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Captain John Smith
CHAPTER VI - QUARRELS AND HARDSHIPS
Charles Dudley Warner
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       _ On Sunday, June 21st, they took the communion lovingly together.
       That evening Captain Newport gave a farewell supper on board his
       vessel. The 22d he sailed in the Susan Constant for England,
       carrying specimens of the woods and minerals, and made the short
       passage of five weeks. Dudley Carleton, in a letter to John
       Chamberlain dated Aug. 18, 1607, writes "that Captain Newport has
       arrived without gold or silver, and that the adventurers, cumbered by
       the presence of the natives, have fortified themselves at a place
       called Jamestown." The colony left numbered one hundred and four.
       The good harmony of the colony did not last. There were other
       reasons why the settlement was unprosperous. The supply of wholesome
       provisions was inadequate. The situation of the town near the
       Chickahominy swamps was not conducive to health, and although
       Powhatan had sent to make peace with them, and they also made a
       league of amity with the chiefs Paspahegh and Tapahanagh, they
       evidently had little freedom of movement beyond sight of their guns.
       Percy says they were very bare and scant of victuals, and in wars and
       dangers with the savages.
       Smith says in his "True Relation," which was written on the spot, and
       is much less embittered than his "General Historie," that they were
       in good health and content when Newport departed, but this did not
       long continue, for President Wingfield and Captain Gosnold, with the
       most of the Council, were so discontented with each other that
       nothing was done with discretion, and no business transacted with
       wisdom. This he charges upon the "hard-dealing of the President,"
       the rest of the Council being diversely affected through his
       audacious command. "Captain Martin, though honest, was weak and
       sick; Smith was in disgrace through the malice of others; and God
       sent famine and sickness, so that the living were scarce able to bury
       the dead. Our want of sufficient good food, and continual watching,
       four or five each night, at three bulwarks, being the chief cause;
       only of sturgeon we had great store, whereon we would so greedily
       surfeit, as it cost many their lives; the sack, Aquavite, and other
       preservations of our health being kept in the President's hands, for
       his own diet and his few associates."
       In his "General Historie," written many years later, Smith enlarges
       this indictment with some touches of humor characteristic of him. He
       says:
       "Being thus left to our fortunes, it fortuned that within ten days
       scarce ten amongst us could either go, or well stand, such extreme
       weakness and sicknes oppressed us. And thereat none need marvaile if
       they consider the cause and reason, which was this: whilst the ships
       stayed, our allowance was somewhat bettered, by a daily proportion of
       Bisket, which the sailors would pilfer to sell, give, or exchange
       with us for money, Saxefras, furres, or love. But when they
       departed, there remained neither taverne, beere-house, nor place of
       reliefe, but the common Kettell. Had we beene as free from all
       sinnes as gluttony, and drunkennesse, we might have been canonized
       for Saints. But our President would never have been admitted, for
       ingrissing to his private, Oatmeale, Sacke, Oyle, Aquavitz, Beef,
       Egges, or what not, but the Kettell: that indeed he allowed equally
       to be distributed, and that was half a pint of wheat, and as much
       barley boyled with water for a man a day, and this being fryed some
       twenty-six weeks in the ship's hold, contained as many wormes as
       graines; so that we might truly call it rather so much bran than
       corrne, our drinke was water, our lodgings Castles in the ayre; with
       this lodging and dyet, our extreme toile in bearing and planting
       Pallisadoes, so strained and bruised us, and our continual labour in
       the extremitie of the heat had so weakened us, as were cause
       sufficient to have made us miserable in our native countrey, or any
       other place in the world."
       Affairs grew worse. The sufferings of this colony in the summer
       equaled that of the Pilgrims at Plymouth in the winter and spring.
       Before September forty-one were buried, says Wingfield; fifty, says
       Smith in one statement, and forty-six in another; Percy gives a list
       of twenty-four who died in August and September. Late in August
       Wingfield said, "Sickness had not now left us seven able men in our
       town." "As yet," writes Smith in September, "we had no houses to
       cover us, our tents were rotten, and our cabins worse than nought."
