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<h2> THE GREAT REVOLUTION IN PITCAIRN </h2>
<p>Let me refresh the reader's memory a little. Nearly a hundred years ago
the crew of the British ship Bounty mutinied, set the captain and his
officers adrift upon the open sea, took possession of the ship, and sailed
southward. They procured wives for themselves among the natives of Tahiti,
then proceeded to a lonely little rock in mid-Pacific, called Pitcairn's
Island, wrecked the vessel, stripped her of everything that might be
useful to a new colony, and established themselves on shore. Pitcairn's is
so far removed from the track of commerce that it was many years before
another vessel touched there. It had always been considered an uninhabited
island; so when a ship did at last drop its anchor there, in 1808, the
captain was greatly surprised to find the place peopled. Although the
mutineers had fought among themselves, and gradually killed each other off
until only two or three of the original stock remained, these tragedies
had not occurred before a number of children had been born; so in 1808 the
island had a population of twenty-seven persons. John Adams, the chief
mutineer, still survived, and was to live many years yet, as governor and
patriarch of the flock. From being mutineer and homicide, he had turned
Christian and teacher, and his nation of twenty-seven persons was now the
purest and devoutest in Christendom. Adams had long ago hoisted the
British flag and constituted his island an appanage of the British crown.</p>
<p>To-day the population numbers ninety persons—sixteen men, nineteen
women, twenty-five boys, and thirty girls—all descendants of the
mutineers, all bearing the family names of those mutineers, and all
speaking English, and English only. The island stands high up out of the
sea, and has precipitous walls. It is about three-quarters of a mile long,
and in places is as much as half a mile wide. Such arable land as it
affords is held by the several families, according to a division made many
years ago. There is some live stock—goats, pigs, chickens, and cats;
but no dogs, and no large animals. There is one church building used also
as a capitol, a schoolhouse, and a public library. The title of the
governor has been, for a generation or two, "Magistrate and Chief Ruler,
in subordination to her Majesty the Queen of Great Britain." It was his
province to make the laws, as well as execute them. His office was
elective; everybody over seventeen years old had a vote—no matter
about the sex.</p>
<p>The sole occupations of the people were farming and fishing; their sole
recreation, religious services. There has never been a shop in the island,
nor any money. The habits and dress of the people have always been
primitive, and their laws simple to puerility. They have lived in a deep
Sabbath tranquillity, far from the world and its ambitions and vexations,
and neither knowing nor caring what was going on in the mighty empires
that lie beyond their limitless ocean solitudes. Once in three or four
years a ship touched there, moved them with aged news of bloody battles,
devastating epidemics, fallen thrones, and ruined dynasties, then traded
them some soap and flannel for some yams and breadfruit, and sailed away,
leaving them to retire into their peaceful dreams and pious dissipations
once more.</p>
<p>On the 8th of last September, Admiral de Horsey, commander-in-chief of the
British fleet in the Pacific, visited Pitcairn's Island, and speaks as
follows in his official report to the admiralty:—</p>
<p>They have beans, carrots, turnips, cabbages, and a little maize;<br/>
pineapples, fig-trees, custard-apples, and oranges; lemons, and<br/>
cocoa-nuts. Clothing is obtained alone from passing ships, in barter<br/>
for refreshments. There are no springs on the island, but as it<br/>
rains generally once a month they have plenty of water, although at<br/>
times in former years they have suffered from drought. No alcoholic<br/>
liquors, except for medicinal purposes, are used, and a drunkard is<br/>
unknown....<br/>
<br/>
The necessary articles required by the islanders are best shown by<br/>
those we furnished in barter for refreshments: namely, flannel,<br/>
serge, drill, half-boots, combs, tobacco, and soap. They also stand<br/>
much in need of maps and slates for their school, and tools of any<br/>
kind are most acceptable. I caused them to be supplied from the<br/>
public stores with a Union jack for display on the arrival of<br/>
ships, and a pit-saw, of which they were greatly in need. This, I<br/>
trust, will meet the approval of their lordships. If the munificent<br/>
people of England were only aware of the wants of this most<br/>
deserving little colony, they would not long go unsupplied....<br/>
<br/>
Divine service is held every Sunday at 10.30 A.M. and at 3 P.M.,<br/>
in the house built and used by John Adams for that purpose until he<br/>
died in 1829. It is conducted strictly in accordance with the<br/>
liturgy of the Church of England, by Mr. Simon Young, their selected<br/>
pastor, who is much respected. A Bible class is held every<br/>
Wednesday, when all who conveniently can, attend. There is also a<br/>
general meeting for prayer on the first Friday in every month.<br/>
Family prayers are said in every house the first thing in the<br/>
morning and the last thing in the evening, and no food is partaken<br/>
of without asking God's blessing before and afterward. Of these<br/>
islanders' religious attributes no one can speak without deep<br/>
respect. A people whose greatest pleasure and privilege is to<br/>
commune in prayer with their God, and to join in hymns of praise,<br/>
and who are, moreover, cheerful, diligent, and probably freer from<br/>
vice than any other community, need no priest among them.<br/></p>
<p>Now I come to a sentence in the admiral's report which he dropped
carelessly from his pen, no doubt, and never gave the matter a second
thought. He little imagined what a freight of tragic prophecy it bore!
