But the revolutionary years saw a repudiation as well as a culmination of eighteenth-century ideals. The politics of politeness had envisioned responsible leaders whose attention to the limits of power and local sensibilities earned the trust of their community. By contrast, the political culture that emerged out of the Revolution often suspected not only politicians but government itself, seeing it as something distinct, even alien. Mason Locke Weems’s immensely popular Life of George Washington similarly argued that public behavior could be deceptive but “private life is always real life.” Such a distinction between public and private was not entirely new, but it became central to the nineteenth-century culture of middle-class respectability and Evangelical religion. Despite these changes, however, American culture continued to celebrate values that had been central to the politics of politeness—moderation, self-control, and sympathetic concern for the feelings of others.33 The ideal of restrained power that had been part of polite ideals also remained at the center of America’s political culture.
The cultural divisions between public power and personal life that developed in the nineteenth-century rethinking of the politics of politeness underlie some central elements of modern thinking about freedom: free markets, privacy, and civil society. Yet the pervasiveness of these views has made it hard to see their roots in eighteenth-century thinking that saw governments and gentility as intimately linked. Paradoxically, the strongest evidence for the influence of the politics of politeness may be our continuing inability to recognize the eighteenth-century connections between society and government that made possible their later separation.
PART I
ATTACKING AUTHORITARIANISM
CHAPTER 1
The Rages of Francis Nicholson
Three years later, the conversations seemed more ominous than they had at the time. The first was in December 1698, on the day Francis Nicholson again became governor of Virginia. After six years of what he considered exile in Maryland, he should have been elated. Instead Nicholson was troubled by letters he had received from his English supporters. Each counseled him to be “moderate.” The new governor showed the correspondence to his closest ally, William and Mary College president James Blair. “What the Devil,” Nicholson asked, did “they [mean] to recommend moderacon to him.” Knowing the governor’s hot temper, Blair suggested that they had a point. Nicholson would have none of it. “If I had not hampered th’m in Maryland & kept them under I should never have been able to have governed them,” he told Blair: “G—, I know better to Govern Virginia & Maryland than all y’e Bishops in England.”1
Blair felt uneasy about the conversation. When the issue came up again six weeks later, he again noted the importance of a civil manner. Nicholson replied that he knew how to deal with discontented assemblies. He could even do without them. When the president refused to back down, Nicholson commanded him “in a great passion” never to speak with him about government again.2
The dispute was surprising. The two men had enjoyed a long and fruitful political partnership. While governing Virginia from 1690 to 1692, Nicholson had helped Blair obtain the charter for what became the College of William and Mary and backed him as its first president. But Nicholson was forced to accept a lesser post as lieutenant governor of Maryland. Even after becoming governor two years later, he still dreamed of returning to Virginia. In 1697, Blair, financed by Nicholson, traveled to London to lobby for his return, a trip that led to Nicholson regaining the post. Even after the arguments that marred the governor’s return, the two remained close allies, working together in such matters as moving the colony’s capital to what became Williamsburg.
Figure 2. James Blair (1705). Blair had this portrait painted in England while he was lobbying to have his former ally Francis Nicholson removed as governor in 1705. Soon to turn fifty, Blair had by then been president of the College of William and Mary for a dozen years. John Hargrave, English, Active 1693–c. 1719, Portrait of James Blair (c. 1655–1743), 4/1705. Gift of Mrs. Mary M. Peachy, 1829.001, Muscarelle Museum of Art at the College of William & Mary in Virginia.
As time went on, however, what Blair called “the violence of [Nicholson’s] Governm’t” increased. The governor engaged in “continual roaring & thundering, cursing & swearing, base, abusive, billingsgate Language.” He called the colony’s leaders “dogs, rogues, villains, dastards, cheats, and cowards”; its women “whores, bitches, [and] jades.”3
Nicholson’s rages were so extraordinary, Blair warned a correspondent, that his report would seem incredible to people who had not seen them.4 But other witnesses reported similar experiences. His “Huffing and Hectoring” was particularly strong, a local minister noted, after the failure of his attempt to woo the teenaged daughter of a prominent family. Though the governor (then in his mid- forties) had pursued her with poems about his “pretty charming innocent dove,” she finally rejected him. A furious Nicholson threatened “to cut the throats of three men” if she married, the bridegroom, the justice of the peace who issued the license, and the clergyman who performed the ceremony. The affair, he declared in a six-hour tirade, “must end in blood.”5
Another observer noted a similarly troubling outburst in 1702, when some naval officers assigned to Virginia were staying in the college building. Pacing the halls with one of the guests in the evening, the governor “flew out into … a Passion.” Shouts and curses echoed through the building. Fearing a repeat of the fire that had broken out two days before, one sea captain left his room so quickly that he forgot to bring his wooden leg. The guests, amazed at Nicholson’s “Folly & Passion,” declared that “the fittest Place for such a Man” was “Bedlam,” the fabled London asylum.6 According to one of Nicholson’s friendly correspondents, this judgment was not far from that held by the bishop of London, a major figure in the Anglican church, who suggested that the most plausible excuse the governor could make for his behavior might be a claim of insanity.7
About the time of the incident (although not entirely because of it), Blair also began to question the governor’s fitness. The problem, he told London officials later in 1702, was not simply the governor’s “passions,” frightening as they were. Nicholson’s rages cloaked his true intentions, “a maine designe” to take further power. Blair’s frustration grew so intense that he finally embarked on another voyage to London. Once again, he succeeded, convincing the British government to relieve Nicholson of his duties in 1705.8
Blair’s assessment of the governor’s purposes is difficult to credit. No further evidence of a secret plan has ever appeared. And Blair himself never raised it again. But Nicholson’s violent behavior was more than