i§ $ <& I Fn y 0AHVH8inS <^ f^t. ^/!V irr U p>£ M L23- a PROCEEDINGS OF THE Virginia Historical Society AT THE Annual Meeting, February 24, 1882, WITH THE ADDRESS OF WILLIAM WIRT HENRY: THE SETTLEMENT AT JAMESTOWN", WITH PARTICULAR REFERENCE TO THE LATE ATTACKS UPON CAP- TAIN JOHN SMITH, POCAHONTAS, AND JOHN ROLFE. R ichm< ind, Virginia. PUBLISHED BY THE SOCIE1 Y. Ml" I I I XXXII. \VM. ELLIS JONES PRINTER, RICHMOND, VA. • » ERRATUM. In the first and second lines of the Address, p. 10, instead of the words, "/6th June, r62i," read " 3d February, 1620." • • • . . • • • • fc CO ca «M in o o ORGANIZATION OF THE Virginia Historical Society. 1882. President. ALEXANDER H. H. STUART, of Staunton, Virginia. Vice-Presidents. CONWAY ROBINSON, of Washington, D. C. WILLIAM \V. CORCORAN, of Washington, D. C. WILLIAM WIRT HENRY ', of Richmond, Virginia. £2 Corresponding Secretary and Librarian. R. A. BROCK , of Richmond, Virginia Recording Secretary. GEORGE A. BARKSDALE, of Richmond. Virginia. Treasurer. ROBERT T. BROOKE, of Richmond, Virginia. /'.. vecuth ■( • C 'otn in it tee. BEVERLEY RANDOLPH WELLFORD, Jr.. of Richmond, Virginia. ANTIK >NY M. KEILEY of Richmond, Virginia. O |. L. M. CURRY of Richmond, Virginia. * HENRY COALTER CABEL1 of Richmond, Virginia. ARCHER ANDERS* >N of Richmond, Virginia. "* WILLIAM P. PALMER of Richmond, Virginia. 2! I HARLES GORHAM BARNEY of Richmond, Virginia. 3 |< iSLI'll BRYAN of Richmond, Virginia. < EDWARD VIRGINIUS VALENTINE of Richmond, Virginia. [< >HN ' >TT of Richmond, Virginia. WILLIAM A. MAURY of Washington, IK C |( MIX 11. WHITEHEAD of Norfolk, Virginia. Members of the Committee m •officio: The President, Vice-Presidents, Set retaries and Treasurer. 4471; (>1 KICERS. Committee on Finance. Wii 1 [AM r. PALMER, BEVERLEY R. WELLFORD, Jr., WILLIAM WIRT HENRY. ( 'ontmittee on Publication. ARCHER ANDERSON, EDWARD VIRGINIUS VALENTINE, J. L. M. CURRY. Committee on the Library. ANTHONY M. KEILEY, JOSEPH BRYAN, WILLIAM P. PALMER. Committee o?i Incidental Expenses. HENRY COALTER CABELL, EDWARD VIRGINIUS VALENTINE, BEVERLEY R. WELLFORD, Jr. Committee on Membership. WILLIAM WIRT HENRY, CHARLES GORHAM BARNEY, JOHN OTT. Committee on Building. JOHN OTT, R. A. BROCK, HENRY COALTER CABELL. PROCEEDINGS. The Annual Meeting of the Virginia Historical Society was held in the Hall of the House of Delegates of Virginia, in the Capitol at Richmond, Friday, February 24th, 1882, at 8 o'clock in the evening. The meeting was called to order by Vice-President Henry, and the Hon. Beverley Randolph Wellford, Jr., requested to preside. The Corresponding Secretary and Librarian, R. A. Brock, in behalf of the Executive Committee, read the report of that body. He also read the report of the Treasurer. Mr. James Lyons, Jr., for the nominating committee, reported a list of officers and committees for the year 1882. They were unanimously chosen. Vice-President Henry then addressed the Society. At the close of the address the Hon. Anthony M. Keiley offered the following resolution, which was unanimously adopted : Resolved, That the thanks of the Society be presented to Vice President Henry for his learned, able and instructive address, a copy of which is hereby requested for publication with the proceedings of the Society on this occasion. 6 rROCEKDINliS. REPORT OV THE EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE. We have just cause to congratulate the Society upon the highly encouraging' progress it has made during the past year, both in membership and material acquisitions. It is worthy of remark also, that the interest which has been manifested in its welfare has not only pervaded our whole country, but has extended across the Atlantic, and we have had gratifying demonstrations that the descent of the " Ancient Dominion," after a lapse of nearly three centuries, is still warmly regarded in the Mother Country. We have the great pleasure to report that the Society now bears upon its rolls an aggregate membership of 592, which comprises 30 honorary, 63 corresponding, 52 life, and 447 an- nual members. Of the last named class, the whole number may be said to have been acquired since February 1, 1881, as, for several years prior to that time, the Society being unable to offer a publication as an equivalent, no subscription had been asked of such members, and no obligation rested upon them. The additions during the past year in the remaining classes have been: 17 life, 13 corresponding, and 7 honorary members. During the same period, the Society has added by gift to its library and collections: 171 bound volumes, 304 pamphlets, a number of files of newspapers, bound and unbound, many valu- able MSS. and autograph letters of distinguished persons, and various memorials and objects of interest. The most important single acquisition was the generous gift of the Hon. W. W. Corcoran, (a Vice-President of the Society), of the Original MS. Records or Entry Books of the Colony of Virginia for the five years (.1752-J757) of the administration of Lieutenant- Governor Robert Dinwiddle. PROCEEDINGS. Among other gifts of significance and value may be men- tioned the follow ine '• *£> The writing-table of George Mason of " Gunston," upon which he prepared the famous Bill of Rights of Virginia — presented by his great-grand-son, George Mason, Esq., Alexandria, Va. The original commission (dated April 4, 1707,) of Robert Hunter, < who being captured by the French on his voyage from England, never served as designed) as Lieutenant-Governor of Virginia — presented by Charles P. Greenough, Esq., Boston, Mass. Two maps of Virginia, bearing date 167 1 ; Notes on Colum- bus, a privately printed and sumptuous volume; 21 bound volumes of the New York World, 1861-1867 inclusive — pre- sented by S. L. M. Barlow, Esq., New Vork City. The Correspondence of the Hon. Archibald Stuart, comprising letters from many of the most eminent American statesmen of his day ; the sword of Major Alexander Stuart, a patriot of the Revolution, used by him at the battle of Guilford Court House — presented by the Hon. Alex'r H. H. Stuart (the President of the Society), Staunton, Va. The Adams and Massie family papers, a most valuable and interesting collection, commencing in the year 1670; The pis- tols and sash of a British officer, captured during the Revo- lution, and afterwards used by Major Thomas Massie of the 2d Va. regiment — presented by Mrs. Elizabeth, relict of the late Col. Thos. J. Massie, Nelson Co., Va. Various family papers and relics — presented by Colonel Thos. Harding Ellis, late of Richmond, now of Chicago, Illinois. An original Fry and Jefferson's Map of Virginia, of 1775 — presented by the Hon. Robert W. Hughes, LL. D., Norfolk, Va. A copy of Stuart's Indian Wars of Virginia in 1774, in the autograph of Colonel Thomas Lewis — presented by Col. John L. Eubank, Warm Springs, Bath Co., Va. Various volumes from the library of Richard Henry Lee, bearing his autograph — presented by Cassius F. Lee, Jr., Esq., Alexandria, Va. Six volumes ol the National Intelligencer^ covering the period June 6, 1848 — May 28, 1 s 5 7 ; Report of the Revisors of the Civil Code of Virginia, made to the General Assembly in 1846 and [847 — interleave' I and annotated — presented by Col. J. Marshall McCue, Alton, Va. Four large boxes ol newspapers and pamphlets — presented by Mrs. \V. li. Caldwell, White Sulphur Springs, West Virginia. Three large boxes of newspapers and pamphlets -pr< ented by Mrs. M. A. Sitlington, Millboro 1 Springs, Va. The MS. Order-book of Col. Wm. Heth of the Revolution, whilst encamped at Hound Brook, New Jersey, in 1777 — pre 8 PROCEEDINGS. sented by the Rev. Philip Slaughter, D. I)., Mitchell's Station, Culpeper Co., Va. Did not the limits of the present occasion forbid it, we would have pleasure in rendering specific acknowledgment for many additional memorials of value and interest. The correspondence of the Society, and other duties incident upon its reorganization, during the past few months, have been so onerous, that the preparation of a catalogue of its library has not as yet been within the accomplishment of the incum- bent of the combined offices of Corresponding Secretary and Librarian. The number of bound volumes, however, may be stated as exceeding 11,000, to which may be added several thousand pamphlets. The Society's collection of portraits, twenty-eight in number, comprises the following subjects: Pocahontas (two of), Earl of Essex, Captain George Percy, Lord Culpeper, George Washington, Martha Washington, Patrick Henry, Peyton Ran- dolph, George Mason, Thomas Jefferson, Lafayette, Arthur Lee, Edmund Pendleton, John Marshall, Duke de Lauzun, Gerard, John Randolph of Roanoke, Hugh Nelson, Commodore Oliver H. Perry, Governor Wm. B. Giles, Black Hawk, and Rev. M. D. Hoge, D. D. The walls of the Westmoreland Club-House, in which the Society is generously allowed its present quarters, are hung with many additional objects of interest — engraved por- traits, relics, historic documents, etc., the property of the Society. The MSS. and autograph letters of the Society are now in course of arrangement, the last in scrap-books. Until the task may be completed, the definite number cannot be stated, but it is thought to exceed 2,000. The library is duly provided with handsome cases, and the exhibit is one alike creditable to the Society and to the State. So inestimably valuable indeed is it — so essential in the elucida- tion of the history of Virginia, and in vindication of her fame, and so irreparable would be its loss, that it is a duty from which we must not shrink, to plead with this assembly its claims to a durable repository, and due provision for its safety against all accident. This can only be assured in the possession by the Society of a fire-proof building of its own. Who, among the PROCEEDINGS. » pecuniarily favored of our citizens, will move in this important matter ? We beg to announce, that in pursuance of one of the offices of the Society, an important contribution to history — The Letter- Books of Lieutenant-Governor Alexander Spotswood, covering the term of his colonial administration in Virginia (1710-1722), a marked period in the development of the resources and manufactures of the colony, and of its progress — is in course of preparation, and that it is contemplated that the first volume of the work will be ready for delivery to the members of the Society by the first of May next. The evidences which the present recital give of the condition of the Society, together with the knowledge of its recent un- exampled progress (of which our citizens have been regularly advised through the generous medium of the local press), are assurances of fruition in its noble mission, which should claim for it all needful sustenance from our own people of Virginia, and this, it is to be hoped, will in the future be cheerfully accorded. 10 ADDRESS. T1IK ADDRESS. In a speech delivered by Lord Chancellor Bacon on the i<>th June, i"ji, in reply to the Speaker's oration, that celebrated man gave utterance to these words: " This Kingdom, now first in his Majesty's times, hath gotten a lot or portion in the New World by the plantation of Virginia and the Summer Islands. And certain it is with the kingdoms on earth, as it is in the Kingdom of Heaven, sometimes a grain of mustard seed proves a great tree. Who can tell?" What that great man hoped for and hesitated to foretell has been realized in a manner far beyond the most glowing conception of his wonderful genius. The little English colony planted at Jamestown in 1607 proved to be the germ of a great people. Less than three centuries have passed by and they occupy a vast continent, and number more than fifty millions. Had that feeble colony perished, as did those pre- viously sent out from England, the Spaniards, who claimed by right of discovery by Columbus in 1492, and by grant from Pope Alexander VI, in 1493, and who were already planted in Florida and Mexico, would have controlled the colonization of North America, as they did that of South America, and to-day North and South America would alike present the wretched appear- ance of a mongrel population, the admixture of three races — Spanish, Indian, and African. In a word, North America would have been Mexicanized. But an overruling Providence ordered it otherwise, and North America, through the Virginia settlement, was secured to the English race and to English civilization. If the importance of an event is measured by the consequences which flow from it, then the planting of the English colony at Jamestown must be considered one of the most important, if not the most important, of the events which have been recorded in secular history. Not only followed from it the possession of this vast and fertile continent by the foremost race of the earth, result- ing in a people who have secured to themselves the highest ADDRESS. 