Jamestown - Timeline (Expand All)
Bee not you discouraged, if the Promises which you have made to your selves, or to others, be not so soone discharg'd. Great Creatures ly long in the wombe; Lyons are litterd perfit, but Beare-whelpes lick'd unto their shape; actions which Kings undertake, are cast in a mould; they have their perfection quickly; actions of private men, and private purses, require more hammering, and more filing to their perfection. Onely let your principall ende, bee the propagation of the glorious Gospell. . . .
truely, if the whole Countrey were but such a Bridewell, to force idel persons to work, it had a good use. But it is already, not onely a Spleene, to draine the ill humors of the body, but a Liver, to breed good bloud; already the imployment breeds Marriners; already the place gives eesayes, nay Fraytes of Marchantable commodities; already it is a marke for the Envy, and for the ambition of our Enemies. . . . Neither can I recommend it to you, by any better Rhetorique then their malice. They would gladly have it, and therefore let us bee glad to hold it.
There is a Power rooted in Nature, and a Power rooted in Grace; a power yssuing from the Law of Nations, and a power growing out of the Gospell. In the Law of Nature and Nations, A Land never inhabited, by any, or utterly derelicted and immemorially abandoned by the former Inhabitants, becomes theirs that will possesse it. So also it is, if the inhabitants doe not in some measure fill the Land, so as the Land may bring foorth her increase for the use of men: for as a man does not become proprietary of the Sea, because he hath two or three boats, fishing in it, so neither does a man become Lord of a maine Continent, because hee hath two or three Cottages in the skirts thereof. . . .
Againe if the Land be peopled and cultivated by the people, and that Land produce in abundance such things, for want thereof their neghbours, or others (being not enemies) perish, the Law of Nations may justifie some force, in seeking, by permission of other commodities which they neede, to come to some of theirs. Many cases may be put, when not onely Commerce, and Trade, but Plantations in lands, not formally our owne, may be lawfull. . . .
when the instinct, the influence, the motions of the Holy Ghost enables your Conscience to say, that your principall ende is not gaine, nor glory, but to gaine Soules to the glory of God, this Seales the great Seale, this justifies Justice it selfe, this authorises Authoritie, and gives power to strength it selfe.