Moved
by recent events – too many, I think, to name specifically – and not a little
bit inspired by what I consider to be a fairly successful deviation from the
accustomed focus of these posts witnessed of these months just passed, I’ve
decided to once again follow my present whimsy in what is, for me, a rather
unusual direction. For the next several weeks, I’m not going to be discussing a
treaty, a constitution, a public address, or a statute. Nor am I going to spend
what is most assuredly an inordinate amount of time alternately picking apart
or rhapsodizing the polemic scribblings of men who have been dead for longer
than the nation in which I was born and reside has existed. I will, of course,
return to such things in due time. My particular neurosis, you see, is
incurable, though I may from time to time succeed in holding it at bay. This
present moment is one of those times, as it happens. And so, with your
indulgence, dear reader, I’d like to discuss something which on the surface
would appear almost entirely out of place in an orthodox discussion of the
documentary history of the American Founding. I’d like to talk about a piece of
art – a play, in fact – that was created by a woman.
Here
I shall pause for effect.
Pausing…pausing…
Very
good.
Yes,
a play. It is, in fairness, a drama whose political overtones are painfully
obvious, so you see I have not wholly taken leave of my senses. Its author has
also already been a subject of this series, though it was in her role as a
political commentator and polemicist. I speak, of course, of one Mercy Otis
Warren. Having done so, however, I feel compelled to admit that it is something
of a shame that the only women whose work has been heretofore discussed in this
forum shall be forced to remain so for the present. I would so like to explore
the written efforts of other members of her sex, provided they are in some way
relevant to the American Founding, but ready examples are not always so easy to
find. I will, rest assured, continue my periodic search for such things. For
the moment, however, we shall remain in the capable hands of Mrs. Warren.
Hardly a consolation prize, I think – rather more a privilege – for the article
to be examined henceforth is a rare and valuable thing.
First published in 1773, The
Adulterer was a compact, five-act drama intended as a send-up of
Massachusetts Governor Thomas Hutchinson (1711-1780) and an encomium to the
virtue, the fortitude, and the prudence of her fellow citizens of
Massachusetts. Granted, she did not portray these things quite as plainly as
that. As per the customs of contemporary satire, all subjects and settings
under discussion were given false names. Massachusetts was “Upper Servia” and
Hutchinson portrayed as “Rapatio” – because people in the 18th
century, it turns out, liked bad wordplay as much as the creators of Rocky & Bullwinkle. Rapatio’s various hangers-on, meanwhile, were
given foolish-sounding names like “Hazelrod,” “Dupe,” and “Gripeall” and the
good people of Servia granted noble Roman monikers like “Brutus,” “Junius,” and
“Portius.” Subtlety, in short, was not much in evidence. And yet, in the bold
strokes with which Warren painted her heroes and her villains it is possible to
discern something of the popular mood in colonial Massachusetts on the very eve
of the Revolutionary War. Hutchinson was not the tyrant Rapatio, and the colony
he governed not the benighted land of Servia. In 1773, however, this mattered
but little.
While treatises and broadsides like John Dickinson’s Letters from a Farmer in Pennsylvania (1767-1768)
or Thomas Jefferson’s A Summary View of
the Rights of British America (1774) explained at length what certain
American colonists thought about British attempts to subvert their accustomed
prerogatives, examples of artistic expression like The Adulterer seemed more interested in attempting to articulate
how the crisis then unfolding made the citizens of British American feel. If
her fellow citizens responded to Warren’s portrait of their plight – and indeed
they did – it was no doubt because it felt to them like the truth. Or perhaps
it was a matter of aspiration. The ancient Roman past that Warren was so keen
to allude to in her dramatic recasting of the plight of Massachusetts was never
as noble as 18th century commentators made it seem. Orators and
statesmen like Cato the Younger (95BC – 46BC) and Cicero (106BC – 43BC) may
well have been good, honest, noble men who were truly worthy of admiration, but
the society from which they emerged was often plagued by corruption, civil war,
and a latent quality of authoritarianism. By the same token, colonial
Massachusetts could hardly have been considered a bastion of 18th
century Enlightenment thought. Culturally conservative and staid, censorious,
and equally characterized by a self-interested merchant class and a petty
governing elite, the country of Warren’s birth did not favorably compare to the
contemporary ideal of the balanced and virtuous Roman Republic.