This is the sentence:—</p>
<p>One stranger, an American, has settled on the island—a doubtful<br/>
acquisition.<br/></p>
<p>A doubtful acquisition, indeed! Captain Ormsby, in the American ship
Hornet, touched at Pitcairn's nearly four months after the admiral's
visit, and from the facts which he gathered there we now know all about
that American. Let us put these facts together in historical form. The
American's name was Butterworth Stavely. As soon as he had become well
acquainted with all the people—and this took but a few days, of
course—he began to ingratiate himself with them by all the arts he
could command. He became exceedingly popular, and much looked up to; for
one of the first things he did was to forsake his worldly way of life, and
throw all his energies into religion. He was always reading his Bible, or
praying, or singing hymns, or asking blessings. In prayer, no one had such
"liberty" as he, no one could pray so long or so well.</p>
<p>At last, when he considered the time to be ripe, he began secretly to sow
the seeds of discontent among the people. It was his deliberate purpose,
from the beginning, to subvert the government, but of course he kept that
to himself for a time. He used different arts with different individuals.
He awakened dissatisfaction in one quarter by calling attention to the
shortness of the Sunday services; he argued that there should be three
three-hour services on Sunday instead of only two. Many had secretly held
this opinion before; they now privately banded themselves into a party to
work for it. He showed certain of the women that they were not allowed
sufficient voice in the prayer-meetings; thus another party was formed. No
weapon was beneath his notice; he even descended to the children, and
awoke discontent in their breasts because—as he discovered for them—they
had not enough Sunday-school. This created a third party.</p>
<p>Now, as the chief of these parties, he found himself the strongest power
in the community. So he proceeded to his next move—a no less
important one than the impeachment of the chief magistrate, James Russell
Nickoy; a man of character and ability, and possessed of great wealth, he
being the owner of a house with a parlor to it, three acres and a half of
yam land, and the only boat in Pitcairn's, a whaleboat; and, most
unfortunately, a pretext for this impeachment offered itself at just the
right time.</p>
<p>One of the earliest and most precious laws of the island was the law
against trespass. It was held in great reverence, and was regarded as the
palladium of the people's liberties. About thirty years ago an important
case came before the courts under this law, in this wise: a chicken
belonging to Elizabeth Young (aged, at that time, fifty-eight, a daughter
of John Mills, one of the mutineers of the Bounty) trespassed upon the
grounds of Thursday October Christian (aged twenty-nine, a grandson of
Fletcher Christian, one of the mutineers). Christian killed the chicken.
According to the law, Christian could keep the chicken; or, if he
preferred, he could restore its remains to the owner and receive damages
in "produce" to an amount equivalent to the waste and injury wrought by
the trespasser. The court records set forth that "the said Christian
aforesaid did deliver the aforesaid remains to the said Elizabeth Young,
and did demand one bushel of yams in satisfaction of the damage done." But
Elizabeth Young considered the demand exorbitant; the parties could not
agree; therefore Christian brought suit in the courts. He lost his case in
the justice's court; at least, he was awarded only a half-peck of yams,
which he considered insufficient, and in the nature of a defeat. He
appealed. The case lingered several years in an ascending grade of courts,
and always resulted in decrees sustaining the original verdict; and
finally the thing got into the supreme court, and there it stuck for
twenty years. But last summer, even the supreme court managed to arrive at
a decision at last. Once more the original verdict was sustained.
