[21] Subsequently Mr. Winslow wrote, correcting this statement: “Whereas, myself and others, in former letters, wrote that the Indians about us are a people without any religion or knowledge of any God, therein I erred, though we could then gather no better.”—Winslow’s Good News.

[22] There is some uncertainty about this word, but this is probably the true reading.

[23] Mr. George Morton, to whom this letter was addressed, came out in the next ship, the Ann, which sailed from London about the last of April, 1622.

[24] Memoir of the Colony of Plymouth, by Francis Baylies. Part the First, page 91.

[25] Winslow in Young; p. 290.

[26] History of Plymouth Plantation, by William Bradford, p. 127.

[27] Young’s Chronicles of the Pilgrims, p. 295.

[28] Mr. Weston had formerly befriended the plantation at Plymouth.

[29] Winslow in Young, p. 297.

[30] Young’s Chronicles; p. 299.