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<h2> CHAPTER VI IN WHICH WE GO TO JAMESTOWN </h2>
<p>IT was early morning when we set out on horseback for Jamestown. I rode in
front, with Mistress Percy upon a pillion behind me, and Diccon on the
brown mare brought up the rear. The negress and the mails I had sent by
boat.</p>
<p>Now, a ride through the green wood with a noble horse beneath you, and
around you the freshness of the morn, is pleasant enough. Each twig had
its row of diamonds, and the wet leaves that we pushed aside spilled gems
upon us. The horses set their hoofs daintily upon fern and moss and lush
grass. In the purple distances deer stood at gaze, the air rang with
innumerable bird notes, clear and sweet, squirrels chattered, bees hummed,
and through the thick leafy roof of the forest the sun showered gold dust.
And Mistress Jocelyn Percy was as merry as the morning. It was now
fourteen days since she and I had first met, and in that time I had found
in her thrice that number of moods. She could be as gay and sweet as the
morning, as dark and vengeful as the storms that came up of afternoons,
pensive as the twilight, stately as the night,—in her there met a
hundred minds. Also she could be childishly frank—and tell you
nothing.</p>
<p>To-day she chose to be gracious. Ten times in an hour Diccon was off his
horse to pluck this or that flower that her white forefinger pointed out.
She wove the blooms into a chaplet, and placed it upon her head; she
filled her lap with trailers of the vine that swayed against us, and
stained her fingers and lips with the berries Diccon brought her; she
laughed at the squirrels, at the scurrying partridges, at the turkeys that
crossed our path, at the fish that leaped from the brooks, at old Jocomb
and his sons who ferried us across the Chickahominy. She was curious
concerning the musket I carried; and when, in an open space in the wood,
we saw an eagle perched upon a blasted pine, she demanded my pistol. I
took it from my belt and gave it to her, with a laugh. "I will eat all of
your killing," I said.</p>
<p>She aimed the weapon. "A wager!" she declared. "There be mercers in
Jamestown? If I hit, thou 'lt buy me a pearl hatband?"</p>
<p>"Two."</p>
<p>She fired, and the bird rose with a scream of wrath and sailed away. But
two or three feathers came floating to the ground, and when Diccon had
brought them to her she pointed triumphantly to the blood upon them. "You
said two!" she cried.</p>
<p>The sun rose higher, and the heat of the day set in. Mistress Percy's
interest in forest bloom and creature flagged. Instead of laughter, we had
sighs at the length of way; the vines slid from her lap, and she took the
faded flowers from her head and cast them aside. She talked no more, and
by and by I felt her head droop against my shoulder.</p>
<p>"Madam is asleep," said Diccon's voice behind me.</p>
<p>"Ay," I answered. "She'll find a jack of mail but a hard pillow. And look
to her that she does not fall."</p>
<p>"I had best walk beside you, then," he said.</p>
<p>I nodded, and he dismounted, and throwing the mare's bridle over his arm
strode on beside us, with his hand upon the frame of the pillion. Ten
minutes passed, the last five of which I rode with my face over my
shoulder. "Diccon!" I cried at last, sharply.</p>
<p>He came to his senses with a start. "Ay, sir?" he questioned, his face
dark red.</p>
<p>"Suppose you look at me for a change," I said. "How long since Dale came
in, Diccon?"</p>
<p>"Ten years, sir."</p>
<p>"Before we enter Jamestown we'll pass through a certain field and beneath
a certain tree. Do you remember what happened there, some years ago?"</p>
<p>"I am not like to forget, sir. You saved me from the wheel."</p>
<p>"Upon which you were bound, ready to be broken for drunkenness, gaming,
and loose living. I begged your life from Dale for no other reason, I
think, than that you had been a horse-boy in my old company in the Low
Countries. God wot, the life was scarcely worth the saving!"</p>
<p>"I know it, sir."</p>
<p>"Dale would not let you go scot-free, but would sell you into slavery. At
your own entreaty I bought you, since when you have served me
indifferently well. You have showed small penitence for past misdeeds, and
your amendment hath been of yet lesser bulk. A hardy rogue thou wast born,
and a rogue thou wilt remain to the end of time. But we have lived and
hunted, fought and bled together, and in our own fashion I think we bear
each other good will,—even some love. I have winked at much, have
shielded you in much, perhaps. In return I have demanded one thing, which
if you had not given I would have found you another Dale to deal with."</p>
<p>"Have I ever refused it, my captain?"</p>
<p>"Not yet. Take your hand from that pillion and hold it up; then say after
me these words: 'This lady is my mistress, my master's wife, to be by me
reverenced as such. Her face is not for my eyes nor her hand for my lips.
If I keep not myself clean of all offense toward her, may God approve that
which my master shall do!'"</p>
<p>The blood rushed to his face. I watched his fingers slowly loosening their
grasp.</p>
<p>"Tardy obedience is of the house of mutiny," I said sternly. "Will you,
sirrah, or will you not?"</p>
<p>He raised his hand and repeated the words.</p>
<p>"Now hold her as before," I ordered, and, straightening myself in the
saddle, rode on, with my eyes once more on the path before me.</p>
<p>A mile further on, Mistress Percy stirred and raised her head from my
shoulder. "Not at Jamestown yet?" she sighed, as yet but half awake. "Oh,
the endless trees! I dreamed I was hawking at Windsor, and then suddenly I
was here in this forest, a bird, happy because I was free; and then a
falcon came swooping down upon me,—it had me in its talons, and I
changed to myself again, and it changed to—What am I saying? I am
talking in my sleep. Who is that singing?"</p>
<p>In fact, from the woods in front of us, and not a bowshot away, rang out a
powerful voice:—</p>
<p>"'In the merry month of May,<br/>
<br/>
In a morn by break of day,<br/>
<br/>
With a troop of damsels playing<br/></p>
<p>Forth I went, forsooth, a-maying;'" and presently, the trees thinning in
front of us, we came upon a little open glade and upon the singer. He lay
on his back, on the soft turf beneath an oak, with his hands clasped
behind his head and his eyes upturned to the blue sky showing between leaf
and branch. On one knee crossed above the other sat a squirrel with a nut
in its paws, and half a dozen others scampered here and there over his
great body, like so many frolicsome kittens. At a little distance grazed
an old horse, gray and gaunt, springhalt and spavined, with ribs like
Death's own. Its saddle and bridle adorned a limb of the oak.</p>
<p>The song went cheerfully on:—</p>
<p>"'Much ado there was, God wot:<br/>
<br/>
would love and she would not;<br/>
<br/>
said, "Never man was true."<br/>
<br/>
He said, "None was false to you."'"<br/></p>
<p>"Give you good-day, reverend sir!" I called. "Art conning next Sunday's
hymn?"</p>
<p>Nothing abashed, Master Jeremy Sparrow gently shook off the squirrels, and
getting to his feet advanced to meet us.</p>
<p>"A toy," he declared, with a wave of his hand, "a trifle, a silly old song
that came into my mind unawares, the leaves being so green and the sky so
blue. Had you come a little earlier or a little later, you would have
heard the ninetieth psalm. Give you good-day madam. I must have sung for
that the very queen of May was coming by."</p>
<p>"Art on your way to Jamestown?" I demanded. "Come ride with us. Diccon,
saddle his reverence's horse."</p>
<p>"Saddle him an thou wilt, friend," said Master Sparrow, "for he and I have
idled long enough, but I fear I cannot keep pace with this fair company. I
and the horse are footing it together."</p>
<p>"He is not long for this world," I remarked, eyeing his ill-favored steed,
"but neither are we far from Jamestown. He'll last that far."</p>
<p>Master Sparrow shook his head, with a rueful countenance. "I bought him
from one of the French vignerons below Westover," he said. "The fellow was
astride the poor creature, beating him with a club because he could not
go. I laid Monsieur Crapaud in the dust, after which we compounded, he for
my purse, I for the animal; since when the poor beast and I have tramped
it together, for I could not in conscience ride him. Have you read me
Aesop's fables, Captain Percy?"</p>
<p>"I remember the man, the boy, and the ass," I replied. "The ass came to
grief in the end. Put thy scruples in thy pocket, man, and mount thy pale
horse."</p>
<p>"Not I!" he said, with a smile. "'T is a thousand pities, Captain Percy,
that a small, mean, and squeamish spirit like mine should be cased like a
very Guy of Warwick. Now, if I were slight of body, or even if I were no
heavier than your servant there"—</p>
<p>"Oh!" I said. "Diccon, give his reverence the mare, and do you mount his
horse and bring him slowly on to town. If he will not carry you, you can
lead him in."</p>
<p>Sunshine revisited the countenance of Master Jeremy Sparrow; he swung his
great body into the saddle, gathered up the reins, and made the mare to
caracole across the path for very joy.</p>
<p>"Have a care of the poor brute, friend!" he cried genially to Diccon,
whose looks were of the sulkiest. "Bring him gently on, and leave him at
Master Bucke's, near to the church."</p>
<p>"What do you do at Jamestown?" I asked, as we passed from out the glade
into the gloom of a pine wood. "I was told that you were gone to Henricus,
to help Master Thorpe convert the Indians."</p>
<p>"Ay," he answered, "I did go. I had a call,—I was sure I had a call.