Christian then said he was satisfied; but Stavely was present, and
whispered to him and to his lawyer, suggesting, "as a mere form," that the
original law be exhibited, in order to make sure that it still existed. It
seemed an odd idea, but an ingenious one. So the demand was made. A
messenger was sent to the magistrate's house; he presently returned with
the tidings that it had disappeared from among the state archives.</p>
<p>The court now pronounced its late decision void, since it had been made
under a law which had no actual existence.</p>
<p>Great excitement ensued immediately. The news swept abroad over the whole
island that the palladium of the public liberties was lost—maybe
treasonably destroyed. Within thirty minutes almost the entire nation were
in the court-room—that is to say, the church. The impeachment of the
chief magistrate followed, upon Stavely's motion. The accused met his
misfortune with the dignity which became his great office. He did not
plead, or even argue; he offered the simple defense that he had not
meddled with the missing law; that he had kept the state archives in the
same candle-box that had been used as their depository from the beginning;
and that he was innocent of the removal or destruction of the lost
document.</p>
<p>But nothing could save him; he was found guilty of misprision of treason,
and degraded from his office, and all his property was confiscated.</p>
<p>The lamest part of the whole shameful matter was the reason suggested by
his enemies for his destruction of the law, to wit: that he did it to
favor Christian, because Christian was his cousin! Whereas Stavely was the
only individual in the entire nation who was not his cousin. The reader
must remember that all these people are the descendants of half a dozen
men; that the first children intermarried together and bore grandchildren
to the mutineers; that these grandchildren intermarried; after them, great
and great-great-grandchildren intermarried; so that to-day everybody is
blood kin to everybody. Moreover, the relationships are wonderfully, even
astoundingly, mixed up and complicated. A stranger, for instance, says to
an islander:—</p>
<p>"You speak of that young woman as your cousin; a while ago you called her
your aunt."</p>
<p>"Well, she is my aunt, and my cousin, too. And also my stepsister, my
niece, my fourth cousin, my thirty-third cousin, my forty-second cousin,
my great-aunt, my grandmother, my widowed sister-in-law—and next
week she will be my wife."</p>
<p>So the charge of nepotism against the chief magistrate was weak. But no
matter; weak or strong, it suited Stavely. Stavely was immediately elected
to the vacant magistracy, and, oozing reform from every pore, he went
vigorously to work. In no long time religious services raged everywhere
and unceasingly. By command, the second prayer of the Sunday morning
service, which had customarily endured some thirty-five or forty minutes,
and had pleaded for the world, first by continent and then by national and
tribal detail, was extended to an hour and a half, and made to include
supplications in behalf of the possible peoples in the several planets.
Everybody was pleased with this; everybody said, "Now this is something
like." By command, the usual three-hour sermons were doubled in length.
The nation came in a body to testify their gratitude to the new
magistrate. The old law forbidding cooking on the Sabbath was extended to
the prohibition of eating, also. By command, Sunday-school was privileged
to spread over into the week. The joy of all classes was complete. In one
short month the new magistrate had become the people's idol!</p>
<p>The time was ripe for this man's next move. He began, cautiously at first,
to poison the public mind against England. He took the chief citizens
aside, one by one, and conversed with them on this topic. Presently he
grew bolder, and spoke out. He said the nation owed it to itself, to its
honor, to its great traditions, to rise in its might and throw off "this
galling English yoke."</p>
<p>But the simple islanders answered:</p>
<p>"We had not noticed that it galled. How does it gall? England sends a ship
once in three or four years to give us soap and clothing, and things which
we sorely need and gratefully receive; but she never troubles us; she lets
us go our own way."</p>
<p>"She lets you go your own way! So slaves have felt and spoken in all the
ages! This speech shows how fallen you are, how base, how brutalized you
have become, under this grinding tyranny! What! has all manly pride
forsaken you? Is liberty nothing? Are you content to be a mere appendage
to a foreign and hateful sovereignty, when you might rise up and take your
rightful place in the august family of nations, great, free, enlightened,
independent, the minion of no sceptered master, but the arbiter of your
own destiny, and a voice and a power in decreeing the destinies of your
sister-sovereignties of the world?"</p>
<p>Speeches like this produced an effect by-and-by. Citizens began to feel
the English yoke; they did not know exactly how or whereabouts they felt
it, but they were perfectly certain they did feel it. They got to
grumbling a good deal, and chafing under their chains, and longing for
relief and release. They presently fell to hating the English flag, that
sign and symbol of their nation's degradation; they ceased to glance up at
it as they passed the capitol, but averted their eyes and grated their
teeth; and one morning, when it was found trampled into the mud at the
foot of the staff, they left it there, and no man put his hand to it to
hoist it again. A certain thing which was sure to happen sooner or later
happened now. Some of the chief citizens went to the magistrate by night,
and said:—</p>
<p>"We can endure this hated tyranny no longer. How can we cast it off?"</p>
<p>"By a coup d'etat."</p>
<p>"How?"</p>
<p>"A coup d'etat. It is like this: everything is got ready, and at the
appointed moment I, as the official head of the nation, publicly and
solemnly proclaim its independence, and absolve it from allegiance to any
and all other powers whatsoever."</p>
<p>"That sounds simple and easy. We can do that right away. Then what will be
the next thing to do?"</p>
<p>"Seize all the defenses and public properties of all kinds, establish
martial law, put the army and navy on a war footing, and proclaim the
empire!"</p>
<p>This fine program dazzled these innocents. They said:—</p>
<p>"This is grand—this is splendid; but will not England resist?"</p>
<p>"Let her. This rock is a Gibraltar."</p>
<p>"True. But about the empire? Do we need an empire and an emperor?"</p>
<p>"What you need, my friends, is unification. Look at Germany; look at
Italy. They are unified. Unification is the thing. It makes living dear.