Warren’s intention, therefore, by portraying contemporary
Massachusetts using decidedly Roman cultural markers, was perchance not to draw
a literal comparison between the two societies. Rather, by using the image of
ancient Rome that had come to exist within the discourse of the philosophical
Enlightenment – with its self-sacrificing statesmen, carefully-constructed
government, and lionization of public service – as a kind of costume for her
like-minded countrymen, she perhaps sought to inspire and channel their better
impulses towards a useful end. And just as 18th century students of
ancient Rome needed figures like Julius Caesar (100BC – 44BC), Sulla (138BC –
78BC), and Catiline (108BC – 62BC) to represent the forces of corruption,
avarice, and the betrayal of republicans ideals, Warren needed her Rapatio to
take on the role of traitor and autocrat against which the citizens of Servia could
set themselves as defenders of all that was good, and virtuous, and rational.
Thus, as good satire often does, The
Adulterer portrayed a heightened version of reality that bent the facts to
suit its author’s intentions without twisting them so as to appear wholly
unrecognizable. The people of Massachusetts, therefore, saw in the good people
of Servia a version of themselves to which they might conceivably have aspired.
And in Rapatio they saw a version of Governor Hutchinson which many of them
doubtless expected was far too near at hand.
Ah, but we’re getting ahead of ourselves. First, as always,
let’s have a word or two on some of our principle players, and then several
more on the times in which they lived and worked.
As Warren’s biography
was presented upon her first appearance in these pages some months ago, what
follows will naturally be somewhat abridged. Of her birth and upbringing, it
will suffice to say that she was born in 1732 in Barnstable, Massachusetts,
that she was the third of thirteen children born to James Otis, Sr. (1702-1778)
and Mary Allyne (1702-1774), that her father was a prominent lawyer and
statesman, and that Mercy was accordingly raised in a household that prized
literacy and tended towards a high degree of political engagement. Between
studying under family tutor Johnathan Russell and aiding her brother James Jr.
(1725-1783) with his graduate readings at Harvard, she managed to acquire an
education of uncommon depth for a woman in 18th century
Massachusetts. She subsequently put this intellectual cultivation to use, after
having married Plymouth lawyer and merchant James Warren (1726-1808), as a
fervent supporter, correspondent, and counsellor to a number of local political
organizations – the infamous Sons of Liberty chief among them – as they became
increasingly concerned by the emerging crisis between Great Britain and its
American colonies. In consequence, over the course of the 1760s and early 1770s,
Warren maintained regular contact with such soon-to-be-prominent figures as
John (1735-1826) and Abigail (1744-1818), and Samuel (1722-1803) Adams, hosted
political meetings in her Plymouth home, and even began to put her budding
literary prowess to public use with the publication of several highly satirical
plays. The first of these, The Adulterer,
was published anonymously in preview on March 22nd, 1772 in the Massachusetts Spy, with a completed
edition available the following year.
As mentioned above, the antagonist of
Warren’s Adulterer, the tyrannical
Rapatio, was intended as a pastiche of one Thomas Hutchinson, then Governor of
the Province of Massachusetts Bay. Since Hutchinson’s life has likewise been
related in these pages – in the final entry on one of Benjamin Franklin’s own
satirical efforts – the following chronicle will once again strive for brevity.
Born in 1711 to a prominent merchant family in the North End of Boston, Hutchinson graduated from Harvard at age sixteen, became established in business at age twenty-one, and entered politics at age twenty-six. Serving first as a Boston Selectman, he was thereafter elected to the colonial legislature in 1728, lost his seat in 1739 because of his opposition to the use of paper currency, was re-elected in 1742, and defeated again in 1749. These recurrent setbacks notwithstanding, Hutchinson was thereafter appointed to the Massachusetts Legislative Council, granted a seat on the Court of Common Pleas, and became Lieutenant-Governor in 1758 and Chief Justice of the Superior Court of Judicature – in spite of the post having been earlier promised to James Otis Sr. – in 1760. Despite – or perhaps because of – this steady rise within the ranks of the colonial elite, however, the pinnacle of Hutchinson’s professional success proved also to herald the most trying years of his life. Between 1760 and his recall from the governorship in 1774, his every official action seemed to meet with accusations of tyranny and corruption by the increasingly belligerent – and increasingly organized – opposition to the colony’s traditional elite.
