登陆注册
19656100000112

第112章 Chapter (1)

Marion retires to his Farm, which he finds in Ruins -- Is returned to the Senate from St. John -- His Course on the Confiscation Act --Anecdotes -- Is made Commandant at Fort Johnson -- His Marriage --A Member of the State Convention in 1794 -- Withdraws from Public Life --His Death.

It was with no reluctance but with the cheerful preference which Marion had always given, since manhood, to the life of the farmer, that he returned to its simple but attractive avocations.

But the world with him was, as it were, to be begun anew;no easy matter to one whose habits had been necessarily rendered irregular by the capricious and desultory influences of a military career;still more difficult in the case of one who has entered upon the last period of life. The close of the Revolution found him destitute of means, almost in poverty, and more than fifty years old. His health was good, however; his frame elastic; his capacity for endurance, seemingly, as great as ever. But his little fortune had suffered irretrievably.

His interests had shared the fate of most other Southern patriots, in the long and cruel struggle through which the country had gone.

His plantation in St. John's, Berkeley, lay within a mile of one of the ordinary routes of the British army, and his career was not calculated to move them to forbearance in the case of one, whose perpetual activity and skill so constantly baffled their designs.

His estate was ravaged, and subjected to constant waste and depredation.

One-half of his negroes were taken away, and the rest only saved to him by their fidelity. The refuge in swamp and forest was as natural to the faithful negro, on the approach of the British uniforms, as to the fugitive patriot. Ten workers returned to him, when he was prepared to resume his farm, but he was destitute of everything beside.

The implements of culture, plantation utensils, household furniture, stock, cattle and horses, clothes and provisions for his people, were all wanting, and all to be purchased, and he penniless. He received no compensation for his losses, no reward for his sacrifices and services.

The hope of half pay was held out to him by his more sanguine friends, but this promise was never realized. But, with that cheerful spirit which hopes all things from time, and a meek compliance with what it brings, Marion proceeded to work out his deliverance by manly industry, and a devotion to his interests as true as that which he had yielded to the interests of his country. He had become fond of rural life, and the temporary estrangement of war seemed only to increase his desire for that repose in action, which the agricultural life in the South so certainly secures. But he was not permitted to retire from public service.

The value of his services was too well known, and there was too much yet to be done, towards the repose and security of the country, to suffer them to be dispensed with. He was again returned to the Senate of the State by the people of St. John's. In this situation, he still maintained those noble and disinterested characteristics which had made him equally beloved and venerated. Two anecdotes are preserved of him in his official character, which deserve mention. Both of these grew out of the events of the war. The importance of the Confiscation Act, passed at the session of January, 1782, at Jacksonborough, arose chiefly from the necessity of providing for the emergencies of the State and military, during the continuance of the war. Under existing circumstances, the measure was sustained by our partisan. But the case was altered when the British ministry abandoned their pretensions to the country, and when it was left by their armies. It was then that numerous offenders --those who had been least conspicuous for their Tory predilections --applied for the indulgence and forbearance of the State.

Petitions were poured into the Legislature, sustained by such pleas and friends as the circumstances of the suppliants could procure --excusing their conduct, asserting their repentance, and imploring the restoration of their possessions. Marion's course in regard to these suppliants may be inferred from his previous character.

There was nothing vindictive in his nature. He was superior to the baser cravings of a dogged vengeance, and his vote and voice declared his magnanimity. It so happened that the first of these petitions upon which he was called to act, came from one of that class of timid, time-serving persons, who, with no predilections for virtue, no sympathy for principles or country, simply shape their course with regard to safety. He was a man of wealth, and the effect of wealth in perilous times is but too frequently to render selfishness equally cowardly and dishonest. The amount of his offence consisted in trimming, while the strife was doubtful, between Whig and Tory, and siding with the latter when the British gained the ascendency.

He did not take up arms, took no active part in public affairs, and was content to shelter his person and possessions under a cautious insignificance. About eighteen months before, Marion had met the petitioner at a gathering of the people.

