登陆注册
26324800000016

第16章 CHAPTER V. THE "SEA ADVENTURE"(3)

The Sea Adventure was but a wreck pinned between the reefs. No sail was seen upon the blue water. Where they were thrown, there Gates and Somers and Newport and all must stay for a time and make the best of it. They builded huts and thatched them, and they brought from the wrecked ship, pinned but half a mile from land, stores of many kinds. The clime proved of the blandest, fairest; with fishing and hunting they maintained themselves.

Days, weeks, and months went by. They had a minister, Master Buck. They brought from the ship a bell and raised it for a church-bell. A marriage, a few deaths, the birth of two children these were events on the island. One of these children, the daughter of John Rolfe, gentleman, and his wife, was christened Bermuda. Gates and Somers held kindly sway. The colonists lived in plenty, peace, and ease. But for all that, they were shipwrecked folk, and far, far out of the world, and they longed for the old ways and their own kin. Day followed day, but no sail would show to bear them thence; and so at last, taking what they could from the forests of the island, and from the Sea Adventure, they set about to become shipwrights.

And there two gallant pynases, Did build of Seader-tree, The brave Deliverance one was call'd, Of seaventy tonne was shee, The other Patience had to name, Her burthen thirty tonne . . . .

. . . The two and forty weekes being past They hoyst sayle and away;

Their shippes with hogges well freighted were, Their harts with mickle joy.

And so to Virginia came . . .

What they found when they came to Virginia was dolor enough. On Jamestown strand they beheld sixty skeletons "who had eaten all the quick things that weare there, and some of them had eaten snakes and adders." Somers, Gates, and Newport, on entering the town, found it "rather as the ruins of some auntient fortification than that any people living might now inhabit it."

A pitiable outcome, this, of all the hopes of fair "harbours and habitations," of golden dreams, and farflung dominion. All those whom Raleigh had sent to Roanoke were lost or had perished. Those who had named and had first dwelled in Jamestown were in number about a hundred. To these had been added, during the first year or so, perhaps two hundred more. And the ships that had parted from the Sea Adventure had brought in three hundred. First and last, not far from seven hundred English folk had come to live in Virginia. And these skeletons eating snakes and adders were all that remained of that company; all those others had died miserably and their hopes were ashes with them.

What might Sir Thomas Gates, the Governor, do? "That which added most to his sorowe, and not a little startled him, was the impossibilitie. . how to amend one whitt of this. His forces were not of habilitie to revenge upon the. Indian, nor his owne supply (now brought from the Bermudas) sufficient to relieve his people." So he called a Council and listened in turn to Sir George Somers, to Christopher Newport, and to "the gentlemen and Counsaile of the former Government." The end and upshot was that none could see other course than to abandon the country. England-in-America had tried and failed, and had tried again and failed. God, or the course of Nature, or the current of History was against her. Perhaps in time stronger forces and other attempts might yet issue from England. But now the hour had come to say farewell!

Upon the bosom of the river swung two pinnaces, the Discovery and the Virginia, left by the departing ships months before, and the Deliverance and the Patience, the Bermuda pinnaces. Thus the English abandoned the little town that was but three years old. Aboard the four small ships they went, and down the broad river, between the flowery shores, they sailed away.

Doubtless under the trees on either hand were Indians watching this retreat of the invaders of their forests. The plan of the departing colonists was to turn north, when they had reached the sea, and make for Newfoundland, where they might perhaps meet with English fishing ships. So they sailed down the river, and doubtless many hearts were heavy and sad, but others doubtless were full of joy and thankfulness to be going back to an older home than Virginia.

The river broadened toward Chesapeake--and then, before them, what did they see? What deliverance for those who had held on to the uttermost? They saw the long boat of an English ship coming toward them with flashing oars, bringing news of comfort and relief. There, indeed, off Point Comfort lay three ships, the De La Warr, the Blessing, and the Hercules, and they brought, with a good company and good stores, Sir Thomas West, Lord De La Warr, appointed, over Gates, Lord Governor and CaptainGeneral, by land and sea, of the Colony of Virginia.

The Discovery, the Virginia, the Patience, and the Deliverance thereupon put back to that shore they thought to have left forever. Two days later, on Sunday the 10th of June, 1610, there anchored before Jamestown the De La Warr, the Blessing, and the Hercules; and it was thus that the new Lord Governor wrote home: "I . . . in the afternoon went ashore, where after a sermon made by Mr. Buck . . . I caused my commission to be read, upon which Sir Thomas Gates delivered up '..unto me his owne commission, both patents, and 'the counsell seale; and then I delivered some few wordes unto the Company .. . . and after . . . did constitute and give place of office and chardge to divers Captaines and gentlemen and elected unto me a counsaile."

