OF EARLY AMERICAN HISTORY NARRATIVES OF EARLY EARLY VIRGINIA 1606-1625 EDITED BY LYON GARDINER TYLER, LL.D. PRESIDENT OF THE COLLEGE OF WILLIAM AND MARY UNIVERSIT: WITH A MAP AND TWO FACSIMILES CHARLES SCRIBNER'S SONS NEW YORK - - 1907 973.1 Vol 5 COPYRIGHT, 1907, BY CHARLES SCRIBNER'S SONS PUBLISHED, OCTOBER, 1907 1025 31 TIBKYKA NOTE THIS volume is intended to include the most important and interesting narratives of that part of Virginian history which extends from the formation to the dissolution of the Virginia Company. In the selection, Captain John Smith's True Relation and the Description of Virginia and account of the Proceedings of the English Colonie which he and his friends drew up have, on well-known historical principles, been preferred to the somewhat ampler but less strictly contemporary version of the transactions of the same period which he gave in the Generall Historie; but the ensuing period was deemed to be in the main best covered by reproducing the fourth book of the latter treatise. Dr. Reuben G. Thwaites, Secretary of the State Historical Society of Wisconsin, and the Burrows Brothers Company of Cleveland, the publishers, have kindly permitted use to be made in this volume of the translation of Father Biard's Relation which appeared in the third volume of The Jesuit Relations, edited by Dr. Thwaites. The Massachusetts Historical Society has permitted the use of the text of the letter of John Pory, printed in their Collections. The Virginia Historical Society has allowed the editor to reprint from the Virginia Magazine of History "The Discourse of the Old Company." Grateful acknowledgments are made for these favors. Those texts which have been taken from books printed in the seventeenth century have been carefully collated with copies of the original editions in the Library of Congress. But the use of u and v and i and j has been modernized; many words printed in italics in the original have been put into roman type when the present practice required it; and while the spelling of the original has of course been closely followed, the punctuation of Purchas or of Captain John Smith has not been regarded as equally sacred. The punctuation has been left as in the original whenever no |