Page:Notes on the State of Virginia (1853).djvu/235

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APPENDIX.
219

the several towns; and those which regard the whole nation, such as the making war, concluding peace, or forming alliances with the neighboring nations, are deliberated on and determined in a national council composed of the chiefs of the tribe, attended by the head warriors and a number of the chiefs from the towns, who are his counsellors. In every town there is a council house, where the chief and old men of the town assemble, when occasion requires, and consult what is proper to be done. Every tribe has a fixed place for the chiefs of the towns to meet and consult on the business of the tribe: and in every nation there is what they call the central council house, or central council fire, where the chiefs of the several tribes, with the principal warriors convene to consult and determine on their national aflfairs. When any matter is proposed in the national council, it is common for the chiefs of the several tribes to consult thereon apart with their counsellors, and, when they have agreed, to deliver the opinion of the tribe at the national council: and, as their government seems to rest wholly on persuasion, they endeavor, by mutual concessions, to obtain unanimity. Such is the government that still subsists among the Indian nations bordering upon the United States. Some historians seem to think, that the dignity of office of Sachem was hereditary. But that opinion does not appear to be well founded. The Sachem or chief of the tribe seems to be by election. And sometimes persons who are strangers, and adopted into the tribe, are promoted to this dignity, on account of their abilities. Thus on the arrival of Captain Smith, the first founder of the colony of Virginia, Opechàncanough, who was Sachem or Chief of the Chickahòminies, one of the tribes of the Powhatàns, is said to have been of another tribe, and even of another nation, so that no certain account could be obtained of his origin or descent. The chiefs of the nations seem to have been by a rotation among the tribes. Thus when Captain Smith, in the year 1609, questioned Powhatàn (who was the chief of the nation, and whose proper name is said to have been Wahunsonacock,) respecting the succession, the old chief informed him, “that he was very old and had seen the death of all his people thrice;[1]


  1. This is one generation more than the poet ascribes to the life of Nestor.
     
    Tῶ δ᾽ ἤδη δύο μὲν γενεαὶ μερόπων ἀνθρώπων
    Eφθίαθ᾽ οἵ οἱ πρόσθεν ἅμα τράφεν ἠδ᾽ ἐγένοντο
    Eν Πύλῳ ἠγαθέῃ, μετὰ δὲ τριτάτοισιν ἄνασσεν.
    1. Hom. II. 250. 
     
    Two generations now had past away.
    Wise by his rules, and happy by his sway;
    Two ages o'er his native realm he reign'd,
    And now th' example of the third remain'd.
    Pope.