|
| Volume 4, No. 2 |
1733: Meeting with Shacco Will
|
1976 |
Many have identified Byrd's Shacco-Will, a guide, with Eno Will, Lawson's
guide, and have pointed to this incident as symbolic of the demise of the noble
savage and of the Siouan tribes.
 |
... we sent for'an old Indian called Shacco-Will, living about
seven miles off, who reckoned himself seventy-eight years old. This
fellow pretended he could conduct us to a silver mine, that lies
either upon Eno river, or a creek of it, not far from where the Tuscaroras
once lived. But by some circumstances in his story, it seemed to
be rather a lead than a silver mine. However, such as it is, he promised
to go and show it to me whenever I pleased. To comfort his heart,
I gave him a bottle of rum, with which he made himself very happy,
and all the family very miserable by the horrible noise he made all
night.
From William Byrd, Journey to the Land of Eden, 1733.
— W. K. Boyd, ed.. Dividing Line Histories, 1929.
|
|