11 development and greatest political freedom, and have reacted with powerful effect upon the civilization and institutions of the Old World, but from this beginning there was developed a sys- tem of colonization which has made the people of the little isles of Great Britain the greatest power of the earth — the greatest power which has ever been upon the earth, "a power [in the eloquent words of Webster] which has dotted over the surface of the whole globe with her possessions and military posts, whose morning drum-beat, following the sun, and keeping com- pany with the hours, circles the earth with one continuous and unbroken strain of the martial airs of England." Since the world has been so wonderfully affected«by the plant- ing of this colony, it well becomes us to preserve with religious care the memory of the men to whom we are indebted for its success. The London Company which sent it out was composed of the best and most honored men of the kingdom, and among the men who composed the colony are names conspicuous for intellect and public services; but the names oftenest mentioned in con- nection with the Virginia settlement, and which have excited the greatest interest, are those of Captain John Smith, the preserver of the colony, and Pocahontas, the preserver of Smith, and the constant friend of the English. For more than two hundred and fifty years historians have delighted to relate their services, often quoting the quaint, terse language of Smith's History in giving his adventures, and especially his rescue from death by Pow- hatan's "dearest daughter," at the risk of her own life, when as her father's prisoner he was condemned to die. In all that time no one discredited Smith's account of the colony, if we except Thomas Fuller, whose groundless sneer at Smith in his "Worthies of England," only demonstrated his ignorance of the sources from which Smith drew the material for his history. Thus the matter stood till the year 1860, when Mr. Charles Deane, of Massachusetts, edited with notes, for the American Antiquarian Society, of which he was a member, " A Discourse of Virginia, by Edward Maria Wingfield, the first president oJ the Colony," which was then first published from the original manuscript in the Lambeth Library. This tract is found in vol. iv of the "Archselogia Americana." In one of his notes t<> this publication Mr. Deane suj I a doubt as to the truth of 1l! address. Smith's account of his rescue by Pocahontas. In 1866, Mr. 1 Vmih' cilitcd with notes a reprint oi "A True Relation of Vir- ginia, by Captain John Smith," and renewed his attack on Smith's veracity. During the next year Mr. Henry Adams fol- low til up the attack, by an elaborate article, contributed to the January number of the North .-hint lean Review. In the year (869 the Rev. Edward D. Neill published a "History of the Vir- ginia Company of London," in which he not only endeavored to destroy the character of Smith, but that of Pocahontas, and of her husband, John Rolfe, as well. This author has been followed by Wm. Cullen Bryant and Sydney Howard Gay in their His- tory of America, published in 1876, and by others. So persistent have these assaults been that it seems to be the fashion now with those writers who are content to act the part of copyists, to sneer at the veracity of Smith, the virtue of Poca- hontas, and the honesty of Rolfe. The more generous task of making their defence shall be mine. In order that there may be a better understanding of the dis- cussion proposed it may be proper to recall certain well-attested facts relating to the early colonial history of Virginia. The colony which made the first permanent settlement was sent from England by " The Virginia Company of London," to whom had been given the rights of colonization previously granted to Sir Walter Raleigh by Queen Elizabeth. Sir Walter had planted a colony at Roanoke Island, on the coast of North Carolina, but it had perished, and his further efforts had been thwarted. The London Company, during the year 1606, fitted out their expedition in three vessels. The Sarah Constant, in charge of Captain Christopher Newport, the commander of the expedition, carried seventy-one men ; the Godspeed, in charge of Captain Bartholomew Gosnold, carried fifty-two men; and the Discovery, a pinnace, in charge of Captain John Ratcliffe, carried twenty men. Leaving the Thames on 19th December, ico6, they were detained in the Downs by bad weather till the 1st Jan- uary, 1607. On the 26th of April following they were driven by a storm into the Chesapeake Bay,* and on the 13th of May they * The Indians had informed the English at Roanoke Island of this bay, and it had been determined by Raleigh to attempt a settlement on it. When the Virginia Company sent out this colony they were directed to search for it. It ADDRESS. 13 landed at Jamestown, where they determined to settle. Upon opening their sealed instructions they found that the London Company had appointed for their government a council, com- posed of Edward Maria Wingfield, Bartholomew Gosnold, John Smith, Christopher Newport, John Ratcliffe, John Martin, and John Kendall. They chose Wingfield to be president. Captain John Smith had been charged during the voyage with fostering a mutiny, and was under arrest when they landed. His inno- cence was made manifest, or, at any rate, his accusers failed to convict him, and on the ioth June he was permitted to take his seat in the council. After exploring the James river to its falls, Captain Newport sailed for England, on the 22d of June, to bring additional colonists and supplies, and he arrived at James- town on his return on the 8th January, 1608. He lound that matters had not gone well during his absence. Want of suit- able food, and a climate to which the men were unaccustomed, had caused much sickness and death. Among the council Cap- tain Gosnold was dead, and Wingfield and Kendall had been deposed, and were under arrest upon serious charges. The difficulties through which the colony had passed had developed the fact, however, that there was one man among them of genius equal to the enterprise. That man was Captain John Smith. He had commenced exploring the country and trading with the Indians for corn, by which he supplied all the wants of the colony, and three times he had prevented their abandonment of the settlement in the pinnace, which Newport had left behind. During one of his expeditions up the Chickahominy some of his men had been killed, and he captured, but by address he had procured his release, and been sent back with an escort to James - town, where he arrived the day of Newport's return. Newport fouild him, however, in great peril; for Gabriel Archer, Smith's enemy, who had been improperly made a councillor during his captivity, on his return had caused him to be arrested and tried upon the charge of being accessory to the murder of the two men he had with him when he was captured by the Indians. Upon this pretext he was condemed to die, but the arrival of ..port saved him. When Newport sailed again for England, been demonstrated that the bad harbor at Roanoke Island rendered that place unfit for a settlement. 14 ADHRKSS. on the toth of April following, he carried with him both Wing- field and Archer. And, upon his arrival in England, Wingfield wrote a defence o\ his administration, which is known as " Wing- field's Discourse of Virginia." The Phu-nix, commanded by Captain Nelson, arrived after Newport's departure, having been separated from him on the voyage from England. This vessel returned to England on the 2d June, 1608, and carried a letter written by Smith to a friend, relating what had happened in the colony. This letter, as published in 1608, is known as " Smith's True Relation," or, " Newes from Virginia.'' Smith continued his explorations and trade, and with the assistance of Pocahontas, who exerted a great influence over her father, kept the colony well supplied with provisions. On the 10th of September, 1608, he accepted the presidency, which office he filled with great credit. His adventures among the Indians, as related by his companions, were very remarkable, and he inspired the Savages with a wholesome fear of himself, which proved of great advantage to the infant colony. Pocahontas was his fast friend, and saved the English on more than one occasion, not only by supplying their wants, but by informing Smith of the plots of the Indians against them. During the fall of 1608 New- port brought a second supply of colonists, and on his return to England carried a map of the country and a description of the inhabitants, prepared by Captain Smith, which were published in 1 61 2 at Oxford. The returns from the colony had not been profitable, and a change of charter was obtained on 23d May, 1609. By its provisions the government was no longer vested in a president and council, but in a governor, to be appointed by the London Company. Sir Thomas West, Lord Delaware, was appointed governor, and he sent Sir Thomas Gates as his Lieu- tenant, to reside in the colony. In October, 1609, Smith sailed for England, and never returned. He left the colony at the close of his presidency in a hopeful condition. It consisted of upwards of four hundred and ninety persons seated at James- town, and several other places. They had twenty-four pieces of ordnance, and three hundred stand of small arms, with sufficient ammunition, three ships and seven boats, a store of commodi- ties to trade with the natives, the harvest newly gathered, ten weeks provisions in store, six hundred swine, with some goats and sheep, and many domestic fowls. They had become well ADDRESS. 15 acquainted with the natives, their language and habitations, and could muster, if need be, one hundred well trained soldiers.* Everything looked to a permanent and successful colony. But the departure of Smith changed the whole aspect of affairs. The Indians at once became hostile, and killed all that came in their way. The ships were lost, the provisions were wasted, and a famine set in, accompanied by the diseases which invariably attend it. Within six months after Captain Smith left them, there were not over sixty alive, and these could hardly hope to live ten days longer. Sir Thomas Gates had been shipwrecked in coming over, and had remained at the Bermudas to refit. When he arrived at Jamestown he beheld the ghastly spectacle of a dying colony. He abandoned all hope of reviving it, and taking the survivors aboard he set sail for England. Before they got out of the river, however, they were met by Lord Delaware, who had determined to visit the colony himself, and had brought three ships well provisioned. He carried the remnant of the colony back to Jamestown, and by his wise administration put new life into the enterprise, the practicability of which had been demonstrated by Captain Smith. After Smith's departure Pocahontas refused to visit Jamestown, but continued to show kindness to the English who fell into her father's hands. In 1613 Captain Argall induced her to visit his ship at anchor in the Potomac, made her a prisoner and carried her to Jamestown. In 1614 she became a Christian, and was married to John Rolfe, one of the colonists. Her marriage brought peace with the Indians. Sir Thomas Dale, who was * This statement of the condition of the colony is taken from the Oxford Tract, compiled from the writings of Smith's companions; and from Purchas' Pilgrims, vol. iv, p. 1 731, where it is taken from the same writers. It has been disputed chiefly upon the statements of the Virginia Assembly in 1624, styled "A liriele Declaration of the plantation of Virginia during the first 12 years, &c ," vol. i of Colonial Records of Virginia. This paper states (p. 70 ) that the men landed by Sir Thomas (iates fell upon the seven acres of corn planted, "and in three days, at the most, wholly devoured it." Doubtless the words, "(he harvest newly gathered," used at a later date, referred to the harvest of the Indi.ms, for which there were ample commodities to trade. I: deigh Crashaw was a member of the Assembly of 1624, and be endorsed Smith's History <,f Virginia, which copies this statement from the Oxford Tract. '1 ne account of suffering afterwards carried to England by the Swallow, icferred to what happened after Smith left the colony. 