iJcLjr & ^ u -/"W^, B E )L01 drcwih ana GOOI s % American Commontocaltfjg VIRGINIA .A. HISTORY OF THE PEOPLE BY JOHN ESTEN COOKE BOSTON HOUGHTON, MIFFLIN AND COMPANY New York : 11 East Seventeenth Street 1891 SEmmcan Conmiontucaitfjsf VIRGINIA -A HISTORY OF THE PEOPLE BY JOHN ESTEN COOKE BOSTON HOUGHTON, MIFFLIN AND COMPANY New York : 11 East Seventeenth Street @fce EtoeriJiDi? $«$& Camfcri&tje 1891 .C772 Copyright, 1888, JOHN ESTEN COOK®. All rights reserved. • R.R The Riverside. Press, Cambridge, M&ss., V. S. A. Electrotyped and Printed by H. 0. Houghton & Company. THE AUTHORITIES. Virginia and New England were the original forces of American society, and shaped its development. This arose from natural causes. Both races were vigorous offshoots of the same English stock, arrived first in point of time, and impressed their characteristics on the younger societies springing up around them. Each was dominant in its section. New England controlled the North from the Atlantic to the Lakes, and Virginia the South, to the Mississippi. This supremacy of the old centres was a marked feature of early American history, but it was not to continue. Other races, attracted by the rich soil of the Continent, made settlements along the seaboard. These sent out colonies in turn, and the interior was gradually occupied by new communities developing under new con- ditions. The character of these later settlements was modified by many circumstances — by distance from the parent stems, their surroundings, the changed habits of living, and the steady intermingling of diverse nationali- ties. Now, a vast immigration has made America the most multiform of societies. But the impetus of the first forces is not spent. The characteristics of the orig- inal races are woven into the texture of the nation, and are ineradicable. iv THE AUTHORITIES. To understaDd the history of the country it is there- fore necessary to study the Virginia and New England of the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. In the case of New England this study has been prosecuted with enthusiasm ; in the case of Virginia it has been very much neglected. The result is that the great pro- portions of the Puritan character have been fully ap- preciated, and that little is known of the Virginians. The men themselves have never been painted, for among the many histories of Virginia it is impossible to find a history of the Virginia people. And yet this history is essential, if for no other reason than that some of the greatest events in the annals of the country are incomprehensible without it. Accepting the general theory of the character of the race, these events are contrary to experience, and spring from causes which ought not to have produced them. The Virginians have been described as " aristocrats and slaves of church and king ; " but the aristocrats were among the first to pro- claim that " all men are created equal ; " the bigots overthrew their church; and the slaves of the king first cast off his authority, declared Virginia an independent Commonwealth, and were foremost in establishing a re- public. To unravel these apparent contradictions it is neces- sary to understand the people, and to do so we must go close to them and study the men of every class : the ruffled planter in his great manor-house or rolling in his coach, the small landholder in his plain dwelling, the parish minister exhorting in his pulpit, the " New Light" preacher declaiming in the fields, the rough waterman of the Chesapeake, the hunter of the Blue Ridge, and beneath all, at the base of the social pyramid, the in- THE AUTHORITIES. V dented servant and the African slave. To have a just conception of the characters of these men we must see them in their daily lives going about their occupations among their friends and neighbors. The fancied dig- nity of history must be lost sight of. The student must come in contact with the actual Virginians ; dis- cover their habits and prejudices; how they dressed and amused themselves on the race-course or at the cock- fight ; see them at church in their high-backed pews, while the parson reads his homily, or listen to them dis- cussing the last act of Parliament at the County Court. If this study is conscientiously pursued, the Virginians of the past will cease to be wooden figures ; they will become flesh and blood, and we shall understand the men and what they performed. The work before the reader attempts to draw an out- line of the people, and to present a succinct narrative of the events of their history. For the portrait of the Virginians, the general histories afford little assistance. The material, and above all, the coloring must be looked for elsewhere — in the writings of the first adventurers, which are the relations of eye-witnesses or contempo- raries ; in forgotten pamphlets, family papers, the curi- ous laws passed by the Burgesses, and in those traditions of the people which preserve the memory of events in the absence of written records. It appeared to the writer that this was the true material of history, and that he ought not to go to the modern works as long as it existed. The likeness of the Virginians is only to be found in these remote sources ; and the writer has patiently studied the dusty archives, and endeavored to extract their meaning, with no other object than to as- certain the truth, and to represent the men and events in their true colors. VI THE AUTHORITIES. The history of Virginia may be divided into three periods — the Plantation, the Colony, and the Common- wealth, These periods present society under three dif- ferent aspects. In the first, which extends from the landing at Jamestown to the grant of free government, we see a little body of Englishmen buried in the Amer- ican wilderness, leading hard and perilous lives, in hourly dread of the savages, home-sick, nearly starved, torn by dissensions, and more than once on the point of sailing back to England. In the second, or Colonial period, reaching to the Revolution, we have the gradual formation of a stable and vigorous society, the long struggle against royal encroachments, the armed rebel- lion against the Crown, and all the turmoil of an age which originated the principle that the right of the citi- zen is paramount to the will of the king. What follows is the serene and picturesque Virginia of the eighteenth century, when society at last reposes, class distinctions are firmly established, and the whole social fabric seems built up in opposition to the theory of republicanism. Nevertheless that theory lies at the very foundation of the Virginia character. For five generations the peo- ple have stubbornly resisted the king ; now they will wrench themselves abruptly out of the ruts of prescrip- tion, and sum up their whole political philosophy in the words of their Bill of Rights, " That all men are by nature equally free and independent, and have certain inalienable rights, namely, the enjoyment of life and liberty, with the means of pursuing and obtaining happiness and safety." When the issue is presented whether the country is to fight or submit, the king- lovers and aristocrats will instruct their delegates to propose the Declaration, and the Commonwealth and THE AUTHORITIES. Vll the Revolution will begin together. This third period embraces the events of the Revolutionary struggle, the adoption of the Federal Constitution, the occurrences of the post- Revolutionary epoch, and the gradual trans- formation of society into what is summed up in the term modern Virginia. The original authorities are full and curious, espe- cially for the periods of the Plantation and Colony. The chief of these authorities are, — I. For the Plantation : — 1. "A True Relation of Virginia," by Captain John Smith, 1608, the first work written by an Englishman in America. 2. "A Discourse of the Plantation of the Southern Colony of Virginia," by George Percy, one of the orig- inal adventurers, which gives the fullest account of the fatal epidemic of 1607. 3. " The General History of Virginia, New England, and the Summer Isles," a compilation of the various narratives by the first settlers up to 1624, edited by Captain John Smith. 4. " A True Repertory of the Wrack and Redemp- tion of Sir Thomas Gates Knt., upon and from the Isl- ands of the Bermudas, his coming to Virginia, and the estate of that Colony then and afterwards, under the Government of the Lord de la Warre," by William Strachey, Secretary of the Colony, who was wrecked in the Sea Venture, and wrote his narrative in Virginia in 1610. 5. " The History of Virginia Britannia," by the same writer, after his return to England. 6. "A True Discourse of the present Estate of Vir- ginia till the 18 of June, 1614," by Raphe Hamor, who yiii THE AUTHORITIES. was also Secretary of the Colony, giving curious details in reference to Powhatan and Pocahontas. 7. " Good News from Virginia," by William Whita- ker, who was parish minister at Varina, in the time of Sir Thomas Dale. 8. "Proceedings of the first Assembly of Virginia, 1619;" a valuable record discovered among the Eng- lish archives. II. For the period of* the Colony extending from the beginning of the reign of Charles I. to the Revolution, the chief works are : — 1. " The Statutes at Large, being a Collection of all the Laws of Virginia," by William Waller Hening, in thirteen volumes, the most important authority on social affairs in Virginia. The unattractive title does not sug- gest the character of the work. It is full of interest, and of paramount value from its official accuracy. It is the touchstone verifying dates, events, and the minutest de- tails in the life of the people for nearly two centuries. Where events are disputed, as in the case of the sur- render to Parliament, and the restoration of the royal authority, it produces the original records, and estab- lishes the facts. As a picture of the Colonial time it has no rival in American books ; and the whole like- ness of the early Virginians may be found in these laws made for the regulation of their private affairs. For the history of Bacon's Rebellion, the most re- markable American occurrence of the century, the authorities are, — 2. " The Beginning, Progress, and Conclusion of Bacon's Rebellion in Virginia in the years 1675 and 1676," by one of the Burgesses, signing himself "T. M.," who witnessed the events. THE AUTHORITIES. ix 3. " A Narrative of the Indian and Civil Wars in Virginia in the years 1675 and 1676," by an unknown writer. 4. " An Account of our late Troubles in Virginia," written in 1676 by Mrs. An. Cotton, of Q. Creeke. 5. " A Review, Breviarie and Conclusion," by Her- bert Jeffreys, John Berry, and Francis Morrison, Royal Commissioners, who visited Virginia after the rebellion. 6. " A List of those who have been Executed for the late Rebellion in Virginia, by Sir William Berkeley, Governor of the Colony." 7. " The History of Virginia," by Robert Beverley, is often inaccurate, but contains a full and interesting- account of the government and society of the Colony at the beginning of the eighteenth century. Stith's " History of Virginia " to the year 1624 is remarkable for its accuracy, but it is avowedly based on Smith's " Gen- eral History." Keith's is of no original authority. 8. Coming to the eighteenth century we have, for the administration of Spotswood, one of the ablest of the early Governors, the official statement of his collisions with the Burgesses, printed in the " Virginia Historical Register ; " for his march to the Blue Ridge with the Knights of the Horseshoe, Hugh Jones' " Present State of Virginia ; " and for the personal picture of the man in private life, the " Progress to the Mines," by Colonel William Byrd of Westover. 9. For Braddock's Expedition, the Journal of Cap- tain Orme, the letters of Washington at the time, and Mr. Winthrop Sargent's history of the Expedition from original documents. 10. For Dunmore's Expedition to the Ohio, and the Battle of Point Pleasant, the memoirs by Stuart and Campbell. X THE AUTHORITIES. 11. For the settlement of the Valley, and life on the frontier, Kercheval's " History of the Valley of Vir- ginia." 12. For the struggle between the Establishment and the Non-conformists, Bishop Meade's " Old Churches, Ministers, and Families of Virginia," Dr. Hawks' " Ec- clesiastical History," Dr. Rice's " Memoir of President Davies," Foote's " Sketches of Virginia," and Sem- ple's " Virginia Baptists." III. For the period beginning with the middle of the eighteenth century and reaching to the present time, the authorities are the writings of Washington, Jeffer- ' son, the Lees, and other public men ; books of travel and observation in America, like the work of the Mar- quis de Chastellux ; and memoirs of special occurrences. It seemed possible to the writer to draw, with the aid of this material, a faithful likeness, if only in outline, of the Virginians. He has written, above all, for the new generation, who, busy in keeping off the wolf of poverty, have had little time to study the history of their people. What this history will show them is the essential man- hood of the race they spring from ; the rooted convic- tion of the Virginians, that man was man of himself, and not by order of the king ; and that this conviction was followed by the long and strenuous assertion of personal right against arbitrary government. Begin- ning in the earliest times, this protest continued through every generation, Until the principle was firmly estab- lished by the armed struggle which resulted in the foun- dation of the American Republic. CONTENTS. I. THE PLANTATION. PAGE I. The Good Land 1 The First Voyagers; Spain and England in America; Gilbert's Shipwreck; The Roanoke Tragedy. II. The Times 8 The Ref oi-mation ; Shakespeare; The Unrest of the Period; Aims of the English Adventurers. III. The Oldest American Charter 13 The Virginia Enterprise; John Smith; The King's Charter ; Its True Intent; The Sailing of the Ships. IV. Jamestown 16 The Adventurers ; Arrest of Smith ; The Landing ; The First Church; The Council; An Indian Attack; The First Jury Trial in America. V. The Terrible Summer of 1607 22 The Fever; Percy's Description of it; Wingfield At- tempts to Escape ; Smith in Command ; The Pin- nace again Seized; Arrest of the Mutineers; The Fever Disappears ; Smith Sails for the South Sea. VI. The Ancient Virginians 26 The Virginia Savage; The Women; The One Alone, called Kiwassa; The Priesthood; A Future Life; Language and Customs; The Land of Powhatan; The Emperor. VII. Pocahontas 32 Smith is Captured ; Preserved by Pocahontas ; His Re- turn to Jamestown ; The Mutineers Again ; The Colonists Starving; They are Saved by Pocahon- tas ; Disorganization ; The Cause of the Trouble. xii CONTENTS. VIII. A Year of Incidents . . . , . 40 Newport Returns; Imperial Trading; The Gold Fe- ver ; The Chesapeake Voyages ; Ratcliffe Deposed and Smith President ; Pocahontas and her Troop ; King Powhatan I. ; The Monacan March; Smith's "Rude Answer." IX. The Strong Hand at Last 48 Snow and Famine; The Raid on Powhatan; Smith is Warned by Pocahontas ; Seizes Opechancanough ; The Indians Subdued; Smith and the Idlers; The Stone House; The Fall of the House-Builders; Ar- gall's Intelligence; A New Charter; Sailing of the Fleet; The Storm. X. The Sea-Venture . • 57 The Bermudas ; Shakespeare's " Tempest " ; Life on the Islands; The Patience and Deliverance; Death of Admiral Somers. XL The Last Wrestle of the Factions ..... 62 The Old Disturbers Back; The Factions; Arrest of the Leaders; Despair of Smith; He Founds Nonsuch; Is Wounded ; Returns to England. XII. The First American Ruler and Writer .... 68 Smith's After-Life ; Attacks on Him; The "General History " ; The Question of the Rescue ; His Char- acter as Man and Author ; His Vision of the Future. XIII. Virginia Abandoned 76 Jamestown at the End of 1609 ; What was Wanted; Ratcliffe's Death; The Starving Time; Cannibal- ism; The Bermuda Ships; Jamestown Deserted; Arrival of Delaware XIV. The Lord dk la Warre 84 Virginia Under Delaware; His Splendor; Ceremonies at Church; He Returns to England ; His Death. XV. Dale's City of Henkicus 88 The Iron Hand; Breaking on the Wheel ; An Alarm; Varina; The City and Life There. XVI. Rolfe and Pocahontas 93 Capture of Pocahontas; Dale goes to the York; Poca- hontas and Her Brothers; Rolfe's Passion; His Curious Letter; Marries Pocahontas; Dale's Em- bassy to Powhatan. XVII. Last Days of Pocahontas and Powhatan . . . 100 Pocahontas in England; Smith's Letter to Queen CONTENTS. Xlll Anne; His Interview with Pocahontas; The Question of their Relations; Her Death; De- scendants; Powhatan's Old Age; His Death and Character. XVIII. Virginia Under a Watch-dog and a Hawk . . 106 The High Marshal; The Acadian Affair; A New Land Law ; Argall ; The Case of Brewster ; Flight of Argall; Representative Government. XIX- The First American Assembly and Constitution 113 The King and the Company; The Great Grant; The First Assembly; Its Proceedings; The Constitu- tion. XX. The Maids and First Slaves 119 The Maids ; How they were Selected; How Married; The Result; Indented Servants ; The First Slaves. XXI. The Massacre 124 Virginia at Peace ; Opechancanough ; His Conspir- acy ; The Attack ; The Retaliation of the Virgin- ians. XXII. The Fall of the Company 129 The London Courts; Virginia Unmasked; Arrest of the Officers; The Commission to Virginia; The Company Overthrown ; Death of James I. XXIII. The Fihst Virginia Authors 133 Effect of their Surroundings ; Character of their Style; Smith's Writings; The Early Relations; Strachey's " Wrack of Sir Thomas Gates " ; Ha- mor's " Present Estate of Virginia " ; Whitaker's "Good News"; Sandys' Translation of Ovid; Importance of the Early Books. XXIV. Outline of Virginia under James 1 141 James River the Highway; The Upper Settlements; The Planter at Home; His Opinions; A Curious Offense; Harrying the Indians; The Burgesses; Some of their Laws; The Pillory ; To the Ocean; Up the York; Virginia Society; The Love of Country Life; English Character of the Virgin- ians. xiv CONTENTS. II. THE COLONY. I. The New Era 158 Virginia Under Charles I.; Cavaliers and Roundheads ; What the Virginians were ; Their Controlling Idea. II. The Thrusting Out of Sir John Harvey . . . 162 Wyat's Battle with the Indians; Trial of Pott for Cat- tle Stealing; Harv r ey's Outrages; He is Deposed; Significance of the Event : The Arrival of Berke- ley. III. The Puritans 167 The Shires Laid Out ; Prosperity of the Colon}' - ; The First Free School in America ; Ministers ; The Oath of Supremacy; Charles I. and the Assembly; Habits of the Planters ; Persecution of the Puri- tans ; Intolerance of the Time. IV. Clayborne the Rebel 176 Baron Baltimore; Visits Virginia; Is Insulted at Jamestown; Maryland Founded; Clayborne; He Settles on Kent Island; Fight on the Potomac; Drives Calvert from Maryland; Is Expelled in Turn; The Meaning of the Struggle. V. The Last Emperor 182 Sir William Berkeley; Greenspring ; Berkeley's Char- acter; Charles I. Recognizes the Assembly; "Berke- ley's Persecutions; Attack on the Colony; Ope- chancanough's Death and Character. VI. A Perfect Picture of Virginia 188 An Earthly Paradise; Agriculture and Trade; Intru- sions on the Soil; Stuyvesant and Berkeley; The Storm in England ; The Distressed Cavaliers ; Their Reception in Virginia ; Execution of Charles I. VII. The Surrender 191 The Feeling in Virginia ; The Cavalier Exiles ; Action of the Burgesses ; Charles II. recognized as King of England and Virginia; The Parliament Ships; Preparations to Fight ; The Surrender of the Col- ony; The Terms. VIII. Virginia Under the Commonwealth 199 Berkeley at Greenspring; The Absence of Rancor; The Burgesses Elect a Governor ; The War on the At- CONTENTS. XV torneys ; Worthy Governor Matthews ; The Three Da} T s of Revolution ; Death of Matthews. IX. The Battle of the Severn 208 The Ricahecrians; Catholics and Puritans; Tolerance and Intolerance; Clayborne Reduces Maryland; Course of Cromwell ; The Trial of Strength ; The Puritans in Power ; The Restoration ; Clayborne's Character. X. The King's-men Up Again 216 The Rejoicing in Virginia; Berkeley's Invitation to Charles II. ; The Interregnum; Berkeley and the Assembly ; The King Proclaimed. XL Virginia on the Eve of the Rebellion .... 220 The " Oliverian Plot" ; Persecution of the Quakers; Of the Baptists ; Laws of the Time ; The Ducking- Stool ; The Suffrage, History of Legislation ; Vir- ginia in 1670; The Growth in Population and the Cause; Why the Cavaliers Came; Servants and Felons; The Family Origin of the Revolutionary Leaders. XII. The Hidden Fires 230 The General Discontent; The Navigation Laws; The Patent to Culpeper and Arlington; The Virginia Protest; The Reply of Charles II.; Suffrage and the Indians; Batte's Expedition; Attack on the * Maryland Fort ; Indian Outrages ; Berkeley's Un- popularity; The People Ripe for Rebellion; Vir- ginia in 1676. XIII. The Outflame . 237 Three Presages; Nathaniel Bacon; The Indian Inroad; Bacon Marches against Them ; Is Proclaimed a Traitor; Routs the Indians at Bloody Run. XIV. Bacon's Arrest 244 Virginia in Rebellion; Bacon Elected to the House of Burgesses ; Is Arrested at Jamestown ; His Inter- view with Berkeley ; His Submission and Restora- tion to the Council. XV. A Scene in the Burgesses 250 The Old Assemblymen; Humors of the Time; The Queen of Pamunkey ; Thoughtful Mr. Lawrence; Bacon Escapes ; Marches on Jamestown. XVI. In Front of the State House 258 Berkeley Appeals to the People ; They make no Re- xvi CONTENTS. sponse; Bacon's Violence; His Address to the Burgesses; Is Appointed General; The Assembly- Dissolved; Bacon is again Proclaimed a Traitor. XVII. The Oath at Middle-Plantation 264 Berkeley takes Refuge in Gloucester-, His Reception There; Crosses to Accomac; Bacon Returns; The Prime Gentlemen; The Oath ; Enthusiasm of the People; Bacon's New Indian Campaign. XVIII. The White Aprons at Jamestown 274 Berkeley in Accomac; Attempt to Capture Him; Bland and Carver Betrayed; Berkeley's Treat- ment of Them ; He Sails for Jamestown ; Takes Possession ; Bacon Marches against Him ; The Arrest of the Ladies ; The White Aprons ; Berke- ley Attacks; Is Defeated and Flies; Jamestown Burnt. XIX. The Death of Bacon 283 Bacon Marches to meet Brent ; Is taken 111 ; Brent's Forces Disband ; Bacon and the Gloucester Men; His Feverish Impatience; His Sudden Death; The Charge of Assassination; His Mysterious Burial; His Character. XX. Berkeley's Vengeances 292 Ingram ; His Surrender ; Fate of Hansford and Others ; Berkeley and Mrs. Cheeseman ; Drum- mond Executed; Lawrence Escapes; A Revel of Blood; Sarah Drummond; Berkeley Returns to England; His Death. XXI. The Last Years of the Century 298 Virginia after the Rebellion; Protest of the Bur- gesses; Culpeper's Legal Tender Proclamation; James II. and the Church; The Papist Alarm; Risings in Stafford and Accomac ; The Lord "and Lady of Virginia; Governor Nicholson; His Arrogance; Affair of Miss Burwell ; Williams- burg the New Capital ; William and Mary Col- lege ; Its Charter; Commissary Blair ; The College Burned and Rebuilt; Old Regulations ; Professors Forbidden to Marry ; Celebrated Graduates ; Popu- lation of Virginia; Characteristics of the People; The Huguenots; Queen Anne; The Governor'* Address. CONTENTS. XVli XXII. The Tubal-Cain of Virginia 311 Alexander Spotswood; Magna Charta in Virginia; Spotswood's Energy ; The Trial of Grace Sher- wood; Spotswood' s Visit to Christanna; His March to the Mountains; The Knights of the Horseshoe; Spotswood and the Burgesses ; Black- beard the Pirate; Postal System in Virginia; Spotswood and the Vestries; Colonel Byrd's Description of Germanna; Of Spotswood's House there ; Of Spotswood as a Husband ; Temple Farm; Spotswood Commander of the Virginia Forces ; His Death and Place of Burial. XXIII. The Virginians of the Valley ........ 322 The Valley ; The German Lutherans ; Their Man- ners and Customs; St. Patrick and St. Michael; Birthplace of Andrew Jackson; The Scotch-Irish Presbyterians ; Their Characteristics ; Church of England Settlement around Greenway Court; The Virginia Arcady; A Bird's-eye View; The Valley and Tidewater; Gooch, Governor; Car- thagena; Richmond and Petersburg; The First Virginia Newspaper. XXIV. The New Lights 331 Lethargy of the Church ; The Clergy ; Whitefield ; His Early Life; His Definition of Methodism; Visits Williamsburg; The Presbyterians; They Attack the Establishment; Are Persecuted ; New Sides and Old Sides; Samuel Davies; Henry's Opinion of Him ; Secures the Extension of the Toleration Act ; His Views of the Episcopal Arti- cles ; Founds the Presbyterian Church in Vir- ginia. XXV. France and England in the Great Woods . . 340 Their Claims ; The Youth of Washington ; His Asso- ciation with Lord Fairfax ; Effect on His Charac- ter; His Expedition beyond the Ohio; Adven- tures on His Return; The Surrender at Great Meadows. XXVI. The Tragedy of Duquesne 344 General EdAvard Braddock; His Plan of Campaign; Franklin's Advice; At Cumberland; The March through the Woods; Braddock Surprised and Routed; His Tribute to the Virginia Troops; His Death and Burial. b xviii CONTENTS. XXVII. The End of the Struggle 354 The Virginia Frontier ; Horrors of the Time ; Wash- ington at Winchester ; Duquesne ; Captain Bul- lit; Duquesne Blown Up; The Fall of Quebec; End of the War. XXVIII. The Writers of the Colonial, Period . . . 358 Narratives of Bacon's Rebellion ; Style of the Writers; The Deed of Gift; Beverley's History of Virginia; Stith's, — Its Value; Colonel Byrd's Westover MSS.; The Author. XXIX. The Golden Age of Virginia 364 The Old Regime; The Nabob after the Pioneer; African Slavery ; Classes of Society ; Planters and Patroons; Ease of the Times; Society at Williamsburg; Amusements; St. Tammany; Lowland and Mountain. in. THE COMMONWEALTH. I. The Hour and the Men 375 The New Ideas; Virginia and New England; The Planters. II. Henry the "Prophet of Revolution" .... 378 His Origin and Early Life; The Parsons' Cause; His First Speech. III. The Stamps 383 The English Ministry; The Stamp Act; Henry's Reso- lutions; His Outburst; Attitude of the Planters; Effect of the Action of Virginia ; A Congress Meets in New York ; Repeal of the Stamp Act. IV. The War of the Churches 390 Attacks on the Establishment ; The Baptists ; They are Persecuted; Scene at Fredericksburg; The Hanover Memorial ; The Dissenters Implacable ; Overthrow of the Establishment; Desecration of the Sacra- mental Vessels; Bishop William Meade; His Energy and Piety; Revives the Episcopacy; The Church at Present. V. The Heart of the Rebellion 396 Williamsburg; Historical Buildings; Winter in the Capital ; Social Habits. CONTENTS. xix VI. The Stepping Stones of Revolution 400 The Tea ; Death of Fauquier ; Lord Botetourt ; His Re- ception; Dissolves the Burgesses; They Meet at the Raleigh; Death of Botetourt; His Character; Lord Dunmore; The Committees of Correspond- ence. VII. Jefferson the "Apostle of Democracy" . . . 