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<h2> EXPLORING THE COUNTRY </h2>
<p>When the shallop had been taken out of the hold of the Susan Constant, and
put together by the Carpenters, our people explored the shores of the bay
and the broad streams running into it, meeting with savages here and
there, and holding some little converse with them. A few were found to be
friendly, while others appeared to think we were stealing their land by
thus coming among them.</p>
<p>One of the most friendly of the savages, so Nathaniel said, having shown
by making marks on the ground with his foot that he wished to tell our
people about the country, and having been given a pen and paper, drew a
map of the river with great care, putting in the islands and waterfalls
and mountains that our men would come to, and afterward he even brought
food to our people such as wheat and little sweet nuts and berries.</p>
<p>I myself would have been pleased to go on shore and see these strange
people, but not being able to do so save at the cost of leaving my master,
I can only repeat some of the curious things which Nathaniel Peacock told
me. It must be known that there was more than one nation, or tribe, of
savages in this new land of Virginia, and each had its king or chief, who
was called the werowance. I might set down the names of these tribes, and
yet it would be so much labor lost, because they are more like fanciful
than real words. As, for example, there were the Paspaheghes, whose
werowance was seemingly more friendly to our people than were the others.</p>
<p>Again, there were the Rapahannas, who wore the legs of birds through holes
in their ears, and had all the hair on the right side of their heads
shaven closely.</p>
<p>It gives them much pleasure to dance, so Nathaniel said, he having seen
them jumping around more like so many wolves, rather than human beings,
for the space of half an hour, shouting and singing all the while.</p>
<p>All the Indians smoked an herb called tobacco, which grows abundantly in
this land, and I have Nathaniel's word for it that one savage had a
tobacco pipe nearly a yard long, with the device of a deer carved at the
great end of it big enough to dash out one's brains with.</p>
<p>There is very much more which might be said about these savages that would
be of interest; but I am minded now to leave such stories for others to
tell, and come to the day when Captain Newport was ready to sail with the
Susan Constant and the Goodspeed back to England, for his share in the
adventure was only to bring us over from England, after which he had
agreed to return.</p>
<p>The pinnace was to be left behind for the use of us who remained in the
strange land. Before this time, meaning the thirteenth day of May, the
members of the Council had decided upon the place where we were to build
our village. It was to be in the country of the Paspahegh Indians, at a
certain spot near the shore where the water runs so deep that our ships
can lie moored to the trees in six fathoms.</p>
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<h2> THE PEOPLE LAND FROM THE SHIPS </h2>
<p>Then it was that all the people went on shore, some to set up the tents of
cloth which we had brought with us to serve as shelters before houses
could be built; others to lay out a fort, which it was needed should be
made as early as possible because of the savages, and yet a certain other
number being told off to stand guard against the brown men, who had
already shown that they could be most dangerous enemies.</p>
<p>My master went ashore, as a matter of course, with the others, I sticking
close to his side; but neither of us taking any part in the work which had
been begun, because the charges of wickedness were still hanging over his
head.</p>
<p>Had Captain Smith been allowed a voice in the Council, certain it is he
never would have chosen this place in which to make the town, for he
pointed out to me that the land lay so low that when the river was at its
height the dampness must be great, and, therefore, exceeding unhealthful,
while there was back of it such an extent of forest, as made it most
difficult to defend, in case the savages came against us.</p>
<p>Captain Smith aided me in building for ourselves a hut in front of an
overhanging rock, with the branches of trees. It was a poor shelter at the
best; but he declared it would serve us until such time as he was given
his rightful place among the people, or had been sent back a prisoner to
England.</p>
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<h2> CAPTAIN SMITH PROVEN INNOCENT </h2>
<p>This served us as a living place for many days, or until my master was
come into his own, as he did before the fort was finished, when, on one
certain morning, he demanded of the other members of the Council that they
put him on trial to learn whether the charges could be proven or not, and
this was done on the day before Captain Newport was to take the ships back
to England.</p>
<p>There is little need for me to say that Captain Kendall's stories of the
plot, in which he said my master was concerned, came to naught. There were
none to prove that he had ever spoken of such a matter, and the result of
the trial was that they gave him his rightful place at the head of the
