TICONDEROGA
The French army rose with the sun,
the drums beating the call to battle. Montcalm
stationed the battalions of Languedoc and La Sarre
on the left with Bourlamaque to command them, on the
right De Levis led the battalions of Béarn, Guienne
and La Reine. Montcalm himself stood with the
battalion of Royal Roussillon in the center, and St.
Luc was by his side. Volunteers held the sunken
ground between the breastwork and the outlet of Lake
George, a strong force of regulars and Canadians was
on the side of Lake Champlain under the guns of the
fort there. Then, having taken their places,
all the parts of the army went to work again, strengthening
the defenses with ax and spade, improving every moment
that might be left.
All thought of escape left Robert’s
mind in the mighty and thrilling drama that was about
to be played before him. Once more he stared at
the long line of the lake, and then his whole attention
was for the circling forest, and the hills. That
was where the army of his country lay. Nothing
was to be expected from the lake. Victory would
come from the woods, and he looked so long at the
trees that they blurred together into one mass.
He knew that the English and Americans were near,
but just how near he could not gather from those around
him.
He brushed his eyes to clear them,
and continued to study the forest. The sun, great
and brilliant, was flooding it with light, gilding
the slopes and crests of Defiance, and tinging the
green of the leaves with gold. Nothing stirred
there. The wilderness seemed silent, as if men
never fought in its depths. Time went slowly on.
After all, the army might not advance to the attack
that day. If so, his disappointment would be
bitter. He wanted a great victory, and he wanted
it at once.
His eyes suddenly caught a gleam on
the crest of Defiance. A bit of red flashed among
the trees. He thought it was the uniform of a
British soldier, and his heart beat hard. The
army was surely advancing, the attack would be made,
and the victory would be won that day, not on the
morrow nor next week, but before the sun set.
The blood pounded in his temples.
He looked at the French. They, too, had seen
the scarlet gleam on Defiance and they were watching.
Montcalm and St. Luc began to talk together earnestly.
De Levis and Bourlamaque walked back and forth among
their troops, but their gaze was upon the crest.
The men lay down ax and spade for the time, and reached
for their arms. Robert saw the sunlight glittering
on musket and bayonet, and once more he thrilled at
the thought of the great drama on which the curtain
was now rising.
Another scarlet patch appeared on
the crest and then more. He knew that the scouts
and skirmishers were there, doubtless in strong force.
It was likely that the rangers, who would be in forest
green, were more numerous than the English, and the
attack could not now be far away. A sharp crack,
a puff of white smoke on the hill, and the first shot
of Ticonderoga was fired. Then came a volley,
but the French made no reply. None of the bullets
had reached them. Robert did not know it then,
but the gleam came from the red blankets of Iroquois
Indians, the allies of the English, and not from English
uniforms. They kept up a vigorous but harmless
fire for a short while, and then drew off.
Silence descended once more on the
forest, and Robert was puzzled. It could not
be possible that this was to be the only attack.
The smoke of the rifles was already drifting away
from the crest, gone like summer vapor. The French
were returning to their work with ax and spade.
The forest covered and enclosed everything. No
sound came from it. Montcalm and St. Luc, walking
up and down, began to talk together again. They
looked no longer toward the crest of Defiance, but
watched the southern wilderness.
The work with the ax increased.
Montcalm had no mind to lose the precious hours.
More trees fell fast, and they were added to the formidable
works. The sun grew hotter and poured down sheaves
of fiery rays, but the toilers disregarded it, swinging
the axes with muscles that took no note of weariness.
Robert thought the morning would last forever.
An hour before noon De Galissonnière was passing, and,
noticing him sitting on a low mound, he said:
“I did not know what had become
of you, Mr. Lennox, but I see that you, like ourselves,
await the battle.”
“So I do,” said Robert
as lightly as he could, “but it seems to me
that it’s somewhat delayed.”
“Not our fault, I assure you.
Perhaps you didn’t think so earlier, but you
see we’re willing to fight, no matter how great
the odds.”
“I admit it. The Marquis
de Montcalm has his courage—perhaps too
much.”
De Galissonnière glanced at the strong
works, and his smile was confident, but he merely
said:
“It is for the future to tell.”
Then he went on, and Robert hoped
that whatever happened the battle would spare the
young Frenchman.
Up went the sun toward the zenith.
A light wind rustled the foliage. Noon was near,
and he began to wonder anew what had become of the
advancing army. Suddenly, the echo of a crash
came out of the forest in front. He stood erect,
listening intently, and the sound rose again, but
it was not an echo now. It was real, and he knew
that the battle was at hand.
The crashes became continuous.