The dead was alive again. Saith Rich's ballad:

And to the adventurers* thus he writes, "Be not dismayed at all, For scandall cannot doe us wrong, God will not let us fall.

Let England knowe our willingnesse, For that our worke is good, WE HOPE TO PLANT A NATION WHERE NONE BEFORE HATH STOOD."

* The Virginia Company.

同类推荐
  • 卓异记

    卓异记

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 履园丛话

    履园丛话

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 阵图

    阵图

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 蕉廊脞录

    蕉廊脞录

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 任诞

    任诞

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
热门推荐
  • 恋爱交响曲:幸福丑小鸭

    恋爱交响曲:幸福丑小鸭

    她是一个生活在大山,长相平庸的”丑小鸭”,他是一个英俊潇洒、腹黑的高干总裁,她努力拼搏只为了让父母过上幸福的生活,他流转于灯红酒绿之间,只为了填充心灵的寂寞,年少时的相识,让他们之间的缘分彼此牵绊,N多年后的相遇,而彼此都已变得陌生,一次酒后失误,让原本淡忘的感情又慢慢萌生,那个小男孩为何与他神似...为何他总是那么眼熟..难道......一个温柔的骑士,一个冷峻的王子,还有一个可爱的小天使,他的生活会不会不在平静了呢?
  • 最忆西窗同剪烛

    最忆西窗同剪烛

    纳兰容若,清初第一词人。生于温柔富贵,却满篇哀感顽艳;身处花柳繁华,心却游离于喧嚣之外;真正的八旗子弟,却喜结交落拓文人;行走于仕途,一生却为情所累;风华正茂之时,却匆匆离世;一位几乎拥有世问一切的惆怅男子,一段三百年来倾倒无数后人的传奇。
  • 逍遥仙王

    逍遥仙王

    一个身世离奇的少年却身怀异宝,为报血海深仇,机缘巧合之下踏上了修真之路。从此,遁出三界外,逍遥天地间……
  • 穿越之蔓山野

    穿越之蔓山野

    她是一个舞女,另一重身份是一个土匪,爱情之路走得无限凄苦。有朝一日,上帝终于垂怜,以为可以执子之手,欣喜盼来的却是爱人的背叛。爱可以无止境的加深,恨却恨得寸步难行。最终,一副铮铮艳骨,人去魂散,只留下余音袅袅—
  • 华妃现代传

    华妃现代传

    上一世她是宫中的蛇蝎美人,一人独宠六宫,不料甄嬛一朝入宫,她才明白什么宠爱什么权势,不过都是梦一场罢了,绝望之下,她三尺白绫自缢。却不曾想穿梭千年来到异世,在这茫茫人海,她该何去何从?
  • 藏宝洞

    藏宝洞

    (剑三同人)普通的门派弟子,出师之后稀里糊涂的卷进一场争端,集齐三张藏宝图残页便可开启藏宝洞
  • 仙战传说

    仙战传说

    一个男人在光怪陆离的异界的成长史,不幼稚不狗血,只有一出跌宕起伏的追求,一腔燃烧的少年热血,一段缠绵悱恻的感情,一个激情澎湃的历程。
  • 妖孽缠身:殿下您歇歇

    妖孽缠身:殿下您歇歇

    单纯天真,是她的外表;狠辣嗜血,是她的内心。一朝穿越,她竟然穿越到一个仙侠时代,但是为毛她会穿越在一群雪狼里面啊!!!!谁来告诉她这是怎么回事?还有,这个从见面就挂在她身上的妖孽大美女是怎么回事?嗯,皮肤白皙,容貌妖娆,柳柳细腰,真是个大美人,在往上看去,胸……Σ(°△°|||)︴,怎么是平的啊?!!!
  • 梦黄泉

    梦黄泉

    他从黄泉归来,带来一朵黄泉花,从此改变了一切……他们说我会是个很牛X的人,而我却阴差阳错成了“诈尸小队长”“灭团小能手”……掌灯人、织梦者、解铃人、阴阳师、巨灵匠……他们到底在寻找什么?交流群:534802071
  • 宅女穿越日常

    宅女穿越日常

    李诺诺心里打着啪啪响的小算盘,点进网页晕了过去碰到神秘老头,成功交♂易后发现自己变成了男♂孩♂子虽然这很杯具,但诺诺的内心其实很开心,因为终于可以正常撩妹啦蛤蛤蛤蛤蛤蛤蛤蛤蛤