POCAHONTAS: THE INDIAN GIRL OF THE VIRGINIA FOREST
Sunlight glinting between huge forest
trees, and blue skies over-arching the Indian village
of Werewocomoco on the York River in Virginia, where
Powhatan, the mighty “Werowance,” or ruler
over thirty tribes, was living.
Through Orapakes and Pamunkey and
other forest settlements a long line of fierce warriors
were marching Indian file, on their way to Werewocomoco,
leading a captive white man to Powhatan for inspection
and for sentence. As the warriors passed into
the Indian village, they encountered crowds of dusky
braves and tattooed squaws hurrying along the
wood trails, and when they halted at the central clearing
of the village, the crowd closed in around them to
get a better view of the captive. At the same
time there rose a wild clamor from the rear of the
throng as a merry group of shrieking, shouting girls
and boys darted forward, jostling their way through
the crowd.
Their leader was a slender, straight
young girl with laughing eyes such as are seldom seen
among Indians, and hair as black as a crow’s
wing blown about her cheeks in wild disorder, while
her manner was that of a happy hearty forest maiden.
This was Matoaka, daughter of the Werowance Powhatan,
and although he had many subjects as well as twenty
sons and eleven daughters, not one was ruled so despotically
as was he himself, by this slender girl with laughing
eyes, for whom his pet name was Pocahontas, or in
free translation, “little romp.”
Having established themselves in the
front row of the crowd the girls and boys stood eagerly
staring at the prisoner, for many of them had never
seen a white man before, and as Pocahontas watched,
she looked like a forest flower in her robe of soft
deer-skin, with beaded moccasins on her shapely feet,
coral bracelets and anklets vying with the color in
her dark cheeks, while a white plume drooping over
her disordered hair proclaimed her to be the daughter
of a great chief. In her health and happiness
she radiated a charm which made her easily the ruling
spirit among her mates, and compelled the gaze of the
captive, whose eyes, looking about for some friendly
face among the savage throng, fastened on the eager
little maiden with a feeling of relief, for her bright
glance showed such interest in the prisoner and such
sympathy with him as was to endear her to his race
in later years.
The long line of braves with their
heads and shoulders gaily painted had wound their
slow way through forest, field, and meadow to bring
into the presence of the great “Werowance”
a no less important captive than Captain John Smith,
leader in the English Colony at Jamestown by reason
of his quick wit and stout heart. The settlers
having been threatened with a famine, the brave Captain
had volunteered to go on an expedition among neighboring
Indian villages in search of a supply of corn.
The trip had been full of thrilling adventures for
him, and had ended disastrously in his being taken
prisoner by Opechancanough, the brother of Powhatan.
The news of Smith’s capture having been carried
to the great Werowance, he commanded that the pale-faced
Caucarouse, or Captain, be brought to him for
sentence. And that was why the warriors marched
into Werewocomoco, Opechancanough in the center, with
the firearms taken from Captain Smith and his companions
carried before him as trophies. The prisoner followed,
gripped by three stalwart Indians, while six others
acted as flank guards to prevent his escape, and as
they passed into Werewocomoco they were greeted by
yelling savages brandishing weapons and surging forward
to get a better glimpse of the white captive.
The procession halted for a few minutes at the village
clearing, then moved slowly on to Powhatan’s
“Chief Place of Council,” a long arbor-like
structure where the great Werowance was waiting to
receive Captain Smith.
The crowd of boys and girls followed
in the wake of the warriors until the Council Hall
was reached, when they all dropped back except their
leader. Pushing her hair from her low brow, that
she might see more clearly, and walking with the erectness
of a Werowance’s daughter, Pocahontas entered
the hall and stood near her father where she could
not only watch the white captive, who appealed strongly
to her fancy, but could also note Powhatan’s
expression as he passed judgment on the prisoner.
With inscrutable reserve and majestic
dignity the great ruler bowed as the captive was led
before his rustic throne, where he reclined in a gorgeous
robe of raccoon-skins. On either side of the Council
Hall sat rows of dusky men and women, with their heads
and shoulders painted red, some of the women wearing
garments trimmed with the white down from birds’
breasts, while others wore long chains of white beads
about their necks.
It was a picturesque sight for English
eyes, and fearful though he was of foul play, the
Captain could not but appreciate the brilliant mingling
of gay colors and dark faces. As he stood before
the Chief, there was a clapping of hands to call an
Indian woman, the Queen of the Appamattock, who brought
water to wash the captive’s hands, while another
brought a bunch of feathers to dry them on. “What
next?” Captain Smith wondered as he watched
further preparations being made, evidently for a feast,
of which he was soon asked to partake.
Under the circumstances his appetite
was not keen, but he felt obliged to pretend to a
relish that he did not feel, and while he was eating
his eyes lighted up with pleasure as he saw by her
father’s side-though he did not know
then of the relationship-the little Indian
girl whose interest in him had been so apparent when
he saw her in the village. He dared not smile
in response to her vivid glance, but his gaze lingered
long on the vision of youth and loveliness, and he
turned back to his meal with a better appetite.
The feast at an end, Powhatan called
his councilors to his side, and while they were in
earnest debate Captain Smith knew only too well that
his fate was hanging in the balance. At last a
stalwart brave arose and spoke to the assemblage.
The captive, so he said, was known to be the leading
spirit among the white settlers whose colony was too
near the Indians’ homes to please them, also
in his expedition in search of corn he had killed
four Indian warriors with “mysterious weapons
which spoke with the voice of thunder and breathed
the lightning,” and he had been spying on their
land, trying to find some secret means by which to
betray them. With him out of the way their country
would be freed from a dangerous menace, therefore he
was condemned to death.
Doomed to die! Although he did
not understand their words, there was no misunderstanding
their intention. Immediately two great stones
were rolled into the hall, to the feet of Powhatan,
and the Captain was seized roughly, dragged forward
and forced to lie down in such a position that his
head lay across the stones. Life looked sweet
to him as he reviewed it in a moment of quick survey
while waiting for the warriors’ clubs to dash
out his brains. He closed his eyes. Powhatan
gave the fatal signal-the clubs quivered
in the hands of the executioners. A piercing
shriek rang out, as Pocahontas darted from her father’s
side, sprang between the uplifted clubs of the savages
and the prostrate Captain, twining her arms around
his neck and laying her own bright head in such a
position that to kill the captive would be to kill
the Werowance’s dearest daughter.
With horror at this staying of his
royal purpose, and at the sight of his child with
her arms around the white man’s neck, Powhatan
stared as if at a hideous vision, and closed his ears
to the sound of her voice as her defiant Indian words
rang out:
“No! He shall not die!”
The savages stood with upraised weapons;
Powhatan sat rigid in the intensity of his emotion.
