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Captain John Smith
CHAPTER XVI - NEW ENGLAND'S TRIALS
Charles Dudley Warner
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       _ Smith was not cast down by his reverses. No sooner had he laid his
       latest betrayers by the heels than he set himself resolutely to
       obtain money and means for establishing a colony in New England, and
       to this project and the cultivation in England of interest in New
       England he devoted the rest of his life.
       His Map and Description of New England was published in 1616, and he
       became a colporteur of this, beseeching everywhere a hearing for his
       noble scheme. It might have been in 1617, while Pocahontas was about
       to sail for Virginia, or perhaps after her death, that he was again
       in Plymouth, provided with three good ships, but windbound for three
       months, so that the season being past, his design was frustrated, and
       his vessels, without him, made a fishing expedition to Newfoundland.
       It must have been in the summer of this year that he was at Plymouth
       with divers of his personal friends, and only a hundred pounds among
       them all. He had acquainted the nobility with his projects, and was
       afraid to see the Prince Royal before he had accomplished anything,
       "but their great promises were nothing but air to prepare the voyage
       against the next year." He spent that summer in the west of England,
       visiting "Bristol, Exeter, Bastable? Bodman, Perin, Foy, Milborow,
       Saltash, Dartmouth, Absom, Pattnesse, and the most of the gentry in
       Cornwall and Devonshire, giving them books and maps," and inciting
       them to help his enterprise.
       So well did he succeed, he says, that they promised him twenty sail
       of ships to go with him the next year, and to pay him for his pains
       and former losses. The western commissioners, in behalf of the
       company, contracted with him, under indented articles, "to be admiral
       of that country during my life, and in the renewing of the letters-
       patent so to be nominated"; half the profits of the enterprise to be
       theirs, and half to go to Smith and his companions.
       Nothing seems to have come out of this promising induction except the
       title of "Admiral of New England," which Smith straightway assumed
       and wore all his life, styling himself on the title-page of
       everything he printed, "Sometime Governor of Virginia and Admiral of
       New England." As the generous Captain had before this time assumed
       this title, the failure of the contract could not much annoy him. He
       had about as good right to take the sounding name of Admiral as
       merchants of the west of England had to propose to give it to him.
       The years wore away, and Smith was beseeching aid, republishing his
       works, which grew into new forms with each issue, and no doubt making
       himself a bore wherever he was known. The first edition of "New
       England's Trials"--by which he meant the various trials and attempts
       to settle New England was published in 1620. It was to some extent a
       repetition of his "Description" of 1616. In it he made no reference
       to Pocahontas. But in the edition of 1622, which is dedicated to
       Charles, Prince of Wales, and considerably enlarged, he drops into
       this remark about his experience at Jamestown: "It Is true in our
       greatest extremitie they shot me, slue three of my men, and by the
       folly of them that fled tooke me prisoner; yet God made Pocahontas
       the king's daughter the meanes to deliver me: and thereby taught me
       to know their treacheries to preserve the rest. [This is evidently
       an allusion to the warning Pocahontas gave him at Werowocomoco.] It
       was also my chance in single combat to take the king of Paspahegh
       prisoner, and by keeping him, forced his subjects to work in chains
       till I made all the country pay contribution having little else
       whereon to live."
       This was written after he had heard of the horrible massacre of 1622
       at Jamestown, and he cannot resist the temptation to draw a contrast
       between the present and his own management. He explains that the
       Indians did not kill the English because they were Christians, but to
       get their weapons and commodities. How different it was when he was
       in Virginia. "I kept that country with but 38, and had not to eat
       but what we had from the savages. When I had ten men able to go
       abroad, our commonwealth was very strong: with such a number I ranged
       that unknown country 14 weeks: I had but 18 to subdue them all."
       This is better than Sir John Falstaff. But he goes on: "When I first
       went to those desperate designes it cost me many a forgotten pound to
       hire men to go, and procrastination caused more run away than went."
