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Captain John Smith
CHAPTER XVIII - DEATH AND CHARACTER
Charles Dudley Warner
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       _ Hardship and disappointment made our hero prematurely old, but could
       not conquer his indomitable spirit. The disastrous voyage of June,
       1615, when he fell into the hands of the French, is spoken of by the
       Council for New England in 1622 as "the ruin of that poor gentleman,
       Captain Smith, who was detained prisoner by them, and forced to
       suffer many extremities before he got free of his troubles;" but he
       did not know that he was ruined, and did not for a moment relax his
       efforts to promote colonization and obtain a command, nor relinquish
       his superintendence of the Western Continent.
       His last days were evidently passed in a struggle for existence,
       which was not so bitter to him as it might have been to another man,
       for he was sustained by ever-elating "great expectations." That he
       was pinched for means of living, there is no doubt. In 1623 he
       issued a prospectus of his "General Historie," in which he said:
       "These observations are all I have for the expenses of a thousand
       pounds and the loss of eighteen years' time, besides all the travels,
       dangers, miseries and incumbrances for my countries good, I have
       endured gratis: ....this is composed in less than eighty sheets,
       besides the three maps, which will stand me near in a hundred pounds,
       which sum I cannot disburse: nor shall the stationers have the copy
       for nothing. I therefore, humbly entreat your Honour, either to
       adventure, or give me what you please towards the impression, and I
       will be both accountable and thankful."
       He had come before he was fifty to regard himself as an old man, and
       to speak of his "aged endeavors." Where and how he lived in his
       later years, and with what surroundings and under what circumstances
       he died, there is no record. That he had no settled home, and was in
       mean lodgings at the last, may be reasonably inferred. There is a
       manuscript note on the fly-leaf of one of the original editions of
       "The Map of Virginia...." (Oxford, 1612), in ancient chirography,
       but which from its reference to Fuller could not have been written
       until more than thirty years after Smith's death. It says: "When he
       was old he lived in London poor but kept up his spirits with the
       commemoration of his former actions and bravery. He was buried in
       St. Sepulcher's Church, as Fuller tells us, who has given us a line
       of his Ranting Epitaph."
       That seems to have been the tradition of the man, buoyantly
       supporting himself in the commemoration of his own achievements. To
       the end his industrious and hopeful spirit sustained him, and in the
       last year of his life he was toiling on another compilation, and
       promised his readers a variety of actions and memorable observations
       which they shall "find with admiration in my History of the Sea, if
       God be pleased I live to finish it."
       He died on the 21 St of June, 1631, and the same day made his last
       will, to which he appended his mark, as he seems to have been too
       feeble to write his name. In this he describes himself as "Captain
       John Smith of the parish of St. Sepulcher's London Esquior." He
       commends his soul "into the hands of Almighty God, my maker, hoping
       through the merits of Christ Jesus my Redeemer to receive full
       remission of all my sins and to inherit a place in the everlasting
       kingdom"; his body he commits to the earth whence it came; and "of
       such worldly goods whereof it hath pleased God in his mercy to make
       me an unworthy receiver," he bequeathes: first, to Thomas Packer,
       Esq., one of his Majesty's clerks of the Privy Seal, "all my
       houses, lands, tenantements and hereditaments whatsoever, situate
       lying and being in the parishes of Louthe and Great Carleton, in the
       county of Lincoln together with my coat of armes"; and charges him to
       pay certain legacies not exceeding the sum of eighty pounds, out of
       which he reserves to himself twenty pounds to be disposed of as he
       chooses in his lifetime. The sum of twenty pounds is to be disbursed
       about the funeral. To his most worthy friend, Sir Samuel Saltonstall
       Knight, he gives five pounds; to Morris Treadway, five pounds; to his
       sister Smith, the widow of his brother, ten pounds; to his cousin
       Steven Smith, and his sister, six pounds thirteen shillings and
       fourpence between them; to Thomas Packer, Joane, his wife, and
       Eleanor, his daughter, ten pounds among them; to "Mr. Reynolds, the
       lay Mr of the Goldsmiths Hall, the sum of forty shillings"; to
       Thomas, the son of said Thomas Packer, "my trunk standing in my
       chamber at Sir Samuel Saltonstall's house in St. Sepulcher's parish,
       together with my best suit of apparel of a tawny color viz. hose,
       doublet jirkin and cloak," "also, my trunk bound with iron bars
       standing in the house of Richard Hinde in Lambeth, together--with
       half the books therein"; the other half of the books to Mr. John
       Tredeskin and Richard Hinde. His much honored friend, Sir Samuel
       Saltonstall, and Thomas Packer, were joint executors, and the will
       was acknowledged in the presence "of Willmu Keble Snr civitas,
       London, William Packer, Elizabeth Sewster, Marmaduke Walker, his
       mark, witness."
