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		  <title type="main">Discourse And View of Virginia</title> 
		  <title type="version">An Electronic Edition</title> 
		  <author> 
			 <name reg="Berkeley, William">William Berkeley</name> 
			 <date>1605-1677</date></author> 
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		  <publisher>Maryland Institute of Technology in the Humanities
			 (MITH)</publisher> 
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				  <name type="organization">University of
					 Maryland</name></addrLine> 
				<addrLine>College Park</addrLine> 
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		  <date value="2003-01-29">January 29, 2003</date> 
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			 <p>Copyright 2003. This text is freely available provided the text is
				distributed with the header information provided</p> 
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		  <bibl>Sir William Berkeley, A Discourse And View of Virginia. William
			 H. Smith, Jr., Publisher Norwalk, Connecticut, 1914.</bibl> 
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		  <p type="original">This text was first published in London in 
			 <date>1663</date>.</p><p> The text of the present edition
			 was prepared from and proofed against Sir William Berkeley, 
		  <title rend="italic">A Discourse And View of Virginia</title> (Norwalk,
		  CT: William H. Smith, Jr., Publisher, 1914). All preliminaries have been
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				<item type="form">Discourse</item> 
				<item type="chronological">1650-1700</item> 
				<item type="geographic">Virginia</item> 
				<item type="subject">Colonial Society and Life</item> 
				<item type="subject">Politics</item> 
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		  <head rend="bold">A DISCOURSE And View of VIRGINIA
</head> 
		  <p n="1">BEfore I enter into the consideration of the advantages this
			 Kingdom of <name rend="italic">England</name> has by the Plantation in <name rend="italic">Virginia</name>, I think it necessary to
			 make a short description of the Situation of it, as to the <emph rend="italic">Climate</emph>; and then
			 tell what natural helps it has to make it a glorious and flourishing Country:
			 And when this Discourse shall produce a concession of the natural advantages it
			 has above all other His Majesties Plantations, I shall lay down the Causes,
			 both intrinsic and accidental, why it has not in all this supposed long tract
			 of time produced those rich and staple Commodities, which I shall in this
			 Discourse affirm it is capable of. </p> 
		  <p n="2">And, First, for the <emph rend="italic">Climate</emph>: It lyeth within the Degrees of
			 37. And 42. (<name rend="italic">Mariland</name> included) which by all is confess'd to be a situation
			 capable of the diversities of all Northern and Southern commodities, some Drugs
			 and Spices excepted, which <name rend="italic">Florida</name>, on whose borders we are newly seated, may
			 also probably produce. </p> 
		  <p n="3"> Into the Bay of <name rend="italic">Virginia</name>, formerly called <name rend="italic">Chesapeack</name> Bay,
			 runs six eminent Rivers, none twenty miles distant from another; three of which
			 exceed the <name rend="italic">Thames</name>, both in extent and progression of the Tides; these cause
			 and continue the admir'd fertility of the Countrey, and by their greatness and
			 contiguity temper those heats, which the dryer places of <name rend="italic">Africa</name> are subject to,
			 in the same degrees of latitude. </p> 
		  <p n="4">Up these Rivers Ships of three hundred tons fail near two
			 hundred miles, and anchor in the fresh waters; and by this means are not
			 troubled with those Worms which endamage ships, both in the Western Islands of
			 <name rend="italic">America</name>, and in the <name rend="italic">Mediterranean sea</name>. And to avoid a larger discourse of it, I
			 will here note it, that our ships once past the Lands end, are in no danger of
			 Pirats, Rocks, or Lee-shores, till they come to their Port, and fewer ships
			 miscarry going to <name rend="italic">Virginia</name>, then to any Port at that distance in the world.
