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The
Heath Anthology of American Literature, Fourth Edition Paul Lauter, General Editor |
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William Bradford
(1590-1657)
Born into a Yorkshire
family of yeoman farmers, William Bradford’s
early misfortune must have made him more
receptive to the religious fervor and sense of
community that Puritanism later provided. By the
age of seven, Bradford was orphaned of both
parents and a grandfather, and soon was sent to
live with his uncles, who raised him as a
farmer. His fragile health and sense of
isolation allowed him plenty of time to read his
Bible, and when at the age of twelve he heard
the sermons of Richard Clyfton, a nonconformist
minister, Bradford felt spiritually moved.
Despite the scorn of family and friends,
Bradford in 1606 became a member of this group
of Separatists who had formed their own
congregation in the village of Scrooby under the
direction of Clyfton, John Robinson, his later
successor to the pulpit, and William Brewster,
the group’s pre-eminent elder. Because of
pressure to conform to the hierarchy of the
Anglican Church, the Scrooby group in 1608 fled
to Holland and eventually settled in Leyden.
After one disastrous business venture, William
Bradford became a weaver.
In 1620 part of
the Leyden congregation, along with an
assortment of less pious emigrants, departed on
the Mayflower to establish a settlement
where they could maintain a church of “ancient
purity” freed from European entanglements. In
November they arrived off the shores of what is
now Cape Cod, Massachusetts (somewhat farther
north than they had intended), and in December
disembarked at Plymouth. Since John Robinson had
stayed behind in Leyden, William Brewster became
the settlers’ spiritual leader, preaching
regularly on Sundays; because of the Separatist
emphasis upon spontaneity, other members gave
short, impromptu sermons as they wished. When
Plymouth’s first governor, John Carver, died in
1621, Bradford was elected to take his place.
The governor wielded extensive powers by
contemporary standards: chief judge and jury,
superintendent of agriculture and trade, and
secretary of state. During his lifetime Bradford
was re-elected to the position thirty times,
serving almost continuously, for a total term of
thirty-three years until his death in
1657.
In 1630 William Bradford wrote the
first book of his history, Of Plymouth
Plantation. Perhaps the settlement that year
of a much larger, and potentially overshadowing,
Puritan colony at Massachusetts Bay prompted
Bradford to begin his history. He put aside the
manuscript until 1644, when he finished the
eleventh chapter, and, between 1646 and 1650, he
brought the account of the colony’s struggles
and achievements through the year
1646.
Surprisingly, Bradford’s unfinished
manuscript was not published until 1856. It had
remained in the Bradford family until 1728, when
Reverend Thomas Prince placed it in his personal
library in Boston’s Old South Church. During the
American Revolution, the manuscript was lost,
presumably stolen by a British soldier during
the British occupation of Boston
(1775–1776). In 1855, scholars intrigued by
references to Bradford in two books on the
history of the Episcopal Church in America (both
written in England) located the manuscript in
the bishop of London’s library at Lambeth
Palace. In 1897, after a protracted legal
battle, Of Plymouth Plantation was
returned to Massachusetts. The unfinished
manuscript of Of Plymouth Plantation is
not Bradford’s only literary effort—he wrote a
journal of Plymouth’s first year, some poems,
and a series of dialogues—but it
constitutes his greatest literary achievement.
For Bradford the history of the Plymouth
settlers closely followed the plot of the Old
Testament. The Puritans’ journey to the New
World indicated a covenanted relationship with
God for which God’s relationship with the
Israelites provided a model and a guide. This
interpretive strategy, known as typology,
influenced a number of later New England
historians such as Nathaniel Morton, Cotton
Mather, and Thomas Prince.
The way in
which Bradford composed Of Plymouth
Plantation should remind us that his history
is not a yearly chronicle of events but a
retrospective attempt to interpret God’s design
for his “saints,” that exclusive group of
believers predestined for eternal salvation.
