ShmoopTube
Where Monty Python meets your 10th grade teacher.
Search Thousands of Shmoop Videos
American Literature: Mayflower Power 1731 Views
Share It!
Transcript
- 00:30
in the early 17th century some new folks arrived in Plymouth yep there goes the
- 00:35
neighborhood who were these odd-looking ankle hiding [Statue of Liberty talking]
- 00:39
people and just what secrets were they hiding beneath their bonnets suppose
- 00:44
you're looking for the absolute definition of conservatism which by the
- 00:47
way is a philosophy that promotes the ideas that tradition should be preserved
Full Transcript
- 00:51
hard work should be regarded above all else and anything the least bit racy is
- 00:57
the devil's work well look no further than the Puritans who even have the word [The Puritans appear]
- 01:02
pure in their name in case you weren't sure the Puritans were devout Protestant
- 01:06
Christians meaning they'd broken off from the beliefs of the Roman Catholic
- 01:09
Church in a number of ways like they believed the Bible was the be-all
- 01:14
end-all accept the word of the Bible and everything else was gravy as Catholics [Bible book and pot of gravy appears on a table]
- 01:19
liked up to sprinkle in some other stuff like going to purgatory praying to
- 01:25
Saints worshipping the Almighty Big Mac etc the Protestants also felt they could
- 01:30
be saved by faith in God alone so they didn't have to do all sorts of good
- 01:34
deeds to get into heaven the Native American were real big fans of this one
- 01:38
and so was King James and so was the Church of England which is a big part of [Pope riding on the Pope-mobile]
- 01:44
the reason the Puritans wanted to skedaddle and seek refuge in America...
- 01:48
you won't let us play our way fine then we're picking up our ball and going home [Puritans walking off with a basketball]
- 01:53
because the Puritans separated from the Church of England to create their own
- 01:57
denominations they are called separatists so clever they looked at the
- 02:02
journey to the new world as an errand into the wilderness yeah it was pretty
- 02:07
much like when your dad tells you he's taking the family camping for the
- 02:10
weekend but with slightly more death and disease [Bear drags man away]
- 02:12
the Puritans didn't care if the way was hard because it was the way they felt
- 02:18
like they'd been chosen to leave England and start a colony overseas so it was
- 02:23
like they didn't even have a choice in the matter [Pokeball lands in a field]
- 02:24
when they arrived it occurred to them that they knew zip about agriculture
- 02:27
but these guys helped them out taught
- 02:31
them how to fish even plant corn the colonists returned the favor by trying
- 02:37
to convert them to their own religion and then murdering them in their sleep
- 02:40
it was like you scratch my back I'll stab you in yours kind of arrangement
- 02:44
nevertheless these prim and proper dudes and dudettes were determined to give
- 02:48
humankind a nice fresh start think Adam and Eve part dude no more body jokes no
- 02:55
more sinful behavior no more Ted movies because they had some big ideas about
- 03:00
how to speak, behave, chew your food, brush your teeth, comb your mullet and so on
- 03:04
they thought of themselves as pilgrims i.e people who are forging a new [Man riding on a ship]
- 03:09
spiritual path by making a holy journey to a new world here's a day in the life
- 03:15
finding food was fun so was keeping cool and warm and bathe... many of them starved
- 03:22
other died in Indian attacks still others knelt and prayed themselves to death...
- 03:25
but no matter what happened these pilgrims stayed strong because they [Pilgrim walking and tree lands on him]
- 03:29
believed that everything that went down was the will of God they believed their
- 03:32
path was the true and holy one and their sacrifices would be rewarded in the long
- 03:37
run in the short run however there would be plenty of scurvy scurvy is a disease
- 03:41
caused by lack of vitamin C these guys did not drink their oOJ... but some survived
- 03:47
they were fighters their God had ordained that they were going to be the [Puritans appear on Amazon order]
- 03:51
founders of a new order had commanded them to separate from the
- 03:55
Church of England to come to the new world to spread word of his awesomeness
- 03:59
and help the ignorant masses see the light so yeah they better do his bidding
- 04:03
God was not an employer you wanted to tick off....