			 </p> 
		  <p n="5">Now for those things which are naturally in it, they are
			 these, Iron, Lead, Pitch, Tar, Masts, Timber for Ships of the greatest
			 magnitude, and Wood for Pot-ashes. </p> 
		  <p n="6">Those other Commodities, which are produced by industry, are
			 Flax, Hemp, Silk, Wheat, Barley, Oats, Rice, Cotton, all sorts of Pulse and
			 Fruits, the last of which in that pefection, that if the taste were the onely
			 judge, we would not think they were of the same <emph rend="italic">species</emph> with those from which
			 they are derived to us from <name rend="italic">England</name>. The vicious ruinous plant of Tobacco I
			 would not name, but that it brings more money to the Crown, then all the
			 Islands in <name rend="italic">America</name> besides. </p> 
		  <p n="7">Now this is ascertained and confessed, that such staple
			 commodities, as Iron, Silk, Flax, Hemp, and Pot-ashes, may be easily raised in
			 Virginia, an high imputation will lye upon us, why we have not all this time
			 endeavoured to evidence the truth and certainty of it, to our own and the
			 publick advantage. </p> 
		  <p n="8">To this I will answer, that the long time of seating of
			 <name rend="italic">Virginia</name> is a general and popular error: For though the first ships arrived in
			 Virginia in 1606. yet by reason of many almost insuparable difficulties, the
			 increase of the number of Planters was hardly perceptible: For, first, that, as
			 all unclear'd Plantations, was unwholsom; then all they eat came from 
			 <name rend="italic"><name rend="italic">England</name></name>,
			 and provided for those they never saw nor cared for, was not likely to be very
			 good. Then the <name rend="italic">Indians</name> quickly grew jealous of them, and forced them to fight
			 for every foot of ground they held, and in the year 1622. in one night murdered
			 all but four or five hundred. So that from that time we must begin the account
			 of the Plantation: nor is this all, for many years after this, the danger and
			 scarcity of the Inhabitants was fo famed through <name rend="italic">England</name>, that none but fuch as
			 were forced could be induced to plant or defend the place; and of those that
			 came, there was not one woman to thirty men, and <foreign rend="italic" lang="lat">populus virorum</foreign> is of no long
			 duration any where. But since the year 1630. the place began to be of more
			 plenty and security, for the <name rend="italic">Indians</name>, though not subdued, were terrified to a
			 suspension of arms, the Planters then first began to fence their grounds and
			 plant Corn; the few Cattel they had, increased to such numbers, that they were
			 able to help their neighbour Plantations. And now I believe, that there is no
			 Plantation of the English would more abound in Cattel, Hogs, and all sorts of
			 Fruit, than <name rend="italic">Virginia</name>, if they had but a mean price to quicken their industry,
			 and make their providence vigilant. </p> 
		  <p n="9">An other great imputation lyes on the Countrey that none but
			 those of the meanest quality and corruptest lives go thither. This to our
			 Maligners we would easily grant, if they would consent to the <emph rend="italic">omen</emph> of it; for
			 was not <name rend="italic">Rome</name> thus begun and composed? and the greatest honour that was given to
			 <name rend="italic">Romulus</name> and his City was this, that his feverity and discipline in his time,
			 made them formidable to their neighbours, and his posterity masters of the
			 world. But this is not all truth, for men of as good Families as any Subjects
			 in <name rend="italic">England</name> have resided there, as the <name rend="italic">Percys</name>, the <name rend="italic">Barkleys</name>, the <name rend="italic">Wests</name>, the
			 <name rend="italic">Gages</name>, the <name rend="italic">Throgmortons</name>, <name rend="italic">Wyats</name>, <name rend="italic">Degges</name>, <name rend="italic">Chickeleys</name>, <name rend="italic">Moldsworths</name>, <name rend="italic">Morrisons</name>,
			 <name rend="italic">Kemps</name>, and hundred others, which I forbear to name, left I should misherald
			 them in the Catalogue. But grant it were thus, is this any imputation to the
			 place, that those that come from hence with those ungoverned manners and
			 affections, change them there for sober and thrifty passions and desires, which
			 is evident in most that are there; and those that will either experimentally or
			 morally weigh the nature and conditions of men, shall find, that naturally this
			 change will follow the alteration of our conditions: For who experimentally in
			 <name rend="italic">England</name> are more prodigal and riotous then the younger brothers of it, who have
			 least Fond to maintain and continue either of them? who lesse careful to their
			 Estates then those, whose early negligence hath engaged them to the Usurer? and
			 the natural reason is evident, for it is hope and a proposed end that quickens
			 our industry, and bridles our intemperance; but when <foreign rend="italic" lang="lat">Cui bono</foreign> shall be objected,
			 wretchlesnesse and a desire of present pleasures will invade us: But this is
			 not so in our Plantations; for we find there that if we will be provident and
			 industrious for a year or two, we may provide for our Posterity of many Ages;
			 the manifest knowledge of this makes men industrious and vigilant with us, who
			 here having no Vineyards to dresse stood idle in the Market-place till the
			 eleventh hour. </p> 
		  <p n="10">But we will confesse, that there is with us a great scarcity
			 of good men; that is, of able Workmen, at whose doors ought this defect to lie?