16 ADDRESS. acting as governor, carried her with her husband and child to England in [616, where she was handsomely entertained by the London Company and others, the queen and her court paying her marked attention. As she was about to return to Virginia she was taken sick, and died at Gravesend on the 2ist of March, [617. The grounds of Mr. Deane's attack on Smith's veracity may be briefly stated as follows: Smith came to Virginia in 1607 and returned to England in 1609. Accounts of what happened during his stay in the colony were written by himself and others, and many publications concerning the early history of the colony were made, but no mention was made in any publication of Smith's rescue by Pocahontas, as is claimed, till 1622, when Smith published a second edition of a tract entitled " New Eng- land Trials," which contains an allusion to it; and it was only in Smith's " General History of Virginia," published in 1624, that the full details were given. It is charged that the' prominence to which Pocahontas had attained in 1616 induced Smith to in- vent the story, in order that he might associate her name with his own. Mr. Deane also claimed that the account of Smith's treat- ment at the hands of the Indians while their prisoner, given at the time in his letter known as the "True Relation," differs ma- terially from that given in the " General History," and that all the later accounts given by Smith of his early adventures show considerable embellishment, and are unworthy of belief. Those who have followed in the wake of Mr. Deane have en- deavored to point out many inconsistencies between the accounts given by Smith in his different publications relating to the same matters, and he has been painted by one at least, (Mr. Neill,) as a braggart and a beggar, and unworthy of belief generally. It is proposed to examine these several grounds of attack in detail, and to show that in no instance has a falsehood been fixed on Smith, but that his writings, where they have been dis- puted, are so fully sustained that they constrain our belief. The first ground of attack is the alleged omission of all allu- sion to Smith's rescue in his early writings and those of his con- temporaries. If this be shown, and cannot be properly explained, it will beyond doubt give rise to a painful suspicion as to the truth of the subsequent account, given after Pocahontas had be- come an object of public interest. But it will only raise doubt ADDRESS. IT as to Smith's veracity. A mere failure of the early writers to mention the incident does not amount to proof that it never oc- curred. If, however, the silence of these earlier publications can be satisfactorily explained then the attack based upon it utterly fails. The books which relate to the early history of the colony, and which it is claimed should have noticed the rescue, are — i. "A True Relation of Virginia," or " Newes from Vir- ginia," the letter written by Captain John Smith, and published in London 1608. 2. " A Discourse of Virginia," written by Edward Maria Wingfield, the first president, and printed first in i860. 3. "Historie of Travaile into Virginia," by Wm. Strachey, secretary of the colony from 1610 to 161 2, printed first in 1849. 4. " The proceedings of the English colonie in Virginia since their first beginning from England in the yeere of our Lord 1606," printed at Oxford 161 2, and known as the second or his- torical part of the " Oxford Tract," Smith's map and description of the country being the first part. 5. " Purchas' Pilgrimage," by the Rev. Samuel Purchas, printed in 1613, and republished in 1614, 1617, and 1626. 6. " A True Discourse of the present estate of Virginia," &c, by Ralph Hamor, late secretary in the colony, printed in 161 5. As the first of these publications was written by Captain Smith himself, and gives an account of his captivity among the In- dians, its failure to record his rescue by Pocahontas is considered the strongest evidence of the falsity of the account given by him years afterwards. Indeed the force of the attack upon Smith, inaugurated by Mr. Deane, will be found in this alleged omission. But what are we to think of the argument when we learn, what is undoubtedly true, that this letter has never been published as Smith wrote it. Parts of it were suppressed by the person who published it, who. in a preface signed with his initials "J. II.," states that fact, and this preface was republished by Mr. Deane in 1866, along with the garbled letter. The preface ^ives an ac- unt of how the publisher came by the manuscript, and of a mistake in printing some of the copies under the nameoi Thomas Watson instead <>i Captain Smith, the true writer, and then these words follow: " Somwhat more was by him written, which 18 ADDRESS. bang, as I thought, (fit to be private,) I would not adventure to make it publicke." What was thus omitted from the letter in its publication has never been known. Until the letter has been reproduced as Smith wrote it, however, it is simply absurd to attempt to build an argument against Smith's veracity upon its alleged omissions. This answer to the main ground of attack would seem to be com- plete, and yet more may be added. We are not left entirely in the dark as to what was omitted by the publisher. He continues his preface as follows : " What may be expected concerning the scituation of the country, the nature of the clime, number of our people there resident, the manner of their government and living, the commodities to be produced, and the end and effect it may come too, I can say nothing more then is here written. Only what I have learned and gathered from generall consent of all (that I have conversed with all) as well marriners as others which have had employment that way, is that the country is excellent and pleasant, the clime temperate and healthfull, the ground fertill and good, the commodities to be expected (if well followed) many, for our people, the worst being already past, these former having indured the heate of the day, whereby those that shall succeede may at ease labour for their profit in the most sweete, cool, and temperate shade." Two things are evident from these sentences, one, that what was omitted could only relate to the narrative of what had happened to the colonists, all else had been given fully to the public; another, that the desire of the publisher was to encourage further emigration to Virginia, and therefore what he left out of the nar- rative was in all probability matters which might tend to dis- courage emigrants. This concealment of all matters tending to discourage emigra- tion was enjoined on the colonists by the London Company, in the instructions given them when they sailed. A copy of these instructions is in the Library of Congress in manuscript. It has been printed by Mr. Neill, in his " History of the Virginia Com- pany of London," pp. 8 to 14 inclusive. In it we find the following words, " You shall do well to send a perfect relation by Captain Newport of all that is done, what height you are seated, how far into the land, what commodities ADDRESS. 19 you find, what soil, woods and their several kinds, and so of all other things else to advertise particularly ; and to suffer no man to return but by passport from the President and Counsel, nor to write any letters of anything that may discourage others." " Lastly and chiefly the way to prosper and achieve good success, is to make yourselves all of one mind, for the good of your country and your own, and to serve and fear God, the Giver ol all Goodness, for every plantation which our Heavenly Father hath not planted shall be rooted out." It is very probable from his preface that the publisher of the "True Relation " was a member of the London Company. He says, " happening upon this relation by chance, (as I take it at second or third hand) induced thereunto by divers well wishers of the action, and none wishing better towards it than myself, so faire footh as my poore abilitie can or may stretch too, I thought good to publish it." He doubtless knew of the instructions of the Company to the colonists, and whatever he found in the letter of Smith which, in his judgment, was contrary to those instructions, and should not have been made public, he suppressed. Certain it is we find either as the work of Smith, or of the publisher, that several matters well attested by writers who published later, were omitted from this letter as published. The following may be noted in this connection. During the voyage out, Smith was arrested on the charge of being impli- cated in an intended mutiny, and was thereby prevented from taking his seat in the Council for some time after the arrival at Jamestown. This is stated in the Oxford Tract, and the state- ment is corroborated by Wingfield in his " Discourse of Vir- ginia," in his admission that he was fined ,£200 for slander in making the charge. No mention is made, however, of the charge, of the arrest, nor of the detention from his scat, in the " True Relation." The Oxford Tract informs us of three several efforts to abandon the colony, which were prevented by Smith at considerable personal hazard, and Wingfield admits thai In- offered ;£ 100 towards "fetching home the collonye, if the action was given over." No mention is made of these efforts to aban- don the colony in Smith's letter, as published. The only pas- sages which seem to make any allusion to the matter are found on pagea 17 and 21. The first is in tin' following words: "Time ADDRESS. thus passing away, and having not above 14 daies vituals left, Some motions were made about our presidents and Capt. Archer going to England to procure a supply." The other is as fol- lows: "Our store being now indifferently well provided with corne, there was much adoe for to have the pinnace goe to Eng- land, against which Capt. Martin and myselle standing chiefly against it, and in tine alter much debatings pro and con, it was resolved to stay a further resolution." These passages indicate no effort to abandon the colony, but seem to have been worded so as to avoid that construction. We have seen that on Smith's return from captivity, Archer had him tried and condemned, as accessory to the murder of his men who were slain by the Indians. Wingfield mentions this, and that he was saved from death by the timely arrival of Captain Newport. The "General History" also confirms Wing- field's account, but the published letter of Smith makes no men- tion of the matter. The same reasons which determined Smith, or his publisher, to omit these well-attested incidents, doubtless induced the omis- sion of the circumstances of Smith's rescue by Pocahontas, and of his deliverance by the Indian chief, Opechankanough, soon after his capture, when he was tied to a tree and his captors, who had promised him safety, were preparing to shoot him, As the unjust treatment of Smith, indicating serious conten- tions amongst themselves, and the efforts to abandon the set- tlement, would have a tendency to " discourage others," and check emigration ; so it might have been believed, and doubt- less was, that a publication of the treacherous disposition of the Indians, which led them to break faith with their prisoners, and to put them to death contrary to their stipulations of surrender, and after their King had professed friendship, as we shall see he did, would have the same tendency ; and we have seen that the colonists were forbidden to write anything home which might have that effect. Another reason may be assigned also for Smith's not mention- ing his rescue by Pocahontas in this letter. We are told in the Oxford Tract, that when Smith was arrested on the voyage to Virginia, the charge against him was that, "he intended to usurpe the government, murder the councell, and make himself king" ; and when he was about to return to England in 1609, to be ADDRESS. 