company. Before many months were passed, all came to know that but for him
the white people in Jamestown would have come to their deaths.</p>
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<h2> WE WHO WERE LEFT BEHIND </h2>
<p>It was on the fifteenth day of June when the ships sailed out of the
Chesapeake Bay, leaving on the banks of the river we called the James, a
hundred men and boys, all told, to hold their lives and their liberty
against thousands upon thousands of naked savages, who had already shown
that they desired to be enemies rather than friends. Even in the eyes of a
boy, it was an odd company to battle with the savages and the wilderness,
for the greater number were those who called themselves gentlemen, and who
believed it beneath their station to do any labor whatsoever, therefore
did it seem to me that this new town would be burdened sorely with so many
drones.</p>
<p>Master Hunt, the preacher, could in good truth call himself a gentleman,
and yet I myself saw him, within two hours after we were landed, nailing a
piece of timber between two trees that he might stretch a square of
sailcloth over it, thus making what served as the first church in the
country of Virginia. Yet Captain Smith has said again and again, that the
discourses of Master Hunt under that poor shelter of cloth, were, to his
mind, more like the real praising of God, than any he had ever heard in
the costly buildings of the old world.</p>
<p>For the better understanding of certain things which happened to us after
we had begun to build the village of Jamestown, it should be remembered
that of all the savages in the country roundabout, the most friendly were
those who lived in the same settlement with Powhatan, who was, so Captain
Smith said, the true head and king of all the Indians in Virginia.</p>
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<h2> BAKING BREAD WITHOUT OVENS </h2>
<p>It was in this town of Powhatan's that I discovered how to bake bread
without an oven or other fire than what might be built on the open ground,
and it was well I had my eyes open at that time, otherwise Captain Smith
and I had gone supperless to bed again and again, for there were many days
when our stomachs cried painfully because of emptiness.</p>
<p>While my master was talking with the king, Powhatan, on matters concerning
affairs at Jamestown, I saw an Indian girl, whose name I afterward came to
know was Pocahontas, making bread, and observed her carefully. She had
white meal, but whether of barley, or the wheat called Indian corn, or
Guinny wheat I could not say, and this she mixed into a paste with hot
water; making it of such thickness that it could easily be rolled into
little balls or cakes.</p>
<p>After the mixture had been thus shaped, she dropped the balls into a pot
of boiling water, letting them stay there until well soaked, when she laid
them on a smooth stone in front of the fire until they had hardened and
browned like unto bread that has been cooked in the oven.</p>
<p>But I have set myself to the task of telling how we of Jamestown lived
during that time when my master was much the same as the head of the
government, and it is not well to begin the story with bread making.</p>
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<h2> AN UNEQUAL DIVISION OF LABOR </h2>
<p>First I must explain upon what terms these people, the greater number of
whom called themselves gentlemen, and therefore claimed to be ashamed to
labor with their hands, had come together under control of those merchants
in London, who were known as the London Company.</p>
<p>No person in the town of James was allowed to own any land except as he
had his share of the whole. Every one was expected to work for the good of
the village, and whatsoever of crops was raised, belonged to all the
people. It was not permitted that the more industrious should plant the
land and claim that which grew under their toil.</p>
<p>Ours was supposed to be one big family, with each laboring to help the
others at the same time he helped himself, and the result was that those
who worked only a single hour each day, had as much of the general stores
as he who remained in the field from morning until night.</p>
<p>Although my master had agreed to this plan before the fleet sailed from
England, he soon came to understand that it was not the best for a new
land, where it was needed that each person should labor to the utmost of
his powers.</p>
<p>The London Company had provided a certain number of tents made of cloth,
which were supposed to be enough to give shelter to all the people, and
yet, because those who had charge of the matter had made a mistake,
through ignorance or for the sake of gain, there were no more than would
provide for the members of the Council, who appeared to think they should
be lodged in better fashion than those who were not in authority.</p>
<p>My master could well have laid claim to one of these cloth houses; but
because of the charges which had been made against him by Captain Kendall
and Captain Martin, the sting of which yet remained, he chose to live by
himself. Thus it was that he and I threw up the roof of branches
concerning which I have spoken; but it was only to shelter us until better
could be built.</p>
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