       "Twise in that time I was President." [It will be remembered that
       about the close of his first year he gave up the command, for form's
       sake, to Capt. Martin, for three hours, and then took it again.] "To
       range this country of New England in like manner, I had but eight, as
       is said, and amongst their bruite conditions I met many of their
       silly encounters, and without any hurt, God be thanked." The valiant
       Captain had come by this time to regard himself as the inventor and
       discoverer of Virginia and New England, which were explored and
       settled at the cost of his private pocket, and which he is not
       ashamed to say cannot fare well in his absence. Smith, with all his
       good opinion of himself, could not have imagined how delicious his
       character would be to readers in after-times. As he goes on he warms
       up: "Thus you may see plainly the yearly success from New England by
       Virginia, which hath been so costly to this kingdom and so dear to
       me.
       "By that acquaintance I have with them I may call them my children [he
       spent between two and three months on the New England coast] for they
       have been my wife, my hawks, my hounds, my cards, my dice, and total
       my best content, as indifferent to my heart as my left hand to my
       right.... Were there not one Englishman remaining I would yet begin
       again as I did at the first; not that I have any secret encouragement
       for any I protest, more than lamentable experiences; for all their
       discoveries I can yet hear of are but pigs of my sowe: nor more
       strange to me than to hear one tell me he hath gone from Billingate
       and discovered Greenwich!"
       As to the charge that he was unfortunate, which we should think might
       have become current from the Captain's own narratives, he tells his
       maligners that if they had spent their time as he had done, they
       would rather believe in God than in their own calculations, and
       peradventure might have had to give as bad an account of their
       actions. It is strange they should tax him before they have tried
       what he tried in Asia, Europe, and America, where he never needed to
       importune for a reward, nor ever could learn to beg: "These sixteen
       years I have spared neither pains nor money, according to my ability,
       first to procure his majesty's letters patent, and a Company here to
       be the means to raise a company to go with me to Virginia [this is
       the expedition of 1606 in which he was without command] as is said:
       which beginning here and there cost me near five years work, and more
       than 500 pounds of my own estate, besides all the dangers, miseries
       and encumbrances I endured gratis, where I stayed till I left 500
       better provided than ever I was: from which blessed Virgin (ere I
       returned) sprung the fortunate habitation of Somer Isles." "Ere I
       returned" is in Smith's best vein. The casual reader would certainly
       conclude that the Somers Isles were somehow due to the providence of
       John Smith, when in fact he never even heard that Gates and Smith
       were shipwrecked there till he had returned to England, sent home
       from Virginia. Neill says that Smith ventured L 9 in the Virginia
       company! But he does not say where he got the money.
       New England, he affirms, hath been nearly as chargeable to him and
       his friends: he never got a shilling but it cost him a pound. And
       now, when New England is prosperous and a certainty, "what think you
       I undertook when nothing was known, but that there was a vast land."
       These are some of the considerations by which he urges the company to
       fit out an expedition for him: "thus betwixt the spur of desire and
       the bridle of reason I am near ridden to death in a ring of despair;
       the reins are in your hands, therefore I entreat you to ease me."
       The Admiral of New England, who since he enjoyed the title had had
       neither ship, nor sailor, nor rod of land, nor cubic yard of salt
       water under his command, was not successful in his several "Trials."
       And in the hodge-podge compilation from himself and others, which he
       had put together shortly after,--the "General Historie," he
       pathetically exclaims: "Now all these proofs and this relation, I now
       called New England's Trials. I caused two or three thousand of them
       to be printed, one thousand with a great many maps both of Virginia
       and New England, I presented to thirty of the chief companies in
       London at their Halls, desiring either generally or particularly
       (them that would) to imbrace it and by the use of a stock of five
       thousand pounds to ease them of the superfluity of most of their
       companies that had but strength and health to labor; near a year I
       spent to understand their resolutions, which was to me a greater toil
       and torment, than to have been in New England about my business but
       with bread and water, and what I could get by my labor; but in
       conclusion, seeing nothing would be effected I was contented as well
       with this loss of time and change as all the rest."