21 treated for his wound, his enemies trumped up several frivolous charges against him, and one was, that "he would have made himself a king by marrying Pocahontas, Powhatan's daughter." (See Purchas' Pilgrims, vol. iv, p. 1731, where Richard Pots is given as authority for the statement which is taken from the Oxford Tract.) There can be no doubt of the fact that Poca- hontas was greatly attached to Smith. The writer just quoted, in defending Smith from the charge, says, "Very oft she came to our fort with what she could get for Captain Smith, that ever loved and used all the country well, but her especially he much respected, and she so well requited it that when her father in- tended to have surprised him, she by stealth in the dark night came through the wild woods and told him of it. If he would, he might have married her." The "General History" states also (p. 112) that "though she had beene many times a preserver of him (Smith) and the whole colony, yet till this accident (her cap- ture in 1613) she was never seene in Jamestown since his depar- ture." With such charges brought against him on the voyage, and the disposition of his enemies to renew them, Smith might very well think it most prudent to say nothing in his letter of the affectionate conduct of the Indian Emperor's daughter towards him. But whatever may have been the reason that this letter, as pub- lished, did not mention Smith's rescue by Pocahontas, enough has been said to show that its omission affords no ground for charging that the detailed account subsequently given, when the reasons for silence had ceased to exist, was false. The silence of Wingfield as to this incident was to be expected. He and Smith were bitter enemies. Smith had recovered against him in a suit for slander, and had been active in having him de- posed from the presidency, and keeping him a prisoner. Wing- field's object in writing was to defend himself, and to throw all the blame he could upon his enemies. Although his " Discourse of Virginia" purports to give what happened from day today, yet it was evidently written in England after his return. He tells us (p. 91) that "somewhat before this tynie, (the execution of Kendall 1 the President and Councill had sent for the Keyes of my Coffers, supposing that I had some wrightings concerning the Collony. * Under cullor heereof they took my books of accompt, and all my noatcs that concerned the ex- 122 ADDRESS. penses o\ the Collony, and instructions under the Cape-mar- chant's hande of the Stoare of provisions, and divers other bookes and trifles of my own proper goods, which I could never recover." In the preface, addressed apparently to the council in England for Virginia, he says, "My due respect to yourselves, mv allegiance (if I may so term it) to the Virginean action, my good heed to my poore reputation, thrust a penne into my handes, so jealous am I to bee missing to any of them." We may safely conclude, therefore, that if he made any notes in Virginia they were taken away from him, and that he only commenced his manuscript, setting forth the defence of his administration, after he was freed from the imprisonment imposed upon him in the colony. It would have been very remarkable if a writer so situated, and having such an object in view, had recorded in his book the passionate attachment of Pocahontas for Smith. He, indeed, makes no allusion to Pocahontas at all, although it is very cer- tain she was frequently in Jamestown before he left on the 16th April, 1608, some three months after Smith's return from cap- tivity. His account of Smith's captivity is very brief, and it would probably have been altogether omitted did it not enable him to strike at Archer, his bitterest enemy, who was, as he relates, improperly sworn as one of the Council during Smith's absence, and who attempted to put Smith to death on his return. He relates Smith's voyage up the Chickahominy until he could go no further in his canoe. He then adds the following: "Then hee went on shoare with his guide, and left Robinson and Em- mery, twoe of our men, in the cannow ; which were presently slayne by the Indians, Pamaonke's men, and hee himself taken prysoner, and by the means of his guide his lief was saved ; and Pamaonke, having him prisoner, carryed him to his neybors, Wyroances [chiefs], to see if any of them knew him for one of those which had bene, some twoe or three yeeres before us, in a river amongst them northward, and taken awaie some Indians from them by force. At last he brought him to the great Powa- ton (of whome before wee had no knowledge), who sent him to our towne the viij of January." This short passage is all that Wingfield devotes to the inci- dents of a captivity extending through at least a month, and which cover in narration a dozen pages of Smith's printed letter.. ADDRESS. 23 The disposition to say nothing to Smith's advantage is apparent. It is undoubtedly true that Smith so impressed himself upon the Indians while their captive, that he was sent back to Jamestown unhurt, and with an escort of honor. This we learn from " Pur- chas' Pilgrims," at page 1709, of volume iv, upon the authority of Anas Todkill, one of the colonists. Wingfield makes not the slightest allusion to this remarkable fact, but credits the saving of his life to his guide, whom Smith had tied to him when attacked by the Indians, and used as a protection from their arrows, as we learn from the " True Relation." Wingfield alludes to the inci- dent in so loose a manner as to leave the impression that the Indian guide saved Smith after his. capture instead of before. That Wingfield was very careless in his statements is abun- dantly shown in his book. We need cite but one instance more of his want of accuracy. We have seen that he states that they had no knowledge of the Emperor Powhatan, before he sent Smith back to Jamestown on the 8th of January, 1608, but at pages 77 and 78 of his narrative he had previously stated that on the 25th of June, 1607, this same emperor had sent a messenger to Jamestown and sought their friendship. We need not be suprised therefore that this careless writer, whose sole purpose was to defend himself from the charge of misbehavior in office, should omit all allusion to Smith's rescue. William Strachey came to Virginia with Sir Thomas Gates, who arrived on the 23d May, 1610. Upon his return to England in 161 2, he published at Oxford a book he styled " Laws for Virginia." Prefixed to this book is an "Address to His Majesties Councell for the Colonie of Vir- ginia Britannia," in which he says: "When I went forth upon this voyage fright worthy gentlemen), true it is, I held it a service of dutie 'during the time of my unprofitable service, and purpose to stay in the colonie, for which way else might I adde unto the least hight of so heroicke and pious a building), to pro- pose unto myself to be (though an unable) remembrancer of all accidents, occurrences, and undertakings thereunto adventitial] ; in most of which, since the time our right famous sole governor then, now Lieutenant General Sir Thomas Gates, Knight, after the unsealing of his commission, hasted to our fleete in the West, there staying for him, I have, both in the Bermudas, and since in Virginia, beene a sufferer and an eie-witiusse, and the full StOlie 24 ADDRESS. of both in due time shall consecrate unto your viewes, as unto whome by right it appertained. * * * Howbeit, since many impediments as yet must detaine such my observations in the shadow of darknesses, untill I shall be able to deliver them perfect unto your judgments, I do, in the meantime, present a transcript ol" the Toparchia^ or state of those duties by which their Colonie stands regulated and commaunded," &.C., oat and all the rest The salvaj having drawne from George Cassen, whether Captain Smith was gone, \> :in^ that opportunity, they followed him with 300 bowmen, conducted by the King of Pamaunkee, « ho, in r sinke. Some no better than lor the losse of our two men which the they should lie, had plotted with the Indians slew : insomuch that they pur- President, the next day to have put posed to depose me, but in the midst him to death, by the Levi ticall law, for of my miseries, it pleased God to send the lives of Robinson & Emry, pre- Captaine Newport, who arriving there tending the fault was his that had led the same night, so tripled our joy, as them to their ends: but he quickly for awhile these plots against me were tooke such order with such Lawyers, deferred, though with much malice that he layd them by the heeles till he against me, which Captain Newport sent some of them prisoners for Eng- in short time did plainly see." land." The statements, that upon his return Smith prevented the running off with the pinnace, and caused the persons who had plotted his death to be arrested, and some of them to be sent to England, are those found in the " General History," which are claimed to be inconsistent with the narrative in the "True Rela- tion." It will be seen that while they are additional to the first narrative, they are in nowise contradictory of it. That they are true we have the testimony of Anas Todkill, then with the Col- ony, who is cited by Purchas in his " Pilgrims," as recording that Smith, on his return, "once more staied the Pinnace her flight for England," and that Wingfield and Archer were carried to Eng- land by Newport on his return. Wingfield states also that Archer would have been hung, had not Newport advised against it. Some of our critics have fancied that they have fixed a false- hood on Smith in his account of his first landing on the island of Mevis, related in the continuation of his " General History," and found in the second part of the Richmond edition of 1819, chap- ter 26. Smith says : " In this little (ile) of Mevis, more than twenty years agoe, I have remained a good time together, to wod and water and refresh my men." This was published in 1629, and refers to the touching at that island of the colony under Captain Newport on its way to Virginia in 1607. Our critics construe Smith's language to mean that he, and not New- ADDRESS. 37 port, was in command of the expedition when they touched at Mevis. An examination of the context demonstrates that Smith meant to convey no such idea. In the beginning of this continuation, and afterwards in this very chapter, Smith refers the reader for particulars as to the planting of the colony at Jamestown to the " General History." This book states the fact that Newport commanded the expe- dition ; and the further fact that when they touched at the island of Mevis, Smith was a prisoner under the charge of plotting a mutiny. This last is referred to by Smith in this chapter in these words : " Such factions here we had as commonly attend such voyages, that a paire of gallowes was made, but Capt. Smith, for whom they were intended, could not be perswaded to use them." Had Smith intended to deceive, he would not have referred the reader to another volume, of which he was then writing a continuation, in which he had made a different state- ment. But any one familiar with the history of the colonization of Virginia will readily understand the expression, " my men," as used by Smith. The orders for the expedition, as published by Neill, show that soldiers under officers were a part of the colony ; and Percy, in his narrative printed by Purchas in volume iv. of his " Pilgrims," tells us that while on this island they "kept centinels and Courts de gard at every captaine's quarter," fear- ing an assault from the Indians. There can be no doubt that Smith was one of the captains, not only from his previous mili- tary training and rank, but from the fact that we find among the verses addressed to him on the publication of his " General History," some by soldiers, who state that he was their Captain in Virginia. It should be remembered also that Smith was active in getting up the colony in England, and, upon their landing in Virginia, was soon looked upon as their leader. The "Oxford Tract " tells us that he saved the colony from starvation by the provisions he got from the Indians, and from extermination by the control he acquired over the Indian princes, and that he plored the country, built Jamestown, and prevented the colony from abandoning it. In fact, that he was the nil founder of Vir- ginia.