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<h2> CHAPTER VIII. </h2>
<h3> 1613-1615. </h3>
<p>RUIN OF FRENCH ACADIA.</p>
<p>"Praised be God, behold two thirds of our company safe in France, telling
their strange adventures to their relatives and friends. And now you will
wish to know what befell the rest of us." Thus writes Father Biard, who
with his companions in misfortune, fourteen in all, prisoners on board
Argall's ship and the prize, were borne captive to Virginia. Old Point
Comfort was reached at length, the site of Fortress Monroe; Hampton Roads,
renowned in our day for the sea-fight of the Titans; Sewell's Point; the
Rip Raps; Newport News,—all household words in the ears of this
generation. Now, far on their right, buried in the damp shade of
immemorial verdure, lay, untrodden and voiceless, the fields where
stretched the leaguering lines of Washington where the lilies of France
floated beside the banners of the new-born republic, and where in later
years embattled treason confronted the manhood of an outraged nation. And
now before them they could descry the mast of small craft at anchor, a
cluster of rude dwellings fresh from the axe, scattered tenements, and
fields green with tobacco.</p>
<p>Throughout the voyage the prisoners had been soothed with flattering tales
of the benignity of the Governor of Virginia, Sir Thomas Dale; of his love
of the French, and his respect for the memory of Henry the Fourth, to
whom, they were told, he was much beholden for countenance and favor. On
their landing at Jamestown, this consoling picture was reversed. The
Governor fumed and blustered, talked of halter and gallows, and declared
that he would hang them all. In vain Argall remonstrated, urging that he
had pledged his word for their lives. Dale, outraged by their invasion of
British territory, was deaf to all appeals; till Argall, driven to
extremity, displayed the stolen commissions, and proclaimed his stratagem,
of which the French themselves had to that moment been ignorant. As they
were accredited by their government, their lives at least were safe. Yet
the wrath of Sir Thomas Dale still burned high. He summoned his council,
and they resolved promptly to wipe off all stain of French intrusion from
shores which King James claimed as his own.</p>
<p>Their action was utterly unauthorized. The two kingdoms were at peace.
James the First, by the patents of 1606, had granted all North America,
from the thirty-fourth to the forty-fifth degree of latitude, to the two
companies of London and Plymouth,—Virginia being assigned to the
former, while to the latter were given Maine and Acadia, with adjacent
regions. Over these, though as yet the claimants had not taken possession
of them, the authorities of Virginia had no color of jurisdiction. England
claimed all North America, in virtue of the discovery of Cabot; and Sir
Thomas Dale became the self-constituted champion of British rights, not
the less zealous that his championship promised a harvest of booty.</p>
<p>Argall's ship, the captured ship of La Saussaye, and another smaller
vessel, were at once equipped and despatched on their errand of havoc.
Argall commanded; and Biard, with Quentin and several others of the
prisoners, were embarked with him. They shaped their course first for
Mount Desert. Here they landed, levelled La Saussaye's unfinished
defences, cut down the French cross, and planted one of their own in its
place. Next they sought out the island of St. Croix, seized a quantity of
salt, and razed to the ground all that remained of the dilapidated
buildings of De Monts. They crossed the Bay of Fundy to Port Royal,
guided, says Biard, by an Indian chief,—an improbable assertion,
since the natives of these coasts hated the English as much as they loved
the French, and now well knew the designs of the former. The unfortunate
settlement was tenantless. Biencourt, with some of his men, was on a visit
to neighboring bands of Indians, while the rest were reaping in the fields
on the river, two leagues above the fort. Succor from Poutrincourt had
arrived during the summer. The magazines were by no means empty, and there
were cattle, horses, and hogs in adjacent fields and enclosures. Exulting
at their good fortune, Argall's men butchered or carried off the animals,
ransacked the buildings, plundered them even to the locks and bolts of the
doors, and then laid the whole in ashes; "and may it please the Lord,"
adds the pious Biard, "that the sins therein committed may likewise have
been consumed in that burning."</p>
<p>Having demolished Port Royal, the marauders went in boats up the river to
the fields where the reapers were at work. These fled, and took refuge
behind the ridge of a hill, whence they gazed helplessly on the
destruction of their harvest. Biard approached them, and, according to the
declaration of Poutrincourt made and attested before the Admiralty of
Guienne, tried to persuade them to desert his son, Biencourt, and take
service with Argall. The reply of one of the men gave little encouragement
for further parley:—</p>
