worse, from Massasoitâs perspective, was that the plague had not affected the Pokanoketsâ neighboring enemies, the Narragansetts, who controlled the western portion of the bay and numbered about twenty thousand, with five thousand fighting men. Just recently, Massasoit and ten of his warriors had suffered the humiliation of being forced to do obeisance to the Narragansetts, whose sachem, Canonicus, now considered the Pokanokets his subjects.
Wasted by disease and now under the thumb of a powerful and proud enemy, the Pokanokets were in a desperate struggle to maintain their existence as a people. But Massasoit had his allies. The Massachusetts to the north and the Nausets on Cape Cod shared the Pokanoketsâ antipathy to the Narragansetts. Numerically the Pokanokets were at a decided disadvantage, but this did not prevent Massasoit from attempting to use his alliances with other tribes to neutralize the threat to the west. âA small bird is called sachem,â the Englishman Roger Williams later observed, âbecause of its sachem or princelike courage and command over greater birds, that a man shall often see this small bird pursue and vanquish and put to flight the crow and other birds far bigger than itself.â The Narragansetts might feel that they were now the Pokanoketsâ masters, but, as they would soon discover, Massasoit was the consummate small bird.
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No one was sure how long ago it had occurred, but some of the Indiansâ oldest people told of what it had been like to see a European sailing vessel for the first time. âThey took the first ship they saw for a walking island,â the English settler William Wood recounted, âthe mast to be a tree, the sail white clouds, and the discharging of ordnance for lightning and thunder, which did much trouble them, but this thunder being over and this moving-island steadied with an anchor, they manned out their canoes to go and pick strawberries there. But being saluted by the way with a [cannonâs] broadsideâ¦, [they turned] back, not daring to approach till they were sent for.â
As early as 1524, the Italian explorer Giovanni da Verrazano had put in at Narragansett Bay in the vicinity of modern Newport. There he encountered âtwo kings more beautiful in form and stature than can possibly be describedâ¦. The oldest had a deerâs skin around his body, artificially wrought in damask figures, his head was without covering, his hair was tied back in various knots; around his neck he wore a large chain ornamented with many stones of different colors. The young man was similar in his general appearance. This is the finest looking tribe, the handsomest in their costumes, that we have found in our voyage.â Almost a century before the arrival of the Mayflower, Verrazano may have met Massasoitâs great-grandfather.
By 1602, when the English explorer Bartholomew Gosnold visited the region, European codfishing vessels had become an increasingly familiar sight along the New England coast. After giving Cape Cod its name, Gosnold ventured to the Elizabeth Islands at the southwestern corner of the Cape, where he built a small fort on the outermost island of Cuttyhunk. Gosnold began harvesting sassafras, the roots of which were used by Europeans to treat syphilis and rheumatism, with the intention of creating a small settlement.
A few days after his arrival, a delegation of fifty Indians in nine canoes arrived from the mainland for the purposes of trade. It was apparent to Gosnold that one of the Indians was looked to with great respect. This may have been Massasoitâs father. It is possible that the sachemâs son, who would have been in his early teens, was also present.
Gosnold presented the sachem with a pair of knives and a straw hat, which he placed experimentally on his head. Then the Indians âall sat down in manner like greyhounds upon their heelsâ and began to trade. With the