			 not at ours, who would procure them could they be perswaded at high prices; but
			 indeed our liberty to do good onely to our selves, is the main obstacle of our
			 progress to staple commodities in our Plantations, for onely such servants as
			 have been brought up to no Art or Trade, hunger and fear of prisons bring to
			 us, which we must entertain or have none: And I think that Lawyer had reason,
			 who being chid by the Judge for often bringing scandalous causes before him;
			 told him, they were the best he could get to be brought to him. </p> 
		  <p n="11">Had the <name rend="italic">Dutch</name> <name rend="italic">Virginia</name>, they would make it the Fortresse;
			 Mart and Magazin of all the <name rend="italic">West Indies</name>, for (as I at first intimated) the
			 Rivers will securely harbour twenty thousand Ships at once; the Country
			 produceth all things necessary for those Ships and the men that sayle in them,
			 nothing wanting for the supplies of war or peace, but it was ever our misery
			 not to take our aims the distance of an Age. </p> 
		  <p n="12">But half that time to the making us, and enriching this
			 Kingdom by our labours, will not be required; for I can with assurance affirme,
			 that if we have from hence resolute instructions and indulgent encouragements,
			 within seven years we shall not need the Northerne nor Southerne East
			 Countries, to supply us with Silk, Flax, Hemp, Pitch, Tar, Iron, Masts, Timber,
			 and Pot-ashes; for all of these, but Iron, we want only skilful men to teach us
			 to produce them the cheapest and readiest way; but the making of Iron will
			 require abler purses then we are yet masters of. </p> 
		  <p n="13">Yet in another Paragraph I shall propose that, which if
			 granted to us, will enable us of our selves to accomplish this and other great
			 concernments. </p> 
		  <p n="14">It must be confessed, that <name rend="italic">Barbadoes </name>fends a better commodity
			 into <name rend="italic">England</name>, then <name rend="italic">Virginia</name> yet does; but withall it must be acknowledged, that
			 one Ship from <name rend="italic">Virginia</name> brings more Money to the Crown, then five Ships of the
			 the same burthern do from the Barbadoes. But had we ability or skill to set
			 forward those staple commodities I mentioned, of Silk, Flax, Hemp, Pitch,
			 Pot-ashes, and Iron, a few yeares would make us able to send more Ships laden
			 with these, then now the <name rend="italic">Barbadoes </name>do with Sugar. </p> 
		  <p n="15">Amongst many other weighty Reasons, why <name rend="italic">Virginia</name> has not all
			 this while made any progression into staple Commodities, this is the chief.
