Unit One Primary Sources Reading 1. The Starving Time (1609): 1. Captain John Smith has no indication of modesty in the passage entitled “The Starving Time”; in fact he shows indications of a total lack of modesty. This is very evident in parts such as: “...his greatest maligners could now curse his loss.” His choice of vocabulary paints this second handed story as though the colony required him to even go on. He shows this through the section of the passage stating: “...within six months after Captain Smith’s departure there remained not past sixty men, women, and children, most miserable and poor creatures.” 2. The settlers of the Jamestown Colony didn’t have a lot going for them during the time period well known as the “Starving Time”; …show more content…
They care strongly about comradery and idleness. Their government is very laid-back with no strict structure. People just focus on doing what is good in their eyes and it keeps the town in check. 2. They believe it will keep them from becoming so incredibly uptight that they “...order a fellow to the stocks for being disorderly in his drinks...” They are attempting to keep a loose central government to avoid becoming dictatorial. Reading 6. Framing the Mayflower Compact (1620): 1. The Mayflower Compact acts as the first American Constitution. It declares a set of ground rules that all other laws must adhere to. For instance: “...hereof to enact, constitute, and frame...just and equal laws, ordinances, acts, constitutions, and offices...” It creates a standard for the laws, ordinances, acts, constitutions, and offices of the colony. 2. The Mayflower Compact shadowed the development of the first democratic institution a lot. They focused on equality a lot through the document. Some cases include: “equal laws”, “convenient for the general good”, etc. They used town meetings to create a voting system similar to the one we have now a days. Their focus was making the colony better for the greater good. Reading 7. Abandoning Communism at Plymouth