       Percy gives a doleful picture of the wretchedness of the colony: "Our
       men were destroyed with cruel sickness, as swellings, fluxes,
       burning-fevers, and by wars, and some departed suddenly, but for the
       most part they died of mere famine.... We watched every three nights,
       lying on the cold bare ground what weather soever came, worked all
       the next day, which brought our men to be most feeble wretches, our
       food was but a small can of barley, sod in water to five men a day,
       our drink but cold water taken out of the river, which was at the
       flood very salt, at a low tide full of shrimp and filth, which was
       the destruction of many of our men. Thus we lived for the space of
       five months in this miserable distress, but having five able men to
       man our bulwarks upon any occasion. If it had not pleased God to put
       a terror in the savage hearts, we had all perished by those wild and
       cruel Pagans, being in that weak state as we were: our men night and
       day groaning in every comer of the fort, most pitiful to hear. If
       there were any conscience in men, it would make their hearts to bleed
       to hear the pitiful murmurings and outcries of our sick men, without
       relief, every night and day, for the space of six weeks: some
       departing out of the world; many times three or four in a night; in
       the morning their bodies trailed out of their cabins, like dogs, to
       be buried. In this sort did I see the mortality of divers of our
       people."
       A severe loss to the colony was the death on the 22d of August of
       Captain Bartholomew Gosnold, one of the Council, a brave and
       adventurous mariner, and, says Wingfield, a "worthy and religious
       gentleman." He was honorably buried, "having all the ordnance in the
       fort shot off with many volleys of small shot." If the Indians had
       known that those volleys signified the mortality of their comrades,
       the colony would no doubt have been cut off entirely. It is a
       melancholy picture, this disheartened and half-famished band of men
       quarreling among themselves; the occupation of the half-dozen able
       men was nursing the sick and digging graves. We anticipate here by
       saying, on the authority of a contemporary manuscript in the State
       Paper office, that when Captain Newport arrived with the first supply
       in January, 1608, "he found the colony consisting of no more than
       forty persons; of those, ten only able men."
       After the death of Gosnold, Captain Kendall was deposed from the
       Council and put in prison for sowing discord between the President
       and Council, says Wingfield; for heinous matters which were proved
       against him, says Percy; for "divers reasons," says Smith, who
       sympathized with his dislike of Wingfield. The colony was in very
       low estate at this time, and was only saved from famine by the
       providential good-will of the Indians, who brought them corn half
       ripe, and presently meat and fruit in abundance.
       On the 7th of September the chief Paspahegh gave a token of peace by
       returning a white boy who had run away from camp, and other runaways
       were returned by other chiefs, who reported that they had been well
       used in their absence. By these returns Mr. Wingfield was convinced
       that the Indians were not cannibals, as Smith believed.
       On the 10th of September Mr. Wingfield was deposed from the
       presidency and the Council, and Captain John Ratcliffe was elected
       President. Concerning the deposition there has been much dispute;
       but the accounts of it by Captain Smith and his friends, so long
       accepted as the truth, must be modified by Mr. Wingfield's "Discourse
       of Virginia," more recently come to light, which is, in a sense, a
       defense of his conduct.
       In his "True Relation" Captain Smith is content to say that "Captain
       Wingfield, having ordered the affairs in such sort that he was hated
       of them all, in which respect he was with one accord deposed from the
       presidency."
       In the "General Historie" the charges against him, which we have
       already quoted, are extended, and a new one is added, that is, a
       purpose of deserting the colony in the pinnace: "the rest seeing the
       President's projects to escape these miseries in our pinnace by
       flight (who all this time had neither felt want nor sickness), so
       moved our dead spirits we deposed him."