* It was not improper, therefore, that he should claim that * It has been claimed that Lord Delaware was the real rounder "I Virginia, because he prevented its abandonment in 1610, and by his wise administration 14 71 : 38 ADDRESS. honor, as he does in the conclusion of this chapter upon the isle of Mevis. He says: "Now to conclude the travels and adven- tures of Captaine Smith, how he planted Virginia, * * * you may read at large in his generall history of Virginia, the Sum- mer lies and New England." But we need not pursue this charge of inconsistencies further, as time would fail us to notice every inconsistency charged by the numerous and often ill-informed assailants of Smith. Those not noticed are even more easily disposed of than those we have already exposed. The bitterest of all of these assailants is the Rev. E. D. Neill, who has written a history of the London Company. When King James determined to take away the charter of the London Company, in 1624, an attempt was made by its enemies to obtain its records. Thereupon the minutes were copied for the Earl of Southampton, the President, and this copy was after- wards bought by Colonel William Byrd, of Virginia, and was used by the historian Stith. Subsequently it came into the pos- session of Thomas Jefferson, and was purchased with Mr. Jeffer- son's library by Congress. These minutes only commence on the 28th of April, 161 9. In the Congressional Library there are in addition two manuscript volumes, one containing letters of the Company and the colony, with other papers, from 162 1 to 1625, and the other containing some copies of early colonial papers. These valuable manuscripts were used by Mr. Neill in the prepa- ration of his book. He says at page v. of his preface, " On the 15th of July (1624), the King ordered all their [the Company's] papers to be given to a commission, which afterwards met weekly at the house of Sir Thomas Smith [the former treas- urer of the Company]. The entries in the minutes were dam- aging to Smith and others of the commission, and it is presumed that no great effort was made to preserve the originals. Re- put the colony on a firm footing. Lord Delaware should have all honor for what he did for the colony, but before his arrival Smith had three times prevented its abandonment, had pre- served it from starvation and destruction for nearly three years, and had left it, on a change of administration, in a condition to take care of itself with proper management. When a man goes out with a colony and accomplishes this much,, he may be well called its founder. ADDRESS. 39 peated searches have been made for them in England, but they have not been discovered." At page 211 of his book, in a note, he says: "Captain Smith's 'General History' was published after the Quo Warranto was issued against the Virginia Company, and it is evident that he wrote in the interest of their opponents. There is no evidence beyond his statement, that the letters which he publishes as writ- ten to the Company were ever received by them." Smith's "General History" was published in 1624, the year the Company's charter was taken from it, and when most of the members of the Company from its foundation were alive ; and yet Mr. Neill would create the impression that Smith forged the letters to the Company which he published, when there were hundreds alive who would have exposed the forgery. The first letter given in the " General History" is found at page 200 (Richmond edition), and was in reply to a letter sent to the presi- dent and Council by the London Company, upon the return of Captain Newport in the fall of 1608. Smith had been made presi- dent in September of that year. The "Oxford Tract " tells us, " by the election of the Councell & the request of the company, Cap- taine Smith received the Letters Patents, which till then by no meanes he would accept, though he was often importuned there- unto." It thus became his duty to answer the communication from the London Company. The second letter is found at page 79 of the second part of the same edition. On the 22d March, 1622, there was a ter- rible massacre of the colonists by the Indians. Smith, who was then in London, relates that he " did intreat & move them to put in practice his old offer, seeing now it was time to use both it & him ;" and then follows the letter. The offer, which was to return to Virginia, was probably made before 16 14, when he commenced exploring New England. Now, until we know that there is a complete collection of the company's letters preserved, nothing can be concluded against Smith, because his letters are not found among the records. Of course no letters before 1621 could be found, as the collection commences during that year; and as we learn from Mr. Neill's book that many <>t the papers were destroyed, and especially those which might be damaging to Sir Thomas Smith and others having possession of them under the King's commission, and as we find Captain Smith's 40 ADDRESS. letters reflect upon the government of the colony under Sir Thomas Smith and his successor, we need not be surprised that Mr. Neill has not found them in the collection now extant. Mr. .Will attempts to produce the impression that Smith, if wounded at all in 1(109, did not have the colony upon that account, and because there was no surgeon there to treat him, as he states in the " History," but that he left because he was arrested upon charges and sent to England. It so happens that the fact of his being severely wounded by an accidental explosion of gunpowder, and the further fact that the lack of a surgeon determined him to sail for England in a ship preparing to leave Jamestown, are both related in the "Oxford Tract," and that Smith copies the passages into his " General History." The "Oxford Tract" relates also how charges against him, of the most frivolous nature, were gotten up by his enemies after he had determined to return. It appears by the published list of original subscribers to the London Company that Captain Smith only subscribed nine pounds, and as in asking remuneration afterwards of the Com- pany, he claimed to have spent upon Virginia " a verie great matter," Mr. Neill concludes that in this he was false. In his haste to condemn Smith he has not taken time to read him. At page 102, of the second part of the " General History " (Rich- mond edition), Smith states that he spent "more than five hun- dred pounds in procuring the Letters Patents and setting for- ward." His claim for special remuneration was not because of his subscription to the capital stock of the Company, as every member would have had the same ground of claim, but because of what he had expended and accomplished in addition, as his petition for reward, found in Mr. Neill's book, at page 214, plainly shows. That the committee to which his petition was referred allowed it, may be fairly inferred from a speech of Smith before the Company, reported by Mr. Neill at page 386.* * On the 4th of February, 1623, Captain Smith, in a discussion concerning the salaries of officers, is reported to have said : " That havinge spent upon Virginia a verie great matter, he did, by God's blessinge, hope to receave this yeare a good quantity of Tobacco, which he would not willingly have come under the hands of them that would performe the buissiness for love, and not upon a good and competent salary." The same author shows that the Com- pany owned much of the tobacco shipt from the colony, and Smith's expec- ADDRESS. 41 Another intimation made by this writer is, that as the records do not show that Smith's offer to the company to write a history of Virginia was accepted, his statement in the book that he wrote it at the instance of the Company, is false. Mr. Neill has given us at page 210 the offer made April 12, 1621, which shows on its face that it was made upon the request of some of the members. What was the action of the committee to whom it was referred, we know not, so far as Mr. Neill's extracts from the records go, but as only a few of the papers of the Company have been pre- served, nothing can be concluded from the absence of the com- mittee's report, and it would seem unreasonable to discredit Smith's published statement in regard to the matter, made when so many witnesses were alive Without pursuing further the details of Mr. Neill's attack upon Smith, it will be sufficient to expose the character of his book for us to notice the authority he has followed in its preparation, and the manner in which he has followed it. At page 16, in a note, he says : " For the facts relative to the early days of the Colony, I am indebted to Wingfield's ' Discourse of Virginia,' edited by Deane, and Capt. Newport's ' Relation,' first printed from manu- scripts in vol. iv, Am. Ant. Soc. Coll." The " Relation " of Captain Newport's discoveries in Virginia ended with his return to Eng- land, June 22, 1607 and Wingfield's "Discourse" takes up the narrative on that day. There is nothing derogatory to Smith in the first. On the contrary, it shows that Newport selected him as one of the persons to accompany him in exploring the James river, and on his return had him sworn one of the Council. In fol- lowing the narrative of Wingfield, however, Mr. Neill has shown himself unworthy of confidence as a historian. The " Oxford Tract" is entitled to the highest credit as a record of the early his- tory of the Colony. The Rev. Wm. Symonds, a minister of high character and considerable learning, compared it with the wri- tings from which it was compiled. He then sent it to Captain Smith with a note, printed at the end of the volume, in these words : tation could only have been founded on the allowance of his claim l»y the com- mittee. The Company, however, was in difficulties, and its charter was taken fn.rn it daring the next year, and before Smith received any reward for his expenditures and sacrifices. 42 ADDRESS. / "Captainc Smith, I returne you the fruit of my labours, as- Mr. Crashaw requested mc, which I bestowed in reading the dis- courses >N: hearing the relations of such which have walked and observed the land of Virginia with you. The paines I tooke was great : yet did the nature of the argument, and hopes I con- ceaved of the expedition, give me exceeding content. I cannot iinde there is anything but what they all afrirme, or cannot contra- dict : the land is good; as there is no cities, so no sonnes of Anak : al is open for labor of a good and wise inhabitant : and my ] nayer shall ever be, that so faire a land may be inhabited by those that professe and love the Gospell." In this book we have the following account of Wingfield's administration, commencing with the departure of Newport : " Being thus left to our fortunes, it fortuned that within tenne daies scarse ten amongst us coulde either goe, or well stand, such weaknes and sicknes oppressed us. * * * * Had we beene as free from all sinnes as gluttony and drunken- nes, we might have bin canonized for saints; But our Presi- dent would never have ben admitted, for ingrossing to his private (use) otemeale. sacke, oile, acquavite, beefe, egs, or what not, but the kettel ; that indeede he allowed equally to be distributed, and that was halfe a pinte of wheat and as much barly boyled with water for a man a day, and this having fryed some 26 weeks in the Ship's hold, contained as many worms as graines; so that we might truly call it rather so much bran thancorne: our drinke was water, our lodgings castles in the aire. With this lodging and diet, our extreame toile in bearing and planting pallisadoes, so strained and bruised us, and our continuall labour in the extremitie of the heate had so weakened us, as were cause suffi- cient to have made us miserable in our native country, or any other place in the world. From May to September, those that escaped lived upon sturgeon and sea-crabs, 50 in this time we buried. The rest seeing the President's proiects to escape these miseries in our Pinnace by flight (who all this time had neither felt want nor sickness) so moved our dead spirits, as we deposed him ; and established Ratcliffe in his place." George Percy, in the fragment of his narrative preserved by Purchas, relates that, "there was certaine Articles laid against Master Wingfield, which was then President, thereupon he was ADDRESS. 