405 His Early Life; His Gay Temperament; Becomes a Freethinker ; Character of his Intellect ; His Sum- mary View. VIII. Lee, Mason, and Pendleton 410 Lee's Origin ; His Advanced Opinions; Personal Ap- pearance; Mason's Wit; His Patriotism; The Bill of Rights; Pendleton's Views; His Person and Oratory. IX. Virginia and Massachusetts 415 The Issue; Boston Occupied by British Troops; The Tea ; Action in Virginia ; The Ball at the Capitol ; A Convention Called; The First of June; The Gen- eral Congress ; Chatham's Opinion of It. X. The First Blood of the Revolution 422 Dunmore' s Expedition ; Andrew Lewis ; He Marches to the Ohio ; Is Attacked ; The Battle at Point Pleasant; Scene with Dunmore; Charges against the Governor; Lewis Returns. XI. Virginia Arming 426 The Spring of 1775; The People in Arms ; The Conven- tion at St. John's; Henry's Great Speech; Mr. Wirt's Exaggerations; The Fight at Concord. XII. The Gunpowder 429 The Seizure of the Powder ; Excitement of the People ; The Rappahannock Men; The March of Henry; The Olive Branch Rejected ; Explosion at the Magazine; Flight of Dunmore; Washington ap- pointed Commander-in-Chief. XIII. The Last of Dunmore in Virginia 435 The Committee of Safety; Henry General-in-Chief; Dunmore's Depredations; Action at Great Bridge; Norfolk Burned; Lewis and Dunmore; Dunmore Sails for England. XIV. Virginia declares Herself an Independent Com- monwealth 438 The Convention ; Proposed Declaration ; The Virginia XX CONTENTS. ■ Bill of Rights; The Constitution; Henry- Elected Governor; Congress and the Declara- tion ; The Record of Virginia. XV. The Overturners 442 The Laboring Oar; Jefferson in the Assembly; The Religious Struggle ; The Result ; Entails ; The Result; The Social Change; Patrick Henry to be Dictator; Cary's Message to Him; Gloom at the End of 1776. XVI. The Hannibal of the West 449 Morgan and his Riflemen ; The Virginia Troops in the Army; George Rogers Clarke; He Marches on Kaskaskia; On Vincennes; The Drowned Lands of the Wabash ; The Capture of Vincen- nes ; The Result. XVII. Lafayette and Cornwallis 454 No more Slaves to be Imported; A Marauder; Despondency of the Times; Washington's Statement; Arnold Captures Richmond ; Phil- lips and Lafayette ; Death of Phillips ; Arrival of Cornwallis; Lafa}~ette Retreats; Tarleton's Depredations; Wayne's Arrival; Cornwallis Retreats ; Action at Jamestown ; Cornwallis Retires to Yorktown ; The Result of the Cam- paign. XVIII. Yorktown 462 The Crisis; Washington's Resolution; His Move- ment Southward; Passage through Philadel- phia; Arrival at Williamsburg; Cornwallis at Yorktown; Lafayette's Soldiership; The Naval Fight; Washington's Visit to De Grasse; Ad- vance on Yorktown ; The Siege ; General Nel- son; Burning of the English Ships; The As- sault; Lord Cornwallis Capitulates; The Cere- mony of Surrender. XIX. The Constitution 472 Conclusion of Peace; The Articles of Confedera- tion ; Virginia for Union ; The Northwest Terri- tory; She Surrenders It; The Federal Constitu- tion ; Excitement in Virginia ; The Virginia Convention; A Passionate Struggle; The Con- stitution Adopted ; The Virginia Conditions. CONTENTS. xxi XX. Modern Virginia 477 The Republican Ascendency ; Change in Manners ; Resolutions of '98 ; Death of Washington and. Henry; Henry's Will; Trial of Callender; Of Aaron Burr; The Servile Insurrections; The Burning of the Theatre ; The War of 1812 ; The Colleges; The Convention of 1829; Jackson and South Carolina ; Repose of the Period pre- ceding the Civil War. XXI. Virginia Literature in the Nineteenth Cen- tury 490 History and Biography; Theology and Physical Science; Constitutional Law; Poetry; Fic- tion ; Miscellany ; Character of the Literature. XXII. The War of the Sections 498 The Attitude of Virginia; Her Peace Policy; The Direct Issue; Secession; The Virginia Troops. XXIII. Virginia since the War 505 Resolution of the People ; Their Treatment of Northerners; Reconstruction; Emancipation; Relations of the Races ; Resources of the State ; New Virginia. The vignette upon the title page is a copy of the first seal of Vir- ginia as it appears on the title page of Smith's " General History of Virginia." The map is a reproduction of so much of the official map of the State of Virginia, published in 1826, with the insertion of names of all places referred to in this history. Where the State map fails to give the localities, the authority followed is that of Frye and Jeffer- son in their survey of 1749, as published by Jeffery in his series of maps of the British possessions in America. VIRGINIA: A HISTORY OF THE PEOPLE. I. THE PLANTATION. THE GOOD LAND. Just three centuries ago, two ships sent from Eng- land on a voyage of exploration crossed the Atlantic by way of the Azores, sailed northward along the coast of Florida, and came to anchor off the Indian kingdom of Axacan, now North Carolina. The voyagers were amazed at the beauty of the coun- try. The time was midsummer, and before them was a long island fringed with verdure. Above the under- growth rose " the highest and reddest cedars of the world ; " the wild vines were so full of grape bunches that " the very surf overflowed them ; " and deer, tur- keys, and snow-white cranes were " in incredible abun- dance." When the mariners landed, first on the island and then on the main-land, they were welcomed by the Indians, who proved to be " a kind, loving people ; " and the time from summer to autumn was spent in exploring the adjacent country. The name of the immediate re- gion was Wingandacoa, which seems to have signified " The Good Land," and the Englishmen found it " most plentiful sweet, wholesome and fruitful of all other." 1 2 VIRGINIA: A HISTORY OF THE PEOPLE. At last the western paradise so long dreamed of seemed to have been discovered, and when the ships went back to England, at the approach of winter, the commanders gave such glowing accounts of what they had seen, that Elizabeth called the country Virginia, the Virgin land. This voyage took place in the summer of 1584. For a long time afterwards the name Virginia was only the popular designation of an unknown region beyond the Atlantic. No more was known of it, and an old writer could only say, " The bounds thereof on the East side are the ocean, on the South lieth Florida, on the North Nova Francia, as for the West thereof the limits are unknown." The English had touched its shores only ; the interior was an untravelled realm, where the fancy might revel freely, — a land of fairer fruits and flowers than the fruits and flowers of Europe ; of green shores, majestic forests, and blue mountains filled with gold and jewels. In this wonderful world bright birds flitted from tree to tree, dusky beauties danced and beckoned, the rivers ran over golden sands, and somewhere far off in the direction of the South Sea was the famous Fount of Youth, which the old had only to bathe in to grow young again. With these visions of delight were min- gled weird and terrible fancies. The Bermuda Islands, a portion of Virginia, were said to be haunted by mys- terious beings. English mariners who had been ship- wrecked there described them as " an enchanted den full of furies and devils which all men did shun as hell and perdition." Even the great intelligences of the time caught the glamour or affected to do so, and the popu- lar superstition was crystallized by Shakespeare in his "Tempest." In this den of enchantment Prospero prac- ticed his magic, witches hovered in the air, and uncouth THE GOOD LAND. 8 shapes appeared and vanished. The far islands posted like sentinels on the threshold of the New World were a realm of wonders, and the ignorant and ardent minds of the men of that age believed all that was reported of them. These fancies were supported by old tradition. It was said that " Arthur, Malgro, and Brandon, a thou- sand years ago were in this North of America, and the Friar of Lynn, by his black art, went to the north pole in 1 380." The friar with his black art was the coun- terpart of Prospero with his magic, and it was as easy to believe in one as in the other. Then tradition took a few uncertain steps in the direction of history. Ma- doc, a Welsh prince, was said to have visited America, and Lief, a Norwegian, was supposed to have landed, about the year 1000, in what is now New England. This may have been the truth, but the fact is not es- tablished. The Norwegian may have been an histor- ical personage, but he and his sea rovers bear a suspi- cious resemblance to ''Arthur, Malgro, and Brandon." Through a mist blown about by the winds of old years loom dim uncertain figures, which may be figures of real men or mere phantasmagoria. The outlines waver as one gazes at them, and the personages are scarcely more real than the Thors and Baldurs of the Scandina- vian sagas. With Columbus certainty begins. At last firm ground is found to stand upon. Sailing westward over the unknown sea, the Genoese reached land and took pos- session in the name of Castile. But the land was not the Continent ; Columbus had only reached San Salva- dor, one of the Bahamas. Five years afterwards John Cabot, commanding an English fleet, discovered the 4 VIRGINIA: A HISTORY OF THE PEOPLE. mainland and claimed it in the name of England ; and this was the foundation of the IJnglish title — priority of actual landing and possession. For nearly a century after this year, 1497, England seemed blind to the importance of her claim. The New World, as far as she was concerned, seemed to go a-begging. Spain and France were wiser. Both made persistent efforts to secure the prize, and a few names and dates will tell the story. In 1512, about twenty years after the discovery by Columbus, Ponce de Leon took possession of Florida in the name of Spain. In 1521 Cortez overran Mexico, and soon afterward Pizarro conquered Peru. In 1534 Jacques Cartier entered the St. Lawrence, and laid claim to Canada in the name of France. In 1541 Fernando de Soto marched through the present Gulf States, from Florida, to the Mississippi, and claimed the country in the name of Spain ; and in 1562 some French Huguenots established a colony at St. Augustine in Florida. Thus the Continent of North America — a name de- rived from Amerigo Vespucci, an Italian and one of the early voyagers — had become a bone of contention be- tween France and Spain, without regard to England. The Spaniards acted with decision. In 1565 they at- tacked St. Augustine and massacred the French Hu- guenots, after which they pushed northward to occupy the whole country. An effort was made to establish a Jesuit mission in what is now North Carolina ; and Don Pedro Morquez, the Governor of Florida, sailed along the coast and entered " the bay of Santa Maria, in the latitude of thirty-seven degrees and a half " — THE GOOD LAND. 5 which is the Chesapeake. The country pleased him, and he sent a party oimen and two Dominican monks to form a settlement. The expedition only failed from accident; and thus the banks of the Chesapeake nar- rowly escaped becoming the site of a Roman Catholic colony owning allegiance to Spain. This is the brief record of events connected with the first years of American history. By the middle of the century the power of Spain seemed firmly established. Before the English flag floated over so much as a log fort on the Continent, she was possessed of all Central America, and the extension of her dominion northward seemed only a question of time. The country was oc- cupied by her troops and officials, and Spanish fleets went to and fro between Cadiz and the ports of Mexico and Peru. As far as the human eye could see, the new world of America had become the property of Spain, and her right to it seemed unassailable. A mariner sailing under the Spanish flag had discovered it ; Span- ish captains had conquered it ; and the Papal authority had formally put Spain in possession of it. If England meant to assert her claim, the time had plainly come to do so; and in 1576 an expedition was sent to explore the country. It came to nothing, and another in 1583 had no better fortune. It was com- manded by Sir Humphrey Gilbert, and the Queen had sent him a small golden trinket, in the shape of an an- chor set with jewels, and the message, that she " wished him as great hap and safety to his ship as if herself were there in person." Gilbert reached the island of St. John, but his fleet was scattered by a storm. His own vessel went down, and he was heard to say as the ship sank : " Be of good cheer, my friends ; it is as near to heaven by sea as by land." 6 VIRGINIA: A HISTORY OF THE PEOPLE. This expedition had been undertaken under the aus- pices of Sir Walter Raleigh, whom his contemporaries called the " Shepherd of the Ocean." This great Eng- lishman, with the soul of a sea-king and the intellect of a statesman looking before and after, saw plainly that the path of empire was westward. He was not discour- aged by Gilbert's mischance. In the next year, 1584, he secured a patent from the Queen to explore and settle America. The expedition to Wingandacoa fol- lowed ; and in 1585 Raleigh sent out a colony under command of Sir Richard Grenville. These old voyages tempt us, with their rude pictures and strange adventures. They are full of the sea breeze and the romance of the former age ; but they do not belong to the special subject of this volume. The result only need be recorded — a gloomy and pathetic tragedy, which for nearly three centuries has excited the sympathy of the world. Sir Richard Grenville founded his colony on Roanoke Island in Albemarle Sound, but it was abandoned by the settlers, who returned to England with Sir Francis Drake ; whereupon he founded a second, which strug- gled on until 1587. White, the Governor, then went to England to obtain supplies for the colony, leav- ing behind him eighty-nine men, seventeen women, and eleven children ; among the latter his daughter Ellinor, and his grand-daughter Virginia Dare, the first English child born in America. None of these men, women, or children were ever again seen. When White returned to Roanoke he found the place deserted. What had become of the colonists ? There was an apparent solution of the mystery. When White sailed for England he had directed that if the settlers were compelled to leave THE GOOD LAND. 7 the island, they should carve the name of the place to which they removed on some conspicuous object, with a cross above the name if they went away in distress. The name Croatan was found cut in a post, but without the cross : thus the people seemed not to have aban- doned the island in distress. But what had occasioned this strange exodus of the Roanoke men, women, and children to Croatan — an Indian town on the coast ? The whole affair remained a mystery and remains as great a mystery to-day. Repeated efforts were made to ascertain from the Indians what had become of the colonists ; but they could not or would not say what had happened. Had the poor people wandered away into the cypress forests and been lost? Had they starved on the route to Croatan ? Had the Indians put them to death ? The secret is still a secret, and this sudden dis- appearance of more than a hundred human beings is one of the strangest events of history. So the Roanoke colony ended. It was the first tragic chapter in the history of the United States, and resem- bles rather the sombre fancy of some dramatist of the time than an actual occurrence. All connected with it is moving, and the sharply contrasted figures cling to the memory — the bearded mariners, and women and children wandering away into the woods ; the pale-faced Governor searching for his daughter, when he returns to the lonely island; and, passing across the background, the stalwart forms of Drake and Grenville, the one fa- mous for hunting down the great Armada in the English Channel, and the other for his desperate fight on board the Revenge. His fate and the fate of his colony were not unlike. Both struggled long and bravely, but the struggle came to an end in dire catastrophe. 8 VIRGINIA: A HISTORY OF THE PEOPLE. " All hopes of Virginia thus abandoned," wrote one of the old chroniclers, " it lay dead and obscured from 1590 till this year 1602." It lay dead and obscured longer. Nothing further was effected in the sixteenth century, and the Americas seemed fated to remain Span- ish possessions to the end of time. The struggle was apparently over, and the wildest fancy could scarcely have conceived what we see to-day — this huge empire dwindled to a few weak dependencies, and confront- ing them the great Protestant Republic of the United States occupying. the continent from ocean to ocean. The wedge which split this hard trunk was the land- ing in May, 1607, of about one hundred Englishmen at Jamestown. II. THE TIMES. The Virginia " plantation," as the old writers called it, began at a remarkable period. The year 1600 may be taken as the dividing line between two eras — the point of departure of a new generation on the untried journey into the future. Europe had just passed through the great convulsion of the Reformation, and this with the invention of print- ing had suddenly changed the face of the world. It is difficult to speak of this change without apparent exag- geration. The dissemination of the Bible in the vulgar tongue was followed by astonishing results. The un- learned could search the Scriptures for their rule of conduct without the intervention of a priesthood, and an upheaval of the human mind followed. A mysterious voice had awakened the sleepers, and they had started THE TIMES. 9 tip, shaking off the old fetters. The lethargy of ages had disappeared. Thought, so long paralyzed by dogma, roved in every direction, moving nimbly and joyfully where it had groped and stumbled before in the thick darkness. The nations of Europe were like blind men who have suddenly been made to see. Daring aspi- rations took possession of them, and the new ideas of the new age crowded into every mind, hurrying and jostling each other. In our old and prosaic world it is difficult to realize the youth and enthusiasm of that time. Authority had lost its prestige, and serfdom to prej- udices social or religious had disappeared. The priest muttering his prayers in Latin was no longer the keeper of men's consciences ; and the prerogative of the King and the privilege of the noble began to be regarded 1 as superstitions. That hitherto unknown quantity, the People, all at once revealed its existence, and those who for centuries had allowed others to think for them be- gan to think for themselves. All this had come with the new century which gummed up and inherited the results of that which had preceded it. Beginning at Wittenberg with the protest of Luther, the Reformation had swept through the Continent and extended to England and Scotland, where its fury was greatest and lasted longest. It ragec! there during the reigns of Henry VIII., Mary, and Elizabeth, and only died down at her death, when the \ong work was at last accomplished, and Protestantism was firmly established. The free thought of the time in England, as every- where, had resulted from reaction and the immense influence of printed books. But books were not all. Bacon, the author of the inductive philosophy, had 10 VIRGINIA: A HISTORY OF THE PEOPLE. published his " Advancement of Learning," and Spen- ser, the perfect flower of the Renaissance, his " Faery Queen ; " but volumes of abstruse thought and refined poesy were for the few. The people at large were compelled to look elsewhere, and to educate their minds by other appliances than costly folios which were be- yond their reach. The acted drama precisely supplied this popular want, and became the educator of the people. The time had come for Shakespeare and his brother dramatists ; and suddenly the epoch flowered in the great names which have made the age of Elizabeth so illustrious. A race of giants appeared, whose works were the expression of the times. All the characteris- tics of the generation were summed up in these dramas — the unreined fancy, the wild imagination, the revolt against the conventional, the daring thought which questioned all things and would sound the mysteries of this world and the world beyond. At the head of this great group stood Shakespeare. On the stage of the Globe and Blackfriars theatres this master dramatist of the age, and of all the ages, directly addressed the ardent crowds who flocked at his summons. Packed together in the dingy pit, under the smoking flambeaux, the rude audiences saw pass before them in long pano- rama the whole history of England with its bloody wars, the fierce scenes of the Roman forum, the loves of Ro- meo and Antony, hump-backed Richard, the laughing Falstaff, and the woeful figures of Lear and Hamlet.' What came from the heart of Shakespeare went to the human hearts listening to him. The crowd laughed with his comedy and cried with his tragedy. He was the great public teacher, as well as the joy of his age — an age full of impulse, of hot aspiration and vague desire, which recognized its own portrait in his dramas. THE TIMES. 11 Thus books, the acted drama, the thirst for knowledge, the ardent desire of the human mind to expand in all directions, made the last years of the sixteenth century and the beginning of the seventeenth a new era in the history of the human race. Men longed for new expe- riences, to travel and discover new countries, to find some outlet for the boiling spirit of enterprise which had rushed into and overflowed the time. The adventurous sea voyages of the period were the direct outcome of this craving ; suddenly a passion for maritime explora- tion had developed itself. We have the record of what followed in the folios of Hakluyt and Purchas — " Divers Voyages touching the Discovery of America," " Navigations, Voyages, and Discoveries made by the English Nation," " Purchas, his Pilgrimage," and other works of the same character. Magellan circumnavigated the world, and Sir Francis Drake doubled Cape Horn, coasted northward to the present Alaska, attempted the northwest passage, and finding it impracticable, crossed the Pacific, traversed the Indian Ocean, and returned to England by the Cape of Good Hope. The English flag was thus carried into every sea, and wherever the flag of Spain was encountered, it was saluted with can- non. For a whole generation these adventurous voy- ages and hard combats went on without ceasing, and on the continent of Europe another outlet was presented to the fierce ardor of the times. Flanders was an inces- sant battle-ground; and in Transylvania the Christians were making war on the Turks. English soldiers of fortune flocked to the Christian standard, and fought among the foremost, winning fortune and renown, or " leaving their bodies in testimony of their minds." At the end of the century this long period of fierce 12 VIRGINIA: A HISTORY OF THE PEOPLE. struggle ended — the foes seemed to have exhausted themselves. But the enterprise of the time was still unsated and demanded new fields. In spite of the dis- astrous ending of the Roanoke experiment, longing eyes had continued to be fixed on America, and the same glamour surrounded "Virginia" for the new generation as for the old. Beyond the Atlantic was the virgin Continent, unexplored by Englishmen, awaiting brave hearts and strong hands. To a people so ardent and restless the prospect was full of attraction. Virginia was the promised land, and they had only to go and occupy it. There the fretting cares and poverty of the Old World would be forgotten, and stirring action would replace the dull inaction of peace at the end of so much fighting. For the daring there was the charm of ad- venture in an unexplored world ; for the selfish the hope of profit, and for the pious the great work of converting the Indian "heathen." The first charter expressed this longing — " that so noble a work may by the providence of God hereafter tend to the glory of His Divine Majesty in propagating of the Christian religion to such people as sit in darkness and miser- able ignorance of the true knowledge and worship of God." — " This is the work that we first intended," says a writer of the time, " and have published to the world to be chief in our thoughts, to bring the infidel people from the worship of Devils to the service of God." And worthy Mr. Crashaw exhorted the adven- turers, about to embark for Virginia, to " remember that the end of this voyage is the destruction of the Devil's kingdom." These were some of the causes which led to the set- tlement of America by the English. THE OLDEST AMERICAN CHARTER. 18 III. THE OLDEST AMERICAN CHARTER. At last, in 1606, the ardent desire of the Englishmen of the time to settle Virginia began to take shape. A brave sea-captain, Bartholomew Gosnold, was the main- spring of the enterprise. He had made the first direct voyage across the Atlantic to New England, and meant now to establish a colony, if possible in the milder south. He found sympathizers in Sir Thomas Gates and Sir George Somers, two brave and pious gentle- men, Richard Hakluyt, prebendary of Westminster, Robert Hunt, an exemplary clergyman, Edward Maria Wingfield, a London merchant, and John Smith, an English soldier. This famous chevalier, who was to become the soul of the enterprise and the founder of Virginia, was born in Willoughby, England, in January, 1579. His family were connected with the Lancashire gentry, but he was left a poor orphan, and before he had grown to manhood had served as a private soldier in the Flanders wars. He then wandered away like a knight-errant in search of adventures; joined the forces of Sigismund Bathori, who was making war on the Turks in Transylvania ■, slew three Turkish " champions " in single combat, for which he was knighted; was captured and reduced to slavery by the Turks, but escaped to Russia; and thence returned by way of Germany, France, Spain, and Morocco, to England, which he reached in 1604, when he was twenty-five. He had left home an unknown youth, and returned a famous man. He was young in years, but old in experience, in suffering, and in those elements which lie at the foundation of greatness. His 14 VIRGINIA: A HISTORY OF THE PEOPLE. portrait, with sweeping mustache and frank glance, is the portrait of a fighting man ; but under it may be discerned the administrator and ruler. When Smith came back to England, Elizabeth was dead and the reign of James I. had just begun. The city of London was full of soldiers returned from the Continental wars, and this restless social element gladly welcomed the Virginia enterprise. They were men of every character — brave soldiers and the scum of war ; frequented the " Mermaid " and other taverns ; jostled the citizens ; and flocked to the theatres, where Shake- speare's plays were the great attraction. The dramatist had not yet retired to Stratford, and it is probable that Smith made his acquaintance then or afterward, as he wrote "they have acted my fatal tragedies on the stage." The stage in London meant the Globe or Blackfriars, in which Shakespeare was a stockholder ; and Smith made his complaint to William Herbert, Earl of Pembroke, the " W. H." of the Shakespearean son- nets. This personal acquaintance of the soldier and the writer is merely conjectural, but it is interesting to fancy them together at the " Mermaid," talking, per- haps, of the Virginia enterprise and the strange stage of the " Tempest," Written a few years afterwards. Smith and Gosnold became friends, and the wandering soldier caught the fever of exploration and adventure in Amer- ica. When the scheme at last took form, he had be- come a prominent advocate of the enterprise, and was appointed by the King one of the first counsellors. James I. had authorized" the undertaking, and it was now launched. He busied himself in drawing up his royal charter for the government of the colony, and April 10, 1606, the paper was ready. THE OLDEST AMERICAN CHARTER. 