<p>"Begone, or I will split your head with this hatchet."<br/></p>
<p>There is flat contradiction here between the narrative of the Jesuit and
the accounts of Poutrincourt and contemporary English writers, who agree
in affirming that Biard, "out of indigestible malice that he had conceived
against Biencourt," encouraged the attack on the settlements of St. Croix
and Port Royal, and guided the English thither. The priest himself admits
that both French and English regarded him as a traitor, and that his life
was in danger. While Argall's ship was at anchor, a Frenchman shouted to
the English from a distance that they would do well to kill him. The
master of the ship, a Puritan, in his abomination of priests, and above
all of Jesuits, was at the same time urging his commander to set Biard
ashore and leave him to the mercy of his countrymen. In this pass he was
saved, to adopt his own account, by what he calls his simplicity; for he
tells us, that, while—instigated, like the rest of his enemies, by
the Devil—the robber and the robbed were joining hands to ruin him,
he was on his knees before Argall, begging him to take pity on the French,
and leave them a boat, together with provisions to sustain their miserable
lives through the winter. This spectacle of charity, he further says, so
moved the noble heart of the commander, that he closed his ears to all the
promptings of foreign and domestic malice.</p>
<p>The English had scarcely re-embarked, when Biencourt arrived with his
followers, and beheld the scene of destruction. Hopelessly outnumbered, he
tried to lure Argall and some of his officers into an ambuscade, but they
would not be entrapped. Biencourt now asked for an interview. The word of
honor was mutually given, and the two chiefs met in a meadow not far from
the demolished dwellings. An anonymous English writer says that Biencourt
offered to transfer his allegiance to King James, on condition of being
permitted to remain at Port Royal and carry on the fur-trade under a
guaranty of English protection, but that Argall would not listen to his
overtures. The interview proved a stormy one. Biard says that the
Frenchmen vomited against him every species of malignant abuse. "In the
mean time," he adds, "you will considerately observe to what madness the
evil spirit exciteth those who sell themselves to him."</p>
<p>According to Pontrincourt, Argall admitted that the priest had urged him
to attack Port Royal. Certain it is that Biencourt demanded his surrender,
frankly declaring that he meant to hang him. "Whilest they were
discoursing together," says the old English writer above mentioned, "one
of the savages, rushing suddenly forth from the Woods, and licentiated to
come neere, did after his manner, with such broken French as he had,
earnestly mediate a peace, wondring why they that seemed to be of one
Country should vse others with such hostilitie, and that with such a forme
of habit and gesture as made them both to laugh."</p>
<p>His work done, and, as he thought, the French settlements of Acadia
effectually blotted out, Argall set sail for Virginia on the thirteenth of
November. Scarcely was he at sea when a storm scattered the vessels. Of
the smallest of the three nothing was ever heard. Argall, severely
buffeted, reached his port in safety, having first, it is said, compelled
the Dutch at Manhattan to acknowledge for a time the sovereignty of King
James. The captured ship of La Saussaye, with Biard and his colleague
Quentin on board, was forced to yield to the fury of the western gales and
bear away for the Azores. To Biard the change of destination was not
unwelcome. He stood in fear of the truculent Governor of Virginia, and his
tempest-rocked slumbers were haunted with unpleasant visions of a rope's
end. It seems that some of the French at Port Royal, disappointed in their
hope of hanging him, had commended him to Sir Thomas Dale as a proper
subject for the gallows drawing up a paper, signed by six of them, and
containing allegations of a nature well fitted to kindle the wrath of that
vehement official. The vessel was commanded by Turnel, Argall's
lieutenant, apparently an officer of merit, a scholar and linguist. He had
treated his prisoner with great kindness, because, says the latter, "he
esteemed and loved him for his naive simplicity and ingenuous candor." But
of late, thinking his kindness misplaced, he had changed it for an extreme
coldness, preferring, in the words of Biard himself, "to think that the
Jesuit had lied, rather than so many who accused him."</p>
<p>Water ran low, provisions began to fail, and they eked out their meagre
supply by butchering the horses taken at Port Royal. At length they came
within sight of Fayal, when a new terror seized the minds of the two
Jesuits. Might not the Englishmen fear that their prisoners would denounce
them to the fervent Catholics of that island as pirates and sacrilegious
kidnappers of priests? From such hazard the escape was obvious. What more
simple than to drop the priests into the sea? In truth, the English had no