- 04:06
there was no severance package at the end of this rainbow anyway the Puritans
- 04:10
decided to start up their own government [Old England and New American Government outlines]
- 04:15
back in England they'd had to jump every time King James said jump which he did a
- 04:20
lot for some reason but no more it was time for a democratic situation one word
- 04:26
that people had a voice nobody wanted their new colony to repeat old habits
- 04:30
the idea was to outline a new system of government that would prevent any one
- 04:34
lunatic from seizing absolute power instead power would be shared by a large
- 04:39
number of lunatics, like it is today the Puritans arrived on a ship called
- 04:43
The Mayflower so they decided to call their document the Mayflower Compact - It [Mayflower Compact album CD appears]
- 04:48
goes a little something like this in the name of God.....[mumbling]
- 05:03
and yeah that's pretty much the way they used to talk back then you don't get a
- 05:07
lot of furtherance these days so what did this wordy document actually say in
- 05:12
'Merican.. why did the Puritans write it and what did they hope to accomplish short
- 05:17
answer first the Mayflower Compact was a social contract a document that clearly [Do's and Don'ts of Mayflower Compact]
- 05:22
outlined how people should behave in this new society the hope was that by
- 05:26
getting everyone to adhere to this new way of living they could avoid a nasty
- 05:30
situation like the one in England where a single iron fist ruled all the little
- 05:35
people okay here's the long answer in the course of the compact the writers
- 05:40
established a number of things one; God was in charge they hit this 1) right
- 05:45
out of the gates and gave him several other shoutouts later in the document
- 05:48
2) they declared that they were still loyal subjects of King James of England
- 05:53
debatable they were basically settling Plymouth because there were over the
- 05:57
whole cake thing they left England to get away
- 06:00
from him so a nice sentiment but you have to wonder if their heart was really
- 06:04
in that one....3) they were going to give a new system of government a try
- 06:09
since they felt the one that they were leaving where one man had all the power
- 06:12
was unfair they wanted the people to have some say in the course of their
- 06:16
lives 4) There's the whole bit about submission and obedience ie once all the
- 06:21
rules were decided the people of the colony would be expected to submit or
- 06:25
yield to authority and obey ie follow any instructions they were given or else...[Submission and obedience definitions appear]
- 06:32
and 5) finally they made the whole thing official by saying they were
- 06:37
putting their names to the thing basically taking an oath that everyone
- 06:40
was willing to stick to the guidelines okay now for the really long answer
- 06:44
let's dive into the text a bit more and really break this baby down in the name [Puritan dives under water]
- 06:49
of God amen any question about where their allegiance lies right off the bat
- 06:53
we get the idea that God comes first in all matters but it's also important to
- 06:57
note in the name of part these guys many of whom were ministers were
- 07:01
speaking for God we hear they were pretty good at doing the accent we whose
- 07:06
names are underwritten the loyal subjects of our dread Sovereign Lord
- 07:08
King James so yeah all the signatures at the bottom of the document were those of [Signatures at the bottom of document appear]
- 07:13
the gents who were putting forth and agreeing to the terms and they called
- 07:16
themselves loyal subjects of King James although maybe they needed a look up
- 07:20
loyal in the dictionary they were breaking away from the King and startin
- 07:24
up their own thing so they weren't exactly candidates for a loyal subjects [Loyal subjects of the month pictures of dogs appear behind King James]
- 07:27
of the month having undertaken for the glory of God and advancement of the
- 07:32
Christian faith and the honor of our King and country a voyage to plant the
- 07:35
first colony in the northern parts of Virginia in addition to beating the
- 07:39
whole god thing to death, there's also a mention of honor which was a biggie for
- 07:43
the Puritans they were die for their principles type of people a life without [Puritan tied up and Indians with pikes]
- 07:48
honor wasn't worth living and then the specifics they lay out what they were
- 07:52
doing planting a colony and where they were doing it in parts of Virginia okay
- 07:57
so the location is a tad vague but maybe they were trying to keep their party
- 08:00
from being crashed...Do by these presents solemnly and mutually in the presence of
- 08:06