Watching him closely for some sign of relenting, Pocahontas,
without moving from her position, began to plead with
the stern old Chief,-begged, entreated,
prayed-until she had her desire.
“Let the prisoner go free!”
Through the long Council-room echoed
Powhatan’s order, and a perfunctory shout rose
from the savage throng, who were always quick to echo
their Chief’s commands. Captain Smith, bewildered
by the sudden turn of affairs, was helped to rise,
led to the beaming girl, and told that the condition
of his release from death was that he might “make
hatchets and trinkets” for Pocahontas, the Werowance’s
dearest daughter. So his deliverer was the daughter
of the great Chief! With the courtly manner which
he had brought from his life in other lands he bent
over the warm little hand of the Indian maiden with
such sincere appreciation of her brave deed that she
flushed with happiness, and she ran away with her
playmates, singing as merrily as a forest bird, leaving
the pale-faced Caucarouse with her royal father,
that they might become better acquainted. Although
she ran off so gaily with her comrades after having
rescued Captain Smith, yet she was far from heedless
of his presence in the village, and soon deserted
her young friends to steal shyly back to the side of
the wonderful white man whose life had been saved
that he might serve her.
During the first days of his captivity-for
it was that-the Captain and Powhatan became
very friendly, and had many long talks by the camp-fire,
by means of a sign language and such words of the Algonquin
dialect as Captain Smith had learned since coming to
Virginia. And often Pocahontas squatted by her
father’s side, her eager eyes intent on the
Captain’s face as he matched the old ruler’s
marvelous tales of hoarded gold possessed by tribes
living to the west of Werewocomoco, with stories of
the cities of Europe he had visited, and the strange
peoples he had met in his wanderings. Sometimes
as he told his thrilling tales he would hear the little
Indian maid catch her breath from interest in his
narrative, and he would smile responsively into her
upturned face, feeling a real affection for the young
girl who had saved his life.
From his talks with Powhatan the Englishman
found out that the great desire of the savage ruler
was to own some of the cannon and grindstones used
by the colonists, and with quick diplomacy he promised
to satisfy this wish if Powhatan would but let him
go back to Jamestown and send with him warriors to
carry the coveted articles. This the wily Indian
ruler promised to do, and in return offered him a
tract of land which he did not own, and from which
he intended to push the settlers if they should take
possession of it. And Captain Smith had no intention
of giving either cannon or grindstones to Powhatan,
so the shrewd old savage and the quick-witted Captain
were well matched in diplomacy.
Meanwhile, Powhatan’s interest
in his white captive became so great that he gave
him the freedom he would have accorded one of his own
subjects, even allowing Pocahontas to hunt with him,
and when evening came she would sit by the great fire
and listen to her Captain’s stories of his life
told with many a graphic gesture which made them clear
to her even though most of his words were unintelligible.
Then came a day when the captive was
led to a cabin in the heart of the forest and seated
on a mat before a smoldering fire to await he knew
not what. Suddenly Powhatan appeared before him,
fantastically dressed, followed by two hundred warriors
as weirdly decorated as he was. Rushing in, they
surrounded the frightened Captain, but quickly dispelled
his fears by telling him that they were all his friends
and this was only a ceremony to celebrate his speedy
return to Jamestown, for the purpose of sending back
cannon and grindstones to their Chief.
This was good news. The Captain
showed hearty appreciation of the favor, and at once
said his farewells. Powhatan, the inscrutable,
who bade him a dignified good-by, repeated his promise
to give him the country of the Capahowsick, which
he did not own, and said he should forever honor him
as his own son. Then, with an escort of twelve
Indians, Captain Smith set out for Jamestown, and beside
him trudged Pocahontas, looking as resolute as if
she were in truth a forest Princess escorting her
chosen cavalier through the wilderness.
As they picked their way along the
rough trail, the Captain told her such tales of the
settlement as he could make clear to her and repeated
some simple English words he had been trying to teach
her. As he talked and as she said over and over
the words she had learned, Pocahontas gripped his
arm with rapt interest and longed to follow where
he led. But night was coming on, it was unwise
for her to go beyond the last fork of the trail, and
so, reluctantly, she parted from her new and wonderful
friend. But before she left him she darted to
the side of a trusty warrior and gave a passionate
command, then started swiftly back on the long wood
path leading to Werewocomoco. The next night
no one could make her laugh or join in the dances
around the big fire, nor did she show any likeness
to the light-hearted, romping, singing little tomboy,
ringleader among her playmates. Pocahontas had
lost a comrade, and her childish heart was sore at
the loss. But when the warriors returned from
Jamestown she became merry and happy again, for had
the Caucarouse not sent her back strings of
beads more beautiful than any she had ever seen before,
such as proved surely that he had not forgotten her?
The truth of the matter was, that
on reaching the colony, Captain Smith showed the Indians
a grindstone and told them to carry it back to Powhatan,
but when they tried to lift it and found its great
weight they were utterly disconcerted. Then the
wily Captain showed them a cannon purposely loaded
with stones, and had it discharged among the icicle-laden
trees, which so terrified the savages that they ran
away and refused to take another look at it.
Then Captain Smith cleverly suggested that they carry
back trinkets in place of the articles which were
so heavy, and the Indians went happily away without
the promised gifts, but bearing many smaller things,
some of which the Captain was thoughtful enough to
suggest be given to Pocahontas as a slight token of
his appreciation of her great service to him.
Little he dreamed, man of the world
though he was, that the small courtesy would mean
as much to the Indian maiden as it did, nor could
he know that from that hour the dreams of Pocahontas
were all to be built around the daily life of the
pale-faced men in the Jamestown settlement. Even
when she joined her playmates in her favorite games
of Gus-ga-e-sa-ta (deer buttons), or Gus-ka-eh
(peach-pit), or even,-tomboy that she was,-when
she turned somersaults with her favorite brother Nantaquaus
and his comrades, she was so far from being her usual
lively self that the boys and girls questioned her
about the reason. In reply she only flung back
her head with an indifferent gesture, and walked away
from them. Later when the great fires blazed
in Council Hall and Long House, she sought the trusty
warrior who had accompanied Captain Smith to Jamestown,
and he gave her such news of the settlers as he had
heard from the Indians who loafed about Jamestown.
They were on friendly terms with the white men, who
let them come and go at will as long as they were peaceful
and did not try to pilfer corn or firearms.
Winter came with its snow and zero
weather, and Pocahontas heard of great hunger and
many privations among the colonists. She held
a long secret conversation with the Indian warrior
who knew of her interest in the pale-faced Caucarouse,
then, at twilight of a bitter cold day, she stole
out from her wigwam, met the warrior at the beginning
of the Jamestown trail, and after carefully examining
the store of provisions which she had commanded him
to bring, she plunged into the gloomy wood trail with
her escort, hurrying along the rough path in the darkness,
until she reached the rough stockade guarding the
entrance to the settlement.