The latter approached and offered our partisan his hand. But the juncture was one in which it behooveth patriotism to speak out at all hazards.

The struggle was for life and death, on the part equally of Whig and Tory.

Marion knew the character of the person, and disdained it.

To the surprise of all, who knew how scrupulous of insult he was, --how indulgent and forbearing, -- he turned away from the trimmer and the sycophant without recognition. This treatment was greatly censured at the time, and when Marion rose in the Senate, to speak on the subject of the petition of the man whom he had so openly scorned, it was taken for granted that he would again give utterance to feelings of the sort which moved him then.

同类推荐
  • 江南野史

    江南野史

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 本草述钩元

    本草述钩元

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 河南程氏遗书

    河南程氏遗书

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 农家

    农家

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 西河词话

    西河词话

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 异界之舍我其谁

    异界之舍我其谁

    江天,从小被人欺辱,甚至心爱的女孩也被强行带走,他不甘,他愤怒,决心修炼九死一生的《开天造化决》,从此走上一条逆袭之路!天才,这江天这个妖孽面前,总是备受打击,感慨道:既生江天,何生我!称霸异界,舍我其谁,佛挡杀佛,神挡杀神!我是江天,注定要站在异界之巅的男人!
  • 斗战

    斗战

    苍月大陆,在这里没有单纯的斗气,没有单纯的魔法,有的仅仅是斗气与魔法的结合——斗气元素,没有过多的等级之分,有的仅仅是无止境斗气值……
  • 医方简义

    医方简义

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 恋爱写真

    恋爱写真

    他是华丽的贵族,是痴心守护爱情的王子,上帝的一次玩笑,却让他变成生活在情感回忆中的假面王子。她是奢华的钻石,是褪下虚荣光环的公主,命运的一次邂逅,却让她最终扮演在感情纠纷中的替身玩偶。对他们来说,这是上帝赐予的邂逅,又是上帝茶余饭后的玩笑。他们坚持各自的信仰,却能让对方泪如雨下……
  • 渔家小夫郎

    渔家小夫郎

    一向喜欢温顺之物的曲隐却因为意外从人牙子那里以十两银子买回来了一只对她极度警惕,还带着利爪的“小野猫”,尤其是一言不合张嘴就咬,并且随时准备逃跑的那种……曲隐:我怎么仿佛看见了我那十两银子打水漂了呢……【情节虚构,请勿模仿】
  • 凡尘仙缘

    凡尘仙缘

    堪笑荣华枕中客,对莲余做世外仙。入了侧殿,方坐定,那嬷嬷便问:“皇后娘娘差我来瞧瞧,十三公主的膝上可好了?”
  • 前妻不乖

    前妻不乖

    傲娇老公狠虐冷淡美娇妻……过世前女友,现任女朋友,掂对冷清溪。好好先生的上司、霸气多金的男主好友、品学兼优的男同事……围绕冷清溪。冷清溪大吼“老娘,有人爱,不缺你一个。”慕氏总裁——慕寻城。因为契约婚不待见冷清溪,极尽虐待之能事。喜欢冷清溪,死鸭嘴硬说不出,别扭引误会……
  • 方法总比问题多

    方法总比问题多

    有问题找方法不仅是一种理念,也是一种工作态度。欧俊编著的《方法总比问题多》既是一部心灵励志书,它告诉人们在工作和生活中要积极地面对问题和困难,不妥协、不后退;同时又是一部思维工具书,《方法总比问题多》教会人们在工作和生活中如何开动思维的动力火车,寻找智慧、灵感和解决问题的方法和工具。
  • 重生之未央长乐

    重生之未央长乐

    她善权谋懂人心却也逃不过一个情字,被那人剜心剖腹八个月大的孩子惨死在她面前,她却只能眼睁睁看着无能为力,这一次她定毁了那人的天下,杀尽负她之人!
  • 高上玉皇本行集经

    高上玉皇本行集经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。