Mingled with them were shouts, and a cloud of smoke
began to float above the trees. The French fired
a cannon as a signal, and, before the echoes of its
report rolled away, every man dropped ax or spade,
and was in his place, weapon in hand. The noise
of the firing in front grew fast. Montcalm’s
scouts and pickets were driven in, and the soldiers
of the advancing army began to show among the trees.
The French batteries opened. The roar in Robert’s
ear was terrific, but he stood at his utmost height
in order that he might see the assault. His eyes
caught the gleam of uniforms and the flash of sunlight
on bayonet and rifle. He knew now that his own
people, dauntless and tenacious, were coming.
He did not know that they had left their artillery
behind, and that they expected to destroy the French
army with bayonet and rifle and musket.
The fire from the French barrier increased
in volume. Its crash beat heavily and continuously
on the drums of Robert’s ears. A deadly
sleet was beating upon the advancing English and Americans.
Already their dead were heaping up in rows. Montcalm’s
men showed their heads only above their works, their
bodies were sheltered by the logs and they fired and
fired into the charging masses until the barrels of
rifles and muskets grew too hot for them to hold.
Meanwhile they shouted with all their might:
“Vive la France! Vive notre General!
Vive le Roi!” and St. Luc, who stood always
with Montcalm, hummed softly and under his breath:
“Hier, sur le pont d’Avignon, j’ai
oui chanter la belle.”
“It goes well,” he said to Montcalm.
“Aye, a fair beginning,” replied the Marquis.
Fire ran through French veins.
No cannon balls were coming from the enemy to sweep
down their defenses. Bullets from rifle and musket
were beating in vain on their wooden wall, and before
them came the foe, a vast, converging mass, a target
that no one could miss. They were far from their
own land, deep in the great North American wilderness,
but as they saw it, they fought for the honor and
glory of France, and to keep what was hers. They
redoubled their shouts and fired faster and faster.
A great cloud of smoke rose over the clearing and the
forest, but through it the attacking army always advanced,
a hedge of bayonets leading.
Robert saw everything clearly.
His heart sank for a moment, and then leaped up again.
Many of his own had fallen, but a great red curve was
advancing. It was the British regulars, the best
troops in the charge that Europe could furnish, and
they would surely carry the wooden wall. As far
as he could see, in front and to left and right, their
bayonets flashed in the sun, and a cry of admiration
sprang to his lips. Forward they came, their
line even and beautiful, and then the tempest beat
upon them. The entire French fire was concentrated
upon the concave red lines. The batteries poured
grape shot upon them and a sleet of lead cut through
flesh and bone. Gaps were torn in their ranks,
but the others closed up, and came on, the American
Colonials on their flanks charging as bravely.
Robert suddenly remembered a vision
of his, vague and fleeting then, but very real now.
He was standing here at Ticonderoga, looking at the
battle as it passed before him, and now it was no vision,
but the truth. Had Tayoga’s Manitou opened
the future to him for a moment? Then the memory
was gone and the terrific drama of the present claimed
his whole mind.
The red lines were not stopped.
In the face of awful losses they were still coming.
They were among the trees where the men were entangled
with the boughs or ran upon the wooden spikes.
Often they tripped and fell, but rising they returned
to the charge, offering their breasts to the deadly
storm that never diminished for an instant.
Robert walked back and forth in his
little space. Every nerve was on edge. The
smoke of the firing was in eye, throat and nostril,
and his brain was hot. But confidence was again
supreme. “They’ll come! They’ll
come! Nothing can stop them!” he kept repeating
to himself.
Now the Colonials on the flank pressed
forward, and they also advanced through the lines
of the regulars in front and charged with them.
Together British and Americans climbed over the mass
of fallen trees in face of the terrible fire, and
reached the wooden wall itself, where the sleet beat
directly upon their faces. For a long distance
behind them, their dead and wounded lay in hundreds
and hundreds.
Many of them tried to scale the barrier,
but were beaten back. Now Montcalm, St. Luc,
De Levis, Bourlamaque and all the French leaders made
their mightiest efforts. The eye of the French
commander swept the field. He neglected nothing.
Never was a man better served by his lieutenants.
St. Luc was at every threatened point, encouraging
with voice and example. Bourlamaque received
a dangerous wound, but refused to quit the field.
Bougainville was hit, but his hurt was less severe,
and he took no notice of it, two bullets pierced the
hat of De Levis, St. Luc took a half dozen through
his clothes and his body was grazed three times, but
his gay and warlike spirit mounted steadily, and he
hummed his little French air over and over again.
More British and Americans pressed
to the wooden wall. The new Black Watch, stalwart
Scotchmen, bagpipes playing, charged over everything.
