A Chief Lady of Pomeiooc About twenty miles from that island, near the lake of Paquippe, there is another town called Pomeiooc hard by the sea. The apparel of the chief ladies of that town differeth but little from the attire of those which live in Roanoke. For they wear their hair trussed up in a knot, as the maidens do which we spake of before, and have their skins pounced in the same manner, yet they wear a chain of great pearls, or beads of copper, or smooth bones, five or six folds about their necks, bearing one arm in the same, and in the other they carry a gourd full of some kind of pleasant liquor. They tie deers' skin doubled about them crossing higher about their breasts and hanging down before almost to their knees, and are almost altogether naked behind. Commonly their young daughters of seven or eight years old do wait upon them wearing about them a girdle of skin, which hangeth down behind, and is drawn underneath between their twist and bound about their navel with moss of trees between that their skins as the older sort do. They are greatly delighted with puppets and babes which were brought out of England.