登陆注册
19682700000019

第19章 CHAPTER VI. SIR THOMAS DALE(3)

It might seem that Virginia was headed to become a land of fishers, of foresters, and vine dressers, perhaps even, when the gold should be at last discovered, of miners. At home, the colonizing merchants and statesmen looked for some such thing. In return for what she laded into ships, Virginia was to receive English-made goods, and to an especial degree woolen goods, "a very liberall utterance of our English cloths into a maine country described to be bigger than all Europe." There was to be direct trade, country kind for country kind, and no specie to be taken out of England. The promoters at home doubtless conceived a hardy and simple trans-Atlantic folk of their own kindred, planters for their own needs, steady consumers of the plainer sort of English wares, steady gatherers, in return, of necessaries for which England otherwise must trade after a costly fashion with lands which were not always friendly. A simple, sturdy, laborious Virginia, white men and Indians if this was their dream, reality was soon to modify it.

A new commodity of unsuspected commercial value began now to be grown in garden-plots along the James the "weed" par excellence, tobacco. That John Rolfe who had been shipwrecked on the Sea Adventure was now a planter in Virginia. His child Bermuda had died in infancy, and his wife soon after their coming to Jamestown. Rolfe remained, a young man, a good citizen, and a Christian. And he loved tobacco. On that trivial fact hinges an important chapter in the economic history of America. In 1612 Rolfe planted tobacco in his own garden, experimented with its culture, and prophesied that the Virginian weed would rank with the best Spanish. It was now a shorter plant, smaller-leafed and smaller-flowered, but time and skilful gardening would improve it.

England had known tobacco for thirty years, owing its introduction to Raleigh. At first merely amused by the New World rarity, England was now by general use turning a luxury into a necessity. More and more she received through Dutch and Spanish ships tobacco from the Indies. Among the English adventurers to Virginia some already knew the uses of the weed; others soon learned from the Indians. Tobacco was perhaps not indigenous to Virginia, but had probably come through southern tribes who in turn had gained it from those who knew it in its tropic habitat. Now, however, tobacco was grown by all Virginia Indians, and was regarded as the Great Spirit's best gift. In the final happy hunting-ground, kings, werowances, and priests enjoyed it forever. When, in the time after the first landing, the Indians brought gifts to the adventurers as to beings from a superior sphere, they offered tobacco as well as comestibles like deer-meat and mulberries.

Later, in England and in Virginia, there was some suggestion that it might be cultivated among other commodities. But the Company, not to be diverted from the path to profits, demanded from Virginia necessities and not new-fangled luxuries. Nevertheless, a little tobacco was sent over to England, and then a little more, and then a larger quantity. In less than five years it had become a main export; and from that time to this profoundly has it affected the life of Virginia and, indeed, of the United States.

This then is the wide and general event with which John Rolfe is connected.

But there is also a narrower, personal happening that has pleased all these centuries. Indian difficulties yet abounded, but Dale, administrator as well as man of Mars, wound his way skilfully through them all. Powhatan brooded to one side, over there at Werowocomoco. Captain Samuel Argall was again in Virginia, having brought over sixty-two colonists in his ship, the Treasurer. A bold and restless man, explorer no less than mariner, he again went trading up the Potomac, and visited upon its banks the village of Japazaws, kinsman of Powhatan. Here he found no less a personage than Powhatan's daughter Pocahontas. An idea came into Argall's active and somewhat unscrupulous brain. He bribed Japazaws with a mighty gleaming copper kettle, and by that chief's connivance took Pocahontas from the village above the Potomac. He brought her captive in his boat down the Chesapeake to the mouth of the James and so up the river to Jamestown, here to be held hostage for an Indian peace. This was in 1613.

Pocahontas stayed by the James, in the rude settlers' town, which may have seemed to the Indian girl stately and wonderful enough. Here Rolfe made her acquaintance, here they talked together, and here, after some scruples on his part as to "heathennesse," they were married. He writes of "her desire to be taught and instructed in the knowledge of God; her capableness of understanding; her aptnesse and willingnesse to recieve anie good impression, and also the spiritual, besides her owne incitements stirring me up hereunto." First she was baptized, receiving the name Rebecca, and then she was married to Rolfe in the flower-decked church at Jamestown.

Powhatan was not there, but he sent young chiefs, her brothers, in his place. Rolfe had lands and cabins thereupon up the river near Henricus. He called this place Varina, the best Spanish tobacco being Varinas. Here he and Pocahontas dwelled together "civilly and lovingly." When two years had passed the couple went with their infant son upon a visit to England. There court and town and country flocked to see the Indian "princess." After a time she and Rolfe would go back to Virginia. But at Gravesend, before their ship sailed, she was stricken with smallpox and died, making "a religious and godly end," and there at Gravesend she is buried. Her son, Thomas Rolfe, who was brought up in England, returned at last to Virginia and lived out his life there with his wife and children. Today no small host of Americans have for ancestress the daughter of Powhatan. In England-in-America the immediate effect of the marriage was really to procure an Indian peace outlasting Pocahontas's brief life.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 混元仙路