15 By this oldest of American charters two colonies were directed to be established in the great empire of Virginia. The southern colony was intrusted to Sir Thomas Gates, Sir George Somers, and others, and was to be " planted " anywhere between thirty-four and forty-one degrees of north latitude, corresponding to the southern limits of North Carolina, and the mouth of the Hudson River. It was to extend fifty miles north and fifty miles south of the spot selected for the settle- ment ; one hundred miles into the land ; and to embrace any islands within the same distance of the coast. The association governing the southern colony was styled the London Company ; the northern colony was intrusted to the Plymouth Company ; and a strip of territory one hundred miles broad was to intervene be- tween the two. Three years afterwards (1609) the boundaries of the southern colony were enlarged and exactly defined. It was to embrace the territory two hundred miles north and two hundred miles south of Old Point Comfort, the mouth of James River, and to reach " up into the land from sea to sea." This was the original charter under which Virginia held at the time of the formation of the Federal Constitution in 1788. The plan of government for the colony was simple. Everything began and ended with the King. A great council of thirteen in London, appointed by himself, was to govern. A subordinate council in Virginia, ap- pointed by the greater, was to follow his instructions. Thus the colony of Virginia was to be ruled and directed in all its proceedings by the royal will, since the King appointed its rulers, and directed under his sign -manual •in what manner they were to rule. The details were generally judicious. The Christian religion was to be 16 VIRGINIA: A HISTORY OF THE PEOPLE. preached to the Indians ; lands were to descend as in England ; trial by jury was secured to all persons charged with crime ; the subordinate council was to try civil causes ; and the products of the colonists were to be brought to a public storehouse, where a Cape mer- chant or treasurer was to control and apportion them as they were needed. This early development of the so- cialistic and cooperative idea resulted unfortunately ; but for the moment it had a plausible appearance on paper. What was plain about the charter was, that the colony of Virginia would have no rights other than those which King James I. chose to allow it. His " instruc- tions " were to be the law, and he held to that theory with all the obstinacy of a narrow mind to the end of his life. Having secured this charter the friends of the enter- prise made every preparation for the voyage. About one hundred colonists were secured, apparently without difficulty, and at the end of the year 1606 all was ready for the expedition. The little fleet consisted of three vessels, one of twenty tons, one of forty, and one of a hundred, the names of which were the Discovery, the Good Speed, and the Susan Constant. On the 19th of December, 1606, these three ships set sail down the Thames for Virginia. IV. JAMESTOWN. The sailing of the ships excited general interest even in so busy a city as London. Prayers were offered up in the churches for the welfare of the expedition, and JAMESTOWN. 17 the poet Drayton wished his countrymen good fortune in a glowing lyric : — " You brave heroic minds Worthy your country's name, That honor still pursue Whilst loitering hinds Lurk here at home with shame, Go and subdue ! " Britons ! you stay too long, Quickly aboard bestow you, And with a merry gale Swell j'our stretch' d sail With vows as strong As the winds that blow you ! " And cheerfully at sea Success you still entice To get the pearls and gold, And ours to hold Virginia Earth's only paradise." The character and motives of these first Virginia ad- venturers have been the subject of discussion. There is really nothing to discuss. They were men of every rank, from George Percy, brother of the Earl of North- umberland, to Samuel Collier, " boy ; " and in the lists were classed as " gentlemen, carpenters, laborers," and others. Unfortunately more than half the whole num- ber were "gentlemen," and a gentleman at the time signified a person unused to manual labor. As to the motives of the adventurers, these lay on the surface. To get the pearls and gold was no doubt the thought in the minds of the majority, but this was not the only aim. Many had it warmly at heart to convert the Indians to Christianity, and others looked to the extension of Eng- lish empire. The dissensions of the first years were due 2 18 VIRGINIA: A HISTORY OF THE PEOPLE. to causes which will be stated ; but a radical defect was the unfitness of the original colonists for their work. More than half their number had never used an axe, and "jewellers, gold refiners, and a perfumer," were among the people sent to fight the American wilder- ness. The three small ships sailed down the Thames, fol- lowed by prayers and good wishes, and, after tossing in the Channel for some weeks, went out to sea. For reasons unexplained they were not in charge of Bartholo- mew Gosnold, but of Captain Christopher Newport; and, following the old southern route by way of the Azores, safely reached the West Indies toward the spring. A curious incident of the voyage was the arrest of Smith by the other leaders. He was charged with a design to murder them and make himself " King of Virginia ; " and he afterwards stated that a gallows was erected to execute him. Nothing more is known of this singular occurrence. Smith remained under arrest until after the arrival in Virginia, when the first American jury tried and acquitted him. It was the intention to found the colony on the old site, Roanoke Island, but a violent storm drove the ships northward quite past the shores of Wingandacoa, and they reached the mouth of Chesapeake Bay. In this they took shelter toward the end of April 1607, and the beauty of the country induced the commanders of the expedition to settle there instead of at Roanoke. The low shores were covered with " flowers of divers colors ; " the " goodly trees " were in full foliage ; and all around was inviting. A party landed to look at the country, and had their first experience with the Indians. They were received with a flight of arrows from the JAMESTOWN. 19 lurking people hidden in the tall grass, but they fled at a volley from the English guns, and the party returned to the ships, which continued their way. Before them was the great expanse of Chesapeake Bay, the " Mother of Waters " as the Indian name signified, and in the distance the broad mouth of a great river, the Pow- hatan. As the ships approached the western shore of the bay the storm had spent its force, and they called the place Point Comfort. A little further, — at the present Hampton, — they landed and were hospitably received by a tribe of Indians. The ships then sailed on up the river, which was new-named James River, and parties landed here and there, looking for a good site for the colony. A very bad one was finally se- lected, — a low peninsula half buried in the tide at high water. Here the adventurers landed on May 13, 1607, and gave the place the name of Jamestown, in honor of the King. Nothing remains of this famous settlement but the ruins of a church tower covered with ivy, and some old tombstones. The tower is crumbling year by year, and the roots of trees have cracked the slabs, making great rifts across the names of the old Armigers and Honour- ables. The place is desolate, with its washing waves and flitting sea-fowl, but possesses a singular attraction. It is one of the few localities which recall the first years of American history ; but it will not recall them much longer. Every distinctive feature of the spot is slowly disappearing. The river encroaches year by year, and the ground occupied by the original huts is already sub- merged. The English landed and pitched tents, but soon found it more agreeable to lodge " under boughs of trees " 20 VIRGINIA: A HISTORY OF THE PEOPLE. in the pleasant May weather, until they built cabins. These were erected on the neck of the peninsula, and before the summer they had settled into something like a community. From the moment of landing they had paid sedulous attention to the exercises of religion. An " old rotten tent " was the first church in the American wilderness. The next step was to stretch an awning between the trunks of trees ; to nail a bar between two of these to serve as a reading-desk — and here " the re- ligious and courageous divine," Mr. Hunt, read the ser- vice morning and evening, preached twice every Sun- day, and celebrated the Holy Communion at intervals of three months. After a while the settlers busied them- selves in constructing a regular church. It was not an imposing structure, since the chronicle describes it as a log building " covered with rafts, sedge, and dirt," but soon they did better. When Lord Delaware came, in 1610, he found at Jamestown a church sixty feet long and twenty-four broad, the first permanent religious edi- fice erected by Englishmen in North America. The Virginians had thus made a good beginning. They" had felled trees, built houses, erected a church, and were saying their prayers in it, like honest people who were bent on doing their duty in that state of life in which it had pleased Heaven to place them. But the whole cheerful prospect was overclouded by a simple circumstance. Their leaders were worthless. The names of the Council had not been announced in Eng- land by King James. He had had the eccentric fancy of sealing them up in a box, which was not to be opened until the expedition reached Virginia. The box had then been opened and the Councillors were found to be Bartholomew Gosnold, John Smith, Edward Maria JAMESTOWN. 21 Wingfield, Christopher Newport, John Ratcliffe, John Martin, and George Kendall. One and all of these men, with the exception of Smith and Gosnold, were grossly incompetent ; and Gosnold died soon afterwards, and Smith was still under arrest and excluded from the Council. Wingfield had been elected President, but it was soon seen that he was a man of no capacity. He was indolent, self-indulgent, wanting in every faculty which should characterize a ruler, and his mind was haunted by the idea that Smith was secretly plotting to murder him and usurp his authority. The rest of the Council were no better, and the promise of the future was gloomy. The little band of Englishmen were in a new country, surrounded by enemies, and those who ruled over them seemed unconscious of their perilous situation. Soon the Indian peril revealed itself. A party of men sailed up James River and paid a visit to Pow- hatan, Emperor of the country, near the present site of Richmond. They found him in his royal wigwam, — a " sour " old man of whom more will be said hereafter, — and after a brief interview returned to Jamestown. Exciting intelligence awaited them. In their absence, a band of Indians had attacked the colonists while plant- ing corn, and a flight of arrows had killed one man and wounded seventeen others, but a cannon shot fired from the ships had put the dusky people to rout. It was more than probable that the sour old emperor had di- rected this onslaught, and the palisade was mounted with cannon and a guard established. It was plain from this dangerous incident, that the Virginia colony required a military ruler. Wingfield was a merchant and faineant, utterly unfitted for his 22 VIRGINIA: A HISTORY OF THE PEOPLE. position. Smith was still under arrest, but all at once he demanded a trial. This, Wingfield strove to evade ; he would send him home to England to be tried by the authorities, he said. But the restive soldier suddenly flamed out. He would be tried in Virginia as was his r jo-ht — there was the charter ! and the trial took place. The result was a ruinous commentary on the characters of Wingfield and the Council. The testimony of their own witnesses convicted them of subornation of perjury to destroy Smith ; he was acquitted by the jury of all the charges against him; and Kendall, who had con- ducted the prosecution, was condemned to pay him £200 damages. This sum was presented by Smith to the colony for the general use, and then the foes partook of the Communion, and the soldier was admitted to his seat in the Council. Such was the first open trial of strength between Smith and the factionists. He was destined to have more, involving the very life of the colony. For the moment all was quiet, however, and Newport sailed for England to report and obtain supplies, leaving one of the barks, the Pinnace, for the use of the colony. From this, were to spring woes unnumbered. V. THE TERRIBLE SUMMER OF 1607. The colony now seemed prosperous. The skies were blue and the corn was growing ; the supply of provisions was sufficient for three months, and the settlers, in their " Monmouth caps, Irish stockings, and coats of mail," went in and out about their occupations, with a sense THE TERRIBLE SUMMER OF 1607. 23 of security. The reed-thatched huts were defended by cannon, but Powhatan had " sued for peace," and the men met and ate their food from the " common kettle " without fear. But under this fair outside was the canker of incapac- ity and misrule. In the bright days all went well, but discerning eyes might have seen that in the hour of trial the leaders would be found wanting. The old chronicle paints the men with pitiless accuracy. They had neither brains, courage, nor morals, nor anything good about them. Wingfield, the President, had corrupted his easily- corrupted associates, and the whole bad crew spent their time in idleness and gluttony. The enterprise had grievously disappointed them, and, seeing no further profit in it, they were looking for an opportunity to abandon it. The true men looked sidewise at them since Smith's trial, and shook their heads. It was the next thing to a certainty that when the dark hour came they would desert their comrades and leave them to de- struction. Soon the dark hour arrived. A worse enemy than the Indians assailed the colony. With July came the sul- try " dog days " of the southern summer, and the marshy banks of the river,- sweltering in the sun, sweated a poi- sonous malaria which entered into the blood of the Eng- lish. The whole colony was prostrated by a virulent epidemic. All thought of guarding against the Indians was abandoned. The supply of food was soon exhausted, and destruction stared them in the face. The men lay wasting away in the sultry cabins. Those who were not attacked were too few to wait on the sick, scarcely enough to drag them out and bury them when they died. " Burning fevers destroyed them," says George Percy, 24 VIRGINIA: A HISTORY OF THE PEOPLE. writing of this terrible time, " some departed suddenly, but for the most part they died of mere famine. There were never Englishmen left in a foreign country in such misery as we were, in this new discovered Virginia." Night and day men were heard " groaning in every cor- ner of the fort, most pitiful to hear." The writer seems to groan himself as he remembers the fearful scene. "If there were any conscience in men," he exclaims, " it would make their hearts to bleed to hear the pitiful murmurings and outcries . . . some departing out of the world, sometimes three and four in a night ; in the morning their bodies trailed out of the cabins like dogs to be buried." By the month of September famine and fever had swept off fifty men, one half the colony, and among the dead were Bartholomew Gosnold and Thomas Studley, the treasurer. Smith was left to contend single-handed with Wingfield and his followers. These people now showed their true characters, and added cowardice to in- capacity. Wingfield and Kendall made an effort to seize the Pinnace and escape to England ; but the col- onists rose in their wrath and dealt promptly with them. They deposed them from the Council and elected Rat- clifife President in Wingfield's place ; but Ratcliffe was little better than his predecessor, and did nothing to suc- cor them. The only hope was Smith, and the settlers compelled him by popular uprising to assume the con- trol of the colony. Smith acted with energy, for the poor people were nearly starving. By an interposition of Providence, the Indians had voluntarily brought them a small sup- ply of corn ; but this was soon exhausted, and Smith went down James River to obtain more. The tribe at THE TERRIBLE SUMMER OF 1607. 25 Hampton refused it, when he fired a volley into the crowd, captured their idol, seized the supplies, and re- turned to Jamestown. Another expedition followed, from which Smith returned at a critical moment. Wingfield and Kendall had again seized the Pinnace and were on the point of escaping, but Smith opened on them with cannon and they were compelled to sur- render. Short work was made of Kendall, the ring- leader of the conspiracy. He was tried by a jury, found guilty, and shot. The life of Wingfield was spared, but he was deprived of all authority. He remained in the colony " living in disgrace," and anxiously looking for an opportunity to return to England. Thus with famine and disease, hot turmoil and con- spiracy, the groans of the dying in the huts, and the sudden thunder of Smith's cannon summoning the mu- tineers to surrender, passed this terrible summer of 1607. It tried the stoutest hearts, but had this much of good in it, that it showed the adventurers who was their true leader. In the midst of the general despondency one man at least had refused to give way to despair. Though sick himself of the fever, Smith had labored unceasingly for the rest. When " ten men could neither go nor stand," he had fed the sick and dying, infused hope into the survivors, and had the right to say of him- self what he said of Pocahontas, that he " next under God was still the instrument to preserve this colony from death, famine, and utter confusion." At last the dawn appeared ; the long night of suffer- ing was at an end. The fall came with its fresh winds, driving away the malaria. The healthful airs restored the sick. The rivers were full of fish and wild* fowl, and the corn was fit for bread. There was no longer 26 VIRGINIA: A HISTORY OF THE PEOPLE. any danger that the colony would be destroyed by dis- ease or want. A kind Providence, watching over the weak and suffering, had preserved the remnant, and the Virginia plantation had risen as it were from the very brink of the grave. A bitter winter followed — " an ex- traordinary frost in most parts of Europe and as ex- treme in Virginia " — but this banished every remnant of fever, as the coming of winter destroys to-day the epidemic which scourges the lower Mississippi. The long agony was over, and what was left of the James- town colony was safe at last. Men soon forget trouble. The fearful summer which they had passed through was lost sight of, and the dissensions again began. Smith had retired from his place as acting President, and the old incompetent peo- ple regained the sway. Complaints were made that nothing had been effected ; that the royal order to go in search of the " South Sea " had not been complied with ; that the whole enterprise was a failure. Smith replied to these " murmurs," which we are informed " arose in the Council," by offering to lead an expedition of dis- covery in the direction of the mountains. This was de- termined upon, and in a severe spell of weather (Decem- ber 10, 1607) he set out in a barge with a small party of men, ostensibly to make the famous discovery of the great " South Sea." VI. THE ANCIENT VIRGINIANS. This voyage toward the unknown was an important event \n. the history of the colony, and Smith's adven- tures, during the month which followed, threw him for THE ANCIENT VIRGINIANS. 27 the first time face to face with the Indians in their wood- land haunts. He made their acquaintance at their homes on the banks of the rivers ; observed their strange rites and usages ; and gathered the details for his picturesque account of them, which enables us to see them as they looked and acted in that old Virginia of nearly three centuries ago. It is not possible and is unnecessary to reproduce here the full picture of this singular race ; but some of the details, especially those relating to their religious belief, are extremely curious. The experiences of the Eng- lish, first and last, were with the " Powhatans," who inhabited what is now called Tidewater Virginia, from the Chesapeake to the Piedmont. Other tribes lay beyond, and all were doubtless the successors of the Mound-builders ; but of these the English settlers knew little or nothing. Smith draws for us a full-length portrait of the Vir- ginia savage, — a barbarian guided by impulse, cunning, treacherous, and nursing his grudge. He lived in a wigwam or an arbor built of trees, and dressed in deer- skin ; the women wearing mantles of feathers " ex- ceedingly warm and handsome." Both sexes wore bead necklaces, and tattooed their bodies with puccoon, which is the bloodroot ; and the women were subject in all things to their husbands. On the hunting expeditions they carried burdens and built the arbors, while the warriors smoked pipes and looked on. The picture drawn in the old record is somewhat comic. The young Indian women are seen erecting the huts at the end of the long day's march ; and in the slant sunset light the youthful braves practice shooting at a target, for by such manly accomplishments they " get their wives " 28 VIRGINIA: A HISTORY OF THE PEOPLE. from among the dusk beauties working at the sylvan arbors ! The most curious feature of this curious race was their religion. There is no evidence that they had any conception of a beneficent Creator. Their god was Okee, or " The One Alone called Kiwassa," the spirit of Evil. They feared and worshiped him as they wor- shiped Force in all its manifestations, — fire that burned them, water that drowned them, the thunder and light- ning, and the English cannon when they came. As to a good god, there was no such being; if there was, it was unnecessary to worship him. They need not take the trouble to conciliate such a deity, since from the nature of things he would not injure them. As to Okee, or the One Alone called Kiwassa, it was different. This Evil one was to be propitiated, and they made images of him, decorated with copper, which they set up in temples hidden in the woods ; and endeav- ored " to fashion themselves as near to his shape as they could imagine." The great national temple was at Uttamussac, on York River. Here, on " certain red sandy hills in the woods, were three great houses filled with images of their kings and devils, and tombs of their predecessors." In these " sepulchres of their kings " were deposited the royal corpses, embalmed and wrapped in skins ; and each district of the kingdom had its temple. At the shrines priests kept watch — hideous figures, with dried snakes' skins falling from their heads on their shoulders, as they shook rattles and chanted hoarsely the greatness of the deity. These priests were chosen and set aside by a strange ceremony. Once a year, twenty of the handsomest youths, from ten to fifteen, THE ANCIENT VIRGINIANS. 29 were " painted white " and placed at the foot of a tree in the presence of a great multitude. Then the sav- ages, armed with clubs, ranged themselves in two ranks, leaving a lane to the tree, through which five young men were to pass, in turn, and carry off the children. As the young men passed through this lane with the children in their arms they were " fiercely beaten," but thought of nothing but shielding the children, while the women wept and cried out " very passionately." The tree was then torn down and the boughs woven into wreaths, and the children were " cast on a heap in a valley as dead." Here Okee, or Kiwassa, sucked the blood from the left breast of such as were " his by lot," until they were dead -, and the rest were kept in the wilderness by the five young men for nine months, after which they were set aside for the priesthood. Thus Okee was the god who sucked the blood of children — a sufficient description of him. The bravest warriors inclined before his temple with abject fear. In going up or down the York, by the mysterious Utta- mussac shrine, they solemnly cast copper, or beads, or puccoon into the stream to propitiate him, and made long strokes of the paddle to get away from the danger- ous neighborhood. As to their views of a future life, the reports differed. According to one account, they believed in " the im- mortality of the soul, when, life departing from the body, according to the good or bad works it hath done, it is carried up to the tabernacles of the gods to per« petual happiness, or to Popogusso, a great pit which they think to be at the farthest parts of the world where the sun sets, and there burn continually." Another account attributes to them the belief that the human 30 VIRGINIA: A HISTORY OF THE PEOPLE. soul was extinguished, like the body, at death. To this the priests were an exception. The One Alone called Kiwassa was their friend. When they died they went " bej^ond the mountains toward the setting of the sun,'* and there, with plenty of tobacco to smoke, and plumes on their heads, and bodies painted with puccoon, they enjoyed a happy immortality. It was a grim faith — the human soul groping in thick darkness ; shrinking from the lightning cutting it, and the harsh reverberation of the god's voice in the thunder. But beyond the sunset on the Blue Mountains was peace at last, where they would " do nothing but dance and sing with all their predecessors." Whether they wished or expected to see the One Alone called Kiwassa there, we are not informed. He was never seen by mortal, it seems, in this world or the next. And yet it was known that he had come to earth once. On a rock below Richmond, about a mile from James River, may still be seen gigantic foot-prints about five feet apart. These were the foot-prints of Kiwassa, as he walked through the land of Powhatan. 1 Thus all was primitive and picturesque about this singular race. They were without a written language, but had names for each other, for the seasons, and every natural object. The years were counted by win- ters or cdhonks — a word coined from the cry of the wild geese passing southward at the beginning of win- ter. They reckoned five seasons — the Budding or Blossoming, which was spring ; the Corn-earing time, early summer ; the Highest Sun, full summer ; the Fall of the Leaf, autumn ; and Cohonks, winter. The months 1 These singular impressions are on the present estate of " Pow- hatan " — the site of the old Imperial residence. Their origin is un- known. THE ANCIENT VIRGINIANS. 31 were counted by moons, and named after their products: as the Moon of Strawberries, the Moon of Stags, the Moon of Corn, and the Moon of Cohonks. The day was.divided into three parts: Sunrise, the Full Sunpower, and the Sunset. They had many festivals, as at the com- ing of the wild-fowl, the return of the hunting season, and the great Corn-gathering celebration. At a stated time every year the whole tribe feasted, put out all the old fires, kindled new by rubbing pieces of wood to- gether, and all crimes but murder were then pardoned; it was considered in bad taste even to allude to them. One other ceremony, the Huskanawing, took place every fourteen years, when the young men were taken to spots in the woods, intoxicated on a decoction from cer- tain roots, and when brought back were declared to be thenceforth warriors. This outline of the aboriginal Virginians will define their character. They were, in the fullest sense of the term, a peculiar people, and had, in addition to the above traits, one other which ought not to be passed over — they were content to be ruled by women. Of this singular fact there is no doubt, and it quite over- turns the general theory that the Indian women were despised subordinates. When Smith was captured, he was waited upon by the " Queen of Appomattock ; " there was a " Queen of the Paspaheghs," and the old histo- rian Beverley, speaking of the tribes about the year 1700, tells us Pungoteague was governed by "a Queen," that Nanduye was the seat of '« the Empress," and that this empress had the shore tribes " under tribute." To this, add the singular statement made by Powhatan, that his kingdom would descend to his brothers, and afterwards to his sisters, though he had sons living. 32 VIRGINIA! A HISTORY Of THE PEOPLE. Such were the Virginia Indians, a race not at all re- sembling the savages of other lands ; tall in person, vigorous, stoical, enduring pain without a murmur ; slow in maturing revenge, but swift to strike ; worshiping the lightning and thunder as the flash of the eyes and the hoarse voice of their unseen god ; without pity ; passionately fond of hunting and war ; children of the woods, with all the primitive impulses ; loving little, hating inveterately ; a strange people, which, on the plains of the West to-day, are not unlike what they were in Virginia nearly three centuries ago. The old chroni- cles, with the rude pictures, give us their portraits. We may fancy them going to war in their puccoon paint, paddling swiftly in their log canoes on the Tidewater rivers ; dancing and yelling at their festivals ; creeping stealthily through the woods to attack the English ; darting quickly by the shadowy temple of Uttamussac \n the woods of the York, and shrinking with terror as the voice of Okee roars in the thunder. The Emperor Powhatan (his public and official name, his family name being Wahunsonacock) ruled over thirty tribes, 8000 square miles, and 8000 subjects, of whom about 2400 were fighting men. Part of his territories came by conquest, but he inherited the country from where Richmond now stands to Gloucester, though the Chickahominy tribe, about three hundred warriors, dis- owned his authority. He was a man of ability, both in war and peace ; greatly feared by his subjects, and holding the state of a king. At his chief places of resi- dence, — Powhatan, below Richmond, Orapax, on the Chickahominy, and Werowocomoco, on the York, — he was waited on by his braves and wives, of whom he had a large number ; and it is plain from the chronicles POCAHONTAS. 