That constitutes progress. We must have a standing army and a navy. Taxes
follow, as a matter of course. All these things summed up make grandeur.
With unification and grandeur, what more can you want? Very well—only
the empire can confer these boons."</p>
<p>So on the 8th day of December Pitcairn's Island was proclaimed a free and
independent nation; and on the same day the solemn coronation of
Butterworth I, Emperor of Pitcairn's Island, took place, amid great
rejoicings and festivities. The entire nation, with the exception of
fourteen persons, mainly little children, marched past the throne in
single file, with banners and music, the procession being upward of ninety
feet long; and some said it was as much as three-quarters of a minute
passing a given point. Nothing like it had ever been seen in the history
of the island before. Public enthusiasm was measureless.</p>
<p>Now straightway imperial reforms began. Orders of nobility were
instituted. A minister of the navy was appointed, and the whale-boat put
in commission. A minister of war was created, and ordered to proceed at
once with the formation of a standing army. A first lord of the treasury
was named, and commanded to get up a taxation scheme, and also open
negotiations for treaties, offensive, defensive, and commercial, with
foreign powers. Some generals and admirals were appointed; also some
chamberlains, some equerries in waiting, and some lords of the bedchamber.</p>
<p>At this point all the material was used up. The Grand Duke of Galilee,
minister of war, complained that all the sixteen grown men in the empire
had been given great offices, and consequently would not consent to serve
in the ranks; wherefore his standing army was at a stand-still. The
Marquis of Ararat, minister of the navy, made a similar complaint. He said
he was willing to steer the whale-boat himself, but he must have somebody
to man her.</p>
<p>The emperor did the best he could in the circumstances: he took all the
boys above the age of ten years away from their mothers, and pressed them
into the army, thus constructing a corps of seventeen privates, officered
by one lieutenant-general and two major-generals. This pleased the
minister of war, but procured the enmity of all the mothers in the land;
for they said their precious ones must now find bloody graves in the
fields of war, and he would be answerable for it. Some of the more
heartbroken and unappeasable among them lay constantly wait for the
emperor and threw yams at him, unmindful of the body-guard.</p>
<p>On account of the extreme scarcity of material, it was found necessary to
require the Duke of Bethany postmaster-general, to pull stroke-oar in the
navy and thus sit in the rear of a noble of lower degree namely, Viscount
Canaan, lord-justice of the common pleas. This turned the Duke of Bethany
into tolerably open malcontent and a secret conspirator—a thing
which the emperor foresaw, but could not help.</p>
<p>Things went from bad to worse. The emperor raised Nancy Peters to the
peerage on one day, and married her the next, notwithstanding, for reasons
of state, the cabinet had strenuously advised him to marry Emmeline,
eldest daughter of the Archbishop of Bethlehem. This caused trouble in a
powerful quarter—the church. The new empress secured the support and
friendship of two-thirds of the thirty-six grown women in the nation by
absorbing them into her court as maids of honor; but this made deadly
enemies of the remaining twelve. The families of the maids of honor soon
began to rebel, because there was nobody at home to keep house. The twelve
snubbed women refused to enter the imperial kitchen as servants; so the
empress had to require the Countess of Jericho and other great court dames
to fetch water, sweep the palace, and perform other menial and equally
distasteful services. This made bad blood in that department.</p>
<p>Everybody fell to complaining that the taxes levied for the support of the
army, the navy, and the rest of the imperial establishment were
intolerably burdensome, and were reducing the nation to beggary. The
emperor's reply—"Look—Look at Germany; look at Italy. Are you
better than they? and haven't you unification?"—-did not satisfy
them. They said, "People can't eat unification, and we are starving.