       In the scarcity of food and the deplorable sickness and death, it was
       inevitable that extreme dissatisfaction should be felt with the
       responsible head. Wingfield was accused of keeping the best of the
       supplies to himself. The commonalty may have believed this. Smith
       himself must have known that the supplies were limited, but have been
       willing to take advantage of this charge to depose the President, who
       was clearly in many ways incompetent for his trying position. It
       appears by Mr. Wingfield's statement that the supply left with the
       colony was very scant, a store that would only last thirteen weeks
       and a half, and prudence in the distribution of it, in the
       uncertainty of Newport's return, was a necessity. Whether Wingfield
       used the delicacies himself is a question which cannot be settled.
       In his defense, in all we read of him, except that written by Smith
       and his friends, he seems to be a temperate and just man, little
       qualified to control the bold spirits about him.
       As early as July, "in his sickness time, the President did easily
       fortell his own deposing from his command," so much did he differ
       from the Council in the management of the colony. Under date of
       September 7th he says that the Council demanded a larger allowance
       for themselves and for some of the sick, their favorites, which he
       declined to give without their warrants as councilors. Captain
       Martin of the Council was till then ignorant that only store for
       thirteen and a half weeks was in the hands of the Cape Merchant, or
       treasurer, who was at that time Mr. Thomas Studley. Upon a
       representation to the Council of the lowness of the stores, and the
       length of time that must elapse before the harvest of grain, they
       declined to enlarge the allowance, and even ordered that every meal
       of fish or flesh should excuse the allowance of porridge. Mr.
       Wingfield goes on to say: "Nor was the common store of oyle, vinegar,
       sack, and aquavite all spent, saving two gallons of each: the sack
       reserved for the Communion table, the rest for such extremities as
       might fall upon us, which the President had only made known to
       Captain Gosnold; of which course he liked well. The vessels wear,
       therefore, boonged upp. When Mr. Gosnold was dead, the President did
       acquaint the rest of the Council with the said remnant; but, Lord,
       how they then longed for to supp up that little remnant: for they had
       now emptied all their own bottles, and all other that they could
       smell out."
       Shortly after this the Council again importuned the President for
       some better allowance for themselves and for the sick. He protested
       his impartiality, showed them that if the portions were distributed
       according to their request the colony would soon starve; he still
       offered to deliver what they pleased on their warrants, but would not
       himself take the responsibility of distributing all the stores, and
       when he divined the reason of their impatience he besought them to
       bestow the presidency among themselves, and he would be content to
       obey as a private. Meantime the Indians were bringing in supplies of
       corn and meat, the men were so improved in health that thirty were
       able to work, and provision for three weeks' bread was laid up.
       Nevertheless, says Mr. Wingfield, the Council had fully plotted to
       depose him. Of the original seven there remained, besides Mr.
       Wingfield, only three in the Council. Newport was in England,
       Gosnold was dead, and Kendall deposed. Mr. Wingfield charged that
       the three--Ratcliffe, Smith, and Martin--forsook the instructions of
       his Majesty, and set up a Triumvirate. At any rate, Wingfield was
       forcibly deposed from the Council on the 10th of September. If the
       object had been merely to depose him, there was an easier way, for
       Wingfield was ready to resign. But it appears, by subsequent
       proceedings, that they wished to fasten upon him the charge of
       embezzlement, the responsibility of the sufferings of the colony, and
       to mulct him in fines. He was arrested, and confined on the pinnace.
       Mr. Ratcliffe was made President.
       On the 11th of September Mr. Wingfield was brought before the Council
       sitting as a court, and heard the charges against him. They were, as
       Mr. Wingfield says, mostly frivolous trifles. According to his
       report they were these:
       First, Mister President [Radcliffe] said that I had denied him a
       penny whitle, a chicken, a spoonful of beer, and served him with foul
       corn; and with that pulled some grain out of a bag, showing it to the
       company.
       Then starts up Mr. Smith and said that I had told him plainly how he
       lied; and that I said, though we were equal here, yet if we were in
       England, he [I] would think scorn his man should be my companion.