33 that his will was treated with implicit respect. He was indeed the head and front of the state — a monarch whose jus divinum was much more fully recognized than the jus divinum of his Majesty James I. in Eng- land. He ruled by brains as well as by royal descent, by might as well as of right. On important occasions, as when going to war, a great council or parliament of the tribes assembled ; but the old Emperor seems to have been the soul of these assemblies, and quite at one with his nobles. In theory he was only the first gentleman in his kingdom, but his will was the constitution, and his authority sacred ; " when he listed his word was law." When Smith came to stand before this king of the woods in his court, it was Europe and America brought face to face ; civilization and the Old World in physical contact with barbarism and the New. VII. POCAHONTAS. Smith began his famous voyage toward the South Sea on a bitter December day of 1607. It is not prob- able that the unknown ocean was in his thoughts at all ; life at Jamestown was monotonous, and he and his good companions in the barge would probably meet with adventures. If these were perilous they would still be welcome, for the ardent natures of the time relished peril ; and, turning his barge head into the Chickahominy, Smith ascended the stream until the shallows stopped him. He then procured a canoe and some Indian guides, and continued his voyage with only 3 34 VIRGINIA: A HISTORY OF THE PEOPLE. two companions, leaving the rest of the men behind to await his return. The result of the canoe voyage was unfortunate in the extreme. Having reached a point in what is now the White Oak Swamp, east of Richmond, — he calls the place Rassaweak, — he landed with an Indian guide, was attacked by a band of Indians, and having sunk in a marsh was captured and taken before their chief, Ope- chancanough, brother of the Emperor Powhatan. The Indians had attacked and killed two of the English left behind, and Smith was now bound to a tree and ordered to be shot to death. A trifle saved his life. He ex- hibited a small ivory compass which he always carried, and explained by signs as far as possible the properties of the magnetic needle. It is improbable that the In- dian chief comprehended this scientific lecture, but he saw the needle through the glass cover and yet could not touch it, which was enough. Smith was released and fed plentifully, and they finally set out with him on a triumphal march through the land of Powhatan. They traversed the New Kent " desert," crossed the Pamunkey, Mattapony, and Rappahannock to the Po- tomac region, and then, returning on their steps, con- ducted the prisoner to Werowocomoco, the " Chief Place of Council " of the Emperor Powhatan. This old Indian capital was in Gloucester, on York River, about twenty-five miles below the present West Point. The exact site is supposed to have been " Shelly," an estate of the Page family, where great banks of oyster shells and the curious ruin, " Pow- hatan's chimney," seem to show that the Emperor held his court. Smith was brought before him as a distin- guished captive, and his fate seemed sealed. He had POCAHONTAS. 35 killed two of his Indian assailants in the fight on the Chickahominy, and it was tolerably certain that his ene- mies would now beat out his brains. His description of the scene, and especially of the Indian Emperor, is picturesque. Powhatan was a tall and gaunt old man with a " sour look," and sat enthroned on a couch, cov- ered with mats, in front of a fire. He was wrapped in a robe of raccoon skins, which he afte wards offered as an imperial present to the King of England, and beside him sat or reclined, his girl-wives. The rest of the In- dian women, nearly nude, stained red with puccoon and decorated with shell necklaces, were ranged against the walls of the wigwam, and the dusky warriors were drawn up in two lines to the right and left of the Emperor. The prisoner was brought in before this imposing as- semblage, and at first there seemed a possibility that he might escape with his life. The " Queen of Appomat- tock " brought him water in a wooden bowl to wash his hands ; another a bunch of feathers to use as a towel ; and then " a feast was spread for him after their best barbarous fashion." But his fate had been decided upon. Two stones were brought in and laid on the ground in front of the Emperor, and what followed is succinctly related in the old narrative. Smith was seized, dragged to the stones, his head forced down on one of them, and clubs were raised to beat out his brains, when Pocahontas, the daughter of Powhatan, interposed and saved him. The description of the scene is concise. The Indian girl, a child of twelve or thir- teen, ran to him, " got his head in her arms, and laid her own upon his to save him from death ; " whereupon the Emperor relented and ordered his life to be spared. 1 1 The questions connected with this incident will be examined else- where. 36 VIRGINIA; A HISTORY OF THE PEOPLE. A kind Providence had thus preserved the soldier, but he was to remain with Powhatan to make " bells, beads, and copper," for Pocahontas. It was a very curious fate for the hardy campaigner of the Turkish wars, to be buried in the Virginia woods, the fashioner of toys for an Indian girl. Pocahontas was the favorite daughter of the Em- peror, and Smith describes her as the most attractive of the Indian maids ; " for features, countenance, and ex- pression, she much exceeded any of the rest." Her figure was probably slight. " Of so great a spirit, how- ever her stature" was the description of her afterwards, when she had grown up and visited London. Her dress was a robe of doeskin lined with down from the breast of the wood pigeon, and she wore coral bracelets on wrists and ankles, and a white plume in her hair, the badge of royal blood. It must have been a very in- teresting woodland picture — the soldier, with tanned face and sweeping mustache, shaping trinkets for the small slip of Virginia royalty in her plumes and brace- lets. A few words of the chronicle give us a glimpse of it, and the curtain falls. The soldier remained with Powhatan until early in the next January (1608). They had sworn eternal friendship, and the Emperor offered to adopt him and give him the " country of Capahowsick " for a duke- dom. It is probable that Smith received this proposal with enthusiasm, but he expressed a strong desire to pay a visit to Jamestown, and the Emperor finally per- mitted him to depart. He traveled with an escort and reached Jamestown in safety. His Indian guard were supplied with presents for Powhatan and his family, a cannon shot was fired into the ice-laden trees for their POCAHONTAS. 37 gratification, and overwhelmed with fright, they fled into the woods. The soldier had not spent a very merry Christmas on the banks of the York, and was not going to enjoy a happy New Year at Jamestown. The place was "in combustion," and the little colony seemed going to de- struction. The new President, Ratcliffe, had revived the project of seizing the Pinnace. This was the only ves- sel, and he meant to escape in it to England — in other words to desert his comrades and leave them to their fate. As long as they had the Pinnace they might save themselves by abandoning the country. Now Ratcliffe and his fellow conspirators intended to take away this last hope. Smith reached Jamestown on the very day (January 8, 1608) when the conspirators were about to sail. They had gone on board the Pinnace and were raising anchor when Smith's heavy hand fell on them. " With the hazard of his life, with sakre falcon and musket- shot" he compelled them "now the third time to stay or sink." With that harsh thunder dogging them, Rat- cliffe and his companions surrendered, in the midst of wild commotion. But their party was powerful and a curious blow was struck at Smith. He was formally charged " under the Levitical law " with the death of the men slain by the Indians on the Chickahominy. The punishment was death; but the "lawyers," as he calls them, were dealing with a resolute foe. Smith suddenly arrested his intended judges, and sent them under guard on board the Pinnace, where Ratcliffe and his accomplice Wingfield awaited his further pleasure in momentary fear of death. All this turmoil and " combustion " had arisen from 38 VIRGINIA: A HISTORY OF THE PEOPLE. sheer starvation. The English were without food, and the fearful summer of 1607 seemed about to be re- peated. Suddenly Providence came to their rescue. A band of Indians bending down under baskets of corn and venison made their appearance from the direction of York River and entered the fort. At the head of the " wild train " was Pocahontas : the Indian girl of her own good heart had brought succor to the perish- ing colony ; and she afterwards traversed the woods be- tween the York and Jamestown " ever once in four or five days " bringing food, which '* saved many of their lives that else, for all this, had starved for hunger." We are informed that the colonists were profoundly touched by this " love of Pocahontas," and their name for her thereafter was " the dear and blessed Pocahon- tas." Long afterwards Smith recalled these days to memory, and wrote in his letter to the Queen, " During the time of two or three years she, next under God, was still the instrument to preserve this colony from death, famine and utter confusion, which, if in those days had once been dissolved, Virginia might have lain as it was at our first arrival to this day." These incidents paint the picture of the colony in the winter of 1607. Nearly a year after the settlement it had not taken root, and as far as any one could see it was not going to do so. The elements of disintegra- tion seemed too strong for it. The men were gloomy and discouraged ; " but for some few that were gen- tlemen by birth, industry and discretion," wrote Smith, " we could not possibly have subsisted." The loss of life by the summer epidemic had been terrible indeed, but what was worse was the loss of hope. The little society was nearly disorganized. Rival factions bat> POCAHONTAS. 39 tied for the mastery. Conspiracies were formed to de- sert the country; and a general discontent and loss of energy seemed to foretell the sure fate of the whole enterprise. What was the explanation of this impatience, in- subordination, and discouragement ? These " gentlemen, laborers, carpenters '' and others, were fair representa- tives of their classes in England ; and in England they had been industrious, and respectable members of the community. Many persons of low character were after- wards sent to Virginia by James I., but the first " sup- plies " were composed of excellent material. Smith, Percy, and many more were men of very high character, and the wars with the savages clearly showed that the settlers generally could be counted on for courage and endurance. Why, then, was the Virginia colony going to destruction ? The reply is easy. Their rulers were worthless, and above all, the unhappy adventurers had no home ties. They were adrift in the wilderness without wives or children, and had little or no incentive to perform honest work. The result duly followed : they became idle and difficult to rule. It was bad enough to have over them such men as Wingfield and Ratcliffe, but the absence of the civilizing element, wives and children, was fatal. Later settlers in other parts of the country, brought their families, and each had his home and hearthstone. These first Americans had neither. When they came home at night — or to the hut which they called home — no smiles welcomed them. When they worked it was under compulsion ; why should they labor ? The " common kettle " from which they took their dreary meals would be supplied by others. So the idlers grew 40 VIRGINIA: A HISTORY OF THE PEOPLE. ever idler ; the days passed in crimination and angry discussion one with another. The Virginia adventurers were steadily losing all hope of bringing the enterprise to a successful issue, and were looking with longing eyes back toward England as the place of refuge from all their woes. Such was the state of things behind the palisades of Jamestown at the beginning of 1608. The original hundred men had dwindled to thirty or forty. This remnant was torn by faction. There was no food for the morrow. Without Pocahontas and her corn-bearers it seemed certain that the Virginia plantation would miserably end. At this last moment succor came. A white sail was seen in James River, and whether Span- iard or English, friend or foe, they would be supplied with bread. The new-comers were friends. The Lon- don Company had sent out two ships under Captain Newport, with men and provisions, and this was one of them. For the time the plantation was saved. VIII. A TEAR OF INCIDENTS. With the opening spring (1608) cheerfulness re- turned. The sun was shining after the dreary winter ; the English ship had brought supplies ; and the new colonists, fresh from home, gave them home news and revived their spirits. For a time, therefore, the growlers and croakers were silenced ; bustle followed the sombre quiet; and a new spirit of life seemed to be infused into the colony. The year which followed was full of movement, and A YEAR OF INCIDENTS. 41 presents an admirable picture of the times and men, which is after all the true end of history. The best history is no doubt the chronicle which shows us the actual human beings — what manner of lives they lived, and how they acted in the midst of their environment ; and this is found in the original relations written by the Virginia adventurers. The full details must be sought for in the writings themselves — here a summary only is possible. The two prominent figures of the year 1608 are Smith and Newport. We have seen the soldier now in too many emergencies to misunderstand his character ; the character of Newport was nearly the precise contrast. He was "an empty, idle man," according to the old settlers, who charged him with tale-bearing ; and was, probably, a man of the world and a courtier of the Lon- don authorities, looking to his own profit. His stay in Virginia was brief, but was marked by interesting in- cidents. He went to trade with Powhatan, and that astute savage outwitted him. Announcing to his visitor that " it was not agreeable to his greatness to trade in a peddling manner," Powhatan proposed that Newport should produce his commodities, for which he should receive their fair value. Newport did so, and the Em- peror, selecting the best of everything, returned him four bushels of corn. But Smith, who accompanied the expedition, received two or three hundred bushels for some glass beads — the first chapter in the dealings be- tween the white and red people. Toward spring a fire broke out at Jamestown, and completely destroyed the place ; but the reed-thatched huts were rebuilt, and the incident was soon forgotten in the excitement of what, in our time, is called th« 42 VIRGINIA: A HISTORY OF THE PEOPLE. gold-fever. A yellow deposit had been discovered in the neighborhood of Jamestown, and suddenly a craze seized upon the adventurers. The deposit was taken for gold, and all heads were turned : " There was no thought, no discourse, no hope, and no work but to dig gold, wash gold, refine gold, and load gold." Newport and the Council caught the fever, like the rest, and Smith was the only one who remained incredulous. He reasoned with them in vain, and at last lost all patience. He told them roughly that he was " not enamored of their dirty skill to fraught such a drunken ship with so much gilded dirt," and went about among the gold-dig- gers " breathing out these and many other passions." They would not listen to him, and Newport carried to London a full cargo of the gilded dirt, which was duly found to be worthless, and no more was heard of it. What was much more important, he took with him twenty turkeys — the first introduction of that fowl into Europe. With the yellow dirt and the turkeys went also to England the disgraced Wingfield. He never returned to Virginia, but spent his leisure, thence- forth, in maligning his old opponents there. Another joyful event of these spring days of 1608 was the arrival of a second ship, which had sailed with Newport, but had been driven to the West Indies. This was the Phoenix, commanded by Captain Francis Nelson, " an honest man and expert mariner." He turned his back on the " fantastical gold," and laid in a cargo of cedar ; and when he sailed for home in June, took back with him Smith's " True Relation of Vir- ginia." This was printed in the same year at " The Grayhound, in Paul's Churchyard," and was the first book written by an Englishman in America. A YEAR OF INCIDENTS. 43 Smith, who had determined to make an exploration of the Chesapeake, accompanied the Phoenix in his barge as far as the capes. There he took final leave of the honest man and expert mariner, Captain Francis Nelson, and the good ship disappears in the old yesirs on her homeward voyage. We may see the white sails fade and the men in the barge standing up and looking seaward. Then the mist swallows the speck, and it is gone. Smith's voyage with fourteen companions to explore the Chesapeake was a remarkable expedition. It was made in an open barge, and resembled a journey into an unknown world. All was new and strange. At one time they meet with the Indian king of Accomac, who relates how the faces of two dead children remained bright and fresh, and all that looked on them at once expired. Then a terrible storm beats on the adven- turers in the small barge — " thunder, lightning, and rain, with mighty waves." Driven far to the north, and nearly out of provisions, the voyagers become faint- hearted, but Smith encourages them. They ought to remember " the memorable history of Sir Ralph Layne, how his company importuned him to proceed in the discovery of Moratico, alleging they yet had a dog, which being boiled with sassafras leaves would richly feed them on their return. Regain, therefore, your old spirits," adds the persuasive orator-soldier, " for return I will not, if God please, till I have seen the Massa- womecs, found Potomac, or the head of this water you conceive to be endless." He found and entered the Potomac, the Rappahannock, and other rivers, often fighting with the Indians ; and near what is now Sting- ray Point, was wounded in the wrist by one of these 44 VIRGINIA: A HISTORY OF THE PEOPLE. fish. His arm swelled to an alarming extent, and, think- ing he would surely die" he selected a spot to be buried in. The swelling soon disappeared, however, and the voyagers returned to Jamestown, from which place they again set out in July on another voyage. This time they proceeded to the furthest northern limits of the Chesapeake ; landing on the site of Baltimore and making the acquaintance of the gigantic Susquehan- nocks. It was the daily habit of Smith to offer up a prayer and sing a psalm, and this proceeding struck the simple and impulsive savages with wonder. " They be- gan," says the chronicle, "in a most passionate manner to hold up their hands to the sun, with a fearful song ; then embracing our captain they began to adore him in like manner" — the only intimation that any of the Indians were sun-worshipers. In the first days of September the Chesapeake voyagers returned south- ward, and while rounding Point Comfort nearly per- ished. The brief account of this incident is a good example of the style of the chronicles. A storm struck them in the night, and ' ; running before the wind we sometimes saw the land by the flashes of fire from heaven, by which light only we kept from the splitting shore until it pleased God in that black darkness to preserve us by that light to find Point Comfort." In these two voyages the adventurers sailed about three thousand miles ; explored both banks of the Ches- apeake ; and Smith drew a map of astonishing accuracy, — that which was afterwards printed in the General History. The voyagers were back at Jamestown early in Sep- tember (1608). Again the condition of affairs there had become deplorable. The chronicle, written by A YEAR OF INCIDENTS. 45 trusty Anas Todkill, and others, sums up the situation : " The silly President [Ratcliffe] had riotously con- sumed the stores, and to fulfill his follies about build- ing for his pleasure in the woods, had brought them all to that misery that had we not arrived, they had as strangely tormented Mm with revenge." The grim hu- mor of the writer is the commentary on the silly Rat- cliffe's pleasure-house and the general misery for which the adventurers had " strangely tormented him with re- venge," but for the interposition of Smith. On one point, however, they would not be persuaded by the soldier. They would have no more of Ratcliffe, and rising suddenly in their wrath they deposed him and chose Smith, who thus by popular election became President of Virginia. And now at the end of autumn, Newport again made his appearance. He brought a number of settlers, among them Mistress Forrest and her maid Anne Bur- ras, who was soon afterwards married to Master John Laydon, the first English marriage on American soil. Newport brought orders from the London authori- ties which showed that they had grown irate. No profit had come from Virginia, and Ratcliffe had written home that Smith and his followers meant to seize upon the country and " divide it among themselves." Thence wrath on the part of the Right Honorables, who had no doubt been enlightened by the disgraced Wingfield. The Virginia adventurers were to discover and return one of the lost Roanoke colonists ; to send back a lump of gold ; and to find the South Sea beyond the mountains. If these orders were not obeyed they were to " remain as banished men." Smith listened in the Council and declared the orders absurd, whereat New- 46 VIRGINIA: A HISTORY OF THE PEOPLE. port and himself came to daggers draw. For the mo- ment, however, their differences were smoothed over, and Newport proceeded to carry out another of his or- ders, — to crown Powhatan. Smith was sent to invite the Emperor to come to Jamestown for that purpose, and finding him absent dispatched a messenger to sum- mon him. A curious scene preceded his arrival. The party of English were seated in a field by a fire when they heard singing, and turning their heads they saw a number of Indian girls emerge from the woods. They were nearty nude and stained with puccoon, and the leader of the band was Pocahontas, who wore a gir- dle of otter skin, and carried in her hand a bow and ar- rows, and behind her shoulders a quiver. Above her forehead she wore " antlers of the deer," and led the masqueraders, who after elaborate dancing conducted the English to a neighboring wigwam, where supper was supplied them and they were treated with the ut- most kindness. The ceremonies wound up with a grand torch-light procession, in honor of the Englishmen. They were escorted to their lodgings when the maids retired to their own, and the picturesque proceedings came to an end. Powhatan appeared on the next morning, but pos- itively declined to go to Jamestown. " I also am a king," he said, " and this is my land. Your father is to come to me, not I to him nor yet to your fort ; neither will I bite at such a bait." This response was delivered " with complimental courtesy," but was plainly final. He did not propose to visit Jamestown ; and find- ing his resolution fixed Smith returned to Newport. The result was that Newport went to Werowocomoco and performed the ceremony there. The scene was A YEAR OF INCIDENTS. 