			 That our Governours by reason of the corruption of those times they lived in,
			 laid the Foundation of our wealth and industry on the vices of men; for about
			 the time of our first seating of the Country, did this vicious habit of taking
			 <name rend="italic">Tobacco</name> possesse the English Nation, and from them has diffused it self into
			 most parts of the World; this I fay being brought to us from <name rend="italic">Spain</name> at great
			 prices, made our Governour suppose great wealth might be raised to particulars
			 by this universal vice, and indeed for many yeares they were not deceived, till
			 that increasing in numbers, and many other Planations following the same
			 design, at last brought it as now it is to that lownesse of price, that the
			 Customes doubles the first purchase; that is, the Merchant buyes it for one
			 penny the pound, and we pay two pence for the Custom of that which they are not
			 pleased to take from us. </p> 
		  <p n="16">This was the first and fundamental hinderance that made the
			 Planters neglect all other accessions to wealth and happinefs, and fix their
			 hopes only on this vicious weed of <name rend="italic">Tobacco </name>, which at length has brought them to
			 that extremity that they can neither handsomely subsist with it, nor without
			 it. </p> 
		  <p n="17">Another hinderance has been, that there was never yet any
			 publick incouragement to affift the Planters in those more chargeable
			 undertakings, as Iron-Mines and Shipping. </p> 
		  <p n="18">Another impediment, and an important one too has been the
			 dis-membring- of the Colonie, but giving away and erecting divers
			 Principalities out of it, as <name rend="italic">Maryland</name> to my Lord <name rend="italic">Baltamore</name>, and part of <name rend="italic">Florida</name>
			 to my Lord of <name rend="italic">Arundell</name>, these Grants will in the next Age be found more
			 disadvantagious to the Crown then is perceptible in this; and therefore I shall
			 not touch it (uncommanded) as to the politick part of it, but as to the
			 Oeconomick. I shall affirme that we can never make Lawes for the erecting
			 Staple Commodities, and setting a stop to our unlimited planting of <name rend="italic">Tobacco </name>,
			 whilst these Governments are distinct and independent, for on frequent tryals
			 when we begin to make provisions for these, our people fly to <name rend="italic">Maryland</name>, and by
			 this means heighten our publick charges, and weaken our defences against our
			 perpetual enemies the <name rend="italic">Indians</name>. Nor is this all, for by reason of these
			 interposing Grants, we have suffered the <name rend="italic">Dutch</name> to enrich themselves on our
			 discoveries, who have in our precincts setled a Trade of Beaver with the
			 <name rend="italic">Indians</name>, amounting to two hundred thousand skins a year, and supply our enemies
			 with Ammunition and Guns in greater proportion then we have them our selves,
			 but God be thanked as yet, they, their Towns and Trade are in the Kings power,
			 when ever he shall command them either to quit the Usurpations, or to
			 acknowledge their Subjection to him in those parts. </p> 
		  <p n="19">Another great impediment has been, the confining the Planter
			 to Trade only with the English, this no good Subject or Englishman will oppose,
			 if it be found either beneficial to the Crown or our Mother-Nation; but if it
			 shall appear that neither of these are advantaged by it, then we cannot but
			 resent, that forth thousand people should be impoverish'd to enrich little more
			 then forty Merchants, who being the only buyers of our <name rend="italic">Tobacco </name> give us what
			 they please for it, and after it is here, fell it how they plese; and indeed
			 have forth thousand servants in us at cheaper rates, then any other men have
			 slaves, for they find them Meat, Drink, and Clothes, we furnish our selves and
			 their Sea-men with Meat and Drink, and all our sweat and labour, as they order
			 us, will hardly procure us course clothes to keep us from the extremities of
			 heat and cold: yet if these pressures of us did advance the Customs, or benefit
			 the Nation, we should not repine; but that it does the contrary to both, I
			 shall easily evidence when commanded. </p> 
		  <p n="20">Another hinderance has been, the want of a puplick Stock to
			 enable us to procure able men for the finding all forts of Mines, making Iron
			 of those Mines that are found, Ship-Carpenters, men skilful in Hemp, Flax, and
			 Silk, for the last of which no Country in the world is more naturally provided
			 that <name rend="italic">Virginia</name> is; and as by the feet we guesse at the proportions of men, so we
			 can experimentally say, that within seaven years, if we are assisted and
			 commanded, we shall bring in yearly as much Silk into <name rend="italic">England</name>, as now costs the
			 Nation two hundred thousand pounds of sterling at least. Flax, Hemp, and Pitch
			 would alwayes be according to the numbers and possibility of the labours of the
			 Planters. </p> 