43 not only displaced out of his Presidentship, but also from being of the Councell." Wingfield, in his defence of himself, does not deny the charge of attempting to make his escape in the pinnace while he was president, although he denies the charge of feasting while the others were starving, and attempts to justify his administration at the expense of the rest of the colony. Purchas had before him, and cited the "Oxford Tract" and Wingfield's "Discourse" in preparing his books, and he knew personally no doubt the writers of both works, as he took part in the affairs of the London Com- pany. With this great advantage he follows the " Oxford Tract," and condemns Wingfield's administration. Mr. Neill, however, with nothing like the advantages of Purchas, follows Wingfield, and discredits the other colonists. This might be attributed to want of sound judgment alone had he faithfully followed him ; but what condemnation is too severe for one who omits from his cita- tions of the author he professes to follow, facts tending to justiiy a good opinion of the persons that author was attacking, This is what Mr. Neill has done. At page 15 he says: "Dissensions arose during the voyage, and on the 12th of February John Smith was suspected of mutiny." On page 21, quoting from Wingfield the grounds of hostility towards him, he says: "Mr. Smyth's quarrel, because his name was mentioned in the intended and confessed mutiny by Galthropp." Mr. Neill makes no other allusion to this charge against Smith, but leaves his readers under the impression that it was true, or at least was never disproved. Now Wingfield, in the very book relied on by Mr. Neill, states enough to show that Smith was innocent of the charge. He says: " The 17th daie of September I was sent for to the court to answer a complaint exhibited against me by Jehu Robinson; for that, when I was president, I did saie, hee, with others, had consented to run awaye with the Shallop to Newfoundland. At another tyme I must ansvvere Mr. Smyth, for that I had said hee did conceal an intended mutany. I tould Mr. Recorder those words would beare no actions: that one of the causes was done without the lymits mentioned in the Patent grauntcd to us. * The jury gave one of them 100, & the other two hundred pound claim-' 3 for slaunder." This passage shows that the charge against Smith was made by Wingfield during tin- voyage, and was investigated in an action for slander, to which action 44 ADDRESS. Wingfield's plea was that the slanderous words were spoken outsiide of the jurisdiction conferred by their patent, and that the jury convicted him of the slander, and fined him two hundred pounds. Mr. Neill has not been content, however, to omit statements of fact as to Smith alone. He has treated all of Wingfield's oppo- nents in the same way. On page 19 he thus relates the deposing of Wingfield: "At length a plot was formed by Ratcliffe, Smith, and Martin, to depose Wingfield and form a triumvirate. On the eleventh of September they brought him before them, Rat- cliffe acting as president, and preferred the following frivolous charges : Ratcliffe charged that he had refused him a penny whitle, a chicken, a spoonful of beer, & given him bad corn ; Smith alleged that he had told him he lied : Martin complained that he had been called indolent. After this he was placed on board of the pinnace in the river, and kept as a prisoner." The charges here given by Mr. Neill, and he gives no others, seem to have been verbal complaints against Wingfield, but not the charges upon which he was deposed. After mentioning these complaints, Wingfield says, " I asked Mr. President if I should answere theis compl'ts, and whether he had ought els to charge me with all, with that he pulled out a paper booke loaded full with artycles against me, and give them Mr. Archer to reade." None of these written charges are given by Wingfield, but he relates how he cut short their reading by appealing to the King. He adds : " Then Mr. Archer pulled out of his bosome another paper book full of artycles against me, desiring that he might reade them in the name of the Collony." He fails also to give these articles, but says of them, "I have forgotten the most of the artycles, they were so slight." Wingfield, while not giving the charges in detail, however, is evidently endeavoring to defend himself from them in his book, and we gather from the defence that they were, as stated in the " Oxford Tract," and not as given by Mr. Neill. In order to strengthen his attack upon Smith, Mr. Neill brings to his aid the Rev. Thomas Fuller, who, in his "Worthies of England," gave a short sketch of Smith, in which this sentence is found : " From the Turks in Europe he passed to the pagans in America, where such his perils, preservations, dangers, deliv- erances, they seem to most men above belief, to some beyond ADDRESS. 45 truth. Vet we have two witnesses to attest them — the prose and the pictures — both in his book, and it soundeth much to the diminution of his deeds, that he alone is the herald to publish and proclaim them." This description is witty, but false, and thus very character- istic of this writer. Fuller was noted for his want of accu- racy, and especially was it shown in his " Worthies." The material was collected during the civil war, and the book published in 1662, after the author's death. One of the most learned men of that century was William Nicholson, Bishop of Carlisle, who published a " History of Libraries" in 1696. In it he says of Fuller's "Worthies," "It was huddled up in haste for the procurement of some moderate profit to the author, though he did not live to see it published. It corrects many mistakes in his Ecclesiastical Story, but makes more new ones in their stead. * His chief author is Bale for the lives of his eminent writers, and those of his greatest heroes are commonly misshapen scraps, mixed with tattle and lies." Alex- ander Chalmers in his Biographical Dictionary, considers this censure too great, but admits Fuller's inaccuracies, and speaks of his " wit, which he could not suppress in his most serious compo- sitions." The Rev. James Granger published a Biographical History of England in 1769. Chalmers testifies to its critical accuracy. The author describes Fuller thus, " He was unhappy in having a vein of wit, as he has taken uncommon pains to write up to the bad taste of his age, which was much fonder of conceit than sen- timent." We need not be surprised, therefore, at finding that Fuller sacrificed truth to wit in his sketch of Smith. That he has done so is apparent to any reader of the "Oxford Tract," which was compiled from the writings of eye-witnesses, and contains nearly every incident of Smith's life in Virginia. The latest attack upon Smith is contained in a volume written by Charles Dudley Warner, Esq., and published during the year 1881, by Henry Holt & Company, of New York. We Learn from the preface that tin- author was engaged to treal of his Bubject "with some familiarity and disregard of historic gravity." Accordingly we find the book is a labored effort i«> ridicule 46 ADDRESS. Smith, and the author has succeeded in making a caricature of him. But a single example need be given to show how utterly unre- liable his picture of Smith is. At page 116, in quoting from the "General History" the account of the capture of Smith in the Chickahominy swamp by the Indians, the following is given: "Then finding the Captaine, as is said, that used the salvage that was his guide as his shield (three of them being slain and divers others so gauld), all the rest would not come neere him. Think- ing thus to have returned to his boat, regarding them as he marched, more than his way, slipped up to the middle in an oosie creek, and his salvage with him, yet durst they not come to him till being neere dead with cold, he threw away his arms. Then according to their composition they drew him forth and led him to the fire where his men were slaine. Diligently they chafed his benumbed limbs. He demanding for their Captaine, they shewed him Opcchankanoagh, King of Pamaunkee, to whom he gave a round Ivory double compass Dyall. Much they marvailed at the playing of the Fly and Needle, which they could see so plainly and yet not touch it because of the glass that covered them. But when he demonstrated by that Globe- like Jewell, the roundnesse of the earth and skies, the spheare of Sunne, Moone, and Starres and how the Sunne did chase the night round about the world continually : the greatnesse of the Land and Sea, the diversitie of nations, varietie of complexions, and how we were to them Antipodes, and many other such like matters, they all stood amazed with admiration." It will be seen from this that Smith was using an Indian as a guide when he was captured. Of course he had learnt to con verse with him. He had been in Virginia at that time nearly two years, and had been constantly mixing with the Indians and learning their language. In the " True Relation," quoted by the author at page 104, Smith states explicitly that he and his guide were " discoursing" when he was attacked. The reader will notice that the Indians had taken him out of the swamp and car- ried him to the fire he had left at his canoe, before he presented the compass to their chief and entered into conversation con- cerning it. Bearing this in mind, let us read Mr. Warner's com- ment on this passage. At pages 122-3 he writes : "We should like to think original in the above the fine passage, in which ADDRESS. 47 Smith, by means of a simple compass dial, demonstrated the roundness of the earth and skies, the sphere of the sun, moon and stars, and how the sun did chase the night round about the world continually ; the greatness of the land and sea, the diver- sity of nations, variety of complexions, and how we were to them antipodes, so that the Indians stood amazed with admiration. Captain Smith up to his middle in a Chickahominy Swamp, dis- coursing on these high themes to a Pamunky Indian, of whose language Smith was wholly ignorant, and who did not under- stand a word of English, is much more heroic, considering the adverse circumstances, and appeals more to the imagination than the long-haired Iopas singing the song of Atlas at the banquet given to yEneas when Trojans and Tyrians drained the flowing bumpers, while Dido drank long draughts of love. Did Smith, when he was in the neighborhood of Carthage, pick up some such literal translations of the song of Atlas as this : " He sang the wandering moon, and the labors of the Sun, From whence the race of men and flocks, whence rain and lightning, Of Arcturus, the rainy Hyades, and the twin Triones ; Why the winter suns hasten so much to touch themselves in the ocean, And what delay retards the slow nights." The misrepresentation contained in the statement, that Smith described himself as discoursing on these high themes while up to his middle in a swamp, with an Indian who could not under- stand a word of the language he used, is unpardonable. Equally groundless is the insinuation that the discourse never occurred, but was made up long afterwards from Smith's recollection of a passage in Virgil's .Hneid. The same discourse is related in the "True Relation," written by Smith directly after his return from captivity, and claimed by Mr. Deane and others attacking Smith, to be the true account of the incidents of his captivity. If we are to look for the sources from whence he got his ideas thus con- veyed, or pretended to be conveyed to the Indian chief, one would think that his lessons at school and his experience on land and sea were sufficient, without making him use a Latin poet, whom, in all probability, he never read, as he left school at an early age. kinplea of such strained efforts to ridicule Smith might be multiplied and taken from every p;ut of the volume, but we need 48 ADDRESS. not stop to expose them, as every reader will readily detect them. Mr. Warner has been constrained, however, to accord to Smith great merit for his accurate descriptions of Virginia and its in- habitants, and for his profound views and eminent services in re- gard to the colonization of North America. He represents him as admirable in many trails of character, yet false in what he says of himself. We think as he is sustained by others in matters of which they were cognisant, the conclusion is a safe one that he is truthful in those matters which rest on his own testimony alone. But we need not pursue this branch of our subject further. The grounds of attack upon Smith, which have not been noticed, will be found even more conspicuously false than those we have been discussing. Turning now to the direct evidence of the truthfulness of Smith as a writer, we shall find it ample and conclusive. We have seen that his " General History" of Virginia was first pub- lished in 1624. In 1629 he published, along with another edition, "The True Travels, Adventures and Observations of Captaine John Smith in Europe, Asia, Africke & America," and dedicated it to " William, Earle of Pembroke, Lord Steward of his Majesties most Honorable Household, Robert, Earle of Lindsay, great Chamberlain of England, and Henrie, Lord Hunsdon, Viscount Rochford, Earle of Dover." He commences his dedication thus : " Sir Robert Cotton, that most learned treasurer of antiquitie, having by the perusal of my ' Generall Historie' and others, found that I had likewise undergone divers other hard hazards in other parts of the world, requested me to fix the whole course of my passages in a booke by itselfe, whose noble desire I could not but in part satisfie ; the rather, because they have acted my fatal Tragedies on the stage, & racked my Relations at their pleasure." In conclusion he says he dedicated his work to these noblemen and expected them to patronize it, because they were " acquainted both with my [his] endeavors and writings." That this work received a favorable notice from them we learn from the dedication of a later work by Smith, called " Advertisements for the Unexperienced." Sir Robert Cotton was the founder of the Cottonian Library, now a valuable part of the British Museum. He and the Earl of Pembroke were members of the Virginia Company, and had ample opportunities of knowing whether Smith's " General His- ADDRESS. 