       Mr. Martin followed with: "He reported that I do slack the service
       in the colony, and do nothing but tend my pot, spit, and oven; but he
       hath starved my son, and denied him a spoonful of beer. I have
       friends in England shall be revenged on him, if ever he come in
       London."
       Voluminous charges were read against Mr. Wingfield by Mr. Archer, who
       had been made by the Council, Recorder of Virginia, the author,
       according to Wingfield, of three several mutinies, as "always
       hatching of some mutiny in my time."
       Mr. Percy sent him word in his prison that witnesses were hired to
       testify against him by bribes of cakes and by threats. If Mr. Percy,
       who was a volunteer in this expedition, and a man of high character,
       did send this information, it shows that he sympathized with him, and
       this is an important piece of testimony to his good character.
       Wingfield saw no way of escape from the malice of his accusers, whose
       purpose he suspected was to fine him fivefold for all the supplies
       whose disposition he could not account for in writing: but he was
       finally allowed to appeal to the King for mercy, and recommitted to
       the pinnace. In regard to the charge of embezzlement, Mr. Wingfield
       admitted that it was impossible to render a full account: he had no
       bill of items from the Cape Merchant when he received the stores, he
       had used the stores for trade and gifts with the Indians; Captain
       Newport had done the same in his expedition, without giving any
       memorandum. Yet he averred that he never expended the value of these
       penny whittles [small pocket-knives] to his private use.
       There was a mutinous and riotous spirit on shore, and the Council
       professed to think Wingfield's life was in danger. He says: "In all
       these disorders was Mr. Archer a ringleader." Meantime the Indians
       continued to bring in supplies, and the Council traded up and down
       the river for corn, and for this energy Mr. Wingfield gives credit to
       "Mr. Smith especially," "which relieved the colony well." To the
       report that was brought him that he was charged with starving the
       colony, he replies with some natural heat and a little show of
       petulance, that may be taken as an evidence of weakness, as well as
       of sincerity, and exhibiting the undignified nature of all this
       squabbling:
       "I did alwaises give every man his allowance faithfully, both of
       corne, oyle, aquivite, etc., as was by the counsell proportioned:
       neyther was it bettered after my tyme, untill, towards th' end of
       March, a bisket was allowed to every working man for his breakfast,
       by means of the provision brought us by Captn. Newport: as will
       appeare hereafter. It is further said, I did much banquit and
       ryot. I never had but one squirrel roasted; whereof I gave part
       to Mr. Ratcliffe then sick: yet was that squirrel given me. I did
       never heate a flesh pott but when the comon pott was so used
       likewise. Yet how often Mr. President's and the Counsellors' spitts
       have night and daye bene endaungered to break their backes-so, laden
       with swanns, geese, ducks, etc.! how many times their flesh potts
       have swelled, many hungrie eies did behold, to their great longing:
       and what great theeves and theeving thear hath been in the comon
       stoare since my tyme, I doubt not but is already made knowne to his
       Majesty's Councell for Virginia."
       Poor Wingfield was not left at ease in his confinement. On the 17th
       he was brought ashore to answer the charge of Jehu [John?] Robinson
       that he had with Robinson and others intended to run away with the
       pinnace to Newfoundland; and the charge by Mr. Smith that he had
       accused Smith of intending mutiny. To the first accuser the jury
       awarded one hundred pounds, and to the other two hundred pounds
       damages, for slander. "Seeing their law so speedy and cheap," Mr.
       Wingfield thought he would try to recover a copper kettle he had lent
       Mr. Crofts, worth half its weight in gold. But Crofts swore that
       Wingfield had given it to him, and he lost his kettle: "I told Mr.
       President I had not known the like law, and prayed they would be more
       sparing of law till we had more witt or wealthe." Another day they
       obtained from Wingfield the key to his coffers, and took all his
       accounts, note-books, and "owne proper goods," which he could never
       recover. Thus was I made good prize on all sides.
       During one of Smith's absences on the river President Ratcliffe did
       beat James Read, the blacksmith. Wingfield says the Council were
       continually beating the men for their own pleasure. Read struck
       back.