Two British columns made a powerful and tremendous
attack upon the French right, where stood the valiant
battalions of Béarn and Guienne. It seemed, for
a while, that they might overwhelm everything.
They were against the barrier itself, and were firing
into the defense. Montcalm rushed to the spot
with all the reserves he could muster. St. Luc
sprang among the men and shouted to them to increase
their fire. This point became the center of the
battle, and its full fury was concentrated there.
A mass of Highlanders, tearing at the wooden wall,
refused to give back. Though they fell fast, a
captain climbed up the barrier. Officers and
men followed him. They stood a moment on the
crest as if to poise themselves, and then leaped down
among the French, where they were killed. Those
who stood on the other side were swept by a hurricane
of fire, and at last they yielded slowly.
Robert saw all, and he was seized
with a great horror. The army was not crashing
over everything. Those who entered the French
works died there. The wooden wall held.
Nowhere was the line of defense broken. Boats
loaded with troops coming down the outlet of Lake George
to turn the French left were repelled by the muskets
of the Canadian volunteers. Some of the boats
were sunk, and the soldiers struggled in the water,
as cannon balls and bullets beat upon them.
His view of the field was blurred,
for a while, by the smoke from so much firing, which
floated in thickening clouds over all the open spaces
and the edges of the forest. It produced curious
optical illusions. The French loomed through
it, increased fourfold in numbers, every individual
man magnified in size. He saw them lurid and
gigantic, pulling the triggers of their rifles or muskets,
or working the batteries. The cannon also grew
from twelve-pounders or eighteen-pounders into guns
three or four times as large, and many stood where
none had stood before.
The smoke continued to inflame his
brain also, and it made him pass through great alternations
of hope and fear. Now the army was going to sweep
over the wooden wall in spite of everything. With
sheer weight and bravery it would crush the French
and take Ticonderoga. It must be. Because
he wanted it to be, it was going to be. Then he
passed to the other extreme. When one of the
charges spent itself at the barrier, sending perhaps
a few men over it, like foam from a wave that has
reached its crest, his heart sank to the depths, and
he was sure the British and Americans could not come
again. Mortal men would not offer themselves
so often to slaughter. If the firing died for
a little space he was in deep despair, but his soul
leaped up again as the charge came anew. It was
certainly victory this time. Hope could not be
crushed in him. His vivid fancy made him hear
above the triumphant shouts of the French the deep
cheers of the advancing army, the beating of drums
and the playing of invisible bands.
All the time, whether in attack or
retreat, the smoke continued to increase and to inflame
and excite. It was like a gas, its taste was
acrid and bitter as death. Robert coughed and
tried to blow it away, but it returned in waves heavier
than ever, and then he ceased to fight against it.
The British and American troops came
again and again to the attack, their officers leading
them on. Never had they shown greater courage
or more willingness to die. When the first lines
were cut down at the barrier, others took their places.
They charged into the vast mass of fallen trees and
against the spikes. Blinded by the smoke of so
much firing, they nevertheless kept their faces toward
the enemy and sought to see him. The fierce cheering
of the French merely encouraged them to new attempts.
The battle went on for hours.
It seemed days to Robert. Mass after mass of
British and Colonials continued to charge upon the
wooden wall, always to be broken down by the French
fire, leaving heaps of their dead among those logs
and boughs and on that bristling array of spikes.
At last they advanced no more, twilight came over the
field, the terrible fire that had raged since noon
died, and the sun set upon the greatest military triumph
ever won by France in the New World.
Twilight gathered over the most sanguinary
field America had yet seen. In the east the dark
was already at hand, but in the west the light from
the sunken sun yet lingered, casting a scarlet glow
alike over the fallen and the triumphant faces of
the victors. Within the works where the French
had stood fires were lighted, and everything there
was brilliant, but outside, where so much valor had
been wasted, the shadows that seemed to creep out
of the illimitable forest grew thicker and thicker.
The wind moaned incessantly among
the leaves, and the persistent smoke that had been
so bitter in the throat and nostrils of Robert still
hung in great clouds that the wind moved but little.
From the woods came long, fierce howls. The wolves,
no longer frightened by the crash of cannon and muskets,
were coming, and under cover of bushes and floating
smoke, they crept nearer and nearer.
Robert sat a long time, bewildered,
stunned. The incredible had happened. He
had seen it with his own eyes, and yet it was hard
to believe that it was true. The great Anglo-American
army had been beaten by a French force far less in
numbers. Rather, it had beaten itself. That
neglect to bring up the cannon had proved fatal, and
the finest force yet gathered on the soil of North
America had been cut to pieces. A prodigious
opportunity had been lost by a commander who stayed
a mile and a half in the rear, while his valiant men
charged to certain death.
