The Pocahontas-John Smith Story

Nonfiction, Religion & Spirituality, New Age, History, Fiction & Literature
Cover of the book The Pocahontas-John Smith Story by Pocahontas Wight Edmunds, Library of Alexandria
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: Pocahontas Wight Edmunds ISBN: 9781465506979
Publisher: Library of Alexandria Publication: March 8, 2015
Imprint: Language: English
Author: Pocahontas Wight Edmunds
ISBN: 9781465506979
Publisher: Library of Alexandria
Publication: March 8, 2015
Imprint:
Language: English
Introduction When I was five our family visited the Croatan settlement near Red Springs, North Carolina, and my father imprudently revealed the Indian names of his wife and daughter. MOther blushed and I bawled as the drunken crowd of Sunday afternoon clasped us to their bosoms so tenaciously that Father could scarcely extricate us from their clutches. Later in the week, Chief Locklear came calling in a golden, yellow surry with yellow fringe, bearing tribute of native scuppernong grapes. They were offered red and sweet, for red, sweet Pocahontas's sake rather than ours. I was usually given the Indian role in school plays. In 1923 I was asked to take the Pocahontas role in the mammoth Virginia pageant in Richmond. In 1925 the Fox News-Reel introduced me: "Descendant of Chief Powhatan Opens the Biggest Book in the World." This volume was Dr. Matthew Page Andrews's Story of the South, which had stood ten feet tall on the stage of the Strand Theater when I had played "Carry Me Back to Old Virginia" on my violin in front of the illustration of my ancestress. Lecturers and notables have singled me out of the mob for the name's sake only. The sonorous American poet Vachel Lindsay bent low as he halted a campus receiving line: "My dear, I must kiss your hand!" When Father told Mrs. Woodrow Wilson, who is also a descendant, of his wife's and daughter's names, she told him: "Now, I want to shake both of your hands." A tobacco company sent an agent to ask if MOther and I, as descendants of John Rolfe, the first tobacconist, would endorse their product. I have received a letter while abroad addressed: "Mademoiselle, la Princesse des Peaux Rouges." That is less surprising when it is noted that a tavern called: "La Belle Sauvage" still stood in England two and a half centuries after her visit. I was told, even before the daily newspaper controversy in 1950 about her burial place that every English school-child knows the story of Pocahontas. The English were delighted when my three children and I signed the register book at the Pocahontas Memorial Chapel of Unity on July 3, 1955
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Introduction When I was five our family visited the Croatan settlement near Red Springs, North Carolina, and my father imprudently revealed the Indian names of his wife and daughter. MOther blushed and I bawled as the drunken crowd of Sunday afternoon clasped us to their bosoms so tenaciously that Father could scarcely extricate us from their clutches. Later in the week, Chief Locklear came calling in a golden, yellow surry with yellow fringe, bearing tribute of native scuppernong grapes. They were offered red and sweet, for red, sweet Pocahontas's sake rather than ours. I was usually given the Indian role in school plays. In 1923 I was asked to take the Pocahontas role in the mammoth Virginia pageant in Richmond. In 1925 the Fox News-Reel introduced me: "Descendant of Chief Powhatan Opens the Biggest Book in the World." This volume was Dr. Matthew Page Andrews's Story of the South, which had stood ten feet tall on the stage of the Strand Theater when I had played "Carry Me Back to Old Virginia" on my violin in front of the illustration of my ancestress. Lecturers and notables have singled me out of the mob for the name's sake only. The sonorous American poet Vachel Lindsay bent low as he halted a campus receiving line: "My dear, I must kiss your hand!" When Father told Mrs. Woodrow Wilson, who is also a descendant, of his wife's and daughter's names, she told him: "Now, I want to shake both of your hands." A tobacco company sent an agent to ask if MOther and I, as descendants of John Rolfe, the first tobacconist, would endorse their product. I have received a letter while abroad addressed: "Mademoiselle, la Princesse des Peaux Rouges." That is less surprising when it is noted that a tavern called: "La Belle Sauvage" still stood in England two and a half centuries after her visit. I was told, even before the daily newspaper controversy in 1950 about her burial place that every English school-child knows the story of Pocahontas. The English were delighted when my three children and I signed the register book at the Pocahontas Memorial Chapel of Unity on July 3, 1955

More books from Library of Alexandria

Cover of the book The History of Fulk Fitz-Warine by Pocahontas Wight Edmunds
Cover of the book The Philosophy of Natural Magic by Pocahontas Wight Edmunds
Cover of the book Bouddha by Pocahontas Wight Edmunds
Cover of the book Memoirs of Extraordinary Popular Delusions, Volume 3 by Pocahontas Wight Edmunds
Cover of the book Villages of the Algonquian, Siouan, and Caddoan Tribes West of the Mississippi by Pocahontas Wight Edmunds
Cover of the book Discourse on Floating Bodies by Pocahontas Wight Edmunds
Cover of the book The Last Tenant by Pocahontas Wight Edmunds
Cover of the book Buddhism in Translations by Pocahontas Wight Edmunds
Cover of the book Trials of a Country Parson by Pocahontas Wight Edmunds
Cover of the book Pascal by Pocahontas Wight Edmunds
Cover of the book Little Mr. Thimblefinger and His Queer Country by Pocahontas Wight Edmunds
Cover of the book Lentala of The South Seas: The Romantic Tale of a Lost Colony by Pocahontas Wight Edmunds
Cover of the book Genio y figura by Pocahontas Wight Edmunds
Cover of the book Homoepathic Treatment: A School Story by Pocahontas Wight Edmunds
Cover of the book From the Closed World to the Infinite Universe by Pocahontas Wight Edmunds
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy