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Pioneers of the Old South: a chronicle of English colonial beginnings by Mary Johnston
page 54 of 158 (34%)
general use turning a luxury into a necessity. More and more she received
through Dutch and Spanish ships tobacco from the Indies. Among the English
adventurers to Virginia some already knew the uses of the weed; others soon
learned from the Indians. Tobacco was perhaps not indigenous to Virginia,
but had probably come through southern tribes who in turn had gained it
from those who knew it in its tropic habitat. Now, however, tobacco was
grown by all Virginia Indians, and was regarded as the Great Spirit's best
gift. In the final happy hunting-ground, kings, werowances, and priests
enjoyed it forever. When, in the time after the first landing, the Indians
brought gifts to the adventurers as to beings from a superior sphere, they
offered tobacco as well as comestibles like deer-meat and mulberries.
Later, in England and in Virginia, there was some suggestion that it might
be cultivated among other commodities. But the Company, not to be diverted
from the path to profits, demanded from Virginia necessities and not
new-fangled luxuries. Nevertheless, a little tobacco was sent over to
England, and then a little more, and then a larger quantity. In less than
five years it had become a main export; and from that time to this
profoundly has it affected the life of Virginia and, indeed, of the United
States.

This then is the wide and general event with which John Rolfe is connected.
But there is also a narrower, personal happening that has pleased all these
centuries. Indian difficulties yet abounded, but Dale, administrator as
well as man of Mars, wound his way skilfully through them all. Powhatan
brooded to one side, over there at Werowocomoco. Captain Samuel Argall was
again in Virginia, having brought over sixty-two colonists in his ship, the
Treasurer. A bold and restless man, explorer no less than mariner, he again
went trading up the Potomac, and visited upon its banks the village of
Japazaws, kinsman of Powhatan. Here he found no less a personage than
Powhatan's daughter Pocahontas. An idea came into Argall's active and
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