45> tory*' was truthful or not. Had they not been satisfied of his truthfulness they would hardly have allowed their names to be used in his dedication of his " True Travels," and such use of their names must be taken as their endorsement of the author. The most remarkable adventures related in this last work are the killing of three Turks by Smith in single combat before the town of Regall, in Transilvania, and his subsequent escape from captivity in Tartary. These are attested by the patent of Sigis- mundus Bathor, Duke of Transilvania, given in full by Smith in his book, together with the certificate of its record in the office of the Herald of Arms at London. By this patent Smith was authorized to add three Turk's heads to his coat of arms. Graze- brook, in his " Heraldry of Smith," says he found Smith's Coat of Arms with the Turk's heads, which were confirmed to him by the College of Arms, in the British Museum. Harleian MS., No. 578. Burke, in his " Encyclopedia of Heraldry," describes it also. With such proof of the most remarkable incidents in his early life we need not look beyond Smith's own statement for evidence of the rest of this narrative. As this attack has grown out of Smith's statements in the " General History," however, we will look more particularly to the evidence of his truthfulness in that book. We have seen that the " ( ieneral History" embodied the " Ox- ford Tract," with some additions from the pen of Smith, and that this tract was carefully compiled out of the writings of the colon- ists, whose names are given by Dr. Symonds, and is a work of the highest authority. Now a comparison of this book with the " General History" shows that nearly every incident of Smith's stay in Virginia, given in the " History," is found in the "Tract." Certainly we find in it abundant evidence of " his perils, preser- vations, dangers, deliverances," which Fuller, through ignorance, or something worse, claimed were published and proclaimed alone by Smith. The "Oxford Tract" relates, among other incidents, his being surprised by Opechankanough with two hundred men, while he only had fifteen, and Ins extrication of himself and his men by zing the Indian King by his long lock and presi nting a cock< d pistol to his breasl ; his 1 ncounter, while alone, with the King ol Paspahegh, "a most strong, stout salvage," which was only ended 50 ADDRESS. by Smith's getting him into the river, and almost drowning him; and the plot of Powhatan to surprise him and murder his party, while away from Jamestown, which was prevented by Pocahontas, who, "by stealth in the darke night came through the wild woods and told him of it." That the Statements, added by Smith in his History, were true, inclusively shown by the fact that the book was published in 1624, when many persons who had been with Smith in Virginia were alive, and some of them inimical to him, and we have no evidence that any one of his companions ever contradicted the statements in the book, while some of them directly testified to their truthfulness. The first edition contained tributes in verse, commending Smith and his book, written by twenty-one persons, and a later edition gives in addition similar tributes by twelve others. Of these thirty-three persons several were members of the London Company, and five were with Smith in Virginia, three arriving with the first supply, and two with the second, as appears by the published lists. One of the contributors, Edward Robinson, served under him in Transilvania, and was a witness to his adventures there. Michael Phettiplace, William Phettiplace and Richard Wiffing, who came to Virginia with the first supply, united in their tribute. They recount the fact that they were with him in Virginia, and witnessed his prowess among the Indians. They say of him : " Who hast nought in thee counterfeit or slie." and add " Who saith of thee, this savors of vaine-glorie, Mistakes both thee and us and this true storie." Of the two who came with the second supply one, John Cod- rington, writes : " That which we call the subject of all storie, Is truth : which in this worke of thine gives glorie To all that thou hast done." And the other, Raleigh Crashaw, speaking of the praise due to him, says: " For all good men's tongues shall keep the same." Among the other contributors we find several of the most ADDRESS. 51 noted men of the day. George Wither, distinguished as a poet, satirist and soldier, says : " Sir your relations, I have read, which show Ther's reason I should honour them and you." R. Brathwait, an author of eminence, and John Donne, the celebrated poet, each contribute handsomely to the author's praise ; but the tribute deserving of the most weight, perhaps, is that of the Rev. Samuel Purchas, the renowned collector of travels. He commences it thus : " Loe here Smith's Forge, where Forgery's Roague-branded," and continues at some length his quaint verses. The character of Purchas is thus drawn by Boissard, who is followed by Chalmers and by the Encyclopaedia Brittanica : "A man exquisitely skilled in languages, and all arts, divine and human ; a very great philosopher, historian, and divine ; a faith- ful presbyter of the Church of England, very famous for many excellent writings, especially for his vast volumes of the East and West Indies, written in his native tongue." He resided in London, and was rector of St. Martin's, Ludgate, and chaplain to Abbott, Archbishop of Canterbury. Mr. Neill shows him to have enjoyed the confidence of the Virgina Com- pany of London, and his works show him to have been an inde- fatigable collector of travels, and colonial histories. His great work, styled " Purchas, His Pilgrimes," was published in 1625, the year after Smith's " General History" appeared. In the 4th volume, at page 1705, he commences a history of Virginia, with this caption, "The proceedings of the English Colony in Vir- ginia, taken faithfully out of the writing of Thomas Studley, cape- merchant, Anas Todkill, Doctor Russell, Nathaniel Powell, Wil- liam Phetiplace and Richard Pot, Richard Wifhn, Tho. Abbay, Tho. Hope ; and since enlarged out of the writings of Capt. John Smith, principall Agent and Patient in these Virginia occurrents, from the beginning of the plantation, 1606, till Ann. i'.io, somewhat abridged." In a marginal note he says: "I have many written Treatises lying by me, written by Capt. Smith and others, some there, Borne here after their return ; but because these have already scene the light, and COntaine a lull relation of Virginian Affaires, I was loth to wearie the reader with others of ADDRESS. this rime.' 1 At page 1773 he tells us he had the advantage of a perusal of Smith's "(h-iht.i1 History" in MS. while preparing his work. He also relates the visit of Rolfe and Pocahontas with Temocomo, "one of Powhatan's counsellours," to England in \<>\<\ and states thai he often conversed with this savage, and was favored by Rolfe with the loan of his work upon Vir- ginia. He tells us of the honor and respect which were shown to Pocahontas, not only by the Company, but by many per- sons of honor, and particularly mentions the magnificent enter- tainment given her by Dr. King, Lord Bishop of London, at which he was present. With all of the advantages of living at the time of the transactions recorded by Smith, of mingling with the Company which colonized Virginia, of having before him the published and unpublished writings of the colonists, some of which are now lost, and of personally knowing so many of the most conspicuous characters which figure in the history of the colony, the testimony of this able and accurate writer should be conclusive as to Smith's "General History." Not only does he contribute verses commending Smith's work, but we find that in his own book he follows him closely, and gives the particulars of his rescue by Pocahontas as they are related in the " General History." It must have been that the acts of kindness shown by Pocahontas to the English in Vir- ginia were topics of conversation while she was so conspicuous a person in London, as the correspondence of the day shows she was. Her rescue of Smith was either not known or was the subject of conversation. Purchas, who was intimate with Smith, and was in the society of Pocahontas and Rolfe, must have conversed with them about the matter, if it was known. If it was not then known, Purchas would have had his suspi- cions aroused when Smith afterwards put the incident in his "General History," and, as a careful historian, would have exam- ined the evidences of the truth of the statement before he in- serted it in his own book. In either event the fact that Purchas records the incident is the strongest evidence of its truth. When we look to the writings of Smith himself for evidence of the truthfulness of his statement, in regard to the rescue, we find it ample to confirm our reliance on his veracity. It is true that the garbled letter from Virginia, published in 1608, makes no mention of the matter, but it relates an incident ADDRESS. 53 -very suggestive of the truth of his subsequent statement. Soon after Smith was released from his captivity he determined to arrest some Indians who had been caught thieving in James- town. Powhatan was greatly concerned at the arrest, and sent several messengers to obtain their release ; finally he sent Poca- hontas, who is described as " a child of tenne years old," (she was probably twelve) and Smith delivered to her the prisoners. Why the cunning savage should have trusted his favorite child at such a tender age upon such an errand would be difficult to explain, unless we believe Smith's statement that she had previ- ously saved his life. In his other writings Smith frequently mentions his rescue, and in such a way as would have led to detection had he made a false statement about it. In his " General History" he states, that upon the arrival of Pocahontas in England, in 1616, he, " to deserve her former cour- tesies, made her qualities knowne to the Oueene's most excellent Majestie and her court, and writ a little booke to this effect to the Queene, an abstract whereof followeth." In this abstract he recounts his captivity amongst the Indians while in Virginia, and says : " After some six weeks fatting amongst these salvage courtiers,, at the minute of my execution she hazarded the beat- ing out of her owne braines to save mine, & not only that, but so prevailed with her father that I was safely conducted to James- towne." He then goes on to relate her coming to him afterwards in the night to apprise him of her father's plot to murder him and his men, her relief of the colonists from want, and her ser- vices in keeping peace between them and the Indians. He then adds these words : " Thus, most gracious Lady, I have related to your Majestic what at your best leasure our approved Histories will account you at large." If this letter was written to the Queen under the circumstances, and at the time stated, we cannot doubt with any reason the truth of its statements. Every statement it contains, except that concerning his rescue, is supported by the writings of others in the " Oxford Tract," who were eye-witnesses. The rescue was only witnessed by the Indians; bul an assertion of it in a Inter t<» the Queen on behalf oJ Pocahontas, when she and her husband and her brother-in-law were in England, would not have been attempted if it had never happened. 