The man on watch, who had heard many
glowing descriptions of the maiden who had saved his
Captain’s life, recognized her at once and admired
her exceedingly as she stood there in her dusky imperiousness,
demanding to see the Captain. Astonished, but
pleased at her coming, Smith quickly came to greet
her and was enthusiastic in his thanks for the provisions
she had brought. Then by the flare of a torch
he showed his eager guest as much of their little
village as could be seen in the fast-falling darkness,
enjoying her questions and her keen interest in such
buildings and articles as she had never seen before.
She responded to the Englishmen’s cordiality
with shy, appreciative glances and would have liked
to linger, but it was too late for her to remain longer,
and the colonists crowded around her with expressions
of regret that she must leave and renewed thanks for
her gifts. Then Pocahontas and her Indian escort
started back toward Werewocomoco, taking the trail
with flying feet that her absence might not be discovered.
From that day she often found her
way to Jamestown, carrying stores of provisions from
her father’s well-filled larder, sometimes going
in broad daylight, with rosy cheeks and flying hair,
after her morning swim in the river, at other times
starting out on her errand of mercy at twilight, always
protected by a faithful warrior who was on terms of
intimacy with the settlers and felt a deep pride in
their admiration for Pocahontas, whom they called
“The Little Angel,” and well they might,
for they would have gone without food many a time
during that bitter winter but for her visits.
As for Powhatan, he was too well accustomed
to the forest excursions of his “dearest daughter,”
and to having her roam the neighboring country at
will, to watch her carefully. He knew that his
daughter was safe on Indian territory, never dreaming
that she would go beyond it, and as her guide was
loyal, there was no one to prevent her from following
out her heart’s desires in taking food to her
Captain and his people.
But as time went on and Powhatan heard
more of the wonderful firearms and useful articles
possessed by the white men, he became not only bitterly
jealous of them, but determined to secure their arms
and articles for his own use. “So when
the valiant Captain made another visit to Werewocomoco
and tried to barter beads and other trinkets for corn,
the old chief refused to trade except for the coveted
firearms, which the Captain declined to give.
But he did give him a boy named Thomas Salvage, whom
Powhatan adopted as his son, and in exchange gave
Smith an Indian boy, Namontack. Then there were
three days of feasting and dancing, but of trading
there was none, and Captain Smith was determined to
get corn.” He showed Powhatan some blue
beads which took the Indian ruler’s fancy and
he offered a small amount of corn in exchange for
them, but the Captain laughed scornfully. Those
beads were the favorite possession of Kings and Queens
in other countries, why should they be sold to Powhatan?
he asked. Powhatan became eager-offered
more corn. The Captain hesitated, shook his head,
and played his part in the transaction so well that
when at last he gave in, he had secured three hundred
bushels of corn for the really worthless beads!
In the following months the Indians
threw off their mask of friendliness for the colonists
and began to steal the firearms so coveted by Powhatan.
For some time the white men were patient under the
annoyance, but when knives and swords began to go,
a watch was set for the thieves, and nine of them
were caught and detained at the Jamestown fort, for
Captain Smith suspected treachery on Powhatan’s
part and determined to hold them until all the stolen
articles were sent back. In return the Indians
captured two straggling Englishmen and came in a shouting
throng to the fort clamoring for the release of the
imprisoned Indians. Out came the bold Captain
and demanded the instant freeing of the settlers.
His force and tactics were so superior to those of
the savages that they were obliged to give up their
captives. Then the Captain examined his Indian
prisoners and forced them into a confession of Powhatan’s
plot to procure all the weapons possible from the
colonists, which were then to be used to kill their
rightful owners. That was all the Captain wanted
of the Indians, but he still kept them imprisoned,
to give them a wholesome fright. Powhatan, enraged
at hearing of the failure of his plot against the
white men, determined that his warriors should be freed
at once. He would try another way to gain his
end. From his rustic throne in the Council Hall
he sent for Pocahontas. She was playing a game
of Gawasa (snow-snake) with two of her comrades, but
left them instantly and ran to the Council Hall.
Long and earnestly Powhatan talked to her, and she
listened intently. When he had finished a pleased
expression flashed into her black eyes.
“I will do what you wish,”
she said, then ran back to join in the game she had
left so suddenly.
The next morning she went swiftly
along the forest trail now so familiar to her, and
at length approached the settlers’ stockade and
demanded audience with the Captain. He was busy
chopping trees at the other end of the settlement,
but dropped his ax at the summons and hurried to bid
the little maiden welcome with the courtly deference
he always showed her, whether he really felt it or
not. With folded arms and intent silence he listened
to her plea:
For her sake would he not give up
the Indians detained in the fort as prisoners?
Powhatan was very anxious that the pleasant relations
between himself and the Englishmen should not be disturbed
by such an unfriendly act as holding his men captive.
Would the noble Caucarouse not free them for
the sake of that maiden who had saved his life?
Captain Smith listened with a set
expression and soldierly bearing and tried to evade
glancing into the girl’s eager eyes, but found
it impossible. One look broke down his iron determination,
and bending over her hand with his Old World chivalry,
he said:
“Your request shall be granted.
They shall be freed, but not in justice, simply as
an act of friendship for you, who saved my life.”
His intention was clear, though his
words were not understood. Joyfully Pocahontas
beamed and blushed her rapturous thanks. Smith,
none too happy over the result of Powhatan’s
shrewd move, called forth the sullen warriors from
the fort, and sent them on their way back to Werewocomoco,
led by victorious Pocahontas.
But the Indian girl did not spend
all of her time in such heroic deeds as this, nor
in dreaming of the pale-faced Caucarouse.
She was usually the merry, care-free child of the
forest and daily led her mates in sport and dance.
Once when the Captain went to Werewocomoco to confer
with Powhatan on matters concerning neighboring tribes,
and found the great Chief away from home, Pocahontas
did the honors of the village in her father’s
place. After sending an Indian runner to request
the old ruler to return, she invited Smith and his
companions to be seated in an open space before the
huge fire which had been built for their benefit.
There, with the clear starlit sky
over their heads, and the forest on all sides, they
awaited the pleasure of their dusky hostess. But
she remained away from them for so long that they
grew uneasy, fearing some plot against them.