       We have no idea that Thomas Packer got rich out of the houses, lands
       and tenements in the county of Lincoln. The will is that of a poor
       man, and reference to his trunks standing about in the houses of his
       friends, and to his chamber in the house of Sir Samuel Saltonstall,
       may be taken as proof that he had no independent and permanent
       abiding-place.
       It is supposed that he was buried in St. Sepulcher's Church. The
       negative evidence of this is his residence in the parish at the time
       of his death, and the more positive, a record in Stow's "Survey of
       London," 1633, which we copy in full:
       This Table is on the south side of the Quire in Saint Sepulchers,
       with this Inscription:
       To the living Memory of his deceased Friend, Captaine John Smith, who
       departed this mortall life on the 21 day of June, 1631, with his
       Armes, and this Motto,
       Accordamus, vincere est vivere.
       Here lies one conquer'd that hath conquer'd Kings,
       Subdu'd large Territories, and done things
       Which to the World impossible would seeme,
       But that the truth is held in more esteeme,
       Shall I report His former service done
       In honour of his God and Christendome:
       How that he did divide from Pagans three,
       Their heads and Lives, types of his chivalry:
       For which great service in that Climate done,
       Brave Sigismundus (King of Hungarion)
       Did give him as a Coat of Armes to weare,
       Those conquer'd heads got by his Sword and Speare?
       Or shall I tell of his adventures since,
       Done in Firginia, that large Continence:
       I-low that he subdu'd Kings unto his yoke,
       And made those heathen flie, as wind doth smoke:
       And made their Land, being of so large a Station,
       A hab;tation for our Christian Nation:
       Where God is glorifi'd, their wants suppli'd,
       Which else for necessaries might have di'd?
       But what avails his Conquest now he lyes
       Inter'd in earth a prey for Wormes & Flies?
       O may his soule in sweet Mizium sleepe,
       Untill the Keeper that all soules doth keepe,
       Returne to judgement and that after thence,
       With Angels he may have his recompence.
       Captaine John Smith, sometime Governour of Firginia, and
       Admirall of New England.
       This remarkable epitaph is such an autobiographical record as Smith
       might have written himself. That it was engraved upon a tablet and
       set up in this church rests entirely upon the authority of Stow. The
       present pilgrim to the old church will find no memorial that Smith
       was buried there, and will encounter besides incredulity of the
       tradition that he ever rested there.
       The old church of St. Sepulcher's, formerly at the confluence of Snow
       Hill and the Old Bailey, now lifts its head far above the pompous
       viaduct which spans the valley along which the Fleet Ditch once
       flowed. All the registers of burial in the church were destroyed by
       the great fire of 1666, which burnt down the edifice from floor to
       roof, leaving only the walls and tower standing. Mr. Charles Deane,
       whose lively interest in Smith led him recently to pay a visit to St.
       Sepulcher's, speaks of it as the church "under the pavement of which
       the remains of our hero were buried; but he was not able to see the
       stone placed over those remains, as the floor of the church at that
       time was covered with a carpet.... The epitaph to his memory,
       however, it is understood, cannot now be deciphered upon the
       tablet,"--which he supposes to be the one in Stow.
       The existing tablet is a slab of bluish-black marble, which formerly
       was in the chancel. That it in no way relates to Captain Smith a
       near examination of it shows. This slab has an escutcheon which
       indicates three heads, which a lively imagination may conceive to be
       those of Moors, on a line in the upper left corner on the husband's
       side of a shield, which is divided by a perpendicular line. As Smith
       had no wife, this could not have been his cognizance. Nor are these
       his arms, which were three Turks' heads borne over and beneath a
       chevron. The cognizance of "Moors' heads," as we have said, was not
       singular in the Middle Ages, and there existed recently in this very
       church another tomb which bore a Moor's head as a family badge. The
       inscription itself is in a style of lettering unlike that used in the
       time of James I., and the letters are believed not to belong to an
       earlier period than that of the Georges. This bluish-black stone has
       been recently gazed at by many pilgrims from this side of the ocean,
       with something of the feeling with which the Moslems regard the Kaaba
       at Mecca. This veneration is misplaced, for upon the stone are
       distinctly visible these words:
       "Departed this life September....