47 comic, but indicated the regal pride of Powhatan. It was plain that he welcomed the bed, basin, and pitcher brought as presents, and he cheerfully submitted to in- vestment with a scarlet cloak. But there his submission ended. He positively refused to kneel and have the crown placed on his head. When they forced him to do so, and a volley was fired in honor of the occasion, he rose suddenly to his feet, expecting an attack. Finding that none was intended, he regained his " complimental courtesy;" consented thenceforth to be Powhatan L, under-king, subject to England ; and sent his brother James I. his old moccasins and robe of raccoon skin, in return for the scarlet cloak and the crown. This was the only order of the Company carried out by Newport. He marched to the Monacan country to- ward the upper waters of James River to discover gold or the South Sea ; found neither in that region, and re- turned foot-sore to Jamestown, where he and Smith came to open quarrel. But the men were unequally matched ; the brusque soldier was too much for the courtier. Smith threatened, if there was more trouble, to send home the ship and keep Newport a prisoner, whereat the man of the world gave way, " cried peccavi," and sailed for England. He took with him, doubtless against his will, Smith's " Map of Virginia and Description of' the Country," and also a letter styled his " Rude An-. swer " to the reprimand sent him by the authorities. This curious production must be read in the original chronicle. The writer is a soldier, and forgets to ap- proach the dignitaries with distinguished consideration. The machine of his eloquence is not oiled, and goes creaking harshly, but the sound attracts attention if it grates on the nerves of the Honorables. " The sailors 48 VIRGINIA: A HISTORY OF THE PEOPLE. say," he writes, " that Newport hath a hundred pounds a year for carrying news. Captain Ratcliffe is a poor counterfeit impostor, I have sent you him home lest the company should cut his throat." It is probable that if Captain Newport had suspected the character of this " Rude Answer " he would have dropped it into the Atlantic. But he duly took it to P^ngland, and the Right Honorables no doubt gasped at its truculence. Such is a glimpse of these old feuds. The actors in the scenes are now mere shadows, — Smith the soldier, Newport the courtier, Ratcliffe the agitator, and all the rest ; but these minutise of the chronicles bring back the actual figures. It is only by stopping to look at them that we are able to obtain some idea of the real drama, of the daily worries, the spites and personal antago- nisms of the men who played their parts during these first years of American history. IX. THE STRONG HAND AT LAST. The snow had begun to fall with the approach of winter (1608), and again the unlucky adventurers were reduced to dire extremity. Once more they were in want of food, and, huddled together behind their pali- sade, were " affrighted " at the thought of famine. To this at the end of nearly two years had the Vir- ginia enterprise come. A company of two hundred men were in the wilderness without resources. It is true they had the immense boon of a gracious charter securing their rights, granting them trial by jury, estab- lishing the English Church, liberally authorizing them THE STRONG HAND AT LAST. 49 to hold their lands by free tenure as in England ; and here they were, a wretched handful wasting away with famine, who had much ado to hold their lands by any tenure whatever against the savages. In their extremity there was but one man to look to. The old rulers had disappeared. Of the original Council, Gosnold was dead of the fever of 1607 ; Newport had retired ; Wingfield and Ratcliffe had been deposed ; Martin had gone off in disgust ; and Kendall had been shot. Smith only remained, the man whom all this bad set had opposed from the first, arrested for treason, tried for murder, and attempted in every manner to de- stroy. In the dark hour now, this man was the stay of the colony. Three other councilors had come out with Newport, Captains Waldo and Wynne and Master Mat- thew Scrivener, all men of excellent character ; but the colonists looked to Smith as the true ruler. With the snow-fall came the question of food. New- port, it seems, had left them little. The supply was nearly exhausted, and the only resource was to apply to the Indians. But it was found that times had changed. The tribes of Powhatan were not going to furnish any ; they had received orders to that effect from their Em- peror. The application was made, refused, and what followed was a decisive trial of strength between the English and the savages, — a series of scenes in which we have the old life of the first adventurers summed up and wrought into a picture full of dramatic interest. Smith resolved to strike at the central authority. " No persuasion," we are told, " could persuade him to starve," and what he meant now to do was to go to Powhatan and procure supplies by fair means or force. The old Emperor gave him a pretext for visiting Wero> 4 50 VIRGINIA: A HISTORY OF THE PEOPLE. wocomoco. He sent inviting Smith to come and bring some men who could build him a house. Some " Dutch- men " were sent at once, and at the end of December (1608) Smith followed. His force was about fifty men, and they went by the water route in the Pinnace and two barges. Among them were George Percy, now an " old settler," and a man who could be implicitly relied upon ; Francis West, of Lord Delaware's family ; and many other " gentlemen." The enterprise was going to be a decisive affair. These fifty men led by a soldier like Smith were a dangerous engine. The voyagers went down James River in the cold winter season, and stopped here and there to enjoy the hospitality of the tribes. They thus coasted along, past Hampton, Old Point, and the present Yorktown, aud about the middle of January (1609) sailed up the York, and came in sight of Werowocomoco. On the way they had received a warning. The king of Warrasqueake had said to Smith, " Captain Smith, you shall find Pow- hatan to use you kindly, but trust him not ; and be sure he have no opportunity to seize on your arms, for he hath sent for you only to cut your throats." The soldier " thanked him for his good counsel," but probably did not need it. He was not confiding and meant to guard himself ; for the rest this intimation of the friendly Warrasqueaker no doubt gratified him. He was going to make war on the host who had invited a visit ; it was satisfactory to know that the host designed cutting his throat. When the Englishmen came opposite the " Chief Place of Council," they found the river frozen nearly half a mile from the shore. The vessels, however, broke the ice, and when near the shore Smith leaped into the water THE STRONG HAND AT LAST. 51 with a party and got to land. Powhatan received him in his great wigwam, but the imperial demeanor had un- dergone a change. There was no more " complimental courtesy " — so the English had come to see him. When were they going away? He had not invited them to visit him ! Whereat Smith pointed to the crowd of braves, and retorted that there were the very envoys who had brought the invitation. At this the Emperor showed his appreciation of the trenchant reply by laugh- ing heartily, and requested a sight of the articles brought by Smith to exchange for corn. He had no corn, but they might trade. In fact the corn would be produced if the English came for it unarmed. And then the Em- peror proceeded to deliver a pathetic address. He was weary of war, and wished to spend his last year in peace, without hearing incessantly the alarm, " There cometh Captain Smith ! " He desired to be the friend of that " rash youth," and meant well. His feelings were moved, and induced him " nakedly to forget him- self." Take the corn ; it should be delivered, but the English guns frightened his poor people. Let the men come unarmed. Smith's view of this eloquent address is set forth suc- cinctly in the chronicle : " Seeing this savage did but trifle the time to cut his throat, he sent for men to come ashore and surprise the king." The response was prompt. The English were heard breaking the ice and approach- ing, and Smith, cutting his way out, joined the party on the beach. Night brought a new peril. Smith and his men bivouacked on the shore, when their friend Pocahon- tas stole through the darkness and warned them that an attack was to be made upon them. When presents were offered her, she said, with tears in her eyes, that her 52 VIRGINIA: A HISTORY OF THE PEOPLE. father would kill her if he saw her wearing them ; went back as she came ; and a party duly appeared to attack Smith, who awaited them. No assault was made, and the night passed in quiet. In the morning the boats were loaded by the Indians with corn, and the rash youth who had thus overcome his aged adversary re- embarked. Going up the York River, he landed near West Point, at the residence of Prince Opechancanough. As before the demand was — corn, to which the smiling Opechancanough made no objection. They should have plenty of corn — when suddenly one of the soldiers rushed into the wigwam crying that -they were "be- trayed." Smith looked and saw a fore* of about seven hundred Indians surrounding the place, whereupon he exhibited his habitual resolution. Seizing the cordial Opechancanough by his scalp-lock, he placed his pistol upon his breast, dragged him out among his people, and presented to him the alternative — corn or your life. This proceeding was too much for the nerves of the In- dian prince. He promptly supplied the corn, and the English reembarked, after which they sailed back in triumph to Jamestown. This raid on the capital city of the land of Powhatan was a decisive event. The material result was a full supply of food ; the moral, a lasting impression on the Indian imagination. It is the nature of ignorant and inferior minds to believe what they see rather than what is reasoned out to them. What the Powhatans had seen was this. Fifty Englishmen had invaded their country, driven the Emperor from his capital, humbled Prince Opechancanough in the midst of his braves, threat- ened to destroy their towns, exacted what they wished, and returned to Jamestown without the loss of a man. THE STRONG HAND AT LAST. 53 This was plain to the simplest comprehension, and it produced a grand effect. These formidable intruders were best conciliated, not defied. Their commander, above all, was an adversary whom it was useless to fight against ; and there is ample evidence that from this moment, to the end of his career in the colony, the savages regarded Smith with a mixture of fear and admiration. They never again exhibited any hostility toward the English as long as he remained in Virginia. They became his firm friends, brought him presents, punished with death — as will soon be shown — those who attempted to harm him ; and the chronicle sums up all in the sentence, " All the country became as ab- solutely free for us as for themselves." The martial figure of the soldier-ruler will not in- trude much longer on the narrative. He is going away from Virginia, and the faineants are coming back. Let us see what he accomplished before their arrival. He forced the idle to go to work — the hardest of tasks. There was pressing necessity for that. A swarm of rats, brought in Newport's ship, had nearly devoured the remnant of food, and unless corn were planted in the spring days the colony would starve. All must go to work, and the soldier made it plain to the sluggards that they now had a master. He assembled the whole " company " and made them a public address. There was little circumlocution about it. A few sentences will serve as examples of his persuasive eloquence to the murmuring crowd : — " Countrymen," said Smith, " you see now that power resteth wholly in myself. You must obey this, now, for a law, — that he that will not work shall not eat. And though you presume that authority here is but a shadow, 54 VIRGINIA: A HISTORY OF THE PEOPLE. and that I dare not touch the lives of any, but my own must answer it, yet he that offendeth, let him assuredly expect his due punishment." This was plain, but the soldier made his meaning still plainer. " Dream no longer," he said sternly, " of this vain hope from Powhatan, or that I will longer for- bear to force you from your idleness, or punish you if you rail. I protest by that God that made me, since necessity hath no power to force you to gather for your- selves, you shall not only gather for yourselves, but for those that are sick. They shall not starve ! " The idlers " murmured " but obeyed. The corn was planted, and the drones in the hive were forced to aid the working bees in another enterprise. This was to build a fort as " a retreat " in case of an Indian war. Smith took nothing on trust. The friendly relations with Powhatan might end at any moment, and the re- sult was the erection of a rude fortification, of which this is the account : " We built also a fort, for a retreat, near a convenient river, upon a high commanding hill, very hard to be assaulted and easy to be defended, but ere it was finished this defect caused a stay — the want of corn occasioned the end of all our works." Was this the curious " Stone House " still standing on a ridge of Ware Creek, emptying into the York ? No traces of the fort here described are found in the neighborhood of Jamestown. The Ware Creek ruin answers the description, and nothing is known of its orio-in. It is near a convenient river, on a hill hard to assault and easy to defend ; a massive stone affair, with thick walls built without mortar, with loop-holes to fire through ; is roofless, and appears never to have been completed. It stands on a wooded ridge and can THE STRONG HAND AT LAST. 55 be approached only by a narrow defile. No other build- ings are found in the vicinity, and it is difficult to be- lieve that it was iutended for any other purpose than defense. If this was the place of " retreat," it is doubt- less the oldest edifice in the United States. A few words will now carry the narrative forward to important events. The colony continued to suffer for want of food while the corn was growing, and the men went in parties among the Indians, who treated them with the utmost kindness. Smith's influence was all- powerful, and no one wi harmed ; and an incident now took place which defied the full extent of this regard and respect. While walking in the woods near Jamestown the soldier was attacked by a gigantic In- dian, but he dragged him into the water aud took him prisoner. Conducted to the fort aud interrogated, he confessed that he had been emplo/ed by the house-build- ers ; and George Percy and others, deeply incensed, offered to go and " cut their throats before Powhatan." That great justiciar eventually saved them the trouble. When Lord Delaware arrived in the colony in the fol- lowing year, the house-builders proposed to Powhatan to send them as envoys to conciliate him. His response was eminently just : " You," he said, " that would have betrayed Captain Smith to me, will certainly be- tray me to this great lord ; " whereupon, as the chroni- cle adds, " he caused his men to beat out their brains ; " — and this was the end of the builders of the old relic, Powhatan's chimney. The colony was now to lose the competent ruler who had made it prosperous. The blow deposing him from authority had already been struck. With the summer came a ship on a trading expedition, commanded by a 56 VIRGINIA: A HISTORY OF THE PEOPLE. certain Captain Argall, who brought intelligence that the Virginia government had been reorganized and Smith removed. The reasons for his disgrace were his " hard dealings with the savages, and not returning the ships freighted " — a bitter charge against a man who had derided the yellow dirt and only seized the corn necessary to save the life o\ the colony. But all was now decided : a new charter from the King (May 23, 1609) had changed the wW>le face of affairs. The lim- its of the colony were ex/tended to two hundred miles north and two hundred f n ^s south of the mouth of James River; the Londo/^ ^ancil was to be chosen by the Company, not appointed by the King; and Virginia was to be ruled by a Governor, Lieutenant-Governor, and Admiral, who were empowered in case of necessity to declare martial law. These officers were already appointed: Sir Thonf a West, Lord Delaware, was to be Governor and Captain-General ; Sir Thomas Gates, Lieutenant-Governor ; and Sir George Somers, Admi- ral — all of them men of character. They were to go with a considerable fleet : nine vessels, containing full supplies and five hundred new settlers, men, women, and children — a great contrast to the little trio, the Susan Constant, the Good Speed, and the Discovery, which had dropped down the Thames in December, 1606. The fleet sailed at the end of May (1609) and went by the Azores. Lord Delaware remained in England, but was to follow a little later, and the ships were un- der command of Smith's old enemy, Newport. In the same vessel with him sailed Sir Thomas Gates and Sir George Somers with the letters-patent ; but this ship, called the Sea- Venture, was never to reach Virginia. THE SEA-VENTURE. 57 When the fleet was within about eight days' sail of Virginia, misfortune came. They were " caught in the tail of a hurricane," one of the vessels was lost, and the Sea- Venture, with the rulers and one hundred and fifty persons, men, women, and children, was separated from the rest and went on her way elsewhere. X. THE SEA-VENTURE. Let us follow the lonely Sea- Venture on her path- way through the troubled waters, allowing the rest to make their way to Virginia, where we shall rejoin them. History is after all a story only — the picture of men and their experiences, the scenes they passed through, their hazards, sufferings, and fortunes, good or bad, in their life pilgrimage. " Purchas his Pilgrimmes " is the title of one of the oldest collections of sea voyages. The adventurers of that age were in fact pilgrims mak- ing their way through unknown lands, stormy seas, and new experiences. The very name of the Sea- Venture expressed the period ; let us therefore glance at this curious episode in the early annals of Virginia, to which it properly belongs. The rest of the fleet had been driven toward the Chesapeake. The great storm lashing the Sea- Ven- ture, containing the future rulers and the letters-patent, swept her off on her separate way, and " with the vio- lent working of the seas she was so shaken and torn " that she sprung a leak ; and then the vivid old chroni- cle by Jordan and others details what followed. The 58 VIRGINIA: A HISTORY OF THE PEOPLE. crew pumped day and night, but finally gave them- selves up for lost. They resolved to " commit them- selves to the mercy of the sea, which is said to be merciless, or rather to the mercy of Almighty God, whose mercy far exceeds all his works." But hope came at last. Sir George Somers, the brave old Ad- miral, who was seated, like Gilbert, at the helm, "scarce taking leisure to eat nor sleep," saw land, toward which the ship was driven. Would she reach it? That seemed doubtful. Their " greedy enemy the salt water entered at the large breaches of their poor wooden castle, as that in gaping after life they had well-nigh swallowed their death." At last the Sea- Venture struck. She lifted, was carried forward on the sum- mit of a wave, and jammed firmly between two ledges of rock, where she rested. They were cast away on the Bermudas, " two hun- dred leagues from any continent," and looked with fear on the unknown realm. Now and then the buccaneers had landed, and another English ship had once suffered shipwreck there. One and all had agreed that the islands were " the most dangerous, forlorn, and unfor- tunate place in the world." They were called the " Isles of Devils," says Henry May, and the use has been noticed of this popular belief in regard to them in " The Tempest." On the moonlit strand of these " still vext Bermoothes " the hag -born Caliban might roll and growl ; Sycorax, the blue-eyed witch, might hover in the cloud wracks ; and the voices of the wind whisper strange secrets. 1 1 The wreck of the Sea-Venture certainly suggested The Tempest. The phrase "the still vext Bermoothes" indicates the stage, and Ariel's description of his appearance as a flaming light on the shrouds THE SEA-VENTURE. 59 Seen with the real eye the famous Isles of Devils were very innocent in appearance. They might be full of enchantment, but it was the enchantment of tropical verdure, sunshine, and calm. The fury of the storm had passed away. The Sea- Venture was held fast between the two ledges of rock, and the crew were safely landed in the boats. The summer was at hand, and the air was full of balm. There was food in abun- dance, — fish, turtle, and wild-fowl, with hogs, left prob- ably by the Spanish buccaneers. The stores of the ship were brought off; huts were built, and thatched with palmetto ; and then the leaders began to devise means of escape. The Sea- Venture was going to pieces, but the long-boat was fitted with hatches, and a party of nine men set out in it for Virginia. They were never again heard of. However the eyes of the shipwrecked mariners might be strained toward the far-off continent, no succor came. It might never come ; they were no doubt given up for lost. There was nothing to do but accept their fate and bear it with fortitude. It did not seem so hard a fate. The voluptuous airs of the most delicious of climates caressed them. The long surges of the Atlantic, rolling from far-off England and Virginia, had tossed them once, but could not harm them now. The islands were green with foliage and of the King's ship is nearly identical with the " little round light like a faint star trembling and streaming along in a sparkling blaze, on the Admiral's ship," mentioned by Strachey in his True Repertory of the Wreck and Redemption of Sir Thomas Gates, Knight, pub- lished in 1610. The dispersion of both fleets, their arrival in the Chesapeake and the "Mediterranean flote, " the safety of the King's ship and the Admiral's ship, the Sea-Venture, — these and many incidental details clearly indicate that Shakespeare based his drama on the real occurrence, and used Strachey's True Repertory, and the relations of Jordan, May, and others, as his material. 60 VIRGINIA:. A HISTORY OF THE PEOPLE. alive with the songs of birds, and we are told that " they lived in such plenty, peace, and ease " that they never wished, to go back to the hard Old World, with its hard work, any more. It was an earthly paradise, and they were content to live for the senses ; but those worthy gentlemen and true Englishmen, Gates and Somers, would have them perform their religious duties. They had a clergyman, Mr. Bucke, to succeed the good Mr. Hunt, who had died in Virginia, and a bell was brought from the Sea- Venture and set up. When this rang, morning and evening, the people assembled and the roll was called, then prayer was offered up ; and on Sunday there was religious service, and two sermons were preached. So the days went on, and it seemed that the castaways were doomed to remain forever in their enforced para- dise. One " merry English marriage " took place, two children were born, and six persons died, among them the wife of Sir George Somers, who was to die himself in these strange islands where the decree of Providence had cast him ashore. The children, a boy and a girl, received the names Bermudas and Bermuda, and Ber- muda was the daughter of Mr. John Rolfe, who after- wards became the husband of Pocahontas. At last discord entered into the terrestrial paradise, and marred all the harmony. Gates and Somers had a misunderstanding, and lived apart from each other. The men and women were no doubt weary of their sweet do- nothing, and longed to escape. A new effort was made, and Somers succeeded in constructing, of cedar and the bolts and timbers of the Sea- Venture, a bark of eighty tons, and another smaller, which were named the Pa- tience and the Deliverance. A reconciliation then en- fir THE SEA-VENTURE. 61 sued between Gates and Somers, — the one celebration of the holy communion may have taken place on this occasion, — and (May 10, 1610) the whole company embarked for Virginia, where they arrived fourteen days afterwards, nearly a year after their departure from England. The wreck of the Sea- Venture was long remembered as one of the most romantic incidents of a romantic age. It caught the popular fancy as a vivid picture of the adventurous experiences which awaited the mariner on the unknown western sea ; and the lonely islands sup- posed to be the haunt of devils and furies, but now known to be full of beauty and tropical delight, became the talk of London, and eventually the site of an Eng- lish colony. They were called indifferently the Somers and the Summer Isles. Either name was appropriate, but the brave Admiral, " a lamb upon land and a lion at sea," was entitled to have them named after him. Returning from Virginia in his cedar ship, in June of the same year, for supplies, he was taken ill, and " in that very place which we now call St. George's town, this noble knight died, whereof the place taketh^ the name." We are told that, " like a valiant captain," he exhorted his men to be true to duty and return to Vir- ginia, but they u as men amazed, seeing the death of him who was even as the life of them all, embalmed his body and set sail for England ; " and " this cedar ship at last, with his dead body, arrived at Whitchurch, in Dorsetshire, where, by his friends, he was honorably buried, with many volleys of shot and the rites of a soldier." So the good English soldier and admiral ended. 62 VIRGINIA: A HISTORY OF THE PEOPLE. XI. THE LAST WRESTLE OF THE FACTIONS. While the castaways were idly dreaming, all these nine long months, under the blue skies of Bermuda, a fierce drama was in progress in Virginia. The old ad- versaries, except Newport, were face to face there once more, and a stormy struggle was taking place, — the old struggle of 1607-8 over again. The seven ships which had been separated from the Sea-Venture in the storm managed to ride through, and reach the Chesapeake, though in a fearfully shattered condition. But they were safe at last in Hampton Roads, and made for Jamestown. As they were seen coming up the river they were taken for Spaniards, and the settlers ran to arms. Even some Indians who were at the town volunteered to fight the supposed Spaniards, which indicated the entente cordiale between them and the English now. The mistake was soon plain. The culverins in the fort were about to open on the ships, when they ran up the English flag. The vessels came to anchor, and a boat brought on shore Ratcliffe, Mar- tin, and a new confederate, Archer. Thus the bad old times were coming back. It was melancholy and exasperating. Of the return of these people to Virginia to resume authority there, it might be said that it could not and it would not come to good. It is not good for the wounded battle-horse, when the vultures have been scared off, to have them swoop back. These birds of ill-omen were now hovering again over Jamestown, or rather had alighted. One is tempted to THE LAST WRESTLE OF THE FACTIONS. 63 thus characterize the ill crew who had the fate of the colony again in their hands. Thanks to the vivid old chronicles we know the men well. The writers who describe them are not generalizing historians, but paint- ers ; with their rude pen-strokes they draw portraits. We see the men themselves, their faces and gestures ; the very tones of the voices come up out of the mist which for nearly three centuries has wrapped the figures ; and the combatants matched against each other on the old arena are actual people, not mere ghosts. The men who fought for the mastery in Virginia, from 1607 to 1609, were the hard workers and the sluggards. Smith was at the head of the first*; Wingfield, Ratcliffe, and their associates at the head of the last. Of these, Wingfield was an imbecile, Newport a tale-bearer, Rat- cliffe a mutineer, who even bore a false name ; and these had drawn into their counsels, by a sort of nat- ural selection, Archer an agitator, Martin a cat's-paw, and all that loose and floating element found in every society, which hangs on and waits, and instinctively takes the side which promises to be the strongest. The antagonists had declared war from the very first ; had gone on wrangling with each other all through the years 1607 and 1608, and the hard workers and fighters had crushed the sluggards. One by one they had been shot, or deposed, or banished. They had gone to England then, and effected by intrigue what they had failed to effect by force. Ratcliffe and Newport had taken their revenge for Smith's unceremonious treatment of them. They had gained the ear of the Company, laid the blame of the whole failure in Virginia on his shoulders, and the result was soon seen. Between the lobbyists in London, bowing low to the Right Honorables, and the 64 VIRGINIA: A HISTORY OF THE PEOPLE. brusque soldier in Virginia, writing them " rude an- swers" and rough, discourteous intimations that they were altogether absurd people, the choice was promptly made. The Company listened to the lobbyists, not to the fighting man, with his unkempt manners. It was plain that all the mismanagement in Virginia was due to him ; the incompetent servant should be discharged^ and the true men reinstated. This indication of the state of things in Virginia at the moment (August, 1609) will explain what followed. Ratcliffe, coming on shore from the ships, claimed au- thority in the colony as the representative of the new rulers, who would soon arrive. The old government was done away with, he said ; Smith was no longer Presi- dent ; and he summoned all men to yield to his author- ity. If Smith's " old soldiers " had been left to decide, the decision of the question would doubtless have been prompt. Ratcliffe was extremely unpopular, and Smith extremely popular; but there were the new-comers. These were Ratcliffe's people, and were about three hun- dred in number. There were among them " divers gen- tlemen of good means and great parentage," but also " many unruly gallants, packed thither by their friends to escape ill destinies." These unruly gallants could be counted on with tolerable certainty to oppose a hard master like Smith. He was not to their fancy, and they promptly sided with Ratcliffe. Then all Jamestown was suddenly in commotion. Ratcliffe went about the town denouncing Smith as a usurper. His men followed him through the narrow streets in loud discussion ; drank deep at the " taverne ; " uttered threats and curses ; and their leader nursed the storm, and inflamed them more and more against the THE LAST WRESTLE OF THE FACTIONS. 6b tyrant. Smith looked on and listened in huge weari- ness and disgust, — chaos had come again. Those " unruly gallants would dispose and determine of the government sometimes to one, sometimes to another : to-day the old commission must rule ; to-morrow the new ; the next day neither ; in fine, they would rule all or ruin all." The soldier grew bitter, and utter hopelessness took possession of him. He would have nothing further to do with affairs, but " leave all and return to England," — not before the arrival, however, of some duly empowered successor. The term of his presidency had not yet expired ; he was still the head of the colony, and he would hold to strict account those who disobeyed his orders. Smith was a man of few words, and could always be counted on to do what he said he would do. Ratcliffe continued his agitation, still inflaming the minds of his followers, when Smith suddenly arrested him with other leaders in the disturbance, and placed them in confine- ment to await trial. This at once suppressed the disor- der, and there was no further opposition to the soldier's will ; but he was weary of his position. He surren- dered it to Martin, who, it seems, had taken no part in the riot ; but to this the old settlers would not consent, and he was compelled to resume it. He was not to exercise authority long. The end was near, and to the very last the vivid contrast between utter incompetence and real ability was plain to all. An incident showed the inefficiency of Martin. Smith sent him to Nanse- mond to form a branch settlement in that region ; but the Indians saw that he was " distracted with fear," and he fled to Jamestown, "leaving his company to their fortunes." 