In "A Description of New England," Smith starts by describing the pleasure and satisfaction that risking your life for getting your own piece of land brings to oneself. He also suggests that building your own house, planting your own crops, and having "God's blessing and his own industry" (Smith 61). would be easy to have without having any unfairness. Then he talks about the joy of building towns and then populating them. John Smith also infrequently mentions the Native Americans, but when he does he says that they are good people and that they helped them a lot when he and his people arrived by giving them corn if they didn't have
In "A Description of New England," Smith starts by describing the pleasure and satisfaction that risking your life for getting your own piece of land brings to oneself. He also suggests that building your own house, planting your own crops, and having "God's blessing and his own industry" (Smith 61). would be easy to have without having any unfairness. Then he talks about the joy of building towns and then populating them. John Smith also infrequently mentions the Native Americans, but when he does he says that they are good people and that they helped them a lot when he and his people arrived by giving them corn if they didn't have