Young Lennox walked stiffly a few
steps. No one paid any attention to him.
In the dark, and amid the joyous excitement of the
defenders, he might have been taken for a Frenchman.
But he made no attempt, then, to escape. No such
thought was in his mind for the moment. His amazement
gave way to horror. He wanted to see what was
beyond the wooden wall where he knew the dead and
wounded lay, piled deep among the logs and sharpened
boughs. Unbelievable it was, but it was true.
His own eyes had seen and his own ears had heard.
He listened to the triumphant shouts of the French,
and his soul sank within him.
A few shots came from the forest now
and then, but the great army had vanished, save for
its fallen. Montcalm, still cautious, relaxing
no vigilance, fearing that the enemy would yet come
back with his cannon, walked among his troops and
gave them thanks in person. Beer and wine in
abundance, and food were served to them. Fires
were lighted and the field that they had defended
was to be their camp. Many scouts were sent into
the forest to see what had become of the opposing army.
Most of the soldiers, after eating and drinking, threw
themselves upon the ground and slept, but it was long
before the leader and any of his lieutenants closed
their eyes. Although he felt a mighty joy over
his great victory of the day, Montcalm was still a
prey to anxieties. His own force, triumphant
though it might be, was small. The enemy might
come again on the morrow with nearly four to one, and,
if he brought his cannon with him, he could take Ticonderoga,
despite the great losses he had suffered already.
Once more he talked with St. Luc, whom he trusted
implicitly.
The Chevalier did not believe a second
attack would be made, and his belief was so strong
it amounted to a conviction.
“The same mind,” he said,
“that sent their army against us without artillery,
will now go to the other extreme. Having deemed
us negligible it will think us invincible.”
St. Luc’s logic was correct.
The French passed the night in peace, and the next
morning, when De Levis went out with a strong party
to look for the enemy he found that he was gone, and
that in his haste he had left behind vast quantities
of food and other supplies which the French eagerly
seized. Montcalm that day, full of pride, caused
a great cross to be erected on his victorious field
of battle and upon it he wrote in Latin:
“Quid dux? quid miles? quid strata
ingentia ligna?
En Signum! en victor! Deus hic, Deus
ipse triumphat.”
Which a great American writer has translated into:
“Soldier and chief and ramparts’
strength are nought;
Behold the conquering cross! ’Tis
God the triumph wrought.”
But for Robert the night that closed
down was the blackest he had ever known. It had
never occurred to him that Abercrombie’s army
could be defeated. Confident in its overwhelming
numbers, he had believed that it would easily sweep
away the French and take Ticonderoga. The skill
and valor of Montcalm, St. Luc, De Levis and the others,
no matter how skillful and valiant they might be,
could avail nothing, and, after Ticonderoga, it would
be a mere question of time until Crown Point fell
too. And after that would come Quebec and the
conquest of Canada.
Now, when his spirits had soared so
high, the fall was correspondingly low. His sensitive
mind, upon which events always painted themselves
with such vividness, reflected only the darkest pictures.
He saw the triumphant advance of the French, the Indians
laying waste the whole of New York Province, and the
enemy at the gates of New York itself.
The night itself was a perfect reproduction
of his own mind. He saw through his spirits as
through a glass. The dusk was thick, heavy, it
was noisome, it had a quality that was almost ponderable,
it was unpleasant to eye and nostril, he tasted and
breathed the smoke that was shot through it, and he
felt a sickening of the soul. He heard a wind
moaning through the forest, and it was to him a dirge,
the lament of those who had fallen.
He knew there had been no lack of
bravery on the part of his own. After a while
he took some consolation in that fact. British
and Americans had come to the attack long after hope
of success was gone. They had not known how to
win, but never had men known better how to die.
Such valor would march to triumph in the end.
He lay awake almost the whole night,
and he did not expect Abercrombie to advance again.
Somehow he had the feeling that the play, so far as
this particular drama was concerned, was played out.
The blow was so heavy that he was in a dull and apathetic
state from which he was stirred only once in the evening,
and that was when two Frenchmen passed near him, escorting
a prisoner of whose face he caught a glimpse in the
firelight. He started forward, exclaiming:
“Charteris!”[1]
The young man, tall, handsome and
firm of feature, although a captive, turned.
“Who called me?” he asked.
“It is I, Robert Lennox,” said Robert.
“I knew you in New York!”
“Aye, Mr. Lennox. I recognize
you now. We meet again, after so long a time.
I could have preferred the meeting to be elsewhere
and under other circumstances, but it is something
to know that you are alive.”
