Jamestown - Timeline (Expand All)
A right sure foundation therefore haue you . . . laid for the immortalitie of your names and memory, which, for the aduancement of Gods glorie, the renown of his Maiestie, and the good of your Countrie, haue vndertaken so honourable a proiect, as all posterities shal blesse you and vphold your names and memories so long the Sunne and Moone endureth: whereas they which preferre their money before vertue, their pleasure before honour, and their sensuall securitie before heroicall adventures, shall perish with their money, die with their pleasures, and be buried in euverlasting forgetfulnes. . . .
So may man say to himselfe: The earth was mine, God gaue it me, and my posteritie, by the name of the children of men, and [garbled] take it not out of the hands of beasts, and brutish sauages, which haue no interest in it, because they participate rather of the nature of beasts then men. . . .
And therefore we may iustly say, as the children of Israel say here to Joshua, we are a great people, and the lande is too narrow for us: so that whatsoever we haue beene, now it behooves us to be both prudent and politicke . . . to imbrace euery occasion which hath any probabilitie in it of future hopes: And seeing there is neither preferment nor employment for all within the lists of our countrey, we might iustly be accounted, as in former times, both impudent and improvident, if we will yet sit with our armes foulded in our bosomes, and not rather seeke after such adventures whereby the glory of God may be advanced, the territories of our kingdome enlarged, our people both preferred and employed abroad, our wants supplyed at home, his Maiesties customes wonderfully augmented, and th honour and renown of our Nation spied and propagated to the ends of the world. . . .
It is euerie mans dutie to travell both by sea and land, and to venture either with his person or with his purse, to bring the barbarous and sauage people to a civill and Christian kinde of government, under which they may learne how to live holily, iustly, and soberly in this world, and to apprehend the meanes to saue their soules in the world to come. . . .
there is no intendment to take away from them by force that rightfull inheritaunce which they haue in that Countrey, for they are willing to entertaine us, and haue offered to [?] into our handes on reasonable conditions, more lande then we shall bee able this long time to plant and manure . . . so that we goe to live peaceablie among them, and not to supplant them. . .
Moreover, all Politititians doe with one consent, holde and maintaine, that a Christian king may lawfullie make war uppon barbarous and sauage people, and such as live under no lawfull and warrantable government, and may make a conquest of them, so that the warre be undertaken to this ende, to reclaim and reduce those sauages from their barbarous kinde of life.