       For this he was condemned to be hanged; but "before he turned of the
       lather," he desired to speak privately with the President, and
       thereupon accused Mr. Kendall--who had been released from the pinnace
       when Wingfield was sent aboard--of mutiny. Read escaped. Kendall
       was convicted of mutiny and shot to death. In arrest of judgment he
       objected that the President had no authority to pronounce judgment
       because his name was Sicklemore and not Ratcliffe. This was true,
       and Mr. Martin pronounced the sentence. In his "True Relation,"
       Smith agrees with this statement of the death of Kendall, and says
       that he was tried by a jury. It illustrates the general looseness of
       the "General Historie," written and compiled many years afterwards,
       that this transaction there appears as follows: "Wingfield and
       Kendall being in disgrace, seeing all things at random in the absence
       of Smith, the company's dislike of their President's weakness, and
       their small love to Martin's never-mending sickness, strengthened
       themselves with the sailors and other confederates to regain their
       power, control, and authority, or at least such meanes aboard the
       pinnace (being fitted to sail as Smith had appointed for trade) to
       alter her course and to goe for England. Smith unexpectedly
       returning had the plot discovered to him, much trouble he had to
       prevent it, till with store of sakre and musket-shot he forced them
       to stay or sink in the river, which action cost the life of Captain
       Kendall."
       In a following sentence he says: "The President [Ratcliffe] and
       Captain Archer not long after intended also to have abandoned the
       country, which project also was curbed and suppressed by Smith."
       Smith was always suppressing attempts at flight, according to his own
       story, unconfirmed by any other writers. He had before accused
       President Wingfield of a design to escape in the pinnace.
       Communications were evidently exchanged with Mr. Wingfield on the
       pinnace, and the President was evidently ill at ease about him. One
       day he was summoned ashore, but declined to go, and requested an
       interview with ten gentlemen. To those who came off to him he said
       that he had determined to go to England to make known the weakness of
       the colony, that he could not live under the laws and usurpations of
       the Triumvirate; however, if the President and Mr. Archer would go,
       he was willing to stay and take his fortune with the colony, or he
       would contribute one hundred pounds towards taking the colony home.
       "They did like none of my proffers, but made divers shott at uss in
       the pynnasse." Thereupon he went ashore and had a conference.
       On the 10th of December Captain Smith departed on his famous
       expedition up the Chickahominy, during which the alleged Pocahontas
       episode occurred. Mr. Wingfield's condensed account of this journey
       and captivity we shall refer to hereafter. In Smith's absence
       President Ratcliffe, contrary to his oath, swore Mr. Archer one of
       the Council; and Archer was no sooner settled in authority than he
       sought to take Smith's life. The enmity of this man must be regarded
       as a long credit mark to Smith. Archer had him indicted upon a
       chapter in Leviticus (they all wore a garb of piety) for the death of
       two men who were killed by the Indians on his expedition. "He had
       had his trials the same daie of his retourne," says Wingfield, "and I
       believe his hanging the same, or the next daie, so speedy is our law
       there. But it pleased God to send Captain Newport unto us the same
       evening, to our unspeakable comfort; whose arrivall saved Mr. Smyth's
       leif and mine, because he took me out of the pynnasse, and gave me
       leave to lyve in the towne. Also by his comyng was prevented a
       parliament, which the newe counsailor, Mr. Recorder, intended thear
       to summon."
       Captain Newport's arrival was indeed opportune. He was the only one
       of the Council whose character and authority seem to have been
       generally respected, the only one who could restore any sort of
       harmony and curb the factious humors of the other leaders. Smith
       should have all credit for his energy in procuring supplies, for his
       sagacity in dealing with the Indians, for better sense than most of
       the other colonists exhibited, and for more fidelity to the objects
       of the plantation than most of them; but where ability to rule is
       claimed for him, at this juncture we can but contrast the deference
       shown by all to Newport with the want of it given to Smith.
