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<h2> THE CONDITION OF THE COLONY </h2>
<p>That he might have something to carry back to England, and not being
minded to take on board a load of sand, Captain Nelson asked that the
Phoenix be laden with cedar logs and such clapboards as our people had
made. Therefore was it that we sent to England the first cargo of value
since having come to Virginia.</p>
<p>Among those who had come over in the Phoenix were workmen who understood
the making of turpentine, tar and soap ashes. There was also a pipe maker,
a gunsmith, and a number of other skilled workmen, so that had the Council
advanced the interest of the colony one half as much as my master was
doing, all would have gone well with us in Jamestown.</p>
<p>As it was, however, the President of the Council, so Master Hunt has
declared many times, and of a verity he would not bear false witness,
often countenanced the men in rebellion against my master's orders, until,
but for the preacher's example, we might never have put into the earth our
first seed.</p>
<p>Because of lack of food, and it seems strange to say so when there were of
oysters near at hand more than a thousand men could have eaten, and fish
in the rivers without number, Captain Smith set off once more in the
pinnace to trade with the Indians, as well as to explore further the bay
and the river.</p>
<p>Master Hunt lived in our house, while he was gone, therefore Nathaniel and
I were not idle, and though we had each had a dozen pair of hands, we
could have kept them properly employed, what with making a garden for our
own use, tending the plants, and keeping house.</p>
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<h2> TOBACCO </h2>
<p>Just here I am minded to set down that which the girl Pocahontas told us
concerning the raising of tobacco, and it is well she spent the time
needed to instruct us, for since then I have seen the people in this new
world of Virginia getting more money from the tobacco plant, than they
could have gained even though Captain Newport's yellow sand had been
veritable gold.</p>
<p>You must know that the seed of tobacco is even smaller than grains of
powder, and the Indians usually plant it in April. Within a month it
springs up, each tiny plant having two or four leaves, and one month later
it is transplanted in little hillocks, set about the same distance apart
as are our hills of Indian corn.</p>
<p>Two or three times during the season the plants have to be hoed and
weeded, while the sickly leaves, which peep out from the body of the
stock, must be plucked off.</p>
<p>If the plant grows too fast, which is to say, if it is like to get its
full size before harvest time, the tops are cut to make it more backward.</p>
<p>About the middle of September it is reaped, stripped of its leaves, and
tied in small bunches; these are hung under a shelter so that the dew may
not come to them, until they are cured the same as hay.</p>
<p>Having thus been dried, and there must be no suspicion of moisture about,
else they will mold, the whole is packed into hogsheads.</p>
<p>I have lived to see the days go by since the girl Pocahontas showed
Nathaniel and me how to cultivate the weed, until the greatest wealth
which Virginia can produce comes from this same tobacco, which, Master
Hunt says, not only induces filthiness in those who use it, but works
grievous injury to the body.</p>
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<h2> CAPTAIN NEWPORT'S RETURN </h2>
<p>When Captain Newport came back to Virginia, at about the time we were
gathering our scanty harvest, his dreams of sudden wealth, through the
digging of gold in Virginia, had burst as does a bubble when one pricks
it.</p>
<p>He had not been more than four and twenty hours in England before learning
that his ship was laden only with valueless sand, and, mayhap, if the
London Company had not demanded that he return to Virginia at once, with
certain orders concerning us at Jamestown, he might have been too much
ashamed to show his face among us again.</p>
<p>My master had come in long since from trading with the Indians, having had
fairly good success at times, and again failing utterly to gather food.