		  <p n="21">On the whole matter, let it be considered, whether or no the
			 English Plantations are not proportioned in a short time to supply us withall
			 those Commodities, which now we have at great charge and hazard from <name rend="italic">Turky</name>,
			 <name rend="italic">Persia</name>, <name rend="italic">Germany</name>, <name rend="italic">Poland</name>, and <name rend="italic">Russia</name>: the Wines, Oyles, and Fruites of <name rend="italic">France</name>
			 and <name rend="italic">Spain</name>, our distance will ever hinder us from introducing at the same rates
			 we have it now from them. </p> 
		  <p n="22">It has, as I intimated, been highly imputed to us by divers
			 wise men, who onely contemplate the natural richnesse of our Soyle, and by that
			 weigh and measure our faults and neglects, that we have not imployed our cares
			 and industry, in producting more staple commodities then hitherto we have
			 attempted. This none can more severely resent then the poor Planter himself in
			 frequent consultations has done, who by many tryals have found their case to be
			 like those Architects, who can design execllent Buildings, but have not skill
			 to square their Timber, or lay their Bricks, and for want of money to procure
			 men for these labours, their models remaine onely in their imaginations or
			 papers; This is our case, who without a publick assistance can neither survive
			 our property, or the remedys of it, without an universal present pressure, as
			 to the Inhabitants of the Colony; for men of manufacture will not be procured,
			 but on great wages, to leave their Countrey, and hazard (as they style it)
			 their lives: this the poor Planter cannot do, whose sweat and labours amount to
			 no more, then to clothe and provide for the ordinary necessities of his
			 indigent Family. </p> 
		  <p n="23">To remedy this, and to procure us able men to set us in a way
			 of staple commodities, at my departure from <name rend="italic">Virginia</name> I was desired by the
			 Assembly to make this Proposal to His Sacred Majesty and his Council, to adde
			 one penny more to the Customs of our <name rend="italic">Tobacco </name>, and give it to the Countrey;
			 which, if granted, will pay all the publick charges of the Countrey, furnish us
			 with Magazines to resist the <name rend="italic">Indians</name>, build Mills for Iron and Planks, procure
			 us on good Salaries able men for Silk, Cordage, Mines, and Flax; and all this
			 will be done at the expence onely of an indulgent Grant: for who payes this but
			 the poor Planter, whose <name rend="italic">Tobacco </name> must fell for lesse, the more is imposed on it?
			 But a nearer way to a publick unquarrelled contribution they cannot find,
			 having this Axiom firmly fixt in them, That never any Community of people had
			 good done to them, but against their wills. </p> 
		  <p n="24">In order to this we shall here declare what we have been
			 necessitated to do these last two years, when war and other emergencies had
			 involved the Plantation into debts inextricable in an ordinary leavy; which was
			 to lay a Tax of two shillings the Hogshead on every one exported. This though
			 the Merchant made us pay, yet we found it an easier and readier way to defray
			 the publick charges: this (if the propositions of the Customs be not granted)
			 we desire His Majesties Council will advance to three or four shilling the
			 Hogshead, which will pay all publick Officers, and enable us to begin the
			 making Iron, and other necessary works, for the enriching our native Kingdom
			 and our selves. And another Proposal they desired me to make, which is this,
			 That such Ships as were built in the Countrey, might carry their goods to what
			 Port they pleased. This they hoped would be easily granted, because by this
			 means the excellency of their Timber and Masts (of both which there is now a
			 visible scarcity in <name rend="italic">England</name>) would be known, and when known the Timber of
			 <name rend="italic">England</name> might be spared for many years, and Ships of the greatest magnitude
			 built there cheaper then possibly they can be in <name rend="italic">England</name>; but if the first be
			 granted, we shall leave this to the wisdom, exigence and care of those His
			 Majesty imployes in those affairs. </p> 
		  <p n="25">To conclude and animate the care, providence and indulgence
			 the Nation ought to have of forreign Plantations, let these few confiderations
			 be duly poised. </p> 
		  <p n="26">First, it is not yet forty years when there was not one
			 <name rend="italic">Englishman</name> in any Plantation of <name rend="italic">America</name>, save onely four or five hundred left
			 in 1622. after the Massacre in <name rend="italic">Virginia</name>; and now there is in the <name rend="italic">West Indies</name> at
			 least three hundred thousand English, and of English extraction. </p> 
		  <p n="27">Secondly, if we examine the Customs, we shall find the fourth
			 part of them arise from the Plantations in <name rend="italic">America</name>. This is a wealth our
			 fathers never knew, and in humane probability will increase on us every year.