       Newport's presence at once quelled all the uneasy spirits.
       Newport's arrival, says Wingfield, "saved Mr Smith's life and mine."
       Smith's account of the episode is substantially the same. In his
       "True Relation" he says on his return to the fort "each man with
       truest signs of joy they could express welcomed me, except Mr.
       Archer, and some two or three of his, who was then in my absence
       sworn councilor, though not with the consent of Captain Martin; great
       blame and imputation was laid upon me by them for the loss of our two
       men which the Indians slew: insomuch that they purposed to depose me,
       but in the midst of my miseries, it pleased God to send Captain
       Newport, who arriving there the same night, so tripled our joy, as
       for a while those plots against me were deferred, though with much
       malice against me, which Captain Newport in short time did plainly
       see." In his "Map of Virginia," the Oxford tract of 1612, Smith does
       not allude to this; but in the "General Historie" it had assumed a
       different aspect in his mind, for at the time of writing that he was
       the irresistible hero, and remembered himself as always nearly
       omnipotent in Virginia. Therefore, instead of expressions of
       gratitude to Newport we read this: "Now in Jamestown they were all in
       combustion, the strongest preparing once more to run away with the
       pinnace; which with the hazard of his life, with Sakre, falcon and
       musket shot, Smith forced now the third time to stay or sink. Some
       no better than they should be, had plotted to put him to death by the
       Levitical law, for the lives of Robinson and Emry, pretending that
       the fault was his, that led them to their ends; but he quickly took
       such order with such Lawyers, that he laid them by the heels till he
       sent some of them prisoners to England."
       Clearly Captain Smith had no authority to send anybody prisoner to
       England. When Newport returned, April 10th, Wingfield and Archer
       went with him. Wingfield no doubt desired to return. Archer was so
       insolent, seditious, and libelous that he only escaped the halter by
       the interposition of Newport. The colony was willing to spare both
       these men, and probably Newport it was who decided they should go.
       As one of the Council, Smith would undoubtedly favor their going. He
       says in the "General Historie": "We not having any use of
       parliaments, plaises, petitions, admirals, recorders, interpreters,
       chronologers, courts of plea, or justices of peace, sent Master
       Wingfield and Captain Archer home with him, that had engrossed all
       those titles, to seek some better place of employment." Mr.
       Wingfield never returned. Captain Archer returned in 1609, with the
       expedition of Gates and Somers, as master of one of the ships.
       Newport had arrived with the first supply on the 8th of January,
       1608. The day before, according to Wingfield, a fire occurred which
       destroyed nearly all the town, with the clothing and provisions.
       According to Smith, who is probably correct in this, the fire did not
       occur till five or six days after the arrival of the ship. The date
       is uncertain, and some doubt is also thrown upon the date of the
       arrival of the ship. It was on the day of Smith's return from
       captivity: and that captivity lasted about four weeks if the return
       was January 8th, for he started on the expedition December 10th.
       Smith subsequently speaks of his captivity lasting six or seven
       weeks.
       In his "General Historie" Smith says the fire happened after the
       return of the expedition of Newport, Smith, and Scrivener to the
       Pamunkey: "Good Master Hunt, our Preacher, lost all his library, and
       all he had but the clothes on his back; yet none ever heard him
       repine at his loss." This excellent and devoted man is the only one
       of these first pioneers of whom everybody speaks well, and he
       deserved all affection and respect.
       One of the first labors of Newport was to erect a suitable church.
       Services had been held under many disadvantages, which Smith depicts
       in his "Advertisements for Unexperienced Planters," published in
       London in 1631:
       "When I first went to Virginia, I well remember, we did hang an
       awning (which is an old saile) to three or foure trees to shadow us
       from the Sunne, our walls were rales of wood, our seats unhewed
       trees, till we cut plankes, our Pulpit a bar of wood nailed to two
       neighboring trees, in foule weather we shifted into an old rotten
       tent, for we had few better, and this came by the way of adventure
       for me; this was our Church, till we built a homely thing like a
       barne, set upon Cratchets, covered with rafts, sedge and earth, so
       was also the walls: the best of our houses of the like curiosity, but
       the most part farre much worse workmanship, that could neither well
       defend wind nor raine, yet we had daily Common Prayer morning and
       evening, every day two Sermons, and every three moneths the holy
       Communion, till our Minister died, [Robert Hunt] but our Prayers
       daily, with an Homily on Sundaies."