       In his "Advertisements" he says that at his own labor, cost, and loss
       he had "divulged more than seven thousand books and maps," in order
       to influence the companies, merchants and gentlemen to make a
       plantation, but "all availed no more than to hew Rocks with Oister-
       shels."
       His suggestions about colonizing were always sensible. But we can
       imagine the group of merchants in Cheapside gradually dissolving as
       Smith hove in sight with his maps and demonstrations.
       In 1618, Smith addressed a letter directly to Lord Bacon, to which
       there seems to have been no answer. The body of it was a
       condensation of what he had repeatedly written about New England, and
       the advantage to England of occupying the fisheries. "This nineteen
       years," he writes, "I have encountered no few dangers to learn what
       here I write in these few leaves:... their fruits I am certain may
       bring both wealth and honor for a crown and a kingdom to his
       majesty's posterity." With 5,000, pounds he will undertake to
       establish a colony, and he asks of his Majesty a pinnace to lodge his
       men and defend the coast for a few months, until the colony gets
       settled. Notwithstanding his disappointments and losses, he is still
       patriotic, and offers his experience to his country: "Should I
       present it to the Biskayners, French and Hollanders, they have made
       me large offers. But nature doth bind me thus to beg at home, whom
       strangers have pleased to create a commander abroad.... Though I can
       promise no mines of gold, the Hollanders are an example of my
       project, whose endeavors by fishing cannot be suppressed by all the
       King of Spain's golden powers. Worth is more than wealth, and
       industrious subjects are more to a kingdom than gold. And this is so
       certain a course to get both as I think was never propounded to any
       state for so small a charge, seeing I can prove it, both by example,
       reason and experience."
       Smith's maxims were excellent, his notions of settling New England
       were sound and sensible, and if writing could have put him in command
       of New England, there would have been no room for the Puritans. He
       addressed letter after letter to the companies of Virginia and
       Plymouth, giving them distinctly to understand that they were losing
       time by not availing themselves of his services and his project.
       After the Virginia massacre, he offered to undertake to drive the
       savages out of their country with a hundred soldiers and thirty
       sailors. He heard that most of the company liked exceedingly well
       the notion, but no reply came to his overture.
       He laments the imbecility in the conduct of the new plantations. At
       first, he says, it was feared the Spaniards would invade the
       plantations or the English Papists dissolve them: but neither the
       councils of Spain nor the Papists could have desired a better course
       to ruin the plantations than have been pursued; "It seems God is
       angry to see Virginia in hands so strange where nothing but murder
       and indiscretion contends for the victory."
       In his letters to the company and to the King's commissions for the
       reformation of Virginia, Smith invariably reproduces his own
       exploits, until we can imagine every person in London, who could
       read, was sick of the story. He reminds them of his unrequited
       services: "in neither of those two countries have I one foot of land,
       nor the very house I builded, nor the ground I digged with my own
       hands, nor ever any content or satisfaction at all, and though I see
       ordinarily those two countries shared before me by them that neither
       have them nor knows them, but by my descriptions.... For the books
       and maps I have made, I will thank him that will show me so much for
       so little recompense, and bear with their errors till I have done
       better. For the materials in them I cannot deny, but am ready to
       affirm them both there and here, upon such ground as I have
       propounded, which is to have but fifteen hundred men to subdue again
       the Salvages, fortify the country, discover that yet unknown, and
       both defend and feed their colony."
       There is no record that these various petitions and letters of advice
       were received by the companies, but Smith prints them in his History,
       and gives also seven questions propounded to him by the
       commissioners, with his replies; in which he clearly states the cause
       of the disasters in the colonies, and proposes wise and statesman-
       like remedies. He insists upon industry and good conduct: "to
       rectify a commonwealth with debauched people is impossible, and no
       wise man would throw himself into such society, that intends
       honestly, and knows what he understands, for there is no country to
       pillage, as the Romans found; all you expect from thence must be by
       labour."