			 </p> 
		  <p n="28">Thirdly, those commodities we were wont to purchase at great
			 rates and hazards, we now purchase at half the usual prices. Nor is this all,
			 but we buy them with our own Manufactures, which here at home imploy thousands
			 of poor people. </p> 
		  <p n="29">Fourthly, when in the past Ages to disburden the Kingdom of
			 indigent younger Brothers, whom the peculiar policy of this Nation condemned to
			 poverty or War, we were forced to undertake the assistance of Rebels, which God
			 of late has revenged on our own bowels; now there can be no necessity of that
			 sin or misery, for a small summe of money will enable a younger Brother to
			 erect a flourishing Family in a new World; and adde more Strength, Wealth, and
			 Honour, to his Native Country, then thousands did before, that dyed forgotten
			 and unrewarded in an unjust War. I should now have ended, but that I think it
			 is expected from me, who have lived twenty years in <name rend="italic">America</name>, that I should
			 declare the power, interest, and wealth we have by our Plantations in the <name rend="italic">West Indies</name>. </p> 
		  <p n="30">To do this, I shall first propose to the consideration of the
			 Reader, the few yeares we have had any footing in <name rend="italic">America</name>, the eldest
			 Planation, <name rend="italic">Virginia</name> excepted, not exceeding forty years, and yet so many
			 difficulties happily overcome. Our numbers there are now at least two hundred
			 thousand English, and if (as in humane probability they will) our numbers
			 double but every twenty yeares, in one Age more how great will our power,
			 strength, and reputation be in this new Weftern World? </p> 
		  <p n="31">Secondly, let it be confidered what summes of Money was in
			 the last Age exhausted from us for Sugar, Cotton, Drugges, Dyings, and <name rend="italic">Tobacco </name>,
			 and how easily now we supply our selves with these, and also bring home enough
			 to balance many other [unclear: forraign] necessities. </p> 
		  <p n="32">Thirdly, let us contemplate the respect we have from most of
			 the Princes and States of Europe, but our power and strength in <name rend="italic">America</name>; the
		<name rend="italic"></name> I know would not willingly quit their interest in the <name rend="italic">Indies</name> for ten
			 Millions of Money; yet all they have there is in the Kings power, when any just
			 occasion shall provoke his displeasure. </p> 
		  <p n="33">The <name rend="italic">French</name>, it is true, have not many considerable places
			 there: But yet the <name rend="italic">Indies</name>, as they term it, are of so Friand agust, that they
			 would not willingly quit their holds in it, not their pretentions to it. </p> 
		  <p n="34">But the <name rend="italic">Spainards</name>, whose interest is greatest, is most
			 jealous of our power there, and we most formidable to him by it. </p> 
		  <p n="35">I will not presume to Counsel, but to give a Memorial I will;
			 that if now we vigorously and prudently manage our late acquired possessions in
			 the Heart and Navel of His Dominions, he will with great caution and respect
			 exasperate our King and Nation: And when our power is increased, and setled,
			 then evidently to one of these two conditions we shall bring him; either to
			 admit of a Trade with us, or have his Bullion come home in our Ships which of
			 these will be most advantagious I cannot readily tell; but both, or either will
			 be of high concernment to His Majesty and people. </p> 
		  <p n="36">To do this with most ease and lesse charge, I think the best
			 expedient is to encourage and admonish the lesser Islands (all but the
			 <name rend="italic">Barbadoes</name>) to remove thither, as they are, they are neither of any mutual
			 strength to themselves, nor contribute any honour or emolument to the Nation,
			 but when once they are incorporated into one body, how secure will they be
			 amongst themselves, how terrible to their opposers? and in case a good
			 temperment does produce a peace, how little will the charge be of assuring it
			 to be lasting; for the more men, the lesse need of Souldiers, and by
			 consequence the diffus'd charge of keeping them lesse burthensome then when it
			 is devolved on a few persons. To conclude, the King of Spains wealth is greater
			 in the <name rend="italic">Indies</name>, then the King of <name rend="italic">England</name>; but our Kings subjects swords are more
			 sharper then the Spainards, which we had lately evidenced, but that God would
			 not suffer the worst of men, <name rend="italic">Cromwell</name>, to glory in the bravest of atchivements.