Like the Puritan journal, the genre of Puritan
history served a distinctly useful
purpose in enhancing spiritual life. Bradford
hoped to demonstrate the workings of divine
providence for the edification of future
generations, and since all temporal events
theoretically conveyed divine meaning, the
texture of Bradford’s writing is as rich in
historical detail as it is patterned on the
language of the Geneva Bible. The word choice
and cadence of Bradford’s prose manifested a
constant reminder of the biblical precedent for
Puritan history. Yet a major tension in his
narrative involves the difficulty in
interpreting the providential will. As Bradford
repeatedly encounters human wickedness and
duplicity, Of Plymouth Plantation
increasingly reveals its author’s perplexity
over the apparent ambiguity of divine
providence. Bradford maintains his piety, but he
is forced to acknowledge his perception of an
infinite gulf between man and God. Such an
acknowledgment amplifies the narrative’s tone of
humility, established at the outset, in
Bradford’s declaration that he shall write in
the Puritan “plain style” of Biblical simplicity
and concrete image, and tell the “simple truth”
as well as his “slender judgment” would
permit.
Many readers have noted the
elegiac note of sadness on which Of Plymouth
Plantation ends. If Bradford’s realization
that “so uncertain are the mutable things of
this unstable world” dictates his humility
throughout, his final entries particularly
pronounce a sense of loss. In the eulogy to
William Brewster Bradford lamented, most of all,
the disappearance of a communitarian vision
embodied by the first-generation founders like
Brewster and John Robinson. To Bradford, those
first emigrants whom he called “Pilgrims”
exemplified the value of community and sense of
purpose that were presumably waning in the 1640s
as second-generation inhabitants and new
immigrants looked for better farmland. Of
Plymouth Plantation thus speaks a message
characteristic of much of the literature of
immigration: the paradoxical nature of
prosperity and success, the sense that, in this
case, the founding of the first successful
British settlement in New England led only to
fragmentation and
dispersal.
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Philip
Gould Brown University
Michael
Drexler Brown University
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Texts
In the Heath Anthology
from Of Plymouth Plantation (Book
I) from
Chapter IX: "Of Their Voyage, and How They
Passed the Sea; and of Their Safe Arrival at
Cape Cod" (1630) from Chapter I:
"The Separatist Interpretation of the
Reformation in England 1550-1607"
(1646-1650)
from Of Plymouth
Plantation (Book II)
Chapter XI: "The Remainder of Anno 1620" [The
Mayflower Compact, The Starving Time, Indian
Relations] (1646-1650)
from Chapter XIV: "Anno Domini 1623" [End of
the "Common Course and Condition"]
(1646-1650) from Chapter
XIX: "Anno Domini 1628" [Thomas Morton of
Merrymount] (1646-1650)
from Chapter XXIII: "Anno Domini 1632"
[Prosperity Brings Dispersal of Population] (1646-1650) from Chapter
XXIX: "Anno Domini 1638" [Great and Fearful
Earthquake] (1646-1650)
from Chapter XXVIII: "Anno Domini 1637" [The
Pequot War] (1646-1650)
from Chapter XXXII: "Anno Domini 1642"
[Wickedness Breaks Forth; A Horrible Case of
Bestiality] (1646-1650)
from Chapter XXXIII: "Anno Domini 1643" [The
Life and Death of Elder Brewster, The New
England Confederation and the Narragansetts] (1646-1650) from Chapter
XXXIV: "Anno Domini 1644" [Proposal to Remove to
Nauset] (1646-1650)
Other Works
Mourt's Relation
(1622)
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Links
American
Writers: A Journey Through History (http://www.americanwriters.org/writers/bradford.asp) Biographical
sketch, links, and information about a video
history of Bradford.
Bradford's
Grave (http://www.findagrave.com/pictures/124.html) Morbid
but fascinating site offering photos of
Bradford's grave in Plymouth, MA.
Modern
History SourceBook (http://www.fordham.edu/halsall/mod/1650bradford.html) Digitized
selections from History of Plymouth
Plantation, c. 1650.
William
Bradford (http://members.aol.com/calebj/bradford.html) Site
offers a biography, ancestral summary, and
selected secondary
resources.
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Secondary Sources
David Cressy,
Coming Over, 1987
Robert Daly,
"William Bradford's Vision of History,"
American Literature, 44, 1973
Alan
B. Howard, "Art and History in Bradford's Of
Plymouth Plantation," William and Mary
Quarterly, 3rd ser., 28, 1971
David
Levin, "William Bradford: The Value of Puritan
Historiography," in Everett H. Emerson's
Major Writers of Early American
Literature, 1972
Bradford, Smith,
Bradford of Plymouth, 1951
Walter
P. Wenska, "Bradford's Two Histories," Early
American Literature, 8, 1978
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