I thought of myself as a very apostle to the Gentiles. I went from
Henricus one day's journey into the wilderness, with none but an Indian
lad for interpreter, and coming to an Indian village gathered its
inhabitants about me, and sitting down upon a hillock read and expounded
to them the Sermon on the Mount. I was much edified by the solemnity of
their demeanor and the earnestness of their attention, and had conceived
great hopes for their spiritual welfare, when, the reading and exhortation
being finished, one of their old men arose and made me a long speech,
which I could not well understand, but took to be one of grateful welcome
to myself and my tidings of peace and good will. He then desired me to
tarry with them, and to be present at some entertainment or other, the
nature of which I could not make out. I tarried; and toward evening they
conducted me with much ceremony to an open space in the midst of the
village. There I found planted in the ground a thick stake, and around it
a ring of flaming brushwood. To the stake was fastened an Indian warrior,
captured, so my interpreter informed me, from some hostile tribe above the
falls. His arms and ankles were secured to the stake by means of thongs
passed through incisions in the flesh; his body was stuck over with
countless pine splinters, each burning like a miniature torch; and on his
shaven crown was tied a thin plate of copper heaped with red-hot coals. A
little to one side appeared another stake and another circle of brushwood:
the one with nothing tied to it as yet, and the other still unlit. My
friend, I did not tarry to see it lit. I tore a branch from an oak, and I
became as Samson with the jaw bone of the ass. I fell upon and smote those
Philistines. Their wretched victim was beyond all human help, but I dearly
avenged him upon his enemies. And they had their pains for naught when
they planted that second stake and laid the brush for their hell fire. At
last I dropped into the stream upon which their damnable village was
situate, and got safely away. Next day I went to George Thorpe and
resigned my ministry, telling him that we were nowhere commanded to preach
to devils; when the Company was ready to send shot and steel amongst them,
they might count upon me. After which I came down the river to Jamestown,
where I found worthy Master Bucke well-nigh despaired of with the fever.
Finally he was taken up river for change of air, and, for lack of worthier
substitute, the Governor and Captain West constrained me to remain and
minister to the shepherdless flock. Where will you lodge, good sir?"</p>
<p>"I do not know," I said. "The town will be full, and the guest house is
not yet finished."</p>
<p>"Why not come to me?" he asked. "There are none in the minister's house
but me and Goodwife Allen who keeps it. There are five fair large rooms
and a goodly garden, though the trees do too much shadow the house. If you
will come and let the sunshine in,"—a bow and smile for madam,—"I
shall be your debtor."</p>
<p>His plea pleased me well. Except the Governor's and Captain West's, the
minister's house was the best in the town. It was retired, too, being set
in its own grounds, and not upon the street, and I desired privacy.
Goodwife Allen was stolid and incurious. Moreover, I liked Master Jeremy
Sparrow.</p>
<p>I accepted his hospitality and gave him thanks. He waved them away, and
fell to complimenting Mistress Percy, who was pleased to be gracious to us
both. Well content for the moment with the world and ourselves, we fared
on through the alternating sunshine and shade, and were happy with the
careless inhabitants of the forest. Oversoon we came to the peninsula, and
crossed the neck of land. Before us lay the town: to the outer eye a poor
and mean village, indeed, but to the inner the stronghold and capital of
our race in the western world, the germ from which might spring stately
cities, the newborn babe which might in time equal its parent in stature,
strength, and comeliness. So I and a few besides, both in Virginia and at
home, viewed the mean houses, the poor church and rude fort, and loved the
spot which had witnessed much suffering and small joy, but which held
within it the future, which was even now a bit in the mouth of Spain, a
thing in itself outweighing all the toil and anguish of our planting. But
there were others who saw only the meanness of the place, its almost
defenselessness, its fluxes and fevers, the fewness of its inhabitants and
the number of its graves. Finding no gold and no earthly paradise, and
that in the sweat of their brow they must eat their bread, they
straightway fell into the dumps, and either died out of sheer perversity,
or went yelping home to the Company with all manner of dismal tales,—which
tales, through my Lord Warwick's good offices, never failed to reach the
sacred ears of his Majesty, and to bring the colony and the Company into
disfavor.</p>
<p>We came to the palisade, and found the gates wide open and the warder
gone.</p>
<p>"Where be the people?" marveled Master Sparrow, as we rode through into
the street. In truth, where were the people? On either side of the street
the doors of the houses stood open, but no person looked out from them or
loitered on the doorsteps; the square was empty; there were no women at
the well, no children underfoot, no gaping crowd before gaol and pillory,
no guard before the Governor's house,—not a soul, high or low, to be
seen.</p>
<p>"Have they all migrated?" cried Sparrow. "Are they gone to Croatan?"</p>
<p>"They have left one to tell the tale, then," I said, "for here he comes
running."</p>
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