While the Captain was wondering what to do in case
of treachery, the woods suddenly resounded with wild
shrieks and hideous yells. All jumped to their
feet, but stepped back at sight of Pocahontas, who
darted from the woods to the Captain’s side and
said that there was nothing to fear, that she would
not allow a hair of the white men’s heads to
be injured, but had merely arranged a masquerade to
amuse her guests while they awaited Powhatan’s
coming. Then she flitted back into the forest,
and presently she danced out, leading a band of thirty
young Indian girls, whose bodies were all stained with
puccoon and painted with gay colors, while such garments
as they wore were made of brilliant green leaves.
“Pocahontas, as leader, wore a head-dress of
buck’s horns and girdle of otter-skin; across
her shoulder was slung a quiver filled with arrows,
and she carried a bow. Her companions all carried
rattles made of dried gourds, or clubs, or wooden
swords as they rushed out of the forest yelling and
swaying to weird music while they formed a ring around
the fire. There they joined hands and kept on
dancing and singing in a weird, fantastic way for
an hour, when at a whoop from their leader they all
ran into the forest, but soon came back in their ordinary
Indian dress, to spread a feast before the white men
and spend the remainder of the evening in dancing
and revels, after which, by the light of flaming torches,
they escorted their guests to their tents for the
night.”
The next morning Powhatan came back,
and was told Captain Smith’s errand. He
had come to invite the old Werowance to visit Jamestown,
to receive gifts which Captain Newport, a colonist
who had just come back from England, had brought from
King James. The King had been much interested
in what Newport told him about the Indian ruler, and
thought it would be a fine idea to send him back some
presents, also a crown, which he suggested might be
placed on the savage’s head with the ceremonies
of a coronation, and the robe thrown over his shoulders,
while he was proclaimed Emperor of his own domains.
This ceremony, King James thought, might bring about
a warmer friendship between the red men and the colonists,-a
result much to be desired. And so Captain Smith
gave the invitation while Pocahontas, never far away
when her Caucarouse was at Werewocomoco, listened
eagerly for her father’s reply.
Powhatan received the invitation in
silence and smoked a long time before answering.
Then he said:
“If your King has sent me presents,
I also am a King, and this is my land. Eight
days will I stay to receive them. Your father
(Newport) is to come to me, not I to him, nor yet
to your fort.”
Wily Powhatan! He had no intention
of visiting the white men’s stronghold, when
by so doing he might walk into some trap they had
laid for him!
And so Pocahontas was disappointed
in her eager hope of going with her father to the
settlement where her white friends lived, and where
she could see her wonderful Captain daily. But
there was no help for it. Powhatan resisted both
her pleading and the arguments of the Captain, who
was obliged to carry back the old Werowance’s
refusal to Captain Newport.
“Then we will take the gifts
to him!” said Newport, stoutly. “The
King would never forgive me if I did not carry out
his wish.”
And so to Werewocomoco went the two
Captains together, bearing their offerings to Powhatan,
who received them with dignity, and showed a mild
interest when presented with a bedstead and a basin
and pitcher such as the English used. But when
Captain Smith tried to throw the coronation robe over
his shoulders he drew away haughtily, wrapped his
own mantle around him, and refused to listen to argument
or entreaty. Namontack hastily assured him that
the garments were like those worn by the English and
would do him no harm, and Pocahontas, seeing the Captain’s
eagerness to accomplish his end, and also keenly interested
in this new game, begged her father to accept the beautiful
gifts. Her words influenced the old ruler, and,
standing as stiff and straight as a wooden image,
he let himself be dressed up in the garb of English
royalty. Then he was told to kneel while the crown
was placed on his head, but this was too much for
even Pocahontas to expect of him. He folded his
arms and stood like a pine-tree. In vain Pocahontas
urged, in vain the two white men bent and bowed and
knelt before him to show him what he ought to do.
At last Captain Smith grew impatient
and laid a powerful hand on the Werowance’s
broad shoulders; unconsciously he stooped. The
crown was hurriedly placed on his head, and a volley
of shots was fired to show that the ceremony was over.
At the shots Powhatan sprang free like a wild creature,
sure that he had been trapped, and Captain Smith appealed
to Pocahontas to explain to her terrified father that
the firing was only part of the program. Meanwhile
both Captains bowed ceremoniously before the savage
ruler, calling him by his new title-Emperor-and
finally soothed and reassured, he stood as erect and
dignified as of old, and beckoning majestically to
Namontack, bade him bring his old moccasins and mantle
to send to King James in return for the crown and
robe!
Much amused, Captain Newport thanked
him and received the gift, but told him that more
than moccasins or mantles, the Englishmen desired
his aid in attacking a neighboring and hostile tribe.
In this desire, however, Powhatan showed no interest,
and the two Captains were obliged to leave Werewocomoco
without his co-operation, which would have been of
much benefit in subduing the unfriendly tribe.
But the coronation ceremony had been accomplished;
that was one thing for which to be thankful and Captain
Newport had for the first time seen the charming Indian
girl who had become such an ally of the settlers,
so he felt well repaid for the visit, although to him
Pocahontas showed none of the spontaneous sympathy
which she gave so joyously to Captain Smith.
And now again came winter and with
it privation and hunger for the colonists. Corn
must be procured. There was only one man stout-hearted
enough to venture on another expedition in search of
it, and that was Captain Smith. He decided to
go to Werewocomoco once more, and if he found the
new-made Emperor rebellious, to promptly make him prisoner
and carry away his stores of corn by force.
While the Captain and his men were
making ready to start on the expedition, to their
great surprise messengers arrived from Powhatan inviting
Captain Smith to visit Werewocomoco again if he would
bring with him men to build a house and give the Emperor
a grindstone, fifty swords, some firearms, a hen and
rooster, and much beads and copper, for which he would
be given corn.
Immediately forty-six Englishmen set
out on a snowy December day, in two barges and a pinnace,
for Werewocomoco. The first night they spent
at the Indian village of Warrasqueake, where a friendly
chief warned Captain Smith not to go further.
“You shall find Powhatan to
use you kindly,” he said, “but trust him
not, and be sure he have no opportunity to seize on
your arms, for he hath sent for you only to cut your
throats.”
On hearing these words many of his
comrades would have turned back, but the Captain spoke
to them in such courageous words that in spite of
the warning all continued on their way.
While they were journeying on toward
their destination, Pocahontas, at Werewocomoco, was
daily with her father, watching him with alert ears
and eyes, for she saw that the old ruler was brooding
over some matter of grave import, and she drew her
own inference. Only when planning to wage war
on an alien tribe or plotting against the Jamestown
settlers did he so mope and muse and fail to respond
to her overtures. Late one evening, when she
saw two of his loyal warriors steal to his side, in
order to hear their conversation better she climbed
a near-by tree and listened to their muttered words.
Her suspicions were confirmed. There was need
of her intervention again. From that moment until
she had foiled Powhatan’s design, she was on
guard day and night watching and waiting for the coming
of the Englishmen, often lying sleepless in her wigwam
to listen for some unwonted noise in the hushed forest.