The king Powhatan was grown so lofty in his bearing, because of the honor
some of our foolish people had shown him, that it was well nigh impossible
to pay the price he asked, even in trinkets, for so small an amount as a
single peck of corn.</p>
<p>However, that which Powhatan did or did not do, concerned me very little
when Captain Newport had arrived, for he brought with him such tidings as
made my heart rejoice, and caused Master Hunt to say that now indeed would
our village of Jamestown grow as it should have grown had our leaders
shown themselves of half as much spirit as had my master.</p>
<p>But for the greater things which followed Captain Newport's arrival in
September of the year 1608, I would have set it down as of the utmost
importance to us in Jamestown, that he brought with him the first two
women, other than the girl Pocahontas, who had ever come into our town.</p>
<p>These were Mistress Forest, and her maid, Anne Burras, and if the king
himself had so far done us the honor as to come, his arrival would have
caused no greater excitement.</p>
<p>Every man and boy in the settlement pressed forward eager even to touch
the garments of these two women as they came ashore in the ship's small
boat, and I dare venture to say that we stared at them, Nathaniel and I
among the number, even as the savages stared at us when first we landed.</p>
<p>It would have been more to my satisfaction had there been two maids,
instead of only one and her mistress, for it was more than likely servants
could tell Nathaniel and me many things about our care of the house, which
a great lady would not well know. Therefore, as I viewed the matter, we
could well spare fine women, so that we had maids who would understand of
what we as houseboys stood mostly in need.</p>
<p>However, it was not with these women, who were only two among seventy,
that had come with Captain Newport on this his third voyage, that I was
most deeply concerned, and how I learned that which pleased me so greatly
shall be set down exactly as it happened.</p>
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<h2> MASTER HUNT BRINGS GREAT NEWS </h2>
<p>I had been down at the landing place, feasting my eyes upon the ship which
had so lately come from the country I might never see again, and was
trying to cheer myself by working around the house in the hope of pleasing
Captain Smith, when Master Hunt came in with a look upon his face such as
I had not seen since the sickness first came among us, and, without
thinking to be rude, I asked him if it was the arrival of the women which
pleased him so greatly.</p>
<p>"It is nothing of such fanciful nature, Richard Mutton," the good man
replied with a smile, "though I must confess that it is pleasing to see
women with white faces, when our eyes have beheld none save bearded men
for so long a time. What think you has been done in the Council this day,
since Captain Newport had speech with President Ratcliffe?"</p>
<p>Verily I could not so much as guess what might have happened, for those
worshipful gentlemen were prone at times to behave more like foolish
children, than men upon whom the fate of a new country depended, and I
said to Master Hunt much of the same purport.</p>
<p>"They have elected your master, Captain John Smith, President of the
Council, Richard Mutton, and now for the first time will matters in
Jamestown progress as they should."</p>
<p>"My master President of the Council at last!" I cried, and the good
preacher added:</p>
<p>"So it is, lad, as I know full well, having just come from there."</p>
<p>"But how did they chance suddenly to gather their wits?" I cried with a
laugh, in which Master Hunt joined.</p>
<p>"It was done after Captain Newport had speech with Master Ratcliffe, and
while I know nothing for a certainty, there is in my mind a strong belief
that he brought word from the London Company for such an election to be
made. At all events, it is done, and now we shall see Jamestown increase
in size, even as she would have done from the first month we landed here
had Captain John Smith been at the head of affairs."</p>
<p>The good preacher was so delighted with this change in the government that
he unfolded all his budget of news, forgetting for the time being, most
like, that he was not speaking to his equal, and thus it was I learned
what were Captain Newport's instructions from the London Company.</p>
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<h2> CAPTAIN NEWPORT'S INSTRUCTIONS </h2>
<p>He was ordered, if you please, not to return to England without bringing
back a lump of gold, exploring the passageway to the South Sea, or finding
some of Sir Walter Raleigh's lost colony, of which I will tell you later.</p>
<p>But whether he did the one or the other, he had been commanded to crown as
a king, Powhatan, and had brought with him mock jewels and red robes for
such a purpose.</p>
<p>To find a lump of gold, after he had brought to England a shipload of
yellow sand!</p>
<p>To crown Powhatan king, when, to our sorrow, he was already showing
himself far more of a king than was pleasing or well for our town of
James!</p>
<p>Forgetting I was but a lad, and had no right to put blame on the shoulders
of my leaders and betters, or even to address Master Hunt as if I were a
man grown, I cried out against the foolishness of those people in London
for whom we were striving to build up a city, saying very much that had
better been left unsaid, until the good preacher cried with a laugh:</p>
<p>"We can forgive them almost anything, Dicky Mutton, since they have made
our Captain Smith the head of the government in this land of Virginia."</p>
<p>And now I will tell you, as Master Hunt told me, the story of this lost
colony of Roanoke, which the London Company had commanded Captain Newport
to find.</p>
<p>You must know that English people had lived in this land of Virginia
before we came here in 1606, and while it does not concern us of
Jamestown, except as we are interested in knowing the fate of our
countrymen, it should be set down, lest we so far forget as to say that
those of us who have built this village are the first settlers in the
land.</p>
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