little dread of the results of conference between the Jesuits and the
Portuguese authorities of Fayal; but the conscience or humanity of Turnel
revolted at the expedient which awakened such apprehension in the troubled
mind of Biard. He contented himself with requiring that the two priests
should remain hidden while the ship lay off the port: Biard does not say
that he enforced the demand either by threats or by the imposition of
oaths. He and his companion, however, rigidly complied with it, lying
close in the hold or under the boats, while suspicious officials searched
the ship, a proof, he triumphantly declares, of the audacious malice which
has asserted it as a tenet of Rome that no faith need be kept with
heretics.</p>
<p>Once more at sea, Turnel shaped his course for home, having, with some
difficulty, gained a supply of water and provisions at Fayal. All was now
harmony between him and his prisoners. When he reached Pembroke, in Wales,
the appearance of the vessel—a French craft in English hands—again
drew upon him the suspicion of piracy. The Jesuits, dangerous witnesses
among the Catholics of Fayal, could at the worst do little harm with the
Vice-Admiral at Pembroke. To him, therefore, he led the prisoners, in the
sable garb of their order, now much the worse for wear, and commended them
as persons without reproach, "wherein," adds the modest father, "he spoke
the truth." The result of their evidence was, we are told, that Turnel was
henceforth treated, not as a pirate, but, according to his deserts, as an
honorable gentleman. This interview led to a meeting with certain
dignitaries of the Anglican Church, who, much interested in an encounter
with Jesuits in their robes, were filled, says Biard, with wonder and
admiration at what they were told of their conduct. He explains that these
churchmen differ widely in form and doctrine from the English Calvinists,
who, he says, are called Puritans; and he adds that they are superior in
every respect to these, whom they detest as an execrable pest.</p>
<p>Biard was sent to Dover and thence to Calais, returning, perhaps, to the
tranquil honors of his chair of theology at Lyons. La Saussaye, La Motte,
Fleury, and other prisoners were at various times sent from Virginia to
England, and ultimately to France. Madame de Guercheville, her pious
designs crushed in the bud, seems to have gained no further satisfaction
than the restoration of the vessel. The French ambassador complained of
the outrage, but answer was postponed; and, in the troubled state of
France, the matter appears to have been dropped.</p>
<p>Argall, whose violent and crafty character was offset by a gallant bearing
and various traits of martial virtue, became Deputy-Governor of Virginia,
and, under a military code, ruled the colony with a rod of iron. He
enforced the observance of Sunday with an edifying rigor. Those who
absented themselves from church were, for the first offence, imprisoned
for the night, and reduced to slavery for a week; for the second offence,
enslaved a month and for the third, a year. Nor was he less strenuous in
his devotion to mammon. He enriched himself by extortion and wholesale
peculation; and his audacious dexterity, aided by the countenance of the
Earl of Warwick, who is said to have had a trading connection with him,
thwarted all the efforts of the company to bring him to account. In 1623,
he was knighted by the hand of King James.</p>
<p>Early in the spring following the English attack, Pontrincourt came to
Port Royal. He found the place in ashes, and his unfortunate son, with the
men under his command, wandering houseless in the forests. They had passed
a winter of extreme misery, sustaining their wretched existence with
roots, the buds of trees, and lichens peeled from the rocks.</p>
<p>Despairing of his enterprise, Poutrincourt returned to France. In the next
year, 1615, during the civil disturbances which followed the marriage of
the King, command was given him of the royal forces destined for the
attack on Mery; and here, happier in his death than in his life, he fell,
sword in hand.</p>
<p>In spite of their reverses, the French kept hold on Acadia. Biencourt,
partially at least, rebuilt Port Royal; while winter after winter the
smoke of fur traders' huts curled into the still, sharp air of these
frosty wilds, till at length, with happier auspices, plans of settlement
were resumed.</p>
<p>Rude hands strangled the "Northern Paraguay" in its birth. Its beginnings
had been feeble, but behind were the forces of a mighty organization, at
once devoted and ambitious, enthusiastic and calculating. Seven years
later the "Mayflower" landed her emigrants at Plymouth. What would have
been the issues had the zeal of the pious lady of honor preoccupied New
England with a Jesuit colony?</p>
<p>In an obscure stroke of lawless violence began the strife of France and
England, Protestantism and Rome, which for a century and a half shook the
struggling communities of North America, and closed at last in the
memorable triumph on the Plains of Abraham.</p>
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