When the party from Jamestown reached
the Indian village the river was frozen over for a
half-mile from shore. With his usual impetuous
courage the Captain broke the ice by jumping into the
frozen stream, and swam ashore, followed by the others,
who were ashamed to be less courageous than he.
It was nearly night, and they took possession of a
deserted wigwam in the woods near the shore and sent
word to Powhatan that they were in immediate need
of food, as their journey had been a long one, and
asked if he would not send provisions at once.
In response an Indian runner came to their wigwam
bearing bread, turkeys, and venison, much to the delight
of the half-starved colonists. Refreshed by a
good meal, they slept heavily in the still forest,
and early the next morning went to pay their respects
to Powhatan, who was in his “Chief Place of
Council” awaiting their visit in his gala robe
of luxurious skins and elaborate feather head-dress.
His greeting was courteous, but he at once turned
to Captain Smith and asked:
“When are you going away?
I did not invite you to come.”
Although taken by surprise, quick-witted
Captain Smith did not show his feelings, but pointing
to a group of Indian warriors standing near, he said:
“There are the very men who
came to Jamestown to invite us here!”
At this Powhatan gave a guttural laugh
and changed the subject at once, by asking to see
the articles which Captain Smith had brought for exchange.
Then began a long and hot discussion in which neither
the Captain nor the wily Emperor gained a point.
Powhatan refused to trade unless the white men left
their firearms on their barges and would barter corn
only for the coveted articles. Captain Smith would
not accede to his demands even to get the much-needed
corn, and was on his guard because of the warning
he had received, knowing that Powhatan was only waiting
for the right moment to kill him.
The debate went on for hours, during
which there had been only one trade made when Smith
exchanged a copper kettle for forty bushels of corn.
Annoyed at this, he determined to take matters into
his own hand. Beckoning to some friendly Indians,
he asked them to go to the river bank and signal to
his men on the barges to come ashore with baskets
to take back the corn for which he had traded the kettle.
Meanwhile he kept up a brisk conversation with the
old Werowance to divert his attention, assuring him
that on the next day he and his men would leave their
firearms on the ships, trusting to Powhatan’s
promise that no harm should come to them.
Powhatan was too clever to be fooled
by any such delightful promise; he knew the quick-witted
Captain was probably playing the same game that he
was, and feared lest the white man should be quicker
than he at it. He slyly whispered a command to
a young warrior, and at a sign from him two gaily
decorated squaws darted forward and, squatting
at the feet of the Captain, began to sing tribal songs
to the beating of drums and shaking of rattles, and
while they sang Powhatan silently drew his fur robe
about him and stole away to a forest retreat long
prepared for an hour of danger. Before him went
a supply of provisions, and with him some women and
children, but not Pocahontas. Meeting her father
in his hasty flight, she listened to his request that
she go with him, but with a laughing gesture of refusal
she fled through the woods to the place where the
white men were grouped. The old Chief’s
power over his daughter had been greatly weakened by
the coming of the colonists to Jamestown, and who
knows what a fire of envy that may have kindled in
his heart?
As soon as the Emperor reached his
hiding-place, he sent an old Sachem in war paint and
feathers back to Captain Smith, bearing a valuable
bracelet as an offering, and saying that his chief
had fled because he feared the white man’s weapons,
but if they could be laid aside, he, Powhatan, would
return to give the colonists an abundance of corn.
Captain Smith, with arms folded and flashing eyes,
refused the bracelet and the request, and the Sachem
went back to carry the news to Powhatan.
Pocahontas had watched the interview
with breathless interest, and when she saw the old
warrior turn away, and knew that Captain Smith had
foiled her father’s intent, she knew that the
brave Caucarouse was in great danger.
That night, while all the Englishmen except their
leader were out hunting, the Captain sat alone in his
wigwam musing on ways and means to gain his end.
There was a sound in the still forest-a
crackling of underbrush-he roused at a light
touch on his arm. Pocahontas stood by his side,
alone in the darkness; swiftly she whispered her message
and he understood its gravity only too well.
“My father is going to send
you food, and, if you eat it, you will die,”
she said. “It is not safe for you to stay
here any longer. Oh, go! I beg you, go!”
She was shivering in her fear for
his safety, and the Captain was deeply moved by her
emotion. Raising her hand to his lips in his
wonted fashion, he thanked her and offered her the
choicest beads in his store for a remembrance, but
she would not accept them!
“He would want to know where
I got them, and then he would kill me, too,”
she said, and vanished as silently and swiftly as she
had come.
As she had reported, soon there came
warriors from Powhatan bearing huge vessels filled
with food, smoking hot. The Chief had returned
to Werewocomoco, they said, and wished to show his
good-will to the white men. Would they partake
of a feast which he had sent?
They set down their burden of tempting
food, and the Captain’s eyes gleamed; with a
profound bow he thanked Powhatan for his courtesy,
but he said:
“When we English make a feast
for any one, we ourselves first taste each dish before
we offer it to our guests. If you would have me
eat what you have brought, you must first taste of
each dish yourselves.”
His manner was defiant as he stood
waiting for them to accept his challenge, and, seeing
they made no move to touch what they had brought,
he said, still more defiantly:
“Tell your Chief to come on
and attack us. We are ready for you!”
So soldierly was he, that the frightened
Indians turned and fled, while the colonists hastily
threw away the food Powhatan had sent. The old
ruler had again been checkmated by his daughter’s
loyalty to the white men and the Captain’s courage.
Early the next morning, when the tide
was right, the white men were able to leave Werewocomoco,
and all on board the barges drew sighs of relief as
they sailed away from the Emperor’s stronghold.
While they had been absent from Jamestown
a party had set out for a neighboring island, but
a great storm having come up, their boat had been
swamped and all on board drowned. As they were
the men who had been left in charge of the colony
during Smith’s absence, it was necessary to
send him word immediately, and one of the survivors,
Richard Wyffin, was sent on the errand. When he
arrived at Werewocomoco the colonists had left, and
Powhatan was in a sullen fury against them for having
outwitted him. Wyffin’s life was in danger,
and he must escape as quickly as possible. Pocahontas
hurried to his rescue and at a moment when there were
no Indians to see, she took him to a forest hiding-place
where he could safely spend the night. Later,
under cover of the darkness, she crept to the spot,
awakened him and led him to the edge of the woods,
directing him to take the opposite trail from that
on which her father’s braves were watching to
capture him. And so he escaped and joined the
other colonists at Pamunkey, where they had gone from
Werewocomoco, Captain Smith being determined either
to get corn from Opechancanough or to burn his storehouses,
for he, like Powhatan, had promised to trade with
the white men. But he proved treacherous, too,
and Captain Smith, exasperated and desperate, sprang
on him and “in a fierce encounter nearly knocked
the breath out of his huge body, then jammed him up
against the wall, placed the muzzle of his gun at
his breast, and, seizing him by his scalp-lock, dragged
him out into full view of his assembled subjects and
gave him the alternative-
“‘Your corn or your life!’
