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The Real America in Romance,
Volume 6
The Project Gutenberg eBook, The Real America in Romance, Volume
6; A
Century Too Soon (A Story of Bacon's Rebellion), by John R. Musick
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Title: The Real America in Romance, Volume 6; A Century Too Soon
(A Story of Bacon's Rebellion)
Author: John R. Musick
Release Date: December 5, 2003 [eBook #10387]
Language: English
Chatacter set encoding: iso-8859-1
***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE REAL
AMERICA IN ROMANCE, VOLUME 6; A CENTURY TOO SOON
(A STORY OF BACON'S REBELLION)***
E-text prepared by Juliet Sutherland, Charlie Kirschner, and the Project
Gutenberg Online Distributed Proofreading Team
THE REAL AMERICA IN ROMANCE, VOLUME VI, A CENTURY
TOO SOON
The Age of Tyranny
By
JOHN R. MUSICK
ILLUSTRATIONS BY
FREELAND A. CARTER
1909
To
MY WIFE,
WHO SHARES MY JOYS AND SORROWS, TOILS AND CARES,
THIS BOOK
IS AFFECTIONATELY DEDICATED
BY
THE AUTHOR
PREFACE.
Historians have bestowed little attention to that important period in our
great commonwealth, just after the restoration in England. Though one
hundred years before liberty was actually obtained, the sleeping
goddess seemed to have opened her eyes on that occasion and yawned,
though she closed them the next moment for a sleep of a century longer.
Events produce such strange and lasting impressions on individuals as
well as on nations, that the historian may not be much out of the way,
who fancies that he sees in the reign of Cromwell the outgrowth of
republicanism, which culminated in the establishment of a free and
independent English-speaking people on the American continent. The
two principal classes of English colonists were the cavaliers and the
Puritans, though there were also Quakers, Catholics, and settlers of
other creeds. Generally the cavaliers were the "king's men," or royalists,
and the Puritans republicans. The different characteristics of these two
sects were quite marked. The Puritans were sober and industrious, quiet,
fanatically religious and strict, while the cavaliers were polite, gallant,
brave, good livers and quite fond of display. They were nearly all of the
Church of England, with rather loose morals, fond of fox-hunting and
gay society. During the time of the Commonwealth of England, the
Puritans were in power, and the king's people, cavaliers, or royalists
were reinstated on the restoration of monarchy in 1660.
Sir William Berkeley, a bigoted churchman, a lover of royalty, and one
who despised, republicanism and personal liberty so heartily that he
could "thank God that there were neither printing-presses nor public
schools in Virginia," was appointed by Charles II. governor of Virginia.
Berkeley, whose early career was bright with promise, seems in his old
age to have become filled with hatred and avarice. He was too stubborn
to listen to the counsel even of friends. Being engaged in a profitable
traffic with the Indians, he preferred to let them slaughter the people on
the frontier, rather than to allow his business to be interfered with.
Berkeley's tyranny was carried to such an extreme, that rebellion was
the natural consequence. Rebellion always follows some injury or
misplaced confidence in the powers of the government. This rebellion
came a "century too soon," being just one hundred years before the
great revolution, which set at liberty all the colonies of North America.
In this story we take up John Stevens and his son Robert, the son and
grandson of Philip Stevens, whose story was told in "Pocahontas." The
object has been to give a complete history of the period and to depict
home life, manners and customs of the time in the form of a pleasing
story. It remains for the reader to say if the effort has been a success.
JOHN R. MUSICK.
KIRKSVILLE, MO., August 1st, 1892.
TABLE OF CONTENTS.
CHAPTER I.
THE DUCKING STOOL
CHAPTER II.
SEEKING BETTER FORTUNE
CHAPTER III.
THE COLONIES OF THE NEW WORLD
CHAPTER IV.
THE STORM AND SHIPWRECK
CHAPTER V.
JOHN STEVENS' CHARGE
CHAPTER VI.
THE ISLAND OF DESOLATION
CHAPTER VII.
IN WIDOW'S WEEDS
CHAPTER VIII.
THE STEPFATHER
CHAPTER IX.
THE MOVING WORLD
CHAPTER X.
THE FUGITIVE AND HIS CHILD
CHAPTER XI.
TYRANNY AND FLIGHT
CHAPTER XII.
THE DAUGHTER OF A REGICIDE
CHAPTER XIII.
LEFT ALONE
CHAPTER XIV.
THE TREASURE SHIP
CHAPTER XV.
THE ANGEL OF DELIVERANCE
CHAPTER XVI.
KING PHILIP'S WAR
CHAPTER XVII.
NEARING THE VERGE
CHAPTER XVIII.
THE SWORD OF DEFENCE
CHAPTER XIX.
THE MYSTERIOUS STRANGER
CHAPTER XX.
BACON A REBEL
CHAPTER XXI.
BURNING OF JAMESTOWN
CHAPTER XXII.
VENGEANCE WITH A VENGEANCE
CHAPTER XXIII.
CONCLUSION
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