       Smith was no friend to tobacco, and although he favored the
       production to a certain limit as a means of profit, it is interesting
       to note his true prophecy that it would ultimately be a demoralizing
       product. He often proposes the restriction of its cultivation, and
       speaks with contempt of "our men rooting in the ground about tobacco
       like swine." The colony would have been much better off "had they
       not so much doated on their tobacco, on whose furnish foundation
       there is small stability."
       So long as he lived, Smith kept himself informed of the progress of
       adventure and settlement in the New World, reading all relations and
       eagerly questioning all voyagers, and transferring their accounts to
       his own History, which became a confused patchwork of other men's
       exploits and his own reminiscences and reflections. He always
       regards the new plantations as somehow his own, and made in the light
       of his advice; and their mischances are usually due to the neglect of
       his counsel. He relates in this volume the story of the Pilgrims in
       1620 and the years following, and of the settlement of the Somers
       Isles, making himself appear as a kind of Providence over the New
       World.
       Out of his various and repetitious writings might be compiled quite a
       hand-book of maxims and wise saws. Yet all had in steady view one
       purpose--to excite interest in his favorite projects, to shame the
       laggards of England out of their idleness, and to give himself
       honorable employment and authority in the building up of a new
       empire. "Who can desire," he exclaims, "more content that hath small
       means, or but only his merit 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 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; if he have any grace of faith or
       zeal in Religion, what can be more healthful to any or more agreeable
       to God than to convert those poor salvages to know Christ and
       humanity, whose labours and discretion will triply requite any charge
       and pain."
       "Then who would live at home idly," he exhorts his countrymen, "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, or 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, or by
       relating news of other men's actions, sharke here and there for a
       dinner or supper, deceive thy friends by fair promises and
       dissimulations, in borrowing when thou never meanest to pay, offend
       the laws, surfeit with excess, burden thy country, abuse thyself,
       despair in want, and then cozen thy kindred, yea, even thy own
       brother, and wish thy parent's death (I will not say damnation), to
       have their estates, though thou seest what honors and rewards the
       world yet hath for them that will seek them and worthily deserve
       them."
       "I would be sorry to offend, or that any should mistake my honest
       meaning: for I wish good to all, hurt to none; but rich men for the
       most part are grown to that dotage through their pride in their
       wealth, as though there were no accident could end it or their life."
       "And what hellish care do such take to make it their own misery and
       their countrie's spoil, especially when there is such need of their
       employment, drawing by all manner of inventions from the Prince and
       his honest subjects, even the vital spirits of their powers and
       estates; as if their bags or brags were so powerful a defense, the
       malicious could not assault them, when they are the only bait to
       cause us not only to be assaulted, but betrayed and smothered in our
       own security ere we will prevent it."
       And he adds this good advice to those who maintain their children in
       wantonness till they grow to be the masters: "Let this lamentable
       example [the ruin of Constantinople] remember you that are rich
       (seeing there are such great thieves in the world to rob you) not
       grudge to lend some proportion to breed them that have little, yet
       willing to learn how to defend you, for it is too late when the deed
       is done."
       No motive of action did Smith omit in his importunity, for "Religion
       above all things should move us, especially the clergy, if we are
       religious." "Honor might move the gentry, the valiant and
       industrious, and the hope and assurance of wealth all, if we were
       that we would seem and be accounted; or be we so far inferior to
       other nations, or our spirits so far dejected from our ancient
       predecessors, or our minds so upon spoil, piracy and such villainy,
       as to serve the Portugall, Spaniard, Dutch, French or Turke (as to
       the cost of Europe too many do), rather than our own God, our king,
       our country, and ourselves; excusing our idleness and our base
       complaints by want of employment, when here is such choice of all
       sorts, and for all degrees, in the planting and discovering these
       North parts of America."