5 66 VIRGINIA: A HISTORY OF THE PEOPLE. Meanwhile Smith had sailed up James River to in< spect the site of another subordinate colony about to be established near the present city of Richmond. Here the last soldierly incident of a soldierly career took place. He found that the site selected was on marshy ground and unsuitable : he therefore fixed on the old " place called Powhatan," on a range of hills a little lower down — a situation so beautiful that he gave it the name of " Nonsuch." But the men who had prob- ably built huts on the marshy site rebelled. They were stronger than his own party, — probably friends of Rat- cliffe, — and attacked and drove him back to his boats. Then a curious sequel came. A force of Indians at- tacked them, and they fled to Smith for protection. He arrested the leaders, removed the colony to " Non- such," and then left them to their fortunes. Worn and weary with all this dissension and bitter blood, he sailed down the river again, bent on finally leaving Virginia. An incident hurried his departure. On his way down the James a bag of gunpowder exploded in his boat, " tearing the flesh from his body and thighs in a most pitiful manner." The pain so " tormented " him that he leaped overboard, and came near drowning. His men drao-ored him back, and in this state he reached Jamestown, where he was taken to a bed in the fort, " near bereft of his senses by reason of his torment." His position was now dangerous. He was entirely disabled, but his will was unbroken, and he continued, in the midst of the fierce pain, to issue his orders, " caus- ing all things to be prepared for peace or war." It was obvious that if he recovered he would surely bring Rat- cliffe and the rest to account for their misdeeds ; and an attempt was made to murder him in his bed. One n. TEE LAST WRESTLE OF THE FACTIONS. 67 of the malcontents came into the room and placed the muzzle of a pistol on his breast, but his heart, it seems, failed him. When this became known, Smith's old soldiers gave way to fierce wrath. They offered to 84 take their heads who would resist his command," but he refused to permit violence. He was going away from Virginia, and meant, if he could, to go in peace. A pathetic picture is drawn of his situation, and the sense of injustice rankling in his mind. He was lying on his bed suffering agonies, with no surgeon to care for his hurts. His past services were forgotten, and his enemies had triumphed over him. His commission as head of the coloQy was " to be suppressed he knew not why, himself and soldiers to be rewarded he knew not how, and a new commission granted they knew not to whom." It was plain that his day had passed, and that it was useless to struggle further. His severe wounds required treatment, and there was no one in the colony who was competent. To end all, he would go away, carrying with him no more than he had brought, — his stout heart and good sword. An opportunity to return to England presented itself. The ships were about to sail, and Smith was carried on board, still persisting in his refusal to resign his author- ity to the Ratcliffe party. In this dilemma a compro- mise was resorted to. George Percy, who had also meant to return to England for his health, consented to remain and act as President. Smith was hopeless of the ability of this sick gentleman to control the factions, but he no longer made any opposition. " Within an hour was this mutation begun and concluded," says the chronicle ; and then the ships set sail, and Smith took his depar- ture, never again to return to Virginia. 68 VIRGINIA: A HISTORY OF THE PEOPLE. XII. THE FIRST AMERICAN RULER AND WRITER. Smith thus disappeared from the stage of affairs in Virginia, but he had played a great part in the first scenes of American history, and his character and sub- sequent career deserve some notice. He returned to London at thirty, and died there at fifty-two ; but these twenty last years, like his early life, were marked by restless movement or continuous toil. He had left Virginia poor, and profited nothing from all his toils and sufferings in the New World. He said with noble pride that he " had broke the ice and beat the path, but had not one foot of ground there, nor the very house he builded, nor the ground he digged with his own hands." It does not appear, however, that he had ever expected to profit by the Virginia enterprise. It had given him a field for the exercise of his energies, and finding that his services were no longer welcome there he turned with all his old ardor to the life of a voyager and writer. The nature of the man was unresting, and craved action. The colonization of America was still his dream, and in the year 1614 he made a voyage to New England, where he gave the names of Boston, etc., to points on the coast, and made a partial exploration of the country. The result of this voyage was a great popular interest in New England, which is said to have led to its settlement by the Puritan Pilgrims. In the following year he set out on a second voyage, but was arrested by one of those incidents which abounded in his checkered career. He was attacked off the island of FIRST AMERICAN RULER AND WRITER. 69 Flores by a French squadron, his vessel was captured, and he was taken as a prisoner to Rochelle, whence he escaped to England. Here he met with a warm wel- come. On board the French ship he had passed his time in writing his " Description of New England," and James I. now conferred on him the title of " Admiral " Df that country. Little more is known of him. He seems to have spent his last years in London, industriously engaged on his histories ; is said to have married, and died in London in the year 1631. He was buried under the chancel of St. Sepulchre's church, and on the slab above his tomb was carved his shield with three Turks' heads, conferred on him by Sigismund, and a poetical inscription, beginning, " Here lies one conquered, that hath conquered kings," and ending with the prayer that " with angels he might have his recompense." So snapped the chords of a stout heart, and a remark- able life ended. The character of the man must have appeared from his career. He was brave as his sword, full of energy, impatient of opposition, and had all the faults and virtues of the dominant class to which he be- longed. His endurance was unshrinking, and his life in Virginia indicated plainly that he had enormous re- coil. Pressure brought out his strength, and showed the force of his organization. He was probably never really cast down, and seems to have kept his heart of hope, without an effort, in the darkest hours, when all around him despaired. He is said to have been cordial and winning in his manners, and even his critics de- clared that he had " a prince's heart in a beggar's purse ; " it is equally certain that he was impatient of temper, had large self-esteem, and was fond of applause. 70 VIRGINIA: A HISTORY OF THE PEOPLE. But his aims were high, and his career shows that he re- garded duty as his watchword. He detested idleness, and was convinced that the only way to do a thing is to do it ; not to determine to do it at some f ature time if con- venience permits. The result was utter impatience with sloth in every form, and he treated the sluggards with little ceremony. He scoffed at them as " tuftaffty hu- morists," and when they would not work he compelled them to do so by sheer force of will, setting them the example himself. When there was no more work for him to do in Virginia he went elsewhere, knowing that everywhere something was to be done. This is the picture of a vigorous personality, and such was Smith. He was positive in all things, and loved and hated with all his energy. Those who knew him were either his warm friends or his bitter enemies. What his " old soldiers "* thought of him may be seen in the verses attached to the " General History." These testify to his greatness as a leader and the perfect truth of his statements. One writer hails him as his " dear noble captain and loyal heart ; " another as " wonder of nature, mirror of our clime ; " another as a soldier of " valorous policy and judgment ; " and a third exclaims, " I never knew a warrior but thee, from wine, tobacco, debts, dice, oaths, so free." What his enemies, on the contrary, thought of the soldier is equally plain. He was a tyrant and a conspirator, bent on becoming " King of Virginia ; " and failing to crush him, they returned to England and vilified him. Am- ple evidence remains that he enjoyed the friendship of eminent contemporaries, among them of Sir Robert Cot- ton, John Donne, Dean of St. Paul's, the Earl of Pem- broke, Purchas, the historian, and others. But the FIRST AMERICAN RULER AND WRITER. 71 men whom he had disgraced spared no effort to blacken his name. He was a boaster and pretender ; his fame rested on his own statements ; and modern critics have echoed these attacks. One of these describes his writ- ings as " full of the exaggerations and self-assertions of an adventurer," and the man himself as " a Gascon and a beggar." He was not the author of the " General History," on which his fame rests. This was merely a compilation made at the request of the London Company — a fact stated in the work. It consisted of narratives written by about thirty persons connected with the events, many of which had already been published, and Smith only contributed the description of Virginia and the account of his rescue by Pocahontas, when no other Englishman was present. This is the main point of attack. The incident is declared to be a mere invention, since nothing is said of it in Smith's first work, the " True Relation." The reply is that this pamphlet is not known with absolute certainty to have been written by Smith, since some copies purport to be by " Thomas Walton," and others by "a gentleman of said colony." He probably wrote it, but in either case a part of the original manuscript was omitted. The statement of: the London editor is : " Something more was by him written which being as I thought (fit to be private) I would not adventure to make it public." There is little doubt that the omitted portions referred to Smith's adven- tures on the Chickahominy and York, and that the editor struck them out in order not to discourage colo- nization. The first necessity was to attract settlers, and these pictures of imminent peril were not calculated to effect that object. 72 VIRGINIA: A HISTORY OF THE PEOPLE. This is, however, purely conjecture ; other proofs of the truth of the incident seem unassailable. Soon after Smith's return, Pocahontas, a girl of thirteen, made her appearance at Jamestown bringing food, and she contin- ued from that time onward to do all in her power to as- sist the colonists. When some Indians were arrested by Smith, Powhatan sent Pocahontas to intercede for them, and they were released at once " for her sake only." It is necessary to account for these incidents, especially for the interest felt by Pocahontas in the enemies of her people. It can only be accounted for on the ground that she took a deep interest in Smith. His own affec- tionate attachment for her is fully established. When she visited London, he wrote to the Queen, recommend- ing her to the royal favor, on the ground that she had saved his life and the life of the colony also. He declared that she had " hazarded the beating out of her brains to save his ; " and if the statement was untrue, Pocahontas, a pious and truthful person, countenanced a falsehood. On other occasions Smith referred to the incidents of his life in Virginia as occurrences to which Captain George Percy, and "other noble gentlemen and resolute spirits now living in England," could testify. In his " New England Trials," he wrote, " God made Poca- hontas, the King's daughter, the means to deliver me ; " and the " General History " contained only the fuller account of an event which had thus been repeatedly re- ferred to. The only intelligible objection to the truth of the incident rests on the theory that Smith was a wander- ing adventurer, and invented it to attract attention to him- self as the hero of a romantic event. The reply is that he was not, in any sense, a wandering adventurer, since he enjoyed the favor of the heir-apparent, afterwards FIRST AMERICAN RULER AND WRITER. 78 Charles I., and had been commissioned by James I. Admiral of New England. Other objections to the truth of the narrative con- tributed by Smith to the " General History " refer to points of the least possible importance — the amount of food and the number of guides supplied him by the In- dians. It is not necessary to notice them. It may be said that the Pocahontas incident rests upon the highest moral evidence, and that the assailants of the " General History " have in no degree discredited it. It remains the original authority for the first years of American history, and Smith's character has not suffered, except in the estimation of a few critics, who seem to feel a personal enmity toward him. His writings will be spoken of elsewhere. They bear the impress of the voyager and soldier, and, it may be added, of an earnest Christian man. It is diffi- cult to find more serious and noble writing than some passages in his books. The rude sentences rise to the height of eloquence, and he exhorts his contemporaries to noble achievements in noble words. " Seeing we are not born for ourselves, but each to help other," he says, " and our abilities are much alike at the hour of our birth and the minute of our death ; seeing our good deeds or our bad, by faith in Christ's merits, is all we have to carry our souls to heaven or to hell ; seeing honor is our lives' ambition, and our ambition after death to have an honorable memory of our life ; and seeing by no means we would be abated of the dig- nities and glories of our predecessors, let us imitate their virtues to be worthily their successors." Such writing is irreconcilable with the theory that Smith was merely a rough fighting man. The noble 74 VIRGINIA: A HISTORY OF THE PEOPLE. maxim, " We are not born for ourselves, but each to help other," might have done honor to the most pious of the English bishops. What the soldier insists upon is the duty of love and charity — that men should not look to themselves and their own profit, but to the good of their neighbors. Faith in Christ, he says, is the main thing, and the next is to leave an honorable memory behind us. He elaborates his thought, and urges a life of noble action as the only life worth living. "Who would live at home idly," he exclaims, "or think in himself any worth to live only to eat, drink, and sleep, and so die ; or by consuming that carelessly his friends got worthily ; or by using that miserably that maintained virtue honestly ; or for being descended nobly, and pine, with the vain vaunt of great kindred, in penury ; or to maintain a silly show of bravery, toil out thy heart, soul, and time basely by shifts, tricks, cards, and dice ; . . . offend the laws, surfeit with excess, burthen thy country, abuse thyself, despair in want, . . . though thou seest what honors and rewards the world yet hath for them that will seek them and worthily de- serve them." And elsewhere we come upon this earnest passage, which appeals directly to the men of our own time — to Americans fretting under the cares and poverty of the older settlements, and to men of every nationality flocking; to the shores of the Continent to establish new homes for themselves and their families : — " Who can desire more content that hath small means, or but only his merits to advance his fortunes, than to tread and plant that ground he hath purchased by the hazard of his life ? If he have but the taste of virtue and magnanimity, what to such a mind can be more FIRST AMERICAN RULER AND WRITER. 75 pleasant than planting and building a foundation for his posterity, got from the rude earth by God's blessing and his own industry, without prejudice to any ? " This is the spirit of the American of to-day, — the pioneer who goes West to build a new home for his family in the wilderness. Smith tells his contempo- raries that the rude earth shall not daunt the man with that spirit in him. By God's blessing and his own in- dustry, without prejudice to any, a home for wife and little ones shall rise in the new land ; new societies will be founded, new States built up in the wilds ; and his words are almost a prophecy of the future United States. " What so truly suits with honor and honesty as the dis- covering things unknown," he says, " erecting towns, peopling countries, informing the ignorant, reforming things unjust, teaching virtue and gain to our native mother country ... so far from wronging any as to cause posterity to remember thee, and, remembering thee, ever honor that remembrance with praise." Thus, in the voice of the soldier-voyager of the seven- teenth century, speaks the man of the last half of the nineteenth. The new life awaits them ; they have only to set out with good heart to find it. They are poor and humble ; they will be rich and powerful. They are wasting with ignoble cares; they will prosper and be happy. It is the dream of the modern world, and al- ready filled the mind of this man of the age of Eliza- beth. He adds a last exhortation. What could " a man with faith in religion do more agreeable to God than to seek to convert these poor savages to Christ and hu- manity " ? It is impossible that this phrase, " Christ and human- ity " could have been written by a charlatan. And if 76 VIRGINIA: A HISTORY OF THE PEOPLE. we doubt the real character of this man, who is repre- sented as "a Gascon and a beggar," the full-length portrait drawn of him by one of his associates ought to set the doubt at rest. "Thus we lost him," says the chronicle, " that in all our proceedings made justice his first guide, and experience his second ; ever hating baseness, sloth, pride, and indignity more than any dangers ; that never allowed more for himself than his soldiers with him ; that upon no danger would send them where he would not lead them himself; that would never see us want what he either had or could by any means get us ; that would rather want than borrow, or starve than not pay ; that loved action more than words, and hated falsehood and covetousness worse than death ; whose adventures were our lives and whose loss our deaths." XIII. VIRGINIA ABANDONED. When Smith sailed away from Virginia, in the month of September, 1609, Jamestown was a straggling as- semblage of fifty or sixty houses. They were built of wood, some of them two stories in height, with roofs of boards, or mats, or reed thatch. There was a church and a store-house — the whole inclosed by a palisade of strong logs, fifteen feet in height. At the neck of the peninsula was a fort, with cannon mounted on platforms ; in rear the forest, where dusky shadows flitted to and fro ; and in front the broad river flowing to the sea, toward which the straining eyes had so often been directed in search of the white sails coming from the home land. VIRGINIA ABANDONED. 77 There were two hundred ftehtinor men trained in In- dian warfare, and, in all, nearly five hundred men, women, and children in the settlement. There seemed to be no reason why they should feel apprehension. They had a sufficiency of provisions if they were only used judiciously ; five or six hundred hogs, horses, sheep, and goats ; fishing nets and working tools, three ships, seven boats, twenty cannon, three hundred mus- kets, swords, and pikes, and a full supply of ammuni- tion. It really seemed that the Virginia colony had taken root at last ; and we may fancy the men, women, and children of the little society going to and fro, in and out of the palisade, busy at their occupations or assembling at their devotions, talking of England, no doubt, and regretting the dear home over the sea, but thankful that their lot is cast in this beautiful land of Virginia. Only one thing was wanting in the bright fall days at Jamestown, but that want was serious, — it was a head. There had been up to this time a very strong head in the colony to direct affairs, a man of real brains, who loved action more than words, and hated sloth worse than death. He had disappeared now, and there was no one to take his place. The old hatreds of the factions still smouldered, and the new President could not control them. Percy was a man of approved courage and character, but he was not a man of energy, and his health was feeble. Smith's sure eyes had fore- cast the future when he objected to surrendering his authority to him. The motley crew, ready to break out at any moment, required a strong hand to control them ; and the hand holding the reins was that of an amiable invalid, who asked nothing better than to be permitted to return to England, 78 VIRGINIA: A HISTORY OF THE PEOPLE. Percy found the work before him too much for his strength. The colony of Jamestown had become a little kingdom, with outlying dependencies, at the Falls of James River, Old Point Comfort, and elsewhere. These all looked to the central authority for supplies of pro- visions and protection against the Indians ; and the central authority was in the hands of one without the health to exercise it. Events hastened ; the prospect before the colony began to grow gloomy. The disso- lution of societies is rapid when it once begins. Like the pace of runaway horses it soon grows headlong, and the crash comes. The Indians saw their opportu- nity, and " no sooner understood Smith was gone, but they all revolted, and did spoil and murther all they en- countered." Martin's men, at Nansemond, and West's, at the Falls, were attacked, and retreated to Jamestown ; and Ratcliffe's career ended in sudden tragedy. He went to visit Powhatan, on the York, with thirty com- panions, and used no precautions. Smith had escaped, Ratcliffe perished. He was killed with his whole party, except one man and a boy, who were saved by Pocahon- tas. So the long intrigues of this old disturber of the peace came to an end. He had been an agitator from first to last ; an impostor down to his name, for his real name was Sicklemore ; and Raphe Hamor wrote his epi- taph in a few pithy words. He was " not worth re- membering, but to his dishonor." Having begun thus auspiciously, Powhatan resolved to continue the war in earnest. He had remonstrated pathetically with the " rash youth " Smith for troubling his old age, but the rash youth was gone now, and af- fairs had suddenly changed their aspect. " We all found the loss of Captain Smith," says one of the contempo« VIRGINIA ABANDONED. 79 rary writers ; " yea, his greatest maligners could how curse his loss ; " and Beverley, the old historian, says, " as soon as he left them to themselves all went to ruin." It was plain that the Indians fully realized the state of things at Jamestown, for a bitter hostility sud- denly took the place of their old friendship. As the days passed on, the disorder increased, and the dissolution became more rapid. Percy was now " so sick that he could neither go nor stand ; " Ratcliffe was a corpse on the bank of York River ; and West, in despair, sailed for England. Then, with every pass- ing hour, the prospect grew darker. There was no au- thority anywhere, though " twenty Presidents " claimed it. Thirty men ran off with one of the vessels, and be- came buccaneers. Utter hopelessness took possession of those left behind. Every day death was in some house, and when the owner was buried the house was torn down for firewood. Even the palisades were burned, and the open gates swung' to and fro in the winter wind. Men, women, and children were starv- ing, and had lost all fear of Indian assaults. The sup- plies were exhausted ; " hogs, hens, goats, sheep, or what lived, all was devoured." When parties went to the savages, piteously beseeching succor, they re- ceived ** mortal wounds with clubs and arrows." They were forced to subsist on roots and acorns, and the skins of horses. At last they became cannibals. An Indian was killed and buried, but " the poorer sort took him up again and ate him, and so did divers one an- other, boiled and stewed with roots and herbs." The " common kettel," in these days, was a fearful cauldron ; the fumes of boiling human flesh ascended from it. All ties were sundered by the sharp edge of mortal famine. 80 VIRGINIA: A HISTORY OF THE PEOPLE. A man killed his wife, and had eaten part of the body before he was discovered. He was burned to death for his horrible deed, but that did not help matters much. Dire famine was stronger than the fear of death. The colony was tottering on the very verge of destruction. " This was that time," the chronicle says, " which, still to this day, we call the Starving Time." The horrors of this terrible period are summed up in a simple statement. Nearly Jive hundred persons had been left in the colony in September, and six months afterwards " there remained not past sixty men, women, and children, most miserable and poor creatures." Of the whole number, five hundred, more than four hundred had perished, — dead of starvation, or slain by the In- dian hatchet. In the last days of May (1610), this is what might have been seen at Jamestown : a group of men, women, and children huddled together behind the dismantled pali- sade, the faces pale, the forms emaciated, the thin lips uttering moans or stifled cries for food. The end was near ; " this, in ten days more, would have supplanted us with death." But help was coming. The last agony was near, when sails were seen approaching, and doubt- less a shrill, wild cry of joy and amazement rose from the throng, and mothers caught their children close to their bosoms, and sobbed over them, thanking God for mercy and succor. The ships were the' Patience and Deliverance from Bermuda. The good Admiral Somers and Sir Thomas Gates had come in their " cedar ship " to bring help to these poor people, shipwrecked in the wilderness, as they had been shipwrecked on the " Isles of Devils." They had arrived just in time : in a few days the Virginia VIRGINIA ABANDONED. 