       ....sixty-six ....years....
       ....months ...."
       As John Smith died in June, 1631, in his fifty-second year, this
       stone is clearly not in his honor: and if his dust rests in this
       church, the fire of 1666 made it probably a labor of wasted love to
       look hereabouts for any monument of him.
       A few years ago some American antiquarians desired to place some
       monument to the "Admiral of New England" in this church, and a
       memorial window, commemorating the "Baptism of Pocahontas," was
       suggested. We have been told, however, that a custom of St.
       Sepulcher's requires a handsome bonus to the rector for any memorial
       set up in the church which the kindly incumbent had no power to set
       aside (in his own case) for a foreign gift and act of international
       courtesy of this sort; and the project was abandoned.
       Nearly every trace of this insatiable explorer of the earth has
       disappeared from it except in his own writings. The only monument to
       his memory existing is a shabby little marble shaft erected on the
       southerly summit of Star Island, one of the Isles of Shoals. By a
       kind of irony of fortune, which Smith would have grimly appreciated,
       the only stone to perpetuate his fame stands upon a little heap of
       rocks in the sea; upon which it is only an inference that he ever set
       foot, and we can almost hear him say again, looking round upon this
       roomy earth, so much of which he possessed in his mind, "No lot for
       me but Smith's Isles, which are an array of barren rocks, the most
       overgrowne with shrubs and sharpe whins you can hardly passe them:
       without either grasse or wood but three or foure short shrubby old
       cedars."
       Nearly all of Smith's biographers and the historians of Virginia
       have, with great respect, woven his romances about his career into
       their narratives, imparting to their paraphrases of his story such an
       elevation as his own opinion of himself seemed to demand. Of
       contemporary estimate of him there is little to quote except the
       panegyrics in verse he has preserved for us, and the inference from
       his own writings that he was the object of calumny and detraction.
       Enemies he had in plenty, but there are no records left of their
       opinion of his character. The nearest biographical notice of him in
       point of time is found in the "History of the Worthies of England,"
       by Thomas Fuller, D.D., London, 1662.
       Old Fuller's schoolmaster was Master Arthur Smith, a kinsman of John,
       who told him that John was born in Lincolnshire, and it is probable
       that Fuller received from his teacher some impression about the
       adventurer.
       Of his "strange performances" in Hungary, Fuller says: "The scene
       whereof is laid at such a distance that they are cheaper credited
       than confuted."
       "From the Turks in Europe he passed to the pagans in America, where
       towards the latter end of the reign of Queen Elizabeth [it was in the
       reign of James] such his perils, preservations, dangers,
       deliverances, they seem to most men above belief, to some beyond
       truth. Yet have we two witnesses to attest them, the prose and the
       pictures, both in his own book; and it soundeth much to the
       diminution of his deeds that he alone is the herald to publish and
       proclaim them."
       "Surely such reports from strangers carry the greater reputation.
       However, moderate men must allow Captain Smith to have been very
       instrumental in settling the plantation in Virginia, whereof he was
       governor, as also Admiral of New England."
       "He led his old age in London, where his having a prince's mind
       imprisoned in a poor man's purse, rendered him to the contempt of
       such as were not ingenuous. Yet he efforted his spirits with the
       remembrance and relation of what formerly he had been, and what he
       had done."
       Of the "ranting epitaph," quoted above, Fuller says: "The
       orthography, poetry, history and divinity in this epitaph are much
       alike."
       Without taking Captain John Smith at his own estimate of himself, he
       was a peculiar character even for the times in which he lived. He
       shared with his contemporaries the restless spirit of roving and
       adventure which resulted from the invention of the mariner's compass
       and the discovery of the New World; but he was neither so sordid nor
       so rapacious as many of them, for his boyhood reading of romances had
       evidently fired him with the conceits of the past chivalric period.