In spite of his personal opposition to the passage and
implementation of the Stamp Act (1765), for instance, his efforts to promote a
moderate response by the colonial legislature earned him the epithet of traitor
among his countrymen. This perception was hardly allayed by his first official
act as Governor in 1771. Commensurate with instructions from London, the
colonial legislature was to be relocated from Boston to Cambridge – away from
the influence of the former city’s radicals. This met with yet another
firestorm of criticism, which in turn evolved into a lengthy and passionate public
debate between Hutchinson and his opponents over issues of executive authority,
taxation, and parliamentary supremacy. The results were effectively twofold. First,
Hutchinson’s ardently Tory-leaning positions left him increasingly isolated
from his fellow countrymen in Massachusetts. Second, by effectively tying his
own personal unpopularity to the efforts of Parliament to assert its
sovereignty over the colonies, British colonial authorities observed that their
chosen magistrate seemed only to have succeeded in further radicalizing
elements of the colonial population who were otherwise moderate in their views.
When a packet of latter written by Hutchinson to a correspondent in Britain –
in which he expressed opinions unfavorable to the Massachusetts radical
position and promoted increased executive authority at the behest of the
colonial legislature – subsequently found their way into print, it didn’t take
long for the colonial legislature to begin drafting a request for his immediate
recall. This request was eventually granted in the aftermath of the so-called
“Boston Tea Party” of December, 1773, and Hutchinson sailed for London in June,
1774.
At this point it perhaps also bears remembering – to some
degree of detail – that much of what transpired in the lives of Warren and
Hutchinson that is of particular interest to the forthcoming discussion took
place against a backdrop of political tension and civil unrest. From where
these condition arose is – I hope – well-known at this point. Nevertheless, a
brief overview of events in the Thirteen Colonies through 1773:
By the conclusion of
the Seven Years War (1754-1763), Great Britain’s national debt had risen to a
new and entirely unprecedented extreme at the same time that its military
establishment had also grown tremendously. Eager to both retire the staggering
obligations they had accrued and see to the continued employment of hundreds of
army officers from well-connected families, the government of Prime Minister
George Grenville (1712-1770) hit upon a controversial solution. Revenue was to
be raised from Britain’s possessions in America through legislation like the
Sugar Act (1764) and the Stamp Act (1765), the stated purpose of which would be
to fund the continued defense of said possessions by the surplus officers and
their respective commands. While these measures effectively side-stepped the issue
of either raising taxes in Britain itself or establishing a standing army in a
nation whose political culture was violently opposed to the very idea, the
response from Britain’s subjects in America was far from sanguine. A tax on
sugar or on revenue stamps notwithstanding, it was the apparent violation of
their accustomed rights that the colonists took particular issue with. Inculcated
with many of the same core political and cultural values as their cousins in
Britain, Americans from Massachusetts to Georgia vociferously objected both to
the stationing of military personal in their home countries during a time of
peace and to the levying of taxes by a legislature in which not one of them
enjoyed direct representation. The Grenville Ministry, though otherwise willing
to grant the primacy of these convictions, meanwhile reacted poorly to what
they perceived as a challenge to the supremacy of Parliament and the loyalty it
felt British subjects in America owed to the Crown. The result, in the
immediate, was something of an impasse.