81 colony would have perished of famine ; but " God, that would not this country should be unplanted," sent them deliverance in the shape of the Deliverance ship. Gates and Somers cast anchor, and at once went on shore. The shipwrecked looked at the shipwrecked. Jamestown was a scene of desolation. The torn-down palisades, the gates creaking on rusty hinges, the dis- mantled houses, the emaciated faces, the hungry eyes and babbling voices, scarce able to articulate the prayer to be taken home to die, — these were the piteous sights and sounds which greeted Sir Thomas Gates and the Admiral, as they landed from their cedar ship and looked and listened, in the midst of the dreary throng gather- ins: around them on the shore. All was over for the Virginia colony, it seemed. Even the stout souls who had braved the storm in the Sea- Venture without los- ing hope lost it now. Heavy-hearted and despairing at finding famine where they had expected abundance, Gates and Somers, who had provisions, for only fourteen days, resolved to sail for England by way of the New* foundland fishing settlements, and take the wretched remnant of the colony with them. The cannon and other arms were buried at the gate of the fort, and on the 7th of June the drums rolled, giving the signal to embark. At the signal the disorderly crowd hastened towards the ships. It was only with great difficulty that they were prevented from destroying the last traces of the settlement. The place was about to be set fire to, but " God, who did not intend that this excellent country should be abandoned," says the old historian Stith, " put it into the heart of Sir T. Gates to save it." Gates remained on shore with a party of men to pre- serve order, and was the last man to step into the boat. 6 82 VIRGINIA: A HISTORY OF THE PEOPLE. Then a volley was fired, the sails were spread, and the Patience and Deliverance, with two other ships con- taining the colonists, sailed away toward England. Such had been the result of the long, hard struggle to found an English colony in the New World. Hun- dreds of thousands of pounds had been expended and hundreds of lives lost in the effort, and now, after three long years of trial, a little band of starving men, wo- men, and children were sailing homeward, leaving be- hind them at Jamestown only a few dismantled cabins to show that the place had been once inhabited. Virginia had been abandoned ; but a joyful surprise was near. On the next morning the little fleet of four small vessels was about to continue its way from Mulberry Island, in James River, where it had anchored for the night, when a row-boat was seen coming up the river toward them. It brought them joyful intelligence. Lord Dela- ware had arrived with three vessels from England ; had heard at the lower settlement that the colony was about to be deserted ; and had sent his long-boat with dis- patches directing Gates and Somers to return to James- town, where he would soon join them. Such was the curiously dramatic event which pre- vented the New World from being abandoned in 1610 by the English. If a writer of fiction had invented the incident it would have been criticised as the most im- probable of fancies. The fleet under Delaware arrived in the waters of Virginia at the very moment when the fleet under Gates and Somers was about to disappear; and an old writer, relating these events, bursts forth into exclamations of thanks and praise for " the Lord's infinite goodness." Never had poor people more cause to cast themselves at his " very footstool." They were VIRGINIA ABANDONED. 83 saved by a direct interposition of his providence. " If they had set sail sooner and launched into the vast ocean, who would have promised that they should en- counter the fleet of the Lord La Warre ? If the Lord La Warre had not brought with him a year's provisions, what comfort would these poor souls have received to have been re-landed to a second destruction ? This was the arm of the Lord of Hosts, who would have his people pass the Red Sea and Wilderness, and then to possess the land of Canaan." On the next morning, which was Sunday (June 10, 1610), Lord Delaware landed at the south gate of the fort, where Gates had drawn up his men to receive him. As soon as the new Governor touched the shore he knelt down, and remained for some moments in prayer. He then rose and went to the church, where service was held and a sermon preached ; after which he deliv- ered an address, encouraging the colonists. Events had followed each other like scenes on the stage of a theatre. The curtain had slowly descended on the desolate picture of the abandoned colony, and now it again rose on a busy and bustling scene, — on the shore thronged with hundreds of persons, the devout worshipers kneeling in the church, and Lord Delaware announcing to the assembled people that all was well. In the space of three days the Virginia colony had per- ished and come to life again. 84 VIRGINIA: A HISTORY OF THE PEOPLE. XIV. THE LORD DE LA WARRE. Virginia under Lord Delaware was a very different place from Virginia under the " rule or ruin " people, Ratcliffe, and the rest. All the turmoil had suddenly disappeared. Jamestown was a scene of tranquillity, and a well-ordered society had succeeded the social chaos. A stable government had all at once taken the place of that wretched mockery of an executive — the old wrangling council. Lord Delaware, Governor and Captain - General of Virginia, ruled now, and he had power to make his authority respected. This power was practically unhampered. He was to obey the in- structions of the Company, if they chose to send him any ; but if none were sent he was to govern at his discretion, under the charter. In any time of emer- gency he was not to await orders from England. He was to strike, and strike quickly ; to declare martial law, and put down wrong-doers with the sword or the halter. It was a wholesome state of things for a community lately a prey to the " unruly gallants," shouting and wrangling in the streets, drinking at the tavern,, and making the days and nights hideous with their w r ild uproar. A single glance showed the gallants that the new ruler was their master. Lord Delaware kept the state of a viceroy. He had his Privy Council: his Lieutenant-General, Sir Thomas Gates ; his Admiral, Sir George Somers ; his Vice- Admiral, Captain New- port ; and his Master of the Horse, Sir Ferdinand Wy THE LORD DE LA WARRE. 85 man. It was an imposing simulacrum of royalty, a lit- tle court in the wilderness. Some of the old soldiers of Smith, no doubt resenting the wrong done him, looked sidewise at the fine pageant. " This tender state of Virginia," one of them growled, " was not grown to that maturity to maintain such state and pleasures as was fit for a personage with such brave and great at- tendance. To have more to wait and play than work, or more commanders and officers than industrious laborers, was not so necessary. For in Virginia," adds the grim critic, " a plain soldier that can use a pickaxe and spade is better than five knights that could break a lance." It was the old protest of Smith, who said " nothing was to be expected from Virginia but by labor." Give us working-men, not drones — - laboring people in good fustian jackets, rather than fine gentlemen in silk and lace ! So the old settlers growled at my Lord Delaware, that " man of approved courage, temper, and experience, distinguished for his virtues and his generous devotion to the welfare of the colony." He was wiser than the critics. This splendor of which they complained had its advantages — it made his authority respected. The unruly gallants had due notice, and Delaware was never forced to proclaim martial law. He imposed and regu- lated. The colonists were ordered to go to work, and they went. The hours of labor were fixed, and were from six to ten in the morning, and from two to four in the afternoon. At ten and four the bells rang, when labor ceased, and the settlers attended religious ser- vices in the church. Thus all in the Virginia colony was well ordered at last. The scenes at this old Jamestown church are painted 86 VIRGINIA: A HISTORY OF THE PEOPLE. for us in the chronicles. It was a building sixty feet long and twenty-four feet wide, which had narrowly escaped burning when the colony was abandoned. Lord Delaware at once repaired it, and would have it deco- rated with flowers. The pews and chancel were of ce- dar, the communion table of black walnut. There was a baptismal font and a lofty pulpit; and at the west end were hung two bells. This was the first church edifice worthy of the name erected in America. All about it was plain and decorous, unless exception be taken to the presence of the flowers. The old Virginians did not object to them. They certainly were not papists, and had no intention of ever becoming such, but God had made the spring blooms, they were among the most beautiful of his creations, and it was fit that they should deck his temple. So, at least, there is a prec- edent for the poor flowers which to-day arouse so much enmity. Worthy Lord Delaware set the example of respect for religion by regularly attending the church services. He went in full dress at the ringing of the bells, at- tended by the Lieutenant-General, the Admiral, Vice- Admiral, Master of the Horse, and the rest of his Council, with a guard of fifty halberd-bearers in red cloaks marching behind him. He sat in the choir in a green velvet chair, and had a velvet cushion to kneel upon. The Council were ranged in state on his right and left ; and when the services were over, the Gov- ernor, his dignitaries, and halberd-bearers all returned with the same ceremony to their quarters. It was a very great contrast indeed to the rude old times, when the colonists worshiped under " a rotten sail ; " when the services were in danger of interruption by a burst THE LORD DE LA WARRE. 87 of war-whoops ; and when the thunder of Smith's can- non, summoning the mutineers to " stay or sink," had taken the place of the Sabbath bells. Lord Delaware did not remain long in Virginia. His health became so bad that he was compelled to return, but during his sojourn in the colony he proved himself an energetic ruler. He built forts Henry and Charles on Southampton River ; sent Percy to punish some depredations of the Paspahegh tribe above Jamestown ; procured full supplies of corn from the Potomac Indians ; and dispatched Sir George Somers to the Bermudas for more food — a voyage from which, as we have seen, the good Admiral never returned. He commanded in person in an engagement with the Indians at the present site of Richmond, and left no doubt in any mind of his capacity as a soldier and ruler. But his strength gave way. He was seized with a violent ague, and (March, 1611) sailed for England, on which voyage he is said to have been driven northward, and named the harbor in which he took refuge Delaware Bay. Seven years afterwards he set out again for Virginia, but died on the voyage. Delaware remains one of the most popular of the early Virginia Governors. Between summer and spring he established the colony on a firm basis. He ruled the unruly without resorting to harshness, added to the public defenses, inculcated respect for religion, and dur- ing his short stay in the country all things prospered. His sudden death on the voyage back to Virginia was sincerely lamented, and he is remembered still as one of the most gallant and picturesque personages of the early Virginia history. Memory takes hold of figures rather than generalities. The public services of " the 88 VIRGINIA: A HISTORY OF THE PEOPLE. Lord La Warre " are unknown or forgotten, but what is still remembered is the affecting scene when he landed at the deserted town, and fell on his knees, thanking God that he had come in time to save Virginia. i XV. DALE'S " CITY OF HENRICUS." In these first years of Virginia history, the stalwart figures rapidly succeed each other. Lord Delaware went away in March, and in May (1611) came Sir Thomas Dale, " High Marshal of Virginia." He had a hard task before him. George Percy had been acting in place of Sir Thomas Gates, who had gone to England, and the idlers had taken advantage of his amiable temper to neglect work. In place of plants ing corn, they resorted to the more agreeable occupation of playing bowls in the grass-grown streets of James- town ; at which employment the High Marshal found them, on his arrival. The drones saw that they had a master. Sir Thomas Dale was a soldier who had seen hard service in Flanders, " a man of good conscience and knowledge in divinity," but a born ruler and un- shrinking disciplinarian. The " unruly " class soon felt his iron hand, upon which there was no velvet glove whatever. He had brought with him one of the worst " supplies " that ever came to Virginia, but he had also brought a " Code of Martial Law," and made prompt use of it. A conspiracy was entered into by a num- ber of the malcontents, but Dale promptly arrested the leaders, and crushed it by inflicting upon them the death penalty, in a manner " cruel, unusual, and barbarous.' DALE'S " CITY OF HENRICUS." 89 This is the guarded phrase of the chronicle, which only adds that the mode of punishment was one at the time customary " in France." But many years after- wards the mystery was cleared up. In 1624, a num- ber of the Burgesses signed a " declaration " of what they had witnessed at Jamestown. One offender " had a bodkin thrust through his tongue and was chained to a tree till he perished," and others were put to death " by hanging, shooting, breaking on the wheel, and the like." The strange fact is thus established that this horrible punishment, inflicted by the Kings of France for political conspiracy, was inflicted by Sir Thomas Dale also for the same offense on the soil of Virginia. But the death penalty, in some form, seems to have been a necessity, and Dale was apparently obliged to be merciless. " If his laws had not been so strictly executed," says one of the fairest of the contemporary writers, " I see not how the utter subversion of the colony should have been prevented." The man of good conscience and great knowledge of divinity did not hesitate. He had to deal with desperate characters, and thrust bodkins through their tongues, broke them on the wheel, and there was no more trouble. In the summer occurred an incident which clearly indicates the ever-present dread of the Spanish power. The settlements in Florida were a standing menace to the English, and the foes were ever watching each other, and expecting an attack. At any moment the Spanish hawks might swoop on the Jamestown dove-cote ; and one day in the bright summer season, a fleet was seen in the distance slowly coming up the river. Suddenly all was in commotion. The ships were apparently Span- lards, and Dale hastened to man " the two good ships, 90 VIRGINIA: A HISTORY OF THE PEOPLE. the Star and the Prosperous, and our own Deliverance, then riding before Jamestown," with plain intent to go out and fight. The heart of the Marshal was evidently in the business, and he " animated " his men with a brave speech. He meant to attack the new comers, he said : if they were too strong for him he would grapple with them, and both would sink together ; " if God had ordained to set a period to their lives, they could never be sacrificed in a more acceptable service." It was the spirit of Grenville in his famous combat off the Azores, and of the old sea voyagers in general ; there were the hated Spaniards, and it was necessary to overcome them or die. Dale was no doubt in earnest when he said that he meant to do that, but a " small shallop with thirty good shot " was first sent to reconnoitre. Soon the shallop came back quietly — the ships were Eng- lishmen, not Spaniards. Sir Thomas Gates, the Lieu- tenant-Governor, was returning with a supply of pro- visions and three hundred additional colonists ; and the Marshal fired a salute, doubtless, instead of opening upon them with his culverins. With the return of the Lieutenant-Governor, the High Marshal found himself at liberty to carry out a favorite project — to establish a new city. His opinion of Virginia was enthusiastic. " Take four of the best kingdoms in Christendom, and put them all together," he wrote, " they may no way compare with this country, either for commodities or goodness of soil." Having resolved to' found his city, he selected the plateau within Dutch Gap, nearly surrounded by James River, above the present City Point, the centre of a fertile and pic- turesque domain called Varina. In September he went thither with three hundred and fifty men, built a pali DALE'S " CITY OF HENRI 'C 'US." 91 sade across the narrow neck, and another without, from water to water, and in this strong position erected his " City of Henricus." It had three streets, store-houses, a church, and regular watch-houses. Across the stream, on the south bank, a large inclosure, " twelve English miles of ground," was shut in also by stout palisades, and defended by forts Charity, Patience, and others. Hope-in-Faith, the name of a part of this tract, sug- gests a Puritan origin, and it is not improbable that a portion of Sir Thomas's settlers were of that faith. He had his official residence in the town on the plateau, and Rock Hall, the parsonage of the good Alexander Whitaker, the " Apostle of Virginia," was in sight across the river. The name Henrico, or City of Henri- cus, was conferred upon the place in honor of Prince Henry, son of James I., of whom Dale wrote these noble words, on his sudden death : '• My glorious master is gone, that would have enameled with his favors the labors I undertake for God's cause and his immortal honor. He was the great captain of our Israel ; the hope to have builded up this heavenly New Jerusalem be interred, I think ; the whole frame of this business fell into his grave." Having founded the City of Henricus, the High Mar- shal proceeded to found another at Bermuda Hundreds, and the new communities were illustrations of society in its first stage of social-military organization. Each group of families had its " commander," in peace a magis- trate, and in war a captain. Excellent Mr. Whitaker looked after the morals of all. " Every Sabbath day," he writes to a friend in London, " we preach in the forenoon, and catechise in the afternoon. Every Satur- day, at night, I exercise in Sir Thomas Dale's house." 92 VIRGINIA: A HISTORY OF THE PEOPLE. The picture is a cheerful one. The Apostle of Virginia and the High Marshal are excellent good friends. For this " worthy and experienced soldier," who has lived so rough a life in Flanders, who has bored peoples' tongues, and inflicted cruel and barbarous death penal- ties, is not, after all, so great a monster. He enjoys converse with the mild clergyman, who calls him " our religious and valiant Governor," and draws the full portrait of the High Marshal in a sentence : " Sir Thomas Dale, with whom I am, is a man of great knowledge in divinity, and of a good conscience in all things, both which be rare in a martial man." This was said by one of the purest of men, who knew the Mar- shal well, and must be taken for his true likeness. So the City of Henricus was established and went on its way. After a while there was another attraction there. Pocahontas came to live in the vicinity. That worthy gentleman, Master John Rolfe, who had married the maiden, had a plantation near the place, and he and his little brunette wife went in and out with their In- dian connections. Pocahontas, we are told by the old historian Stith, who afterwards lived at Henricus, "held friendly trade and commerce " with her father the Em- peror ; and thus Yarina is full of figures, and is a charmed domain to the antiquary and romance lover. To-day the figures have all disappeared — apostles and marshals, soldiers and axe-men, women and children, and the mild face of the girl-wife, Pocahontas. The city is gone also, with its outlying dependencies, Coxendale^ Hope-in-Faith, and its forts, Patience and Charity. The past has vanished, but here, nearly three centuries ago, the first Americans were laying the foundation of the republic. ROLFE AND POCAHONTAS. 93 XVI. ROLFE AND POCAHONTAS. After the departure of Smith from Virginia, Poca- hontas did not reappear at Jamestown — a fact which occasioned surprise, as she had made frequent visits and was known to take a warm interest in the English. It was now discovered that she had left Werowocomoco, either in consequence of some misunderstanding with Powhatan, or to visit her relatives on the Potomac. Raphe Hamor, the contemporary historian, attributes her absence from the York River country to the latter cause. "The JS^ ~ parella of Virginia in her princely progress," he say!' " took some pleasure to be among her friends of Potomac." Another account speaks of her as " being at Potomac, thinking herself unknown," which leaves the impression that she had taken refuge there. But this is all conjecture. She was now (1612) taken prisoner, and conducted to Jamestown by that roving adventurer, Captain Samuel Argall, who had brought Smith the intelligence of his deposition. Sent in a sloop to procure a supply of corn from the Potomac country, Argall was informed by a chief named Japazaws that Pocahontas was on a visit to him ; and the offer of a copper kettle induced him to betray her into the rover's hands. She was brought on board the vessel, and taken weeping to Jamestown, — ArgalPs object being to hold her as a hostage for the good behavior of Powhatan. When the Emperor heard of her capture he was bitterly offended, and when the English sent him word that she 94 VIRGINIA: A HISTORY OF THE PEOPLE. would be released as soon as he restored some captured men and arms he took no notice of the message. Poca- hontas therefore remained at Jamestown in custody of the English until the spring of the next year (1613), when Sir Thomas Dale, the High Marshal, set out with one hundred and fifty men to visit Powhatan, taking her with him, to negotiate the proposed exchange. Sailing down the James, and then into York River, the Marshal reached Werowocomoco, but found, the Em- peror absent. His reception was not encouraging. A swarm of Indians appeared on the bank and shouted defiance. Had the English come to fight ? they cried. If so, they were welcome, and might remember the fate of Ratcliffe. A flight of arrows followed, and one of the Englishmen was wounded ; whereupon Dale, who was a man of decision, pushed ashoia;, killed some of the party, burned their cabins, and then, reembarking, sailed up the York, looking for the Emperor. At Machot, an Indian village near the present West Point, several hundred savages were drawn up and awaited him. They defied him to come on shore, and he promptly did so ; but no fighting followed. A truce was agreed upon until Powhatan could be heard from, and " Master John Rolfe and Master Sparks " were sent with a message to him. They penetrated to his retreat in the woods, but the Emperor refused to grant them a personal interview. Vague promises only were held out by Powhatan's representatives, and the two emissaries returned to Dale at Machot. A scene had meanwhile taken place there which induced Sir Thomas to change all his plans. He had fully resolved to carry fire and sword into the Indian realm ; in the comprehensive phrase of the chronicle, ROLFE AND POCAHONTAS. 95 " to destroy and take away all their corn, burn all their houses on that river, leave not a fish-wear standing nor a canoe in any creek, and destroy and kill as many of them as he could." From this fell purpose he was now diverted, and the change in his plans is explained by the old writer, Master Raphe Hamor, who was present. The details of the scene are entertaining, and have es- caped the historians. They are found only in the work of Hamor, until recently nearly unknown. 1 Pocahontas had landed at Macho t, but would scarcely take any notice of her own people. She complained that " if her father had loved her he would not value her less than old swords, pieces, and axes ; wherefore she would still dwell with the Englishmen, who loved her." What this meant was soon seen. Two of her brothers hastened to meet her, — one of them the Nan- taquaus, whom Smith described as " the most manliest, comeliest, boldest spirit he ever saw in a savage," — and expressed the utmost delight at again seeing her. Poca- hontas replied by making them an unexpected confi- dence. She was going to marry one of the Englishmen — a Master John Rolfe ; and the affair was communi- cated to Sir Thomas Dale at the same moment. Rolfe had written a long letter to Sir Thomas, asking his " advice and furtherance," and this was now handed by Raphe Hamor to the Marshal. It produced a magical effect. Sir Thomas saw in the marriage the promise of peace and good-will between the two races, and abandoning his hostile designs returned to Jamestown, taking Poca- hontas back with him. This is the first mention of Rolfe in Virginia. He 1 The rare old Present Estate of Virginia till the 18th of June, 1614, -was reprinted at Albany, in fac-simile, in the present century. 96 VIRGINIA: A HISTORY OF THE PEOPLE. was young ; " a gentleman of much commendation," ac- cording to Raphe Hamor ; " honest and discreet," ac- cording to Mr. Whitaker ; and " of good understanding," according to Sir Thomas Dale. He had been wrecked in the Sea- Venture, and was married at that time, as a daughter was born to him on the islands, and named Bermuda. It is to be inferred that his wife died either there or in Virginia, as we now find the honest and dis- creet gentleman paying his addresses to Pocahontas. She had impressed his fancy, it seems, soon after her ar- rival from the Potomac as a prisoner. li Long before this time," the date of the York River raid, " a gentle- man of approved behavior and honest carriage, Master John Rolfe, had been in love with Pocahontas," and the historian adds, " and she with him." Thus for a whole year the affair had been in progress. The little Indian maid had come weeping to Jamestown, but had soon dried her tears ; and when she went to the York with the Marshal she had made up her mind to marry Rolfe. The only hesitation seems to have been on his part ; and his scruples, which were of a religious character, were set forth in full in the letter delivered by Hamor to Sir Thomas. It is a very curious production, and may be found in Hamor's work. Rolfe lays bare his whole heart — "the passions of his troubled soul." What is he to do ? he asks Sir Thomas, that man of good conscience and great knowledge in divinity. The Scriptures forbade marrying " strange wives," and Po- cahontas belonged to " a generation accursed ; " but his love caused " a mighty war in his meditations," and the great question was whether it was not his solemn duty to marry and convert this " unbelieving creature, namely, Pokahuntas." ROLFE AND POCAHONTAS. 97 What most touched and decided him was " her desire to be taught and instructed in the knowledge of God ; her capableness of understanding ; her aptness and will- ingness to receive any good impression ; and also the spiritual besides her own incitements stirring me up hereunto." Doubtless the latter were the main incen- tives. Rolfe seems to have conceived a genuine passion for the Indian maid, now eighteen and in the early flower of womanhood ; and, no doubt, seeing what all this dis- course meant, Sir Thomas Dale at once advised that the marriage should take place. The ceremony was performed without delay, the Em- peror having given his consent. He would not come to Jamestown in person, but sent an uncle and two brothers of Pocahontas to attend in his place. The scene was the church at Jamestown, and the time the month of April (1613). Sir Thomas Dale had assidu- ously labored to impress the truths of Christianity on the Indian maid, and she had renounced her " idolatry," and been baptized. The name of Rebecca was selected for her, no doubt in allusion to the Rebekah of Genesis, and the verse, " The Lord said unto her, two nations are in thy womb, and two manner of people shall be separated from thy bowels." The " Apostle of Vir- ginia," the good Whitaker, seems to have performed the marriage ceremony, which was, no doubt, attended by the colonists from far and near. The scene must have been picturesque. The church was probably dec- orated with the first flowers, as Lord Delaware had brought that into fashion, and the bride's dusky rela- tives mingled with the adventurers. As Sir Thomas Dale had anticipated, the alliance brought the blessing of peace. The tribe of Chickahom- 7 98 VIRGINIA: A HISTORY OF THE PEOPLE. inies, the fiercest of all the Indians, sent an embassy to conclude a treaty by which they were to become Eng- lishmen and subjects of the English King, and this union of the two races was consummated in the midst of gen- eral rejoicing. John Rolfe and his bride " lived civilly and lovingly " together, we are informed, first at James- town, then at Rolfe's plantation, near the City of Hen- ricus. Yarina was possibly the birthplace of her child, " which she loved most dearly," says a contemporary writer ; and the latter spot continued to be her resi- dence until she left Virginia. The most cordial rela- tions continued to exist between herself and Powhatan. He would not visit her, having apparently made a vow not to put himself in the power of the English ; but he sent her messages and presents, which indicated his af- fection for her. This was also seen from an incident of the time, which affords a last glimpse of the eccentric old ruler in his sylvan court. Sir Thomas Dale sent an embassy to Powhatan with a singular proposal : to confer upon him the hand of a favorite daughter in marriage. The request was strange indeed, more especially on the part of one with a good conscience and a great knowledge in divinity, since the girl was less than twelve, and Sir Thomas had a Lady Dale in England. Raphe Hamor, the ambassador and a truthful gentleman, is, however, explicit. He was sent to Machot to inform the Emperor that his Brother Dale had heard " the bruit of the exquisite perfection of his youngest daughter, and would gladly make her his nearest companion, wife, and bedfellow?' He meant to live for the rest of his life in Virginia, he said, and his object was to conclude with Powhatan a " perpetual friendship." ROLFE AND POCAHONTAS. 