       This imported into his conduct something inflated and something
       elevated. And, besides, with all his enormous conceit, he had a
       stratum of practical good sense, a shrewd wit, and the salt of humor.
       If Shakespeare had known him, as he might have done, he would have
       had a character ready to his hand that would have added one of the
       most amusing and interesting portraits to his gallery. He faintly
       suggests a moral Falstaff, if we can imagine a Falstaff without
       vices. As a narrator he has the swagger of a Captain Dalghetty, but
       his actions are marked by honesty and sincerity. He appears to have
       had none of the small vices of the gallants of his time. His
       chivalric attitude toward certain ladies who appear in his
       adventures, must have been sufficiently amusing to his associates.
       There is about his virtue a certain antique flavor which must have
       seemed strange to the adventurers and court hangers-on in London.
       Not improbably his assumptions were offensive to the ungodly, and his
       ingenuous boastings made him the object of amusement to the skeptics.
       Their ridicule would naturally appear to him to arise from envy. We
       read between the lines of his own eulogies of himself, that there was
       a widespread skepticism about his greatness and his achievements,
       which he attributed to jealousy. Perhaps his obtrusive virtues made
       him enemies, and his rectitude was a standing offense to his
       associates.
       It is certain he got on well with scarcely anybody with whom he was
       thrown in his enterprises. He was of common origin, and always
       carried with him the need of assertion in an insecure position. He
       appears to us always self-conscious and ill at ease with gentlemen
       born. The captains of his own station resented his assumptions of
       superiority, and while he did not try to win them by an affectation
       of comradeship, he probably repelled those of better breeding by a
       swaggering manner. No doubt his want of advancement was partly due
       to want of influence, which better birth would have given him; but
       the plain truth is that he had a talent for making himself
       disagreeable to his associates. Unfortunately he never engaged in
       any enterprise with any one on earth who was so capable of conducting
       it as himself, and this fact he always made plain to his comrades.
       Skill he had in managing savages, but with his equals among whites he
       lacked tact, and knew not the secret of having his own way without
       seeming to have it. He was insubordinate, impatient of any authority
       over him, and unwilling to submit to discipline he did not himself
       impose.
       Yet it must be said that he was less self-seeking than those who were
       with him in Virginia, making glory his aim rather than gain always;
       that he had a superior conception of what a colony should be, and how
       it should establish itself, and that his judgment of what was best
       was nearly always vindicated by the event. He was not the founder of
       the Virginia colony, its final success was not due to him, but it was
       owing almost entirely to his pluck and energy that it held on and
       maintained an existence during the two years and a half that he was
       with it at Jamestown. And to effect this mere holding on, with the
       vagabond crew that composed most of the colony, and with the
       extravagant and unintelligent expectations of the London Company, was
       a feat showing decided ability. He had the qualities fitting him to
       be an explorer and the leader of an expedition. He does not appear
       to have had the character necessary to impress his authority on a
       community. He was quarrelsome, irascible, and quick to fancy that
       his full value was not admitted. He shines most upon such small
       expeditions as the exploration of the Chesapeake; then his energy,
       self-confidence, shrewdness, inventiveness, had free play, and his
       pluck and perseverance are recognized as of the true heroic
       substance.
       Smith, as we have seen, estimated at their full insignificance such
       flummeries as the coronation of Powhatan, and the foolishness of
       taxing the energies of the colony to explore the country for gold and
       chase the phantom of the South Sea. In his discernment and in his
       conceptions of what is now called "political economy" he was in
       advance of his age. He was an advocate of "free trade" before the
       term was invented. In his advice given to the New England plantation
       in his "Advertisements" he says:
       "Now as his Majesty has made you custome-free for seven yeares, have
       a care that all your countrymen shall come to trade with you, be not
       troubled with pilotage, boyage, ancorage, wharfage, custome, or any
       such tricks as hath been lately used in most of our plantations,
       where they would be Kings before their folly; to the discouragement
       of many, and a scorne to them of understanding, for Dutch, French,
       Biskin, or any will as yet use freely the Coast without controule,
       and why not English as well as they? Therefore use all commers with
       that respect, courtesie, and liberty is fitting, which will in a
       short time much increase your trade and shipping to fetch it from
       you, for as yet it were not good to adventure any more abroad with
       factors till you bee better provided; now there is nothing more
       enricheth a Common-wealth than much trade, nor no meanes better to
       increase than small custome, as Holland, Genua, Ligorne, as divers
       other places can well tell you, and doth most beggar those places
       where they take most custome, as Turkie, the Archipelegan Iles,
       Cicilia, the Spanish ports, but that their officers will connive to
       enrich themselves, though undo the state."