       It was all in vain so far as Smith's fortunes were concerned. The
       planting and subjection of New England went on, and Smith had no part
       in it except to describe it. The Brownists, the Anabaptists, the
       Papists, the Puritans, the Separatists, and "such factious
       Humorists," were taking possession of the land that Smith claimed to
       have "discovered," and in which he had no foothold. Failing to get
       employment anywhere, he petitioned the Virginia Company for a reward
       out of the treasury in London or the profits in Virginia.
       At one of the hot discussions in 1623 preceding the dissolution of
       the Virginia Company by the revocation of their charter, Smith was
       present, and said that he hoped for his time spent in Virginia he
       should receive that year a good quantity of tobacco. The charter was
       revoked in 1624 after many violent scenes, and King James was glad to
       be rid of what he called "a seminary for a seditious parliament."
       The company had made use of lotteries to raise funds, and upon their
       disuse, in 1621, Smith proposed to the company to compile for its
       benefit a general history. This he did, but it does not appear that
       the company took any action on his proposal. At one time he had been
       named, with three others, as a fit person for secretary, on the
       removal of Mr. Pory, but as only three could be balloted for, his
       name was left out. He was, however, commended as entirely competent.
       After the dissolution of the companies, and the granting of new
       letters-patent to a company of some twenty noblemen, there seems to
       have been a project for dividing up the country by lot. Smith says:
       "All this they divided in twenty parts, for which they cast lots, but
       no lot for me but Smith's Isles, which are a many of barren rocks,
       the most overgrown with shrubs, and sharp whins, you can hardly pass
       them; without either grass or wood, but three or four short shrubby
       old cedars."
       The plan was not carried out, and Smith never became lord of even
       these barren rocks, the Isles of Shoals. That he visited them when
       he sailed along the coast is probable, though he never speaks of
       doing so. In the Virginia waters he had left a cluster of islands
       bearing his name also.
       In the Captain's "True Travels," published in 1630, is a summary of
       the condition of colonization in New England from Smith's voyage
       thence till the settlement of Plymouth in 1620, which makes an
       appropriate close to our review of this period:
       "When I first went to the North part of Virginia, where the Westerly
       Colony had been planted, it had dissolved itself within a year, and
       there was not one Christian in all the land. I was set forth at the
       sole charge of four merchants of London; the Country being then
       reputed by your westerlings a most rocky, barren, desolate desart;
       but the good return I brought from thence, with the maps and
       relations of the Country, which I made so manifest, some of them did
       believe me, and they were well embraced, both by the Londoners, and
       Westerlings, for whom I had promised to undertake it, thinking to
       have joyned them all together, but that might well have been a work
       for Hercules. Betwixt them long there was much contention: the
       Londoners indeed went bravely forward: but in three or four years I
       and my friends consumed many hundred pounds amongst the Plimothians,
       who only fed me but with delays, promises, and excuses, but no
       performance of anything to any purpose. In the interim, many
       particular ships went thither, and finding my relations true, and
       that I had not taken that I brought home from the French men, as had
       been reported: yet further for my pains to discredit me, and my
       calling it New England, they obscured it, and shadowed it, with the
       title of Canada, till at my humble suit, it pleased our most Royal
       King Charles, whom God long keep, bless and preserve, then Prince of
       Wales, to confirm it with my map and book, by the title of New
       England; the gain thence returning did make the fame thereof so
       increase that thirty, forty or fifty sail went yearly only to trade
       and fish; but nothing would be done for a plantation, till about some
       hundred of your Brownists of England, Amsterdam and Leyden went to
       New Plimouth, whose humorous ignorances, caused them for more than a
       year, to endure a wonderful deal of misery, with an infinite
       patience; saying my books and maps were much better cheap to teach
       them than myself: many others have used the like good husbandry that
       have payed soundly in trying their self-willed conclusions; but those
       in time doing well, diverse others have in small handfulls undertaken
       to go there, to be several Lords and Kings of themselves, but most
       vanished to nothing." _