“Under the circumstances Opechancanough
promptly decided to give the corn, and with a ship
full of the much-needed provisions the settlers sailed
triumphantly back to Jamestown.”
When this was reported to Powhatan
it greatly increased his respect for the pale-faced
Caucarouse, but he was still enraged at the
failure of his plan to kill him, and he commanded his
warriors to capture him as soon as possible; but meanwhile
events occurred which worked for the Captain’s
good. A Chickahominy Indian had stolen various
articles from the settlers, among them a pistol.
He escaped, but his two brothers, who were known to
be his accomplices, were captured and one held in
the Jamestown fort, while the other was told to go
for the pistol, and if he did not return with it in
twelve hours his brother would be hung. Away
went the Indian-while the Captain took
pity on the poor naked wretch imprisoned in the cold
cell and sent him some food and charcoal for a fire-the
fumes from which suffocated him. When his brother
came back with the pistol he lay senseless on the
ground. Captain Smith at once hurried to the spot
and worked so hard to revive him that he recovered,
and the next morning was well enough to leave the
fort with his brother, both of them having been given
substantial presents of copper. The story was
told among the tribe as a miracle, and the belief
became current that to his other virtues the brave
Captain added that of being able to raise men from
the dead. Then one of Powhatan’s warriors
secretly secured a bag of gunpowder and pretended
that he could use it as the English did. His
dusky comrades crowded around to watch him manage the
strange article, but in some way it caught fire, and
blew him, with one or two more, to death. This
happening so awed and terrified those Indians who
saw the accident that they began to be superstitious
about the knowledge of the settlers, who could make
such powerful things obey their will. It was
better to be a friend than foe of the white man, so
even Powhatan concluded, and warriors from all the
neighboring tribes came to Jamestown bringing presents,
also stolen articles, and begging for friendly relations
instead of attempting to capture Captain Smith.
Then came an event which forever changed
the life of Pocahontas, the Captain’s staunch
admirer. He, after having adventured up the James
River to visit a struggling colony there, was sailing
down the river feeling weary and discouraged, as he
had many enemies working against him at Jamestown,
and was so disheartened that he determined to leave
Virginia forever. As he lay musing and trying
to sleep in the stern of the ship, a bag of gunpowder
exploded, wounding him so badly that he leaped into
the water to cool the burning agony of his flesh.
He was rescued and the ship sailed for Jamestown with
all possible haste. His wounds were dressed,
but he was in a dangerous condition and there was
no skilled surgeon to care for him, so his plight was
pitiable. An Indian carried the sad news to Pocahontas,
who at once deserted her comrades for solitary brooding
in the forest. Then she took the long wood trail
to Jamestown. Hours later one of the settlers
found her standing outside the stockade, peering through
the cracks between the logs as though it were some
comfort to see into the village where her Captain
lay-that Captain who held her heart in his
keeping. She would have stood there less quietly
had she known that an enemy of his had stolen into
his cabin and at that very moment was holding a pistol
to the wounded man’s bosom, trying to nerve
himself to do a deed he had been bribed to do!
But his courage failed, his hand dropped, and he crept
out into the silent night, leaving the wounded man
unharmed. While Pocahontas stood on tiptoe outside
the stockade, straining her eager eyes for a glimpse
of the Captain’s cabin, there were footsteps
beside her-a hand was laid on her shoulder,
and a voice asked:
“Why are you here at such an hour, Pocahontas?”
It was one of the colonists who was
Captain Smith’s loyal friend. Pocahontas
turned to him, gripping her slender hands together
in an agony of appeal.
“He is not dead?” she
asked. The man shook his head and a glad light
flashed into the girl’s eyes.
“He has many enemies,”
she said. “Can you do nothing to nurse him
back to health?”
Tears stood in her black eyes, and
her appeal would have softened a heart less interested
in the Captain’s welfare than was her hearer’s.
Promising to watch over the brave Captain and care
for him as his own kin, the white man soothed and
comforted Pocahontas, and at last induced her to leave
her place at the fort and go back to Werewocomoco,
and never did the Captain know of her long vigil for
his sake that night.
Reaching the Indian village without
her absence having been discovered, she went about
her daily routine of work and play as if nothing had
happened, but every sound in the still forest caused
her heart to beat fast, and she was always listening
for an approaching footstep bringing news of her beloved.
Then a warrior brought the tidings-Captain
Smith was dead. Dead! She could not, would
not believe it! Dead! He who was so full of
life and vigor was not dead-that was too
absurd. And yet even as she reasoned with herself,
she accepted the fact without question with the immobility
of her race; and no one guessed the depth of her wound,
even though all the tribe had known of her devotion
to the pale-faced Caucarouse whose life she
had saved.
From that day she went no more to
Jamestown, nor asked for news of the settlers, and
soon the gay voice and the laughing eyes of the “little
romp” were missing, too, from Werewocomoco.
Pocahontas could not bear the sights and sounds of
that village whose every tree and trail was dear to
her because of its association with her Captain.
She had relatives among the Potomacks, and to them
she went for a long visit, where in different surroundings
she could more easily bear the loneliness which overpowered
her, child of a savage and unemotional race though
she was. It may have been also that Powhatan was
beginning to distrust her friendship with the white
men. At all events, she, who was fast blossoming
into the most perfect womanhood of her race, remained
away from home for many months. Had she dreamed
that Captain Smith was not dead, but had sailed for
England that he might have proper care for his injury,
and also because of the increasing enmity against
him in the colony, she would have gone about her work
and play with a lighter heart. But she thought
him dead, and in the mystic faith of her people saw
him living in every tree and cloud and blossoming
thing.
Powhatan had respected Captain Smith,
but for the white men as a race he had more enmity
than liking, and now he and his neighbors, the Chickahominies,
again refused to send any provisions to Jamestown,
and again the colonists faced a famine. Captain
Argall, in command of an English ship, suggested once
more going to Werewocomoco to force Powhatan into
giving them corn, and soon sailed up the Potomac toward
the Indian village. One night on the way up, while
the ship lay at anchor near shore, an Indian came
aboard with the news that the Emperor’s dearest
daughter, Pocahontas, was staying among the Potomacks
visiting a chief named Japazaws. The unscrupulous
Captain had an idea. If he could capture Pocahontas
and hold her for a ransom he would surely be able
to gain anything he demanded from Powhatan. No
thought of the kindness and loyalty of the Indian maiden
to the white man interfered with his scheming.