       It may perhaps be admitted that he knew better than the London or the
       Plymouth company what ought to be done in the New World, but it is
       absurd to suppose that his success or his ability forfeited him the
       confidence of both companies, and shut him out of employment. The
       simple truth seems to be that his arrogance and conceit and
       importunity made him unpopular, and that his proverbial ill luck was
       set off against his ability.
       Although he was fully charged with the piety of his age, and kept in
       mind his humble dependence on divine grace when he was plundering
       Venetian argosies or lying to the Indians, or fighting anywhere
       simply for excitement or booty, and was always as devout as a modern
       Sicilian or Greek robber; he had a humorous appreciation of the value
       of the religions current in his day. He saw through the hypocrisy of
       the London Company, "making religion their color, when all their aim
       was nothing but present profit." There was great talk about
       Christianizing the Indians; but the colonists in Virginia taught them
       chiefly the corruptions of civilized life, and those who were
       despatched to England soon became debauched by London vices. "Much
       they blamed us [he writes] for not converting the Salvages, when
       those they sent us were little better, if not worse, nor did they all
       convert any of those we sent them to England for that purpose."
       Captain John Smith died unmarried, nor is there any record that he
       ever had wife or children. This disposes of the claim of subsequent
       John Smiths to be descended from him. He was the last of that race;
       the others are imitations. He was wedded to glory. That he was not
       insensible to the charms of female beauty, and to the heavenly pity
       in their hearts, which is their chief grace, his writings abundantly
       evince; but to taste the pleasures of dangerous adventure, to learn
       war and to pick up his living with his sword, and to fight wherever
       piety showed recompense would follow, was the passion of his youth,
       while his manhood was given to the arduous ambition of enlarging the
       domains of England and enrolling his name among those heroes who make
       an ineffaceable impression upon their age. There was no time in his
       life when he had leisure to marry, or when it would have been
       consistent with his schemes to have tied himself to a home.
       As a writer he was wholly untrained, but with all his introversions
       and obscurities he is the most readable chronicler of his time, the
       most amusing and as untrustworthy as any. He is influenced by his
       prejudices, though not so much by them as by his imagination and
       vanity. He had a habit of accurate observation, as his maps show,
       and this trait gives to his statements and descriptions, when his own
       reputation is not concerned, a value beyond that of those of most
       contemporary travelers. And there is another thing to be said about
       his writings. They are uncommonly clean for his day. Only here and
       there is coarseness encountered. In an age when nastiness was
       written as well as spoken, and when most travelers felt called upon
       to satisfy a curiosity for prurient observations, Smith preserved a
       tone quite remarkable for general purity.
       Captain Smith is in some respects a very good type of the restless
       adventurers of his age; but he had a little more pseudo-chivalry at
       one end of his life, and a little more piety at the other, than the
       rest. There is a decidedly heroic element in his courage, hardihood,
       and enthusiasm, softened to the modern observer's comprehension by
       the humorous contrast between his achievements and his estimate of
       them. Between his actual deeds as he relates them, and his noble
       sentiments, there is also sometimes a contrast pleasing to the
       worldly mind. He is just one of those characters who would be more
       agreeable on the stage than in private life. His extraordinary
       conceit would be entertaining if one did not see too much of him.
       Although he was such a romancer that we can accept few of his
       unsupported statements about himself, there was, nevertheless, a
       certain verity in his character which showed something more than
       loyalty to his own fortune; he could be faithful to an ambition for
       the public good. Those who knew him best must have found in him very
       likable qualities, and acknowledged the generosities of his nature,
       while they were amused at his humorous spleen and his serious
       contemplation of his own greatness. There is a kind of simplicity in
       his self-appreciation that wins one, and it is impossible for the
       candid student of his career not to feel kindly towards the "sometime
       Governor of Virginia and Admiral of New England."
        
       THE END.
       Captain John Smith, Charles Dudley Warner _