登陆注册
15394200000065

第65章 YORKTOWN(7)

Thus it was that the war ended.Great Britain had urged especially the case of the Loyalists, the return to them of their property and compensation for their losses.She could not achieve anything.Franklin indeed asked that Americans who had been ruined by the destruction of their property should be compensated by Britain, that Canada should be added to the United States, and that Britain should acknowledge her fault in distressing the colonies.In the end the American Commissioners agreed to ask the individual States to meet the desires of the British negotiators, but both sides understood that the States would do nothing, that the confiscated property would never be returned, that most of the exiled Loyalists would remain exiles, and that Britain herself must compensate them for their losses.This in time she did on a scale inadequate indeed but expressive of a generous intention.The United States retained the great Northwest and the Mississippi became the western frontier, with destiny already whispering that weak and grasping Spain must soon let go of the farther West stretching to the Pacific Ocean.When Great Britain signed peace with France and Spain in January, 1783, Gibraltar was not returned; Spain had to be content with the return of Minorca, and Florida which she had been forced to yield to Britain in 1763.Each side restored its conquests in the West Indies.France, the chief mainstay of the war during its later years, gained from it really nothing beyond the weakening of her ancient enemy.The magnanimity of France, especially towards her exacting American ally, is one of the fine things in the great combat.The huge sum of nearly eight hundred million dollars spent by France in the war was one of the chief factors in the financial crisis which, six years after the signing of the peace, brought on the French Revolution and with it the overthrow of the Bourbon monarchy.Politics bring strange bedfellows and they have rarely brought stranger ones than the democracy of young America and the political despotism, linked with idealism, of the ancient monarchy of France.

The British did not evacuate New York until Carleton had gathered there the Loyalists who claimed his protection.These unhappy people made their way to the seaports, often after long and distressing journeys overland.Charleston was the chief rallying place in the South and from there many sad-hearted people sailed away, never to see again their former homes.The British had captured New York in September, 1776, and it was more than seven years later, on November 25, 1783, that the last of the British fleet put to sea.Britain and America had broken forever their political tie and for many years to come embittered memories kept up the alienation.

It was fitting that Washington should bid farewell to his army at New York, the center of his hopes and anxieties during the greater part of the long struggle.On December 4, 1783, his officers met at a tavern to bid him farewell.The tears ran down his cheeks as he parted with these brave and tried men.He shook their hands in silence and, in a fashion still preserved in France, kissed each of them.Then they watched him as he was rowed away in his barge to the New Jersey shore.Congress was now sitting at Annapolis in Maryland and there on December 23, 1783, Washington appeared and gave up finally his command.We are told that the members sat covered to show the sovereignty of the Union, a quaint touch of the thought of the time.The little town made a brave show and "the gallery was filled with a beautiful group of elegant ladies." With solemn sincerity Washington commended the country to the protection of Almighty God and the army to the special care of Congress.Passion had already subsided for the President of Congress in his reply praised the "magnanimous king and nation" of Great Britain.By the end of the year Washington was at Mount Vernon, hoping now to be able, as he said simply, to make and sell a little flour annually and to repair houses fast going to ruin.He did not foresee the troubled years and the vexing problems which still lay before him.Nor could he, in his modest estimate of himself, know that for a distant posterity his character and his words would have compelling authority.What Washington's countryman, Motley, said of William of Orange is true of Washington himself: "As long as he lived he was the guiding star of a brave nation and when he died the little children cried in the streets." But this is not all.To this day in the domestic and foreign affairs of the United States the words of Washington, the policies which he favored, have a living and almost binding force.This attitude of mind is not without its dangers, for nations require to make new adjustments of policy, and the past is only in part the master of the present; but it is the tribute of a grateful nation to the noble character of its chief founder.

BIBLIOGRAPHICAL NOTE

In Winsor, "Narrative and Critical History of America", vol.VI(1889), and in Larned (editor), "Literature of American History", pp.111-152 (1902), the authorities are critically estimated.