			 </p> 
		  <p n="37">To make a Parallel betwixt <name rend="italic">Virginia</name> and our other Island
			 Plantations in <name rend="italic">America</name>, we will take the Mistresse of them all, <name rend="italic">Barbadoes</name>, for
			 the other Islands, if now they were to be seated, would not be suffered
			 uselesly to exhaust to many men our of our Nation as now they do; who being
			 thinly planted and defencelesse, and exposed not only to the designs, but as I
			 may truly speak it to the divertisement of their Enemies, who only passing by
			 have taken the best of them without losing two dayes of their intended Voyage;
			 this Saint <name rend="italic">Christophers</name> and the <name rend="italic">Tartugos</name> have experimented, and their weak
			 resistance have made the <name rend="italic">Spainard</name> have false apprehensions of our Courages and
			 Conduct: These then I will not particularly mention, but the <emph rend="italic">Paragon</emph> shall be
			 betwixt <name rend="italic">Virginia</name> and the <name rend="italic">Barbadoes</name>, which does produce all those Commodities in
			 perfection, which the other Islands do but attempt to do this, I will
			 impartially mention their industrious vertues and our negligent defects; and
			 first, I will say that the bringing of Sugar and Cotton to be a Commodity of
			 English growth, was a work worthy of a publick mark of Honour and Reward; for
			 by it the Nation saves yearly a Million pounds sterling. Cottens, Indicos, and
			 Ginger were likewise noble undertakings; and to admiration perfected, and God
			 forbid, that emulation should make us forbear to speak or lessen the designs
			 and industry of the first promoters of these noble Commodities. But we shall
			 say, that it is pity those men had not a larger field to exercise their vertues
			 in, for like flowers they were quickly at their full growth and perfection, and
			 a <foreign rend="italic" lang="lat">Nil ultra</foreign> is fixt on them, But that our desires to honour them may not
			 tacitly fix an accusation on us, I must here say, they had the happinesse to
			 have no Enemy to encounter, whose swords were continually in our bowels or
			 apprehensions; that they lay more in the way of Merchants and men of War, by
			 whom they got persons skilled in the Engines that made Sugar; that their
			 security from Enemies made Merchants, and other rich men, willingly venture
			 their Estates thither, and therefore the comparison being as I suppose to be
			 made between the places, and not the happy Conjuncture of the men that possesse
			 them, I shall boldly and truly affirm, that there can be no comparison between
			 the places relative to the future advantage of our Nation: For though <name rend="italic">Virginia</name>
			 yet only produceth <name rend="italic">Tobacco </name>, as to the main of her Traffick, yet it has produced
			 Silk, Flax, Hemp, Iron, Rice, Pitch, Tar, which are Commodities more lasting
			 and necessary then Sugar or Indico can be: and as our Numbers increase, so will
			 our Wealth, when our industry and assistance shall equal theirs, which is clean
			 contrary with them, who are already forced to expend one fifth part of their
			 Merchandise to provide Victuals for themselves and Servants. But the best
			 resolution of this, will be, that being both of one Nation, we blesse God that
			 has made us so instrumental to the Wealth and Glory of it. </p> 
		  <closer>FINIS</closer> 
		</div0> 
	 </body> 
  </text>
</TEI.2>