54 ADDRESS. Sir Thomas Dale brought them to Kngland, and they were the guests of the London Company. Dale and the members of the Company were well informed of the incidents of Smith's life in Virginia, as he had been the most conspicuous man in the colony. Besides, some of the companions of Smith in Virginia had re- turned to England, and amongst them were several of his ene- mies. 1 lad Smith for the first time related his rescue under such circumstances, or repeated a story which was untrue, it is impos- sible to believe that it would have passed without exposure. Nor can we discover any motive prompting Smith to so hazardous an undertaking as the utterance of such a falsehood. The other incidents in the life of Pocahontas, related in the letter and at- tested by the writings of others, were ample to commend her to the favorable notice of the Queen, and to gratify any vanity Smith might have had about connecting their names. No other motive has been suggested by those attacking him. But the statement made in this letter that approved histories contained this with the other acts of kindness towards the Eng- lish, performed by Pocahontas, proves that it was not then for the first time related by Smith. Doubtless the reference is to some of the writings mentioned by Purchas, which are now lost. It will not do to say now that no such statement was contained in histories then extant, when Smith openly stated that it was, and by publishing the letter in 1624 reiterated the statement without contradiction. It is proper to note that what is given in the " General His- tory," is stated to be an " abstract" of the letter, or "little book " which was sent to the Queen. It cannot be properly concluded, therefore, that the rescue was not more fully detailed in the letter than in the abstract, and all the effort which has been made to represent the account of the rescue as growing by repetition is without warrant. The fact that Smith wrote this letter in 1 616, if conceded, is conclusive of the rescue, and this was so apparent to Mr. Adams that he attempted to discredit Smith's statement concerning it. If the letter was written as claimed, the members of the court must have known of it, and when Smith published the state- ment in 1624, there were living many persons who had been members of the court of 161 6. The Queen was dead, but the King was alive. There were also surviving, Prince Charles, who ADDRESS. 55 named for Smith the localities he had discovered in New Eng- land; the celebrated Duchess of Richmond and Lenox, to whom the "General History" was dedicated; the Duchess of Bedford, lady to the Queen's bed chamber, an authoress and a patron- ess of literary men ; the Duchess of Nottingham, lady to the Queen's drawing chamber, famous for her connection with the ring said to have been given by Elizabeth to the unfortunate Earl of Essex, who lost his head; and the Duchess of Suffolk, also of the drawing chamber, and mother of the notorious woman who was divorced from that Earl of Essex, who subsequently led the armies of Parliament against Charles the First. These, and many others, would have at once detected the false- hood had Smith dared to publish in 1624 a letter purporting to have been written in 1616 to the Queen and her court, about so interesting a person as Pocahontas, which he had in fact never written. Purchas, too, who lived in London, and was intimate with Smith, must have known whether the statement was true, and, so far from any one denying it, he and others are found endorsing it, as well as the rest of the book. The second reference to his rescue was made by Smith in 1622 in his book entitled " New England Trials." He had just heard of the massacre by the Indians in Virginia, and this led him to speak of his experience in the colony. Amongst other things he says: "Those two honorable Gentlemen, Captaine George Percie and Capt. Francis West, two of the Phitteplaces, and some other such noble Gentlemen and resolute spirits bore their shares with me, and, now living in England, did see me take this murdering Opechankanough, now their Great King, by the long lock on his head, with my pistol to his breast I led him amongst his greatest forces." Further on he adds : " It is true in our greatest extremity they shot me, slue three of my men, and by the folly of them that tied took me prisoner, yet God made Pocahontas, the King's Daughter, the meanes to deliver me." It thus appears that these companions of Smith were in England in 1622, and he named them as witnesses to certain actions of his in Virginia. These persons must have heard the particulars of Smith's captivity when they lived in Virginia, and they would have pronounced this statement in reference to the rescue false, if, indeed, it was false 56 ADDRESS. We learn from Mr. Null's book that Rolfe died in 1622, the year this statement was published, and he may not have seen it in print, but we learn from the same author that his brother, Henry Rolfe, was living in England at the time, and was the guardian ol the son of Pocahontas. He certainly would have informed himself of the matter, -md denied the statement if he had found it untrue. The reference of Smith in the passage seems' to be to a matter well known, and has every indication of truth about it, and it cannot be believed, without conclusive testimony, that he then for the first time, and falsely, put forth a claim that Pocahontas saved his life. It may be as well to state that in the verses of the Phettiplaces, printed with the '' General History," and endorsing- it, they particularly mention Smith's adventure with Opechankanough, which they witnessed. The next reference we find is in Smith's letter to the commis- sioners appointed by the King in 1623, to inquire into the affairs of the Company. In this Smith says: "Six weekes I was led captive by those Barbarians, though some of my men were slaine, and the rest fled, yet it pleased God to make their great King's daughter the meanes to returne me safe to Jamestowne." Here again Smith would have been detected if he had related a falsehood, as the commissioners were directed to enquire into the affairs of the Company from the beginning, and they exam- ined various persons who had been connected with it and knew its history. The fourth statement as to his rescue is found in the " General History," where the detailed account is given heretofore quoted. When we remember that this book states that it was written at the instance of the Virginia Company of London, which state- ment was not contradicted by any one, so far as we know, but was confirmed by several members who commended the veracity of the author as regards his statements in the volume, we must look upon the book as published with the endorsation of the Company. The men who composed the Company were among the noblest and best in the kingdom, and had every opportunity of knowing whether Smith wrote the truth about their history. It is not credible that they would have permitted his work to go through so many editions without correcting what was known to be false. The fact, therefore, that Smith's book, so far from ADDRESS. 57 being disowned by the members of the Company, was accepted as the standard history of the colony from its first appearance, is very strong evidence of its truthfulness. The author was, in fact, a man of high character as well as genius. He was one of the persons selected by the Company to govern the infant colony of Virginia ; he was entrusted with the charge of two expeditions to New England, and was appointed Admiral of that country. His maps of the countries he visited, and descriptions of their inhabitants, are acknowledged by all writers to be remarkably accurate, and the estimation in which he was held by those who knew him best, is admirably expressed by one of the writers in the " Oxford Tract" upon the occasion of his departure from the colony, in these words : " What shall I saye, but thus we lost him ; that in all his pro- ceedings made justice his first guide, and experience his second, ever hating basenesse, sloth, pride and indignitie more than any dangers; that never allowed more for himselfe than for his sol- diers with him ; that upon no danger would send them where he would not lead them himselfe; that would never see us want what he either had or could by any means get us ; that would rather want than borrow, or starve than not pay ; that loved action more than wordes, and hated falsehood and coveteousnesse worse than death, whose adventures were our lives, and whose losse our deathes." The London Company were prompted in sending out the col- ony by the desire ot immediate gain, and when disappointed, threatened to abandon the colonists to their fate; and the hard- ships of colonial life made many desirous ot" abandoning the enterprise. But the far-reaching genius of Smith saw in the fertile soil and mild climate ot" Virginia, the provision by Provi- dence for a great people, and he set himself resolutely to the work of bringing into subjection the native tribes,* and of *The influence acquired l t<> the whole matter. 1 lis allusion to his con- dition in the following sentence shows plainly that he was un- married : " Nor .mi I in so desperate an estate, that 1 regard not 0'2 ADDRESS. what becommeth of mee ; nor am I out of hope but one day to see my country, nor so void of friends nor mean of birth but there to obtain a mach to my great content." It is not to be believed that Sir Thomas Dale, the acting Gov- ernor, and the Rev. Alexander Whitaker, the minister in the colony, should have approved of the marriage, as their letters printed by Purchas show, if either of the parties were married at the time. Both Dale and Whitaker state that Pocahontas had been baptized into the Christian faith before her marriage. Po- cahontas and Rolfe were afterwards carried to England by Dale, as the guests of the London Company, and were received with favor at Court and into London society. Mr. Neill should bring direct and overwhelming proof to establish now that they were never lawfully married. His insinuations to the contrary will not be taken as proof, and can injure no one but himself. At page 101 of his book, Mr. Neill heads a section with these words : " Rolfe suspected of unfair dealings," and he adds, " The minutes of the Company do not give a very high opinion of Rolfe's honesty." In proof he gives an entry of April 30, 1621, by which it appears that Lady Delaware requested, " that in con- sideration of her goods remayning in the hands of Mr. Rolfe, in Virginia, she might receive satisfaction for the same out of his tobacco now sent home." Mr. Neill himself gives other entries which show that the tobacco did not belong to Rolfe, and that Mr. Henry Rolfe was directed to acquaint her ladyship that his brother offered to make her, " good and faithfull account of all such goods as remayne in his hands, upon her ladyship's direc- tion to that effect." Accordingly she desired " the court would grant her a commission dyrected to Sir Frances Wyatt, Mr. George Sandys and others, to examine and certifie what goods and money of her late husband's deceased, came to the hands of Mr. Rolfe, * * * and to require the attendinge to his promise that she may be satisfied." This seems to have been the usual way that estates in Virginia were appraised and settled at that time, when, for the lack of probate courts in the colony, the Company in London regulated such matters. Nothing more is given by Mr. Neill from any source as to the settlement of Lord Delaware's estate, and we must conclude that Rolfe fully accounted for it so soon as his accounts were lawfully settled and he could get a legal discharge. ADDRESS. 63 It is upon such a flimsy pretext as this that Mr. Neill attempts to fix the charge of dishonesty on Rolfe, who is represented by the Rev. Alex. Whitaker, and other writers of the time, as a man of high character and of great usefulness in the colony. It is worthy of note that he was the pioneer in the culture of Virginia's great staple, tobacco, and one of the most active in developing the various resources of the country. He will be ever remem- bered in history, however, as the husband of Pocahontas, who, born the daughter of a savage King, was endowed with all the graces of character which become a Christian princess; who was the first of her people to embrace Christianity, and to unite in marriage with the English race; who, like a guardian angel, watched over and preserved the infant colony which has devel- oped into a great people, among whom her own descendants have ever been conspicuous for true nobility ; and whose name will be honored while this great people occupy the land upon which she so signally aided in establishing them. UNIVERSITY of CALIFORNIA GELES W^ ^ 3 1158 0091 6 2446 ^P" UC SOUTHERN REGIONAL LIBRARY FACILITY AA 000 694 273 4