    父亲是开国元勋,母亲是国公夫人,舅舅是威名赫赫的大将军,做为父母的掌上明珠,常家的小凤凰无瑕一直觉得自己的人生可以很轻松惬意,长大后只需寻觅一位美人夫君相伴左右,人生便圆满了。后来却发觉她不得不夺了这天下……
  • 神话血脉

    神话血脉

    800年前,夜空中的星光忽然暴涨一倍,神秘晶石破土而出。人们发现,借助晶石的能量,并在强烈的可以觉醒血脉,返祖先人的信心驱驶下,真的能获得无穷伟力。东方血脉复现出项羽吕布达摩张三丰,甚至悟空,二郎真君这等绝世强者,而在西方,刀枪不入的阿喀琉斯,击杀牛头怪的忒修斯,斩杀美杜莎的珀尔修斯,众多英雄血脉也复现而出。然,神魔辈出的时代里,项峰十五岁了还未能觉醒,直到有一天,他明白一个道理。别人觉醒,需要的是强烈自信,而他需要的则是,他信。项峰曾言:自己认为自己牛比,没用,只有当别人也认为你牛比时,你才是真的牛比。信我为神,天下无魔。信我为魔,屠尽神佛!
  • 蟾蜍怒放

    蟾蜍怒放

    本文包含作者的八篇短篇小说,作者笔锋细腻,并没有阐述太多的思想,而是将他所见所闻所想平实的呈现出来,其中内里的情感与批判,都需要读者慢慢体会。
  • 理财,一辈子的慢思考

    理财,一辈子的慢思考

    在碎片化的时代里,人们很少有整块的时间去关注一件事,理财也没有得到应有的重视,大多数只关注赚钱的过程,并没有发现钱也是有生命力的,它甚至能成为你最好的帮手。可惜,并不是所有人都懂得,不过,这也许对现在正在“侦查世界”的你是个机会,真理和财富一样,只掌握在少数人手里。“理财,一辈子的慢思考”这句话,送给所有人。熊爸的方法具体、可操作性强,用浅显的语言带门外汉入门,坚持阅读全球财经新闻、坚持深夜学堂、不让自己的脑袋成为别人的跑马场、知识管理三步走、投资的五个天气指标、人生的三个存折……从今天起,一起来学习如何从阅读中发现财富真相,抓住财富机会!
  • 天才第一步,追妻漫漫路

    天才第一步,追妻漫漫路

    晏轻瑟这一生没什么别的愿望,只想吃吃喝喝睡睡,偶尔拌拌嘴,衣食无忧即可宋明净“巧了,我也是。不如姑娘我们凑合凑合?”晏轻瑟“你做梦……”宋明净“……”他追她,她躲。他念她,她装作听不多,可谁又明白这一切都是早已经注定好了的。难以逃避,当一切浮散开来,她,又该如何面对
  • 你的温柔好冷漠

    你的温柔好冷漠

    初遇的那年盛夏,他对她说,“你爱我,可以爱到为了我牺牲自己的性命吗?”交往的那年盛夏,他对她说,“若是我没有爱上你呢?”而当她离开他的那年盛夏,他抱着她的相片说,“是谁让你从我身边逃开的,用了这么卑劣的方式来逃开!叶欣婕,没有我的允许,你怎么可以!”……他说,“原来我也会怕,怕你把我丢下,让我孤零零的一个人迎接日升日落。”
  • 牌在谁手上?五个绝招让他对你一见倾心,俯首称臣

    牌在谁手上?五个绝招让他对你一见倾心,俯首称臣

    你的男友是否总是对你趾高气昂?你是否已经厌倦了那些迟迟不肯给你承诺的废柴?男人们经常跟你提出分手吗?或者,你仅仅是想知道,怎样做才能找到男朋友?本书用“致命”5招,教你如何让男人对你俯首称臣,每招每式都可现学现用。让这本美国亚马逊销量第一的社交指南,一次解决你所有恋爱难题!
  • 佐治药言

    佐治药言

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 末世超级猎人

    末世超级猎人

    在残酷的末日世界,是成为猎物还是成为猎人?