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Captain John Smith
CHAPTER VII - SMITH TO THE FRONT
Charles Dudley Warner
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       _ It is now time to turn to Smith's personal adventures among the
       Indians during this period. Almost our only authority is Smith
       himself, or such presumed writings of his companions as he edited or
       rewrote. Strachey and others testify to his energy in procuring
       supplies for the colony, and his success in dealing with the Indians,
       and it seems likely that the colony would have famished but for his
       exertions. Whatever suspicion attaches to Smith's relation of his
       own exploits, it must never be forgotten that he was a man of
       extraordinary executive ability, and had many good qualities to
       offset his vanity and impatience of restraint.
       After the departure of Wingfield, Captain Smith was constrained to
       act as Cape Merchant; the leaders were sick or discontented, the rest
       were in despair, and would rather starve and rot than do anything for
       their own relief, and the Indian trade was decreasing. Under these
       circumstances, Smith says in his "True Relation," "I was sent to the
       mouth of the river, to Kegquoughtan [now Hampton], an Indian Towne,
       to trade for corn, and try the river for fish." The Indians,
       thinking them near famished, tantalized them with offers of little
       bits of bread in exchange for a hatchet or a piece of copper, and
       Smith offered trifles in return. The next day the Indians were
       anxious to trade. Smith sent men up to their town, a display of
       force was made by firing four guns, and the Indians kindly traded,
       giving fish, oysters, bread, and deer. The town contained eighteen
       houses, and heaps of grain. Smith obtained fifteen bushels of it,
       and on his homeward way he met two canoes with Indians, whom he
       accompanied to their villages on the south side of the river, and got
       from them fifteen bushels more.
       This incident is expanded in the "General Historie." After the lapse
       of fifteen years Smith is able to remember more details, and to
       conceive himself as the one efficient man who had charge of
       everything outside the fort, and to represent his dealings with the
       Indians in a much more heroic and summary manner. He was not sent on
       the expedition, but went of his own motion. The account opens in
       this way: "The new President [Ratcliffe] and Martin, being little
       beloved, of weake judgement in dangers, and loose industrie in peace,
       committed the management of all things abroad to Captain Smith; who
       by his own example, good words, and fair promises, set some to mow,
       others to binde thatch, some to builde houses, others to thatch them,
       himselfe always bearing the greatest taske for his own share, so that
       in short time he provided most of them with lodgings, neglecting any
       for himselfe. This done, seeing the Salvage superfluities beginne to
       decrease (with some of his workmen) shipped himself in the Shallop to
       search the country for trade."
       In this narration, when the Indians trifled with Smith he fired a
       volley at them, ran his boat ashore, and pursued them fleeing towards
       their village, where were great heaps of corn that he could with
       difficulty restrain his soldiers [six or seven] from taking. The
       Indians then assaulted them with a hideous noise: "Sixty or seventy
       of them, some black, some red, some white, some particoloured, came
       in a square order, singing and dancing out of the woods, with their
       Okee (which is an Idol made of skinnes, stuffed with mosse, and
       painted and hung with chains and copper) borne before them; and in
       this manner being well armed with clubs, targets, bowes and arrowes,
       they charged the English that so kindly received them with their
       muskets loaden with pistol shot, that down fell their God, and divers
       lay sprawling on the ground; the rest fled againe to the woods, and
       ere long sent men of their Quiyoughkasoucks [conjurors] to offer
       peace and redeeme the Okee." Good feeling was restored, and the
       savages brought the English "venison, turkies, wild fowl, bread all
       that they had, singing and dancing in sign of friendship till they
       departed." This fantastical account is much more readable than the
       former bare narration.
       The supplies which Smith brought gave great comfort to the despairing
       colony, which was by this time reasonably fitted with houses. But it
       was not long before they again ran short of food. In his first
       narrative Smith says there were some motions made for the President
       and Captain Arthur to go over to England and procure a supply, but it
       was with much ado concluded that the pinnace and the barge should go
       up the river to Powhatan to trade for corn, and the lot fell to Smith
       to command the expedition. In his "General Historie" a little
       different complexion is put upon this. On his return, Smith says, he
       suppressed an attempt to run away with the pinnace to England. He
       represents that what food "he carefully provided the rest carelessly
       spent," and there is probably much truth in his charges that the
       settlers were idle and improvident. He says also that they were in
       continual broils at this time. It is in the fall of 1607, just
       before his famous voyage up the Chickahominy, on which he departed
       December 10th--that he writes: "The President and Captain Arthur
       intended not long after to have abandoned the country, which project
       was curbed and suppressed by Smith. The Spaniard never more greedily
       desired gold than he victual, nor his soldiers more to abandon the
       country than he to keep it. But finding plenty of corn in the river
       of Chickahomania, where hundreds of salvages in divers places stood
       with baskets expecting his coming, and now the winter approaching,
       the rivers became covered with swans, geese, ducks, and cranes, that
       we daily feasted with good bread, Virginia peas, pumpions, and
       putchamins, fish, fowls, and divers sorts of wild beasts as fat as we
       could eat them, so that none of our Tuftaffaty humorists desired to
       go to England."
       While the Chickahominy expedition was preparing, Smith made a voyage
       to Popohanock or Quiyoughcohanock, as it is called on his map, a town
       on the south side of the river, above Jamestown. Here the women and
       children fled from their homes and the natives refused to trade.
       They had plenty of corn, but Smith says he had no commission to spoil
       them. On his return he called at Paspahegh, a town on the north side
       of the James, and on the map placed higher than Popohanock, but
       evidently nearer to Jamestown, as he visited it on his return. He
       obtained ten bushels of corn of the churlish and treacherous natives,
       who closely watched and dogged the expedition.
       Everything was now ready for the journey to Powhatan. Smith had the
       barge and eight men for trading and discovery, and the pinnace was to
       follow to take the supplies at convenient landings. On the 9th of
       November he set out in the barge to explore the Chickahominy, which
       is described as emptying into the James at Paspahegh, eight miles
       above the fort. The pinnace was to ascend the river twenty miles to
       Point Weanock, and to await Smith there. All the month of November
       Smith toiled up and down the Chickahominy, discovering and visiting
       many villages, finding the natives kindly disposed and eager to
       trade, and possessing abundance of corn. Notwithstanding this
       abundance, many were still mutinous. At this time occurred the
       President's quarrel with the blacksmith, who, for assaulting the
       President, was condemned to death, and released on disclosing a
       conspiracy of which Captain Kendall was principal; and the latter was
       executed in his place. Smith returned from a third voyage to the
       Chickahominy with more supplies, only to find the matter of sending
       the pinnace to England still debated.
       This project, by the help of Captain Martin, he again quieted and at
       last set forward on his famous voyage into the country of Powhatan
       and Pocahontas. _