Agriculture has ceased. Everybody is in the army, everybody is in the
navy, everybody is in the public service, standing around in a uniform,
with nothing whatever to do, nothing to eat, and nobody to till the fields—"</p>
<p>"Look at Germany; look at Italy. It is the same there. Such is
unification, and there's no other way to get it—no other way to keep
it after you've got it," said the poor emperor always.</p>
<p>But the grumblers only replied, "We can't stand the taxes—we can't
stand them."</p>
<p>Now right on top of this the cabinet reported a national debt amounting to
upward of forty-five dollars—half a dollar to every individual in
the nation. And they proposed to fund something. They had heard that this
was always done in such emergencies. They proposed duties on exports; also
on imports. And they wanted to issue bonds; also paper money, redeemable
in yams and cabbages in fifty years. They said the pay of the army and of
the navy and of the whole governmental machine was far in arrears, and
unless something was done, and done immediately, national bankruptcy must
ensue, and possibly insurrection and revolution. The emperor at once
resolved upon a high-handed measure, and one of a nature never before
heard of in Pitcairn's Island. He went in state to the church on Sunday
morning, with the army at his back, and commanded the minister of the
treasury to take up a collection.</p>
<p>That was the feather that broke the camel's back. First one citizen, and
then another, rose and refused to submit to this unheard-of outrage—and
each refusal was followed by the immediate confiscation of the
malcontent's property. This vigor soon stopped the refusals, and the
collection proceeded amid a sullen and ominous silence. As the emperor
withdrew with the troops, he said, "I will teach you who is master here."
Several persons shouted, "Down with unification!" They were at once
arrested and torn from the arms of their weeping friends by the soldiery.</p>
<p>But in the mean time, as any prophet might have foreseen, a Social
Democrat had been developed. As the emperor stepped into the gilded
imperial wheelbarrow at the church door, the social democrat stabbed at
him fifteen or sixteen times with a harpoon, but fortunately with such a
peculiarly social democratic unprecision of aim as to do no damage.</p>
<p>That very night the convulsion came. The nation rose as one man—though
forty-nine of the revolutionists were of the other sex. The infantry threw
down their pitchforks; the artillery cast aside their cocoa-nuts; the navy
revolted; the emperor was seized, and bound hand and foot in his palace.
He was very much depressed. He said:—</p>
<p>"I freed you from a grinding tyranny; I lifted you up out of your
degradation, and made you a nation among nations; I gave you a strong,
compact, centralized government; and, more than all, I gave you the
blessing of blessings—unification. I have done all this, and my
reward is hatred, insult, and these bonds. Take me; do with me as you
will. I here resign my crown and all my dignities, and gladly do I release
myself from their too heavy burden. For your sake I took them up; for your
sake I lay them down. The imperial jewel is no more; now bruise and defile
as ye will the useless setting."</p>
<p>By a unanimous voice the people condemned the ex-emperor and the social
democrat to perpetual banishment from church services, or to perpetual
labor as galley-slaves in the whale-boat—whichever they might
prefer. The next day the nation assembled again, and rehoisted the British
flag, reinstated the British tyranny, reduced the nobility to the
condition of commoners again, and then straightway turned their diligent
attention to the weeding of the ruined and neglected yam patches, and the
rehabilitation of the old useful industries and the old healing and
solacing pieties. The ex-emperor restored the lost trespass law, and
explained that he had stolen it—not to injure any one, but to
further his political projects. Therefore the nation gave the late chief
magistrate his office again, and also his alienated Property.</p>
<p>Upon reflection, the ex-emperor and the social democrat chose perpetual
banishment from religious services in preference to perpetual labor as
galley-slaves "with perpetual religious services," as they phrased it;
wherefore the people believed that the poor fellows' troubles had unseated
their reason, and so they judged it best to confine them for the present.
Which they did.</p>
<p>Such is the history of Pitcairn's "doubtful acquisition."</p>
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