Neglecting To Provide for the Future
The
one thing which seemed most surprising to us lads, after
Captain Smith had called it to our notice, was that these
people, who knew there could be no question but that the
winter would find them in Jamestown, when there could be
neither roasting ears, peas, beans, nor fowls of the air to
be come at, made no provision for a harvest.
Captain Smith, not being allowed to raise his voice in the
Council, could only speak as one whose words have little
weight, since he was not in authority; but he lost no
opportunity of telling these gold seekers that only those
who sowed might reap, and unless seed was put into the ground,
there would be no crops to serve as food during the winter.
Even Master Wingfield, the President of the Council, refused to
listen when my master would have spoken to him as a friend. He
gave more heed to exploring the land, than to what might be
our fate in the future. He would not even allow the gentlemen
to make such a fort as might withstand an assault by the
savages, seeming to think it of more importance to know what
was to be found on the banks of this river or of that, than
to guard against those brown people who daily gave token of
being unfriendly.
The serving men and laborers were employed in making clapboards
that we might have a cargo with which to fill one of Captain
Newport's ships when he returned from England, according to
the plans of the London Company. The gentlemen roamed here or
there, seeking the yellow metal which had much the same as
caused a madness among them; and, save in the case of Master
Hunt and Captain Smith, none planted even the smallest garden.
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