99 It is impossible to regard the incident otherwise than as a ruse ; and it is a very curious commentary upon the men of that time. The message was delivered on the York to the Emperor, who solaced himself with a pipe, and listened in grave silence, but with manifest impatience. Then he briefly responded : he could not give Brother Dale his daughter ; she was " as dear as his own life to him, and he delighted in none so much as in her." Besides, he had sold her to a great werow- ance for two bushels of roanoke, and she had " already gone with him three days' journey." The ambassador urged Powhatan to annul the marriage, but he refused, and there the strange proposition ended. The Emperor asked particularly after Pocahontas and Rolfe, " his daughter and unknown son, and how they lived, loved, and liked." Informed that they were well, and that Pocahontas was so happy that she never wished to return to her own people, the philosophic old ruler " laughed heartily, and said he was very glad of it ; " and Master Raphe Hamor soon afterwards took his de- parture. Powhatan's message to his Brother Dale was emi- nently reasonable, and full of wild-wood dignity. The English already had one of his daughters, he said ; when she died they should have another, " but she yet liveth." He wished to remain friends with the white people ; he was old, and would " gladly end his days in peace." If the English wronged him, his country was large, and he would remove to a distance from them. None of his own people should annoy them, or in any manner disturb them ; and he added the kingly assurance, " I, which have power to perform it, have said it." 100 VIRGINIA: A HISTORY OF THE PEOPLE. Such is the last scene in the old chronicles in which Powhatan appears as one of the dramatis personce of Virginia history. XVII. LAST DAYS OF POCAHONTAS AND POWHATAN. The narrative of the career of Pocahontas in Vir- ginia here ends ; but her last years and those of the Emperor, Powhatan, ought to be briefly noticed. These two figures, with a third, the figure of Smith, dominate the early annals. His after life has been spoken of ; let us say a few words also of the last days of the two persons with whom he was so closely associated. About three years after her marriage, Pocahontas accompanied her husband on a visit to England. She arrived in London early in the summer of 1616, and was received with great distinction at court. She was treated as " the daughter of a king," and Stith, one of the oldest of the Virginia historians, says that it was a "constant tradition" in his time that "the King became jealous, and was highly offended at Mr. Rolfe for mar- rying a princess." The statement seems absurd, but according to the theory of the time the alliance was important. If Virginia descended to Pocahontas, as it might do at Powhatan's death, at her own death the kingdom would be "vested in Mr. Rolfe's posterity." The constant tradition is, therefore, not improbable. It exactly accords with the character of James I., and has the right to exist. It is certain that the arrival of Pocahontas caused a great sensation in London. She was the New World personified in the gracious form of a little beauty of twenty-one. It is true that she was a LAST DAYS OF. POCAHONTAS AND POWHATAN. 101 brown beauty, and her black hair was too straight for the English taste, but this was not noticed. She sud- denly became the fashion. The courtiers called on her, and went away with the declaration that they had seen a great many English ladies who were less attractive in face and manners. The curious eyes of the fine gentle- men and ladies of London noticed the fact that there was no trace of awkwardness or embarrassment in her demeanor. Lady Delaware presented her at court, where she was " graciously used " by the King and Queen. They invited her to be present at the masques, and the Bishop of London, who was delighted at the conversion of the young Indian princess to Christianity, gave an entertainment in her honor, which Purchas, the historian, described as full of splendor. It was a curi- ous contrast to the first years of Pocahontas, in the Virginia woods — this fine life of London, with its rich costumes and brilliant flambeaux, its gilded coaches and high revelry ; but it does not seem to have affected in any degree the simplicity of her character. The proof of this is seen in the details of her last in- terview with Smith, who was in England at the time of her arrival. The wandering soldier, whom she had known in Virginia, was now a celebrity. He had just returned from France, after his capture off the Azores, had received from the King the appointment of " Ad- miral of New England," and was a favorite with Prince Charles, afterwards the unfortunate Charles I. He was making preparations to sail for New England when Pocahontas arrived at Gravesend, and her presence in England revived all his old affection for her. He wrote a letter to Queen Anne, warmly recommending her to the royal favor, and declared that he would be guilty of 102 VIRGINIA: A HISTORY OF THE PEOPLE. " the deadly poison of ingratitude " if he omitted any occasion to record her merit. More than once she had preserved his life, first by " hazarding the beating out of her brains to save his," and again by stealing through "the dark night and t irksome woods" to warn him of an intended attack. Her services to Virginia had been as great as those to himself ; she had been the instru- ment, under God, to preserve the colony from destruc- tion, and he invoked the royal favor as due to her "great spirit, her desert, birth, want, and simplicity." The letter had the desired result, and attracted attention to Pocahontas ; and Smith went to call on her near Lon- don. The interview was brief, but of a very curious nature. Smith approached her with deep respect, addressing her as u Lady Rebecca ; " but this seemed to offend her, and, covering her face with her hands, she remained for some time silent. When she spoke, it was to reproach him for his formality. " You did promise Powhatan," she said, " that what was yours should be his. You called him Father, being in his land a stranger — and fear you here 1 should call you Father ? I tell you, then, I will ; and you shall call me child." And she added, " They did tell me al- ways you were dead, and I knew no other till I came to Plymouth." These latter words have suggested the curious ques- tion whether Pocahontas had been designedly deceived, either by Rolfe or his friends, on the subject of Smith's death. Had she conceived for the young soldier a warmer sentiment than simple regard, and had that fact explained her absence from Jamestown after his departure ? Her age might seem to contradict the LAST DAYS OF POCAHONTAS AND POWHATAN. 103 supposition ; but the Indian girls married young, and when Smith left Virginia Pocahontas was fifteen. Of her real feelings we 'know nothing ; but some one had cer- tainly produced the conviction in her mind that Smith was dead. She fully believed it up to the time of her arrival in England : and she had married Rolfe under that belief. The romantic view will commend itself to youthful readers, and may be the truth. As to the sentiment of Smith, there is no reason to suppose that he ever indulged in any romance in relation to the In- dian maid. His life at Jamestown was hard and pas- sionate ; his days were spent in fighting the factions and defending himself from mutineers, and such a life is not propitious to love dreams. Pocahontas died suddenly at Gravesend, in March, 1617, just as she was on the point of sailing for Vir- ginia. She made " a religious and godly end," and was buried in the parish church, where her name was registered, after the careless fashion of the time, as " Re- becca Wrothe." The church was afterwards burned, and the exact spot of her grave is unmarked. Only a few additional details are known of this beautiful and romantic character. She bore three names — Pocahon- tas, Amonate, and Matoax, the last being her " real name." It was rarely uttered, as the Indians believed that a knowledge of the real names of persons gave their enemies power to cast spells upon them. Pocahontas, signifying, it is said, " Bright Stream between two Hills," was her household name, and she was Pow- hatan's " dearest daughter." Her brother, Nantaquaus, and her sisters, Matachanna and Cleopatre, are men- tioned. As she was probably born in 1595, she was only twenty-two when she died — a brief and pathetic 104 VIRGINIA: A HISTORY OF THE PEOPLE. career, which has appealed to the human heart in every generation. John Rolfe returned to Virginia; where he became a prominent official of the colony ; and his son, Thomas Rolfe, was taken to London, where he was brought up by an uncle. When he was a young man he came to Virginia, and as " Lieutenant Rolfe " commanded Fort James, on the Chickahominy. Only one other trace is found of him. When he was about twenty-six (1641), we hear of his petition to the Governor for permis- sion to visit his grand-uncle Opechancanough, and his aunt Cleopatre — denizens still, it would seem, of the woods on York River. He married, before this time or afterwards, a young lady in England, became a gentleman of "note and fortune" in Virginia, and some of the most respectable families in the State are de- scended from him. One of his descendants was John Randolph, of Roanoke, who was proud of his Indian blood. His manner of walking and the peculiar bright- ness of his eyes are said to have betrayed his origin, and he once said that he came of a race who never for- got or forgave an injury. He was sixth in descent from Pocahontas through Jane Rolfe, her granddaugh- ter ; and it is curious that the blood of Powhatan should thus have mingled with that of his old enemies. Dead for many a day, and asleep in his sepulchre at Orapax, the savage old Emperor still spoke in the voice of his great descendant, the orator of Roanoke. Powhatan does not again appear upon the stage in Virginia. He had abdicated, some time before, in favor of his brother, Opitchapan, and lived the life of a re- tired sovereign, going from place to place at his pleas- ure, still venerated by his people, but taking no part in LAST DAYS OF POCAHONTAS AND POWHATAN. 105 public affairs. It was Charles V. in private life, — an ex-emperor awaiting the end. The end soon came. Powhatan was now past seventy, and the death of Poca- hontas had been a severe blow to him. He went about from Werowocomoco, to Machot, to Orapax, to Pow- hatan, lamenting her. It was some comfort that her child was living, and he expressed a deep interest in the boy, but was never to see him. He finally ceased his journeys, and retired to Orapax " in the desert." Here he spent his last days, and died in 1618, — a year fur- ther remarkable for the death of Sir Walter Raleigh and Lord Delaware, — just one year after the death of Pocahontas. He was no doubt buried in the immedi- ate vicinity, for about a mile from Orapax was an ar- bor in the woods, where he kept his treasures " against the time of his death and burial ; " and here, near the present Cold Harbor, his dust probably reposes. Powhatan was a man of ability, and rises to the height of an important historical personage. He was a war- rior and statesman both, and may be described in gen- eral terms as a subtle diplomat and a relentless enemy. He butchered one of his tribes, the Pianketanks, who rebelled against him, reducing the women and children to slavery, and hanging the scalps of the warriors on a cord, between two trees, near his royal residence. On other occasions he burned his enemies alive, or beat them to death, and was thus not a model of the Chris- tian virtues. He was simply a type of the Indian race in its strongest and harshest development ; cunning and treacherous, but a man of large brain and a certain re- gal dignity ; full of pride, persistent resolve, and a born ruler. He loved his children, and was profoundly re- spected by his people, who recognized his jus divinum. 106 VIRGINIA: A HISTORY OF THE PEOPLE. Throughout his land of Powhatan, with his eight thou- sand subjects and thirty under-kings, he was absolute master, and controlled all things by unwritten custom and the force of his will. He opposed the English as long as possible ; made every effort to overcome them and put them to death, or drive them from the country ; and finding it impossible to do so, silently gave up the struggle. At last, old and weary of authority, and mourning his dead daughter, he surrendered the sceptre and the rule, and retired to Orapax to die. It is a picturesque figure of the old years of Virginia, and takes its place beside the figure of Smith, his per- sistent adversary. The one was the representative In- dian of the American forest ; the other, the representa- tive Caucasian of the great age of Elizabeth. Between the two hardy forms thus standing on the threshold of Virginia history, we have a third and more gracious figure, — the Indian girl, whose kind heart and brave spirit belong to no clime or race. XVIII. "S- VIRGINIA UNDER A WATCH-DOG AND A HAWK. These personal details relating to Pocahontas and Powhatan have carried us forward in the narrative. Let us now go back to the days of the valiant and re- ligious Sir Thomas Dale, High Marshal of Virginia, who, when Gates returned to England, became Gov- ernor of the colony. It is a very singular figure, that of the hardy knight, with his martial instincts and love of divinity harmo« piously combined. He was a rude antagonist, but a UNDER A WATCH-DOG AND A HAWK. 107 devout Christian. He "labored long to ground the faith of Jesus Christ " in Pocahontas, and wrote to a friend in London that all his work in the plantation of Virginia was undertaken " for God's cause and his immortal honor." Such is the curious picture. The character of the Marshal exhibited the sharpest con- trasts. He was a stalwart soldier and ruler, a student of divinity, and a man of good conscience ; but he was a wily diplomatist also, and not above intrigue. He no doubt meant to practice a trick when he applied to Powhatan to give him his daughter in marriage ; and the cruelties inflicted on the conspirators paint the harsher phase of the man. But all these singular con- trasts mingled in the High Marshal's character, which was brave and politic, harsh and devout, mildly courte- eous and pitilessly stern. He carried fire and sword into the land of Powhatan ; labored to convert Poca- hontas, of whom he wrote, " Were it but for the gain- ing of this one soul, I will think my time, toils, and present stay well spent ; " established the new colony of Varina ; ruled all, high and low ; and was now going to give an additional proof of his energy, if not of his good conscience. The rumor came that the French had intruded on the soil of Virginia. The intrusion was a long way off, it is true, as far away as Nova Scotia ; but for the French or any others to settle south of the forty-fifth parallel was an encroachment on the sacred soil. At teast, Sir Thomas Dale took that view of the matter, and sent an expedition to expel the intruders. It was commanded by Captain Argall, the energetic adventurer who had captured Pocahontas. He sailed for Acadia in 1613, found the French had made a settlement at 108 VIRGINIA: A HISTORY OF THE PEOPLE. Mount Desert Island, fell suddenly on them when they least suspected the presence of danger, and, pursuing them through the woods, shot down or captured the whole body. At one blow the Mount Desert colony was exterminated. Argall carried away with him about fifteen prisoners ; the rest he generously permitted to re- turn to France in a fishing vessel. It would be a waste of time to comment upon this proceeding. It was simple buccaneering. The French had settled in Acadia as early as the year 1604, and by the charter of 1606 the English claimed in the New World only such territory as was not " actually pos- sessed by any Christian prince or people." Now, as the King of France was a Christian prince, and did actually possess Acadia in the year 1606, Argall's expedition was no more defensible than the expeditions of Morgan or any other marauder of the West Indies. But nice scruples no more controlled men in that age than they control them to-day. The Spaniards and French were enemies, and were to be driven from Virginia soil, which for convenience meant the whole of North America. Argall raised the English flag, and sailed away in triumph. On his way he found other intruders on Vir- ginia territory : some Dutch, who had presumed to erect a trading settlement at the present site of Albany, in New York. He sailed up the Hudson, summoned the commandant to surrender, and the demand was at once complied with. But the worthy Hollanders had no in- tention to go away. As soon as Argall's sails disap- peared on their way to Virginia, the Dutch flag was raised again, and all went on as before. The intruders even extended their sway southward. Soon afterwards <1614), they founded a second trading settlement on UNDER A WATCH-DOG AND A HAWK. 109 Manhattan Island, at the mouth of the Hudson, which in due time was to become the great city of New York. Dale was an excellent Governor. Under his firm administration the colony prospered. He was the au- thor, especially, of a new system, which changed the whole aspect of affairs in Virginia. Up to this time, the old bad practice of bringing all things to " the common store " had continued. Through all the first years the colony had groaned under it. It was a premium for idle- ness, and just suited the drones, who, " presuming that, however the harvest prospered, the general store must maintain them," promptly decided that it was unneces- sary to work themselves, since others would work for them. Thirty or forty industrious people had thus been compelled to support four times their number, and a worse evil still had resulted. Virginia was evil spoken of: "from the slothful and idle drones had sprung the man- ifold imputations Virginia had innocently undergone." This was now done away with ; the working bees were no longer to provide for the drones. The old homeless system was abolished at one blow. Every man was to have bis own hearth-stone and his own private tract, — three acres of cleared ground, which he was to cultivate himself, bringing two barrels and a half of corn from it to the public granary. All above this was to be his own, and the result was soon seen. Having an indi- vidual interest, the settlers labored honestly, and instead of a deficiency there was a surplus. In the past they had been forced to apply to the Indians in time of need ; now the Indians applied in turn, and were supplied. In 1615 this system was extended further. Dale in- duced the London Company to grant fifty acres in fee simple to each colonist who would clear and settle them, 110 VIRGINIA: A HISTORY OF THE PEOPLE. and pay a nominal rent to the King yearly u at the feast of St. Michael the Archangel," as the old deeds ran. Any one paying into the treasury the sum of twelve pounds ten shillings should be entitled to one hundred acres, to be located where he pleased. And whoever performed a public service to the Company or the col- ony was to be rewarded with a grant not to exceed two thousand acres. Thus began in Virginia the absolute tenure of real estate. It rested on a respectable basis : the men who labored and did the state service were to be the land- holders. When, in 1616, Sir Thomas Dale returned to Eng- land, in the same ship with Pocahontas, his strong hand had left its impress on the whole fabric of Virginia society. Order everywhere reigned, and the land was at peace. It contained three hundred and fifty inhab- itants,— or, probably, heads of families, — and a chain of settlements extended from Varina to the ocean : Henrico, Bermuda, West and Shirley Hundreds, James- town, Kiquotan, and Dale's Gift on the sea-coast, near Cape Charles. There was a college for Indian children at the City of Henricus, where the Rev. William Wick- ham officiated as minister; and Governor George Yeard- ley, left in charge of the colony, had a house, and for the most part of the time resided there. At the capi- tal, Jamestown, were fifty settlers, under Captain Fran- cis West, and the Rev. Mr. Bucke, of the Sea- Venture, was the minister. Thus Virginia was growing and developing. The new Governor, Yeardley, was a man of mild character and respectable ability ; and in the year 1616 introduced the cultivation of tobacco, which John Rolfe had experi- UNDER A WATCH-DOG AND A HAWK HI merited with some years before. The Indians smoked it, but were obliged to cultivate it, as it did not grow wild ; and finding that it was prized in Europe, the settlers began to plant it. The demand steadily in- creased with the habit of using it, and a few years afterwards it became the great staple of Virginia. Suddenly Yeardley's rule, which had been " temperate and just, too mild indeed for many of this colony," ended. He was replaced by a personage whose rule was not going to be temperate or mild — Captain Sam- uel Argall, of Acadian memory. Argall is One of the most dramatic figures of that dramatic age — wily, energetic, rapacious, a human hawk, peering about in search of some prey to pounce on. He was trader, fisherman, intriguer, and a little of the buccaneer ; ever going to and fro in search of something to profit by ; ready to capture Indian girls, or burn settlements, or " run " a cargo of slaves. He performed this latter exploit, and was nearly the author of the introduction of slavery into America ; for he had sailed to the West Indies, captured a number of negroes from the Span- iards, and they were landed in the Bermudas instead of Virginia, only by accident. Argall's restless spirit had carried him back to England, after the Acadian business. There he had intrigued with the Earl of Warwick, the head of the court party, and the result was that in 1617 he was sent to supersede Yeardley, with the title of Deputy Governor and Admiral of Virginia. When he took the reins it was seen that the days of " temperate and mild " rule had passed away. He re- vived martial law, and ruled the colony with a rod of iron. He fixed the percentage of profit on goods and 112 VIRGINIA: A HISTORY OF THE PEOPLE. regulated the price of tobacco, attaching the penalty of three years' " slavery to the colony," or public labor, to violations of his edicts. For teaching the Indians the use of fire-arms, the punishment was death to teacher and pupil. Absence from church was visited with a night's imprisonment and a week's " slavery ; " for the second offense, a month of slavery ; and for the third, a year and a day. These regulations were severe, but the " unruly " element probably required severity, and Argall was not the man to shrink from it. Unfortu- nately for his good name, he was grasping and unscru- pulous in whatever concerned his own private interests. The case of Brewster, manager of Lord Delaware's Virginia estates, is an example. Argall ordered the laborers on the estate to labor on his own, and when Brewster demurred Argall arrested him for mutiny, tried him by court-martial, and condemned him to death. He barely escaped from the hawk's clutches, and got back to England ; but once there, he made such an outcry that the Company lost all patience with Argall. He was superseded, but acted with his usual decision. Before the arrival of the new Governor, he loaded a vessel with the proceeds of his " plunder," and sailed away from the colony. To the last, fortune befriended him. He was knighted by James I., as a reward for his public services — otherwise his close adherence to the court party in the Company. The portrait drawn of him here is that which appears on the face of the record. There is no doubt at all that he was rapacious and despotic, but both Dale and Hamor had a high opinion of him. His ability and energy were unquestionable ; and he was perhaps only another example of the singular contrasts presented in the characters of the strong men of that strong age. THE FIRST AMERICAN ASSEMBLY. 113 George Yeardley came back (April 19, 1619) as Sir George Yeardley, Governor-General of Virginia. His friends must have welcomed his mild and honest face, after the hawk visage of Argall ; but he brought with him certain documents which made him thrice welcome in Virginia. When their contents were pro- claimed, a thrill ran through the colony, and shouts and cheers must have risen from the Varina settlement all along James River to Dale's Gift on the ocean. Virginia, thenceforward, was to have representative government. XIX. THE FIRST AMERICAN ASSEMBLY AND CONSTITUTION. This wonder was the unconscious work of that bit- ter enemy of free discussion and popular right, King James I. When the ship bearing the body of the good Ad- miral Somers from Bermuda reached England, the crew brought with them a large lump of ambergris, which they had found on the islands, and gave glowing de- scriptions of their fertility and value. This account excited the Company, and they petitioned the King to include the Bermudas in the territory of Virginia. He did so by a new charter in March, 1612, and this was the remote cause of free government in Virginia. The charter, which was the old one of 1609 remodeled, ha documents. By the aid of these he is able to give his work a value and interest that would have been impossible had he fol- lowed slavishly the commonly accepted authorities on his subject His investigation in regard to toleration in Maryland is particu- larly noticeable. — New York Evening Post. A substantial contribution to the history of America. — Mag* %(ne of American History. « KENTUCKY." Professor Shaler has made use of much valuable existing ma- terial, and by a patient, discriminating, and judicious choice has given us a complete and impartial record of the various stages through which this State has passed frcm its first settlement t» the present time. No one will read this story of the building i one of the great commonwealths of this Union without feelings deep interest, and that the author has done his work well and ir partially will be the general verdict. — Christian at Work (Ne York). A capital example of what a short State history should be. • Hartford Courant. " KANSAS." In all respects one of the very best of the series. . . . His wo; exhibits diligent research, discrimination in the selection of m terials, and skill in combining his chosen stuff into a narrati* that has unity, and order, and lucidity. It is an excellent prese tation of the important aspects and vital principles of the Kans struggle. — Hartford Courant. "MICHIGAN." An ably written and charmingly interesting volume. . . . F •variety of incident, for transitions in experience, for importan of events, and for brilliancy and ability in the service of the lea ing actors, the history of Michigan offers rare attractions ; ar the writer of it has brought to his task the most excellent gif and powers as a vigorous, impartial, and thoroughly accomplish* historian. — Christian Register (Boston). "CALIFORNIA." Mr. Royce has made an admirable study. He has establishes I his view and fortified his position with a wealth of illustratio from incident and reminiscence. The story is made altogethf entertaining. . . . Of the country and'its productions, of pionet life and character, of social and political questions, of busines and industrial enterprises, he has given us full and intelligent ai counts. — Boston Transcript. It is the most truthful and graphic description that has bee \ written of this wonderful history which has from time to time been written in scraps and sketches. — Chicago Inter-Ocean. HOUGHTON, MIFFLIN & CO., Publishers, Boston and New York.