For their part, colonial governments in America agreed
amongst themselves to the need for a collective response to British
intransigence. The resulting Stamp Act Congress of 1765 – during which
delegations from nine colonies met in New York City for the purpose of crafting
a strategy of resistance – generated a series of joint petitions intended to
convey the shared objections of Britain’s American subjects to both Parliament
and King George III (1738-1820), as well as plans for a non-importation
agreement intended to secure the repeal of the hated statutes. While British
authorities were alarmed by the decidedly unauthorized nature of the New York
meeting, the complaints of British merchants which resulted from a total
American boycott of their manufactured goods eventually succeeded in pressuring
the vulnerable government of the Marquess of Rockingham (1730-1782) into
replacing the Sugar Act and nullifying the Stamp Act. That this latter action
was accompanied by a formal declaration by Parliament that it nevertheless
possessed the unequivocal right to make law for the colonies in all cases,
however, did not appear to bode well for the colonies. The subsequent passage
of the Townshend Acts (1767) – a series of taxes on goods like paper, paint,
and lead – seemed amply to bear this out. Colonists again widely rejected the
premise of being taxed by a legislature in which they did not enjoy
representation, and found additional fault in the notoriously corrupt Board of
Customs Commissioners established in Boston to see the taxes collected and the
heavy-handed tactics of the Admiralty Courts assigned to prosecute alleged
violators. Smuggling became rampant, riots more and more common, and the
attitudes of both sides seemed daily to harden.
In the midst of these
tensions, newly-appointed Secretary of State for the Colonies Lord Hillsborough
(1718-1793) made the arguably fatal decision to deploy military force as a
means of ensuring colonial cooperation. First, the warship HMS Romney was stationed in Boston Harbor as
a means of countering continued attempts to circumvent customs duties via the
smuggling of taxed goods. Second, in response to the harassment regularly suffered
by customs officials and the popular ire generated by the attempted prosecution
of local residents accused of violating the Townshend duties, four regiments of
the British Army under General Thomas Gage (1719-1787) were garrisoned in
Boston beginning in October of 1768. While two of these regiments were removed
shortly thereafter in 1769, the two that remained proved more than capable of
arousing the suspicion and resentment of the city’s civilian population all on
their own. The events of March 5, 1770 paid fatal heed to this conviction.
Following an altercation between an apprentice wigmaker and a British sentry
outside the Custom House on State Street, a confrontation between a growing mob
of incensed Bostonians and a hastily-assembled patrol of British regulars ended
in bloodshed when the soldiers fired into the crowd. Three people were killed
instantly, one died the next morning, and another passed away two weeks later.
Thomas Hutchinson, then acting-Governor of Massachusetts, arrived on the scene
shortly thereafter and struggled to reassert order. Eventually the crowd was
dispersed, the British soldiers arrested, and charges of murder drawn against
them. The trial that followed – one of the most closely-watched in the history
of Massachusetts, and during which Boston lawyer John Adams acted for the
defence – ended in acquittal for six of the eight accused and guilty verdicts
on charges of manslaughter for the remaining two.
The already tenuous relationship between the
people and government of Massachusetts and the Crown and Parliament of Britain
took on an increasingly volatile aspect in the years that followed what quickly
became known – thanks in no small part to the agitations of Boston radicals
like Samuel Adams – as the Boston Massacre. While, soon after his ascension to the
post of Prime Minister in 1770, Lord North (1732-1792) oversaw the repeal of
most of the import taxes that had so aroused the anger of Britain’s American
subjects, his government’s conviction that a tax on tea should remain – and
that Parliament still possessed the inherent right to levy taxes upon the
colonies of British America – did little to avert this potentially fatal
trajectory. Indeed, it was the continuation and expansion of duties on tea that
precipitated the next major episode in the series of events leading to outright
war between the Thirteen Colonies and the Kingdom of Great Britain. Eager to
aid the financially-struggling East India Company, and desirous of colonial
recognition of its claimed right to tax, the North Ministry devised the Tea Act
(1773) as a means of accomplishing both objectives simultaneously. Under its
terms, Company tea could be exported from British warehouses duty free, shipped
directly to ports in North America, offloaded by authorized co-signees in the
colonies, and sold at a price deemed low enough to undercut the cost of
smuggled Dutch tea. As the established Townshend duty on tea would remain in
force, the relative savings compared to the contraband product would
theoretically ensure the tacit public acceptance of Parliament’s acclaimed
right of taxation.
No comments:
Post a Comment