    混元仙路

    乡下小子叶枫,机缘巧合被一位美丽绝伦的仙女选中,步入修仙门派五雷宗。叶枫本来天资奇差,但却发现潜藏在自己体内的秘密,从此一飞冲天。在这个世界上,修真联盟,龙岛凰城,蜀山剑修……数不清的修仙门派无所不能的法宝,通天彻地的修行功法,焚遍万物的稀奇异火……娇俏的天才少女,高冷的小萝莉,温婉的掌教人妻,单纯的龙女,抚媚多姿的天狐妖女……在叶枫的修仙之路上,这些都是他不可或缺的风景。飘渺莫测的天道,如何才能证得?叶枫只知道,一步步坚定地走下去。
  • 绝世仙罗

    绝世仙罗

    大道无情,仙者有意。佛魔隐现,诡计无边……地球商人风扬斩断尘缘,被师尊接引至荧惑星,开启了闯荡仙佛大干世界的传奇人生,走上了一条追逐永生的大道。风扬一路结识朋友,凭借自身机缘闯过各种险境,最终站在宇宙金字塔的巅峰。无尽的宇宙无奇不有,为了逍遥长生,纵死无悔的逐仙者们和天地斗,历无边劫难,于茫茫人世之中找寻逆天改命的机缘。绝世大能虚空遨游星际,穿梭于六界之中,恐怖的仙法可以焚烧星球,上古仙宝可以摧毁虚空。强大的圣兽可以掀起星河谁能续接仙路,演绎一卷壮丽的逐仙史诗,一切尽在石子狂徒著的《绝世仙罗》……
  • 天才魂斗师

    天才魂斗师

    有人问,什么是天才?也许有人会说,学习好、修炼天赋强。当高阳参军的一刻起,人们对天才的定义就变了……
  • 邪少的暗夜天使

    邪少的暗夜天使

    她们是穿梭在黑暗中的精灵,神秘莫测,为了一个月牙之印,一道神秘任务辗转到宇桥贵族学院。他们是高高在上,众人追捧的“宇桥四王子”,他们冷酷,神秘,温柔……原本是两条不相交的平行线,却在一次偶然的际遇中撞出了交点……他们的相遇,相知频频掀起大波,怪事连连……
  • 源神破天

    源神破天

    上古年间,混沌初开,混沌之子为祸世间,为阻止畜牲涂炭生灵,圣天界凌云四圣尊出手擒拿妖畜,此战殃及人,魔,鬼三界,死伤无数。为顾及世间凡灵,四圣尊被混沌之子所伤,无可奈何,唯有以自身性命做牵引,遁起噬日泯天大阵,将妖畜永生永世封印于人界玄天梵州,四圣尊灵力分别融入四个国家,从此之后,天下太平,,,,,千年以后,一个少年,为了自己的梦想,一步步强大,破命劫,斩苍穹,成就万尊之驱,凌驾圣天之上!
  • 都市小子修真记

    都市小子修真记

    一个奇怪的梦,一位美丽而神秘的女子。梦代表什么?而你又是谁?从小被梦境困惑的他,如何走上修真之路?管你万年谜团,管你谁在指使。我会更加强大。我能只手遮天。无人再能阻挡我的脚步!
  • 天才狂妃妖孽小姐

    天才狂妃妖孽小姐

    她,一代杀手之皇,却与人同归于尽,穿到异世,好不容易才得到的温情又被无情收走,娘亲死亡,弟弟失踪,继而又被拐了,当她破开重重迷雾时才发现,她并非娘亲所生,她该如何?她的亲生父母究竟是谁?她又该归往何处?他,帝国太子,却沦落为街头乞丐,本以为早已无心时偏偏遇上了她,他才知,他的心,只为她怦然心动。魔神重生,魔将终归,且看他们携手一步一步踏上巅峰!
  • 异界之纵横瓦罗兰

    异界之纵横瓦罗兰

    lol黄铜五的理论大神林洛,魂穿异界瓦罗兰大陆,来到一个因为瓦罗兰之心而破家的少年身上。发现原来传说中的瓦罗兰知心竟然是带有一个超神系统。在这个根英雄联盟似是而非的大路上,拥有能够兑换英雄联盟里的装备的超神系统,林洛能不能从黄铜蜕变成为王者呢?(这是一本好书,要是不好看,你觉得受骗了的话……你丫的来咬我啊!)
  • 一世婚殇:冷心boss绝情妻

    一世婚殇:冷心boss绝情妻

    厨房里的诡异血迹,饭碗里的奇怪肉汤,突然改口的算命瞎子……赵小怜的生活突然陷入前所未有的恐惧当中!预置胎儿于死地的狠心婆婆,郁郁寡欢的无奈公公,无动于衷的木讷丈夫,不作不会死的神经小姑子……贺家这个母权社会里,谁心怀鬼胎?谁两面三刀?谁又步步算计登堂入室?本是求个安稳嫁进来,才发现,吃人的恶鬼从来都是不吐骨头的!
  • 邪王追妻:鬼医三小姐

    邪王追妻:鬼医三小姐

    她,是21世纪的孤儿。被培养成杀人于无形的人,有着妙手回春的医术,不料意外来到这个陌生的世界,给予她前世未曾有过的亲情。在这里,她一路往上打,直到他和她挽手站在了最高巅峰。她,一直有个原则,人不犯我我不犯人,人若犯我,定将十倍奉还!【男强+女强】片段:某男衣着半敞,露出精壮的胸膛,单手支撑着头,笑得一脸风骚的看着她,脸上写着:快来扑倒我啊!结果,某男的属下们看到了,他们尊贵无比的主上大人再一次被冰姑娘给丢了出来……嗯,算起来这已经是第十次了吧。