Corn he must have, and here was a way to obtain it.
He quickly arranged with the Indian for an interview
with the Chief Japazaws, who proved to be quite as
unscrupulous as Captain Argall, and for a copper kettle
promised to deliver Pocahontas into the Captain’s
hands-in fact, to bring her aboard his vessel
on the following day.
Having taken his wife into his confidence,
Japazaws told her in the presence of Pocahontas that
the white Captain had invited her to visit his ship.
She retorted that she would like to accept, but would
not go unless Pocahontas would go too. Japazaws
pretended to be very angry at this:-
“I wish you to go,” he
exclaimed; “if you do not accept I will beat
you until you do.”
But the squaw was firm.
“I will not go without Pocahontas,” she
declared.
Pocahontas was very kind-hearted,
as the chief and his wife knew, so at once she said:
“Stop beating her; I will do as she wishes!”
Captain Argall gave them a cordial
greeting and had a lavish feast prepared in their
honor, and while they were talking together he asked
Pocahontas if she would not like to see the gun-room.
She assented, entirely unsuspicious of any treachery,
and was horrified when she heard the door fastened
behind her, and knew that for some reason she was
a prisoner. Terror-stricken,-brave
girl though she was,-she pounded violently
on the door and cried as she had never cried before
in all her care-free life, begging “Let me out!”
but in vain. She could hear Japazaws and his
wife weeping even more violently than she on the other
side of the door, and begging for her release, but
it was only a pretense. The door remained locked,
and as soon as the couple were given the copper kettle
and a few trinkets, they left the ship contentedly.
After that there was an ominous silence on the vessel,
except for the sobbing of the Indian girl, who was
still more frightened as she felt the motion of the
ship and knew they were getting under way.
But as they sailed down the river
to Jamestown, the captain unlocked the door and the
girl was allowed to come out of her prison. She
faced him with a passionate question:
“What wrong have I done that
I should be so treated-I who have been
always the loyal friend of the English?”
So noble was she in her youth and
innocence, that the captain was horrified at the deed
he had done and could do no less than tell her the
truth. He assured her that she had done no wrong,
that he well knew that she was the white man’s
friend, and that no harm should befall her, but that
it was necessary to take firm measures to secure provisions
for the starving colonists. Hearing this, she
was less frightened and became quiet, if not in spirit,
at least in manner, giving no cause for trouble as
they entered the harbor. But her heart was filled
with sadness when she again saw that fort to which
she had so often gone with aid for her vanished friend
whose name now never passed her lips.
Indian girls mature rapidly, and the
maiden who had first attracted Captain Smith’s
attention was no less lovely now, but she was in the
full flower of womanliness and her charm and dignity
of carriage compelled respect from all.
Powhatan was in his Place of Council
when a messenger from Jamestown demanded audience
with him and gave his message in quick, jerky sentences:
“Your daughter Pocahontas has
been taken captive by the Englishmen,” he said.
“She will be held until you send back to Jamestown
all the guns, tools, and men stolen from them by your
warriors.”
The old chief, terrified, grief-stricken,
and in a dilemma, knew not what to say, for though
he loved his daughter, he was determined to keep the
firearms taken from the English. For a long time
he was deep in thought. Finally he replied:
“The white men will not harm
my child, who was their very good friend. They
know my wrath will fall on them if they harm a hair
of her head. Let her remain with them until I
shall have made my decision.”
Not another word would he say, but
strode out from the Council Hall and was lost in the
forest.
Three months went by without the Englishmen
receiving a word from him, and Pocahontas meanwhile
became their inspiration and joy, giving no sign that
she feared her captors or objected to her captivity.
Then Powhatan sent seven white men who had been held
by the Indians to the settlement, carrying a gun which
had been spoiled for use. Their leader brought
this message from the Indian Emperor:
“If you will send back my daughter
I will send you five hundred bushels of corn and be
your friend forever. I have no more guns to return,
as the remainder have been lost.”
Prompt was the retort:
“Tell your Chief that his daughter
will not be restored to him until our demand has been
complied with. We do not believe that the guns
have been lost.”
The runner took back the message,
and again nothing more was heard from Powhatan for
several months, during which time the colonists became
so deeply attached to the young captive that they dreaded
to think of the settlement without her cheery presence.
Especially did John Rolfe, a young widower, who was
by report “an English gentleman of approved
behavior and honest carriage,” feel a special
interest in the charming young savage; in fact he
fell in love with her, but felt that he must convert
her to the Christian religion before asking her to
become his wife. So he devoted much time to instructing
her in the doctrines of the white man’s faith.
Pocahontas accepted the new religion eagerly, and
little did John Rolfe guess that to her it was the
religion of Captain John Smith,-a new tie
binding her to the man who she believed had gone forever
beyond her sight, but who would be forever dearest
to her loyal heart, untutored girl of the forest though
she was. It is doubtful, too, whether John Rolfe
would ever have made any headway in her affection
had she not believed her beloved Captain to be dead.
However that may have been, she became a convert to
Christianity, and John Rolfe asked her to marry him.
When almost a year had gone by with
no word from Powhatan, the colonists were very angry
and decided to force the issue. A party in command
of Sir Thomas Dale, who had come from England to be
the leader of the Jamestown settlement, sailed for
Werewocomoco, taking Pocahontas with them, hoping
that when Powhatan heard of the presence of his dearest
daughter at his very door he would relent and yield
to their demands.
But Powhatan was not at Werewocomoco.
Anticipating just such a visit, he was in a safe retreat,
and his warriors who thronged to the river bank to
meet the white men at once attacked them, and there
was lively skirmishing until two brothers of Pocahontas
heard of her arrival. Hurrying to the river bank,
they quelled the turmoil and hastily paddled out to
the ship, where they were soon standing beside their
sister, seeing with joy that despite her captivity
she was well and happy, with the same merry light
in her black eyes as she had in her forest days.
Their feeling deepened into awe when with downcast
eyes and flushed cheeks she told them of John Rolfe’s
love for her and of her attachment for him. Their
sister girl of the forest, kin of the red men,-going
to marry an Englishman from that marvelous land across
the sea, of which one of their tribe who had visited
it had brought back the report: “Count
the stars in the sky, the leaves on the trees, and
the sand upon the seashore-such is the number
of the people of England!” Pocahontas, their
little sister, going to marry an Englishman!-the
stalwart Indian boys could scarcely believe the tale,
and on leaving the ship they hurried to their father’s
forest retreat to tell their wondrous tale. The
old Chief listened with inscrutable reserve, but his
eyes gleamed with exultation and in his heart he rejoiced.
