It is in Smith's own writings, "General Historie of Virginia" and "A True Relation," that we find the best and fullest accounts of these first days at Jamestown. He tells us not only what happened, but how the new country looked; what kinds of game abounded; how the Indians lived, and what his impressions of their customs were. Smith was ignorant of certain facts about the Indians with which we are now familiar. The curious ceremony which took place in the hut in the forest, just before Powhatan freed Smith and allowed him to return to Jamestown, was one he could not comprehend. Modern historians believe that it was probably the ceremony of adoption by which Smith was made one of the tribe.

In many places in this story I have not only followed closely Smith's own narrative of what occurred, but have made use of the very words in which he recorded the conversations. For instance the incident related on page [101] was set down by Smith himself; on pages [144], [154], [262] the words are those of Smith as given in his history; on pages [173], [195], [260], [300] the words of Powhatan or Pocahontas as Smith relates them.

There may be readers of this story who will want to know what became of Pocahontas. She fell ill of a fever just as she was about to sail home for Virginia and died in Gravesend, where she was buried. Her son Thomas Rolfe was educated in England and went to Virginia when he was grown. His daughter Jane married John Bolling, and among their descendants have been many famous men and women, including Edith Bolling (Mrs. Galt) who married President Woodrow Wilson.


CONTENTS

[INTRODUCTION]
[CONTENTS]
[ILLUSTRATIONS]
[CHAPTER I. THE RETURN Of THE WARRIORS]
[CHAPTER II. POCAHONTAS AND THE MEDICINE MAN]
[CHAPTER III. MIDNIGHT IN THE FOREST]
[CHAPTER IV. RUNNING THE GAUNTLET]
[CHAPTER V. THE GREAT BIRDS]
[CHAPTER VI. JOHN SMITH'S TEMPTATION]
[CHAPTER VII. A FIGHT IN THE SWAMP]
[CHAPTER VIII. POCAHONTAS DEFIES POWHATAN]
[CHAPTER IX. SMITH'S GAOLER]
[CHAPTER X. THE LODGE IN THE WOOD]
[CHAPTER XI. POCAHONTAS VISITS JAMESTOWN]
[CHAPTER XII. POWHATAN'S AMBASSADOR]
[CHAPTER XIII. POWHATAN'S CORONATION]
[CHAPTER XIV. A DANGEROUS SUPPER]
[CHAPTER XV. A FAREWELL]
[CHAPTER XVI. CAPTAIN ARGALL TAKES A PRISONER]
[CHAPTER XVII. POCAHONTAS LOSES A FRIEND]
[CHAPTER XVIII. A BAPTISM IN JAMESTOWN]
[CHAPTER XIX. JOHN ROLFE]
[CHAPTER XX. THE WEDDING]
[CHAPTER XXI. ON THE TRAIL OF A THIEF]
[CHAPTER XXII. POCAHONTAS IN ENGLAND]

ILLUSTRATIONS

[The white figure moved rapidly]
["We choose to-day," he cried]
["Let us be friends and allies, oh Powhatan"]
["I will lead the princess"]
[Virginia in 1606—from Captain John Smith's Map]
["Nay, nay," cried Pocahontas, "thou must not go"]
["Do not shoot, Mark!"]