Various

The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 13, No. 75, January, 1864


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who were to be its members to a life-long and exacting undertaking, from which there were to be no lookings-back. A day was appointed for the company to meet, on which two committees were chosen, to weigh and present with full force, respectively, the reasons for a removal, and the reasons against it. The "show of hands," when these committees reported, fixed the purpose of the company on what they did not hesitate to believe was the leading of Providence.

      From that moment we find Winthrop busy with cares and efforts of the most exacting character, drawing upon all his great energies, and engaging the fondest devotion of his manly and Christian heart. He gave himself, without stint or regret, with an unselfish and supreme consecration, to the work, cherishing its great aim as the matter of his most earnest piety, and attending to its pettiest details with a scrupulous fidelity which proved that conscience found its province there. We seem almost to be made spectators of the bustle and fervor of the old original Passover scenes of the Hebrew exodus. It is refreshing to pause for a moment over a touch of our common humanity, which we meet by the way. Winthrop in London "feeds with letters" the wife from whom he was so often parted. In one of them he tells her that he has purchased for her the stuff for a "gowne" to be sent by the carrier, and he adds, "Lett me knowe what triminge I shall send for thy gowne." But Margaret, who could trust her honored husband in everything else, was a woman still, and must reserve, not only the rights of her sex, but the privilege of her own good taste for the fitnesses of things. So she guardedly replies,—in a postscript, of course,—"When I see the cloth, I will send word what triminge will serve." In a modest parenthesis of another letter to her, dated October 29, 1629, he speaks of himself, as if all by the way, as "beinge chosen by ye Company to be their Governor." The circumstances of his election and trust, so honorable and dignified, are happily told with sufficient particularity on our own Court Records. Governor Cradock, his honored predecessor, not intending immediate emigration, put the proposition, and announced the result which gave him such a successor.

      Attending frequently upon meetings of the Company, and supervising its own business as well as his private affairs, all having in view what must then have been in the scale of the time a gigantic undertaking, full of vexations and embarrassments, Winthrop seizes upon a few days of crowded heart-strugglings to make his last visit at the dear homestead, and then to take of it his eternal farewell. How lovingly and admiringly do we follow him on his way from London, taking his last view of those many sweet scenes which were thenceforward to embower in his memory all the joys of more than forty years! He did not then know for what a rugged landscape, and for what uncouth habitations, he was to exchange those fair scenes and the ivy-clad and -festooned churches and cottages of his dear England. His wife, for reasons of prudence, was to remain for a while with some of his children, beside his eldest son, and was to follow him when he had made fit preparation for her. His last letters to her (and each of many was written as the last, because of frequent delays) after the embarkation of the company, are gems and jewels of a heart which was itself the pure shrine of a most fond and faithful love. His leave-taking at Groton was at the end of February, 1630; his embarkation was on March 22. The ships were weather-bound successively at Cowes and at Yarmouth, whence were written those melting epistles. A letter which he wrote to Sir William Spring, one of the Parliamentary members from Suffolk, a dear religions friend of his, overflows with an ardor and intenseness of affection which passes into the tone and language of feminine endearment, and fashions passages from the Song of Solomon into prayers. One sentence of that letter keeps sharp its lacerating point for the reader of to-day. "But I must leave you all: our farewells usually are pleasant passages; mine must be sorrowful; this addition of forever is a sad close." And it was to be forever. Winthrop was never to see his native land again. Many of his associates made one or more homeward voyages. A few of them returned to resume their English citizenship in those troublous times which invited and exercised energies like those which had essayed to tame a wilderness. But the great and good leader of his blessed exodus never found the occasion, we know not that he ever felt the prompting, to recross the ocean. The purpose of his life and soul was a unit in its substance and consecration, and it had found its object. For nineteen years, most of them as Governor, and always as the leading spirit and the recognized Moses of the enterprise, he was spared to see the planting and the building-up which subdued the wilderness and reared a commonwealth. He had most noble and congenial associates in the chief magistrates of the other New-England colonies. Bradford and Winslow of Plymouth, Eaton of New Haven, his own son and Haynes and Hopkins of Connecticut, and Williams of Providence Plantations, were all of them men of signal virtue. They have all obtained a good report, and richly and eminently do they deserve it. They were, indeed, a providential galaxy of pure-hearted, unspotted, heroic men. There is a mild and sweet beauty in the star of Winthrop, the lustre of which asks no jealous or rival estimation.

      THE PLANTING OF THE APPLE-TREE

      Come, let us plant the apple-tree!

      Cleave the tough greensward with the spade;

      Wide let its hollow bed be made;

      There gently lay the roots, and there

      Sift the dark mould with kindly care,

              And press it o'er them tenderly,

      As, round the sleeping infant's feet,

      We softly fold the cradle-sheet:

              So plant we the apple-tree.

      What plant we in the apple-tree?

      Buds, which the breath of summer days

      Shall lengthen into leafy sprays;

      Boughs, where the thrush with crimson breast

      Shall haunt and sing and hide her nest.

              We plant upon the sunny lea

      A shadow for the noontide hour,

      A shelter from the summer shower,

              When we plant the apple-tree.

      What plant we in the apple-tree?

      Sweets for a hundred flowery springs,

      To load the May-wind's restless wings,

      When, from the orchard-row, he pours

      Its fragrance through our open doors;

              A world of blossoms for the bee;

      Flowers for the sick girl's silent room;

      For the glad infant sprigs of bloom.

              We plant with the apple-tree.

      What plant we in the apple-tree?

      Fruits that shall swell in sunny June,

      And redden in the August noon,

      And drop, as gentle airs come by

      That fan the blue September sky;

              While children, wild with noisy glee,

      Shall scent their fragrance as they pass,

      And search for them the tufted grass

              At the foot of the apple-tree.

      And when above this apple-tree

      The winter stars are quivering bright,

      And winds go howling through the night,

      Girls, whose young eyes o'erflow with mirth,

      Shall peel its fruit by cottage-hearth,

              And guests in prouder homes shall see,

      Heaped with the orange and the grape,

      As fair as they in tint and shape,

              The fruit of the apple-tree.

      The fruitage of this apple-tree

      Winds and our flag of stripe and star

      Shall bear to coasts that lie afar,

      Where men shall wonder at the view,

      And ask in what fair groves they grew;

              And