       It is due to Mr. Wingfield, who is about to disappear from Virginia,
       that something more in his defense against the charges of Smith and
       the others should be given. It is not possible now to say how the
       suspicion of his religious soundness arose, but there seems to have
       been a notion that he had papal tendencies. His grandfather, Sir
       Richard Wingfield, was buried in Toledo, Spain. His father, Thomas
       Maria Wingfield, was christened by Queen Mary and Cardinal Pole.
       These facts perhaps gave rise to the suspicion. He answers them with
       some dignity and simplicity, and with a little querulousness:
       "It is noised that I combyned with the Spanniards to the distruccion
       of the Collony; that I ame an atheist, because I carryed not a Bible
       with me, and because I did forbid the preacher to preache; that I
       affected a kingdome; that I did hide of the comon provision in the
       ground.
       "I confesse I have alwayes admyred any noble vertue and prowesse, as
       well in the Spanniards (as in other nations): but naturally I have
       alwayes distrusted and disliked their neighborhoode. I sorted many
       bookes in my house, to be sent up to me at my goeing to Virginia;
       amongst them a Bible. They were sent up in a trunk to London, with
       divers fruite, conserves, and preserves, which I did sett in Mr.
       Crofts his house in Ratcliff. In my beeing at Virginia, I did
       understand my trunk was thear broken up, much lost, my sweetmeates
       eaten at his table, some of my bookes which I missed to be seene in
       his hands: and whether amongst them my Bible was so ymbeasiled or
       mislayed by my servants, and not sent me, I knowe not as yet.
       "Two or three Sunday mornings, the Indians gave us allarums at our
       towne. By that tymes they weare answered, the place about us well
       discovered, and our devyne service ended, the daie was farr spent.
       The preacher did aske me if it were my pleasure to have a sermon: hee
       said hee was prepared for it. I made answere, that our men were
       weary and hungry, and that he did see the time of the daie farr past
       (for at other tymes bee never made such question, but, the service
       finished he began his sermon); and that, if it pleased him, wee would
       spare him till some other tyme. I never failed to take such noates
       by wrighting out of his doctrine as my capacity could comprehend,
       unless some raynie day hindred my endeavor. My mynde never swelled
       with such ympossible mountebank humors as could make me affect any
       other kingdome than the kingdom of heaven.
       "As truly as God liveth, I gave an ould man, then the keeper of the
       private store, 2 glasses with sallet oyle which I brought with me out
       of England for my private stoare, and willed him to bury it in the
       ground, for that I feared the great heate would spoile it.
       Whatsoever was more, I did never consent unto or know of it, and as
       truly was it protested unto me, that all the remaynder before
       mencioned of the oyle, wyne, &c., which the President receyved of me
       when I was deposed they themselves poored into their owne bellyes.
       "To the President's and Counsell's objections I saie that I doe knowe
       curtesey and civility became a governor. No penny whittle was asked
       me, but a knife, whereof I have none to spare The Indyans had long
       before stoallen my knife. Of chickins I never did eat but one, and
       that in my sicknes. Mr. Ratcliff had before that time tasted Of 4 or
       5. I had by my owne huswiferie bred above 37, and the most part of
       them my owne poultrye; of all which, at my comyng awaie, I did not
       see three living. I never denyed him (or any other) beare, when I
       had it. The corne was of the same which we all lived upon.