There are excellent classified lists in Van Tyne, "The American Revolution" (1905), vol.V of Hart (editor), "The American Nation", and in Avery, "History of the United States", vol.V, pp.422-432, and vol.VI, pp.445-471 (1908-09).The notes in Channing, "A History of the United States", vol.III (1913), are useful.Detailed information in regard to places will be found in Lossing, "The Pictorial Field Book of the Revolution", 2 vols.

(1850).

同类推荐
  • 剖心记

    剖心记

    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。
  • 明伦汇编人事典十五岁部

    明伦汇编人事典十五岁部

    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。
  • 广志绎

    广志绎

    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。
  • 憨休禅师敲空遗响

    憨休禅师敲空遗响

    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。
  • BLIX

    BLIX

    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。
热门推荐
  • 巫师本纪

    巫师本纪

    翱翔的鱼鹰从水中抓出一尾鱼儿,看了看外面的世界后,又把它扔回河中。不甘的鱼儿,花了二百年寻找翱翔天空的翅膀,寻找那只鱼鹰。那在天空中翱翔的何止鱼鹰啊!……前路多舛,作为鱼儿的灯塔,梅林。一个乡下小贵族,怀抱着鱼儿的明灯,在时空之流中,遥望着天空……
  • 不灭道皇

    不灭道皇

    武者强身健体,凝结斗气,只手破苍穹。魔法师冥思苦想,凝练精神,一念裂天地。炼金术士勤学苦练,绘制魔阵,智力造万物。………陈旭,大陆有名的废物,偶得华夏世界力量的传承,会给这个世界带来怎么样的冲击?上击九天,下荡十地,人挡杀人,神挡屠神。且看他牛逼哄哄,横推一切。
  • 王者世界之上古冲突

    王者世界之上古冲突

    时空裂缝,被一场千古战争打开缝隙。中国第一勇士和第二勇士,李元霸和宇文成都灵魂穿越到,人们不为人知的上古。重生并且成熟。
  • 圣战风云录

    圣战风云录

    是命运的驱使还是召唤,让他来到风云再起的世界,争霸的舞台?
  • 四六话

    四六话

    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。
  • 等你到天明

    等你到天明

    爱是什么,我们一直在追寻。爱是“山有木兮木有枝”的暗恋;爱是跨越千年的执着;爱是红颜枯骨的守候;爱是轻而易举的放弃;爱是不可理解的追寻。等到天明,我们的故事会结束,爱还在继续。
  • 忍古楼词话

    忍古楼词话

    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。
  • 火焰纹章之玛克

    火焰纹章之玛克

    军师中的皇者,被称为神军师。当那注定的神军师被异界之人所代替,那么,命运的齿轮将会运转到何方?举起手中之剑,元素环绕于身,原罪缠绕,品德随身。军师之神,魔剑之圣。玛——克
  • 冥帝养成之樱仙嫁到

    冥帝养成之樱仙嫁到

    某男:“看你那么凄惨,我就勉为其难的让你跟我回家好了。”某女:“什么凄惨,什么勉为其难,你这是绑架好不好!”某男无赖:“是吗?我以为我这是救你出来。”某女一个劲的翻着白眼“那好吧,其实我是为了拯救那个男人。”
  • 御妖笔录

    御妖笔录

    你们相信妖怪的存在吗?他们繁衍生存了近千年,早已无声无息的融入了人类社会,他们的平常容貌与人类并无差异,甚至比人类更美丽更聪慧。人类除妖师同样秘密潜入,他们是妖怪的天敌,他们自称是人类的守护者,数百年间在无数个暗夜下与妖怪进行殊死搏斗!苏羽羽从小跟爷爷在远离大城的山林中长大,见识过各方妖怪,懂得各种收妖法术,是一位强大的除妖师。然而从小就远离城市的她因为常年不与生人打交道所以有些性格孤僻和心思单纯,她的父母决定在她十六岁时接回到他们身边抚养。这个不爱说话又善良纯真的女孩在大城市中又将会遭遇什么?会邂逅什么样的人与妖呢?