God and one another so here it's a bit of a guilt trip sponsored by trivago
- 08:10
anyone who dares to break any other rules of the colony is breaking not only
- 08:15
the vow they've made to God but the promises they've made to one another no
- 08:18
pressure there ....covenant and combine ourselves together into a civil body
- 08:23
politic for our better ordering and preservation and furtherance of the ends
- 08:27
aforesaid....well sounds like there's a bunch of Autobots [Explosion sounds and Michael Bay appears]
- 08:30
combining themselves into one massive transformer which is roughly the idea
- 08:34
rather than everyone being purely an individual and living by their own rules
- 08:38
the pilgrims are agreeing to work together as one by doing so they believe
- 08:43
they can keep order in the colony preserve it for a long time and further
- 08:47
their ends ie spread the good word about God and help any disbelievers believe [Knife buttering toast]
- 08:52
and by virtue here of do enact constitute and frame such just and equal
- 08:58
laws ordinances acts constitutions and officers from time to time as shall be
- 09:03
thought most meet and convenient for the general good of the colony unto which we
- 09:07
promise all due submission and obedience this part of the compact is just saying
- 09:11
for all the reasons the author's just mentioned they're framing this thing so [Framed document of the Compact]
- 09:15
that as they go along they can meet and agree which laws and acts need to be
- 09:19
established so that the colony can thrive and also they throw in that whole
- 09:24
submission and obedience thing in there to remind everyone that it ain't
- 09:27
optional and rules are broken there will be consequences and punishment like a
- 09:31
punishment even worse than having to wear a doublet and breeches... in witness
- 09:35
whereof we have hereunto subscribed our names at Cape Cod the 11th of
- 09:39
November in the reign of our Sovereign Lord King James of England France and
- 09:43
Ireland - the 18th and of Scotland the 54th
- 09:47
Anno Domini 1620 the big finale here's the declaration that everyone is [Group of John's signing the document]
- 09:52
agreeing to sign their names to the compact along with one final shout out
- 09:56
to the King James dude, they want to have nothing else to do with they finish with
- 10:00
the date and year and the thing is dunzo the Mayflower
- 10:03
Compact didn't look too much like a Declaration of Independence which would
- 10:06
be written almost 200 years later but it did sort of pave the way back then [Mayflower Compact riding a roller]
- 10:11
people didn't think to govern themselves nobody knew what the heck checks and
- 10:14
balances were and these people and the silly costumes were determined to raise
- 10:18
the bar they envisioned a world of fairness justice and equality well okay
- 10:23
maybe not equality so one thing the Mayflower Compact was written by males
- 10:27
only so yeah there wasn't a big focus on women's issue when when was there
- 10:31
really the natives were foolishly unchristian they didn't think too much [Natives playing instrument]
- 10:34
of that God character for some reason they didn't feel like junking centuries
- 10:38
of their own traditions to follow a bunch of random rules set up by folks
- 10:41
who had just moved into town but the Puritans job was made way easier by the
- 10:45
fact that they didn't look at these natives people as people different skin
- 10:50
color dressed a little differently didn't totally love the taste of sweet
- 10:53
grapes and oysters didn't like wearing buckles on their shoes yeah definitely
- 10:57
not people....The whole thing got totally smoothed out over the next couple hundred years [Man riding a steam roller]
- 11:02
though at every turn the Native Americans were either disregarded or
- 11:05
eliminated which is what you do with unwanted animals but on the upside the
- 11:11
Puritans whole self-governing thing went off like gangbusters thanks to the
- 11:15
guidelines set forth in the Mayflower Compact
- 11:17
so they had that going for them.... positive note
Up Next
“Happy Hunger Games!” Or not. Katniss’s Hunger Games experiences left a not-so-happy effect on her. This video will prompt you to ponder if...
Related Videos
Who's really the crazy one in One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest? Shmoop amongst yourselves.
Sure, Edgar Allan Poe was dark and moody and filled with teenage angst, but what else does he have in common with the Twilight series?
¿Por que es el 'Gran' Gatsby tan gran? ¿Porque de su nombre peculiar? ¿Porque de el misterio que le rodea? Se ha discutido esta pregunta por muc...
Would would the world be like without books? Ray Bradbury tackles that question—and many more— in Fahrenheit 451. Go ahead; read it on your Kin...