       "Mr. Smyth, in the time of our hungar, had spread a rumor in the
       Collony, that I did feast myself and my servants out of the comon
       stoare, with entent (as I gathered) to have stirred the discontented
       company against me. I told him privately, in Mr. Gosnold's tent,
       that indeede I had caused half a pint of pease to be sodden with a
       peese of pork, of my own provision, for a poore old man, which in a
       sicknes (whereof he died) he much desired; and said, that if out of
       his malice he had given it out otherwise, that hee did tell a leye.
       It was proved to his face, that he begged in Ireland like a rogue,
       without a lycence. To such I would not my nam should be a
       companyon."
       The explanation about the Bible as a part of his baggage is a little
       far-fetched, and it is evident that that book was not his daily
       companion. Whether John Smith habitually carried one about with him
       we are not informed. The whole passage quoted gives us a curious
       picture of the mind and of the habits of the time. This allusion to
       John Smith's begging is the only reference we can find to his having
       been in Ireland. If he was there it must have been in that interim
       in his own narrative between his return from Morocco and his going to
       Virginia. He was likely enough to seek adventure there, as the
       hangers-on of the court in Raleigh's day occasionally did, and
       perhaps nothing occurred during his visit there that he cared to
       celebrate. If he went to Ireland he probably got in straits there,
       for that was his usual luck.
       Whatever is the truth about Mr. Wingfield's inefficiency and
       embezzlement of corn meal, Communion sack, and penny whittles, his
       enemies had no respect for each other or concord among themselves.
       It is Wingfield's testimony that Ratcliffe said he would not have
       been deposed if he had visited Ratcliffe during his sickness. Smith
       said that Wingfield would not have been deposed except for Archer;
       that the charges against him were frivolous. Yet, says Wingfield, "I
       do believe him the first and only practiser in these practices," and
       he attributed Smith's hostility to the fact that "his name was
       mentioned in the intended and confessed mutiny by Galthrop." Noother
       reference is made to this mutiny. Galthrop was one of those who died
       in the previous August.
       One of the best re-enforcements of the first supply was Matthew
       Scrivener, who was appointed one of the Council. He was a sensible
       man, and he and Smith worked together in harmony for some time. They
       were intent upon building up the colony. Everybody else in the camp
       was crazy about the prospect of gold: there was, says Smith, "no
       talk, no hope, no work, but dig gold, wash gold, refine gold, load
       gold, such a bruit of gold that one mad fellow desired to be buried
       in the sands, lest they should by their art make gold of his bones."
       He charges that Newport delayed his return to England on account of
       this gold fever, in order to load his vessel (which remained fourteen
       weeks when it might have sailed in fourteen days) with gold-dust.
       Captain Martin seconded Newport in this; Smith protested against it;
       he thought Newport was no refiner, and it did torment him "to see all
       necessary business neglected, to fraught such a drunken ship with so
       much gilded durt." This was the famous load of gold that proved to
       be iron pyrites.
       In speaking of the exploration of the James River as far as the Falls
       by Newport, Smith, and Percy, we have followed the statements of
       Percy and the writer of Newport's discovery that they saw the great
       Powhatan. There is much doubt of this. Smith in his "True Relation
       "does not say so; in his voyage up the Chickahominy he seems to have
       seen Powhatan for the first time; and Wingfield speaks of Powhatan,
       on Smith's return from that voyage, as one "of whom before we had no
       knowledge." It is conjectured that the one seen at Powhatan's seat
       near the Falls was a son of the "Emperor." It was partly the
       exaggeration of the times to magnify discoveries, and partly English
       love of high titles, that attributed such titles as princes,
       emperors, and kings to the half-naked barbarians and petty chiefs of
       Virginia.
       In all the accounts of the colony at this period, no mention is made
       of women, and it is not probable that any went over with the first
       colonists. The character of the men was not high. Many of them were
       "gentlemen" adventurers, turbulent spirits, who would not work, who
       were much better fitted for piratical maraudings than the labor of
       founding a state. The historian must agree with the impression
       conveyed by Smith, that it was poor material out of which to make a
       colony. _