Strasburg and Zurich, cities of refuge for conservatives, 104.
Strasburg reformers attempt to reform church at Frankfort, 105.
Straus"s Life of Roger Williams, 308, n. 6; 311, n. 17.
Stubbes"s Philip, Anatomie of Abuses, 100, m.; 119, 127, 134, n. 2; 135, n. 5.
Succession, apostolic, of churchly order and ordinance the mainspring of high-churchism, 302.
Svmme and Svbstance. See BARLOW.
Sumner, George, on John Robinson, 158, n. 3.
Sumptuary laws, 75.
Sunday had sanct.i.ty of a church feast before the Reformation, 125; English reformers retained the Catholic, 125; first called Sabbath in literature, 126; scruples regarding recreations on, 127; brutally cruel sports on the old English, 129; strict observance of, carried to New England, 132; in the middle ages, 138, n. 8; legislation on, rare before the Reformation, 138, n. 8; in time of Edward VI, 138, n. 9; sabbatical character of, denied, 140, n. 13.
See also SABBATH.
Sunday fishing, juries inquire into, 125.
Sunday morning ceremony at Plymouth, 103.
Sunday-Sabbath, theory of a, not confined to the Puritans, 132; Augustine on, in the fifth century, 137, n. 8; 140, n. 13.
Surplices begin to be used in Virginia, 183, n. 3.
Susan Constant, the ship, 25.
Sutton"s Hospital founded by legacy, which c.o.ke defended, later known as Charter-House School, 268.
Swift, Lindsay, on the early election sermons, 313, n. 22.
Symonds, Dr. William, editor of second part of Smith"s Oxford Tract, 61, n. 3.
Synod, the, of 1637, 336, 346, n. 1.
Tales, extravagant, of the Indians, 7, 8; Ralegh distrusts, 21, n. 3.
Taylor"s Observations and Travel from London to Hamburg, 46, m.
Tempest, Shakespeare"s, 17; suggested by the wreck of Gates and Somers, 65, n. 6.
Tenant, the copy-hold, driven to distress, 111.
Tenantry, the suffering, Puritans make common cause with, 111, 135, n. 5.
Theater, pa.s.sionate love of the, 99.
Theocracy, instability of a, 326.
Thomas Aquinas, St., on the fourth commandment, 138, n. 8.
Thurloe, 263, n. 13.
Timber sought in Virginia, 82.
Tobacco, profitable cultivation of, in Virginia, 49, 84; exported, 68, n. 10, n. 11; 96, n. 7; more profitable than silk-raising, 78; culture of, forbidden, 81; King James"s Covnter-Blaste to, 84; John Rolfe planted the first, at Jamestown, 84; heavy duties on, 85, 96, n. 8; seven thousand shops in London, 97, n. 8; inferiority of Indian, 97, n. 9; large profits from, 231; public use of, forbidden in Ma.s.sachusetts, 285.
Toleration, the Baltimore policy, 242, 263, n. 15; principle of, formulated, 254; Act of, pa.s.sed in 1649, 255, 256, 257; intolerable to the rulers of "the Bay," 297; limited and qualified at Amsterdam, 298; decried as a great crime by all the world, 298; a beneficent result of commerce, 298, 312, n. 18.
Tortures, legal, examples of, 46, 67, n. 9.
Town government, the princ.i.p.al feature of civil organization, 325.
Town system, the, 275.
Trade with the Indians by Captain John Smith, 34; suspended after Smith"s departure, 38; renewed by Capt. Argall, 50.
Tragicall Relation, 40, m.; 56, m.; 66, n. 9; 68, n. 12.
Trainbands drilled, 284.
Travel, taste for books of, 2.
Treasure received by Spain from America influenced English colonial projects, 73; wrought mischief to England, 94, n. 1.
True Declaration of the Estate of the Colony of Virginia, 40, m.; 56, m.; 65, n. 5, n. 8.
Trumbull"s Blue Laws, 347, n. 2.
Tucker, Daniel, builds boat at Jamestown, 39.
Underhill, Captain, sent after Williams, 295.
Unicorn, reported find of the, 19, 24, n. 10.
Uniformity not possible, 109.
Upper House, dissension concerning power of the, in Ma.s.sachusetts, 286.
Utopia, the religious, attempted in New England, 342.
Van der Donck"s New Netherland, 23, n. 7.
Van Meteren, Nederlandsche Historic, 312, n. 18.