His daughter, child of an Indian Werowance, to become
wife of a white man,-the two races to be
united? Surely this would be a greater advantage
than all the firearms that could be bought or stolen!
But if he expected that the breach
between the white men and the red would be at once
healed, he was mistaken. Although Pocahontas greeted
her brothers so cordially, she would have nothing to
do with her father or any of his braves, and when
Powhatan desired to see her she sent back the imperious
message:
“Tell him if he had loved his
daughter he would not have valued her less than old
swords, pieces, and axes; wherefore will I still dwell
with the Englishmen who love me!”
And back to Jamestown she presently
sailed with those men of the race to which she had
been loyal even in her captivity.
That Powhatan did not resent her refusal
to see him after his long silence, but probably admired
her for her determination, was soon shown. Ten
days after the party reached Jamestown an Indian warrior,
Opachisco, uncle of Pocahontas, and two of her brothers,
arrived there, sent by Powhatan to show his approval
of his daughter’s alliance with an Englishman,
although nothing would have induced him to visit the
white man’s settlement himself, even to witness
the marriage of his dearest daughter.
Having become a convert to the white
man’s faith, Pocahontas was baptized according
to the ritual of the Christian church, taking the
name of Rebecca, and as she was the daughter of an
Emperor, she was afterwards called “Lady Rebecca;”
but to those who had known her in childhood she would
ever be Pocahontas, the “little romp.”
And now the Indian maiden, who by
her loyalty to the white race had changed the course
of her life, was about to merge her identity in that
of the colonists:-
“On a balmy April day, with
sunshine streaming through the open windows of the
Jamestown chapel, the rude place of worship was filled
to overflowing with colonists, all eagerly interested
in the wedding of John Rolfe with the dusky princess
who was the first Christian Indian in Virginia.”
The rustic chapel had been decorated
with woodland blossoms, and its windows garlanded
with vines. Its columns were pine-trees cut from
the forest, its rude pews of sweet-smelling cedar,
and its simple Communion table covered with bread
made from wheat grown in neighboring fields, and with
wine from the luscious wild grapes picked in near-by
woods.
There, in the beauty and fragrance
of the spring day, up the aisle of the chapel passed
the young Indian bride on the arm of John Rolfe, who
looked every inch an English gentleman in his cavalier’s
costume. And very lovely was the new-made Lady
Rebecca in her gown of white muslin with its richly
embroidered over-dress given by Sir Thomas Dale.
Her head-dress of birds’ plumage was banded
across her forehead, Indian fashion, with a jeweled
fillet, which also caught her floating veil, worn
in the English way, which emphasized her dark beauty.
On her wrists gleamed many bracelets, and in her deep
eyes was the look of one who glimpses the future and
fears it not.
Slowly they advanced up the aisle,
and halted before the altar, a picturesque procession;
the grave, dignified Englishman, who now and again
cast adoring glances at his girlish bride, of an alien
forest race; the old Chief of a savage tribe, in his
gay ceremonial trappings and head-dress; the two stalwart,
bronzed young braves, keenly interested in this great
event in their sister’s life, all in a strange
commingling of Old World and New, auguring good for
the future of both Indians and colonists.
The minister of the colony repeated
the simple service, and Lady Rebecca, in her pretty
but imperfect English, repeated her marriage vows
and accepted the wedding-ring of civilized races as
calmly as if she had not been by birth a free forest
creature. Then, the service ended, down the aisle,
in the flickering sunlight, passed the procession,
and there at the chapel door, surrounded by the great
forest trees which had been her lifelong comrades,
and with the wide sky spreading over her in blue benediction,
we have a last glimpse of the “little romp,”
for Pocahontas, the Indian maiden, had become Lady
Rebecca, wife of John Rolfe, the Englishman.
Three years later Pocahontas, for
so we still find it in our hearts to call her, visited
England with her husband and little son Thomas, to
see with her own eyes that land across the sea where
her husband had been brought up, and of which she
had heard such wonderful tales. One can well
imagine the wonder of the girl of the forest when she
found herself out of sight of land, on the uncharted
ocean of which she had only skirted the shores before,
and many a night she stole from her cabin during that
long voyage to watch the mysterious sea in its majestic
swell, and the star-sown heavens, as the ship moved
slowly on to its destination.
London, too, was a revelation to her
with its big buildings, its surging crowds of white
men, its marks of civilization everywhere, and, girl
of the outdoors that she had ever been, her presentation
at Court, with all that went before and after of the
frivolities and conventionalities of city life, must
have been a still greater marvel to her. But
the greatest surprise of all awaited her. One
day at a public reception a new-comer was announced,
and without warning she found herself face to face
with that Captain of her heart’s youthful devotion!
There was a moment’s silence, a strained expression
in the young wife’s dark eyes, then Captain
John Smith bent over the hand of John Rolfe’s
wife with the courtly deference he had given in Virginian
days to the little Indian girl who was his loyal friend.
“They told me you were dead!”
It was Pocahontas who with quivering
lips broke the silence, then without waiting for a
reply she left the room and was not seen for hours.
When she again met and talked with the brave Captain,
she was as composed as usual, and no one could say
how deeply her heart was touched to see again the
friend of her girlhood days. Perhaps the unexpected
sight of him brought with it a wave of home-sickness
for the land of her birth and days of care-free happiness,
perhaps she felt a stab of pain that the man to whom
she had given so much had not sent her a message on
leaving the country, but had let her believe the rumor
of his death-perhaps the heart of Pocahontas
was still loyal to her first love, devoted wife and
mother though she was. Whatever may have been
the truth, Lady Rebecca was proud and calm in the presence
of the Captain after that first moment, and had many
conversations with him which increased his admiration
for the gracious forest Princess, now a lady of distinction
in his own land.
The climate of England did not agree
with Pocahontas, her health failed rapidly, and in
the hope that a return to Virginia would save her
life, her husband took passage for home. But it
was too late; after a sickness of only a few hours,
she died, and John Rolfe was left without the vivid
presence which had been his blessing and his joy.
Pocahontas was buried at Gravesend
on the 21st of March, 1617, and as night fell, and
John Rolfe tossed on a bed of anguished memories, it
is said that a man muffled in a great cloak stole through
the darkness and knelt beside the new-made grave with
bowed head and clasped hands.
It was Captain Smith who came to offer
reverent tribute to the girl who had given him so
much, asking nothing in return, a girl of savage lineage,
yet of noble character and great charm, whose blossoming
into the flower of civilization had no parallel.
Alone there, in the somber night, the silent figure
knelt-the brave Captain of her loyal devotion
paying tardy homage to Pocahontas, the girl of the
Virginia forest, the white man’s steadfast friend.