They shook hands with great friendliness
and the Frenchmen, who were guarding Charteris, waited
patiently.
“May our next meeting be under
brighter omens,” said Robert.
“I think it will be,” said Charteris confidently.
Then he went on. It was a long
time before they were to see each other again, and
the drama that was to bring them face to face once
more was destined to be as thrilling as that at Ticonderoga.
The next night came heavy and dark,
and Robert, who continued to be treated with singular
forbearance, wandered toward Lake Champlain, which
lay pale and shadowy under the thick dusk. No
one stopped him. The sentinels seemed to have
business elsewhere, and suddenly he remembered his
old threat to escape. Hope returned to a mind
that had been stunned for a time, and it came back
vivid and strong. Then hope sank down again,
when a figure issued from the dusk, and stood before
him. It was St. Luc.
“Mr. Lennox,” said the
Chevalier, “what are you doing here?”
“Merely wandering about,”
replied Robert. “I’m a prisoner, as
you know, but no one is bothering about me, which
I take to be natural when the echoes of so great a
battle have scarcely yet died.”
St. Luc looked at him keenly and Robert
met his gaze. He could not read the eye of the
Chevalier.
“You have been a prisoner of
ours once before, but you escaped,” said the
Chevalier. “It seems that you are a hard
lad to hold.”
“But then I had the help of
the greatest trailer and forest runner in the world,
my staunch friend, Tayoga, the Onondaga.”
“If he rescued you once he will
probably try to do it again, and the great hunter,
Willet, is likely to be with him. I suppose you
were planning a few moments ago to escape along the
shore of the lake.”
“I might have been, but I see now that it is
too late.”
“Too late is a phrase that should be seldom
used by youth.”
Robert tried once again to read the
Chevalier’s eye, but St. Luc’s look contained
the old enigma.
“I admit,” said young
Lennox, “that I thought I might find an open
place in your line. It was only a possible chance.”
St. Luc shrugged his shoulders, and
looked at the darkness that lay before them like a
great black blanket.
“There is much yet to be done
by us at Ticonderoga,” he said. “Perhaps
it is true that a possible chance for you to escape
does exist, but my duties are too important for me
to concern myself about guarding a single prisoner.”
His figure vanished. He was gone
without noise, and Robert stared at the place where
he had been. Then the hope of escape came back,
more vivid and more powerful than ever. “Too
late,” was a phrase that should not be known
to youth. St. Luc was right. He walked straight
ahead. No sentinel barred the way. Presently
the lake, still and luminous, stretched across his
path, and, darting into the bushes along its edge,
he ran for a long time. Then he sank down and
looked back. He saw dimly the lights of the camp,
but he heard no sound of pursuit.
Rising, he began a great curve about
Ticonderoga, intending to seek his own army, which
he knew could not yet be far away. Once he heard
light footsteps and hid deep in the bush. From
his covert he saw a band of warriors at least twenty
in number go by, their lean, sinewy figures showing
faintly in the dusk. Their faces were turned toward
the south and he shuddered. Already they were
beginning to raid the border. He knew that they
had taken little or no part in the battle at Ticonderoga,
but now the great success of the French would bring
them flocking back to Montcalm’s banner, and
they would rush like wolves upon those whom they thought
defenseless, hoping for more slaughters like that
of William Henry.
Tandakora would not neglect such a
glowing opportunity for scalps. His savage spirit
would incite the warriors to attempts yet greater,
and Robert looked closely at the dusky line, thinking
for a moment that he might be there. But he did
not see his gigantic figure and the warriors flitted
on, gone like shadows in the darkness. Then the
fugitive youth resumed his own flight.
Far in the night Robert sank down
in a state of exhaustion. It was a physical and
mental collapse, coming with great suddenness, but
he recognized it for what it was, the natural consequence
flowing from a period of such excessive strain.
His emotions throughout the great battle had been
tense and violent, and they had been hardly less so
in the time that followed and in the course of the
events that led to his escape. And knowing, he
forced himself to do what was necessary.
He lay down in the shelter of dense
bushes, and kept himself perfectly quiet for a long
time. He would not allow hand or foot to move.
His weary heart at last began to beat with regularity,
the blood ceased to pound in his temples, and his
nerves grew steadier. He dozed a little, or at
least passed into a state that was midway between wakefulness
and oblivion. Then the terrible battle was fought
once more before him. Again he heard the crash
and roar of the French fire, again he saw British
and Americans coming forward in indomitable masses,
offering themselves to death, once again he saw them
tangled among the logs and sharpened boughs, and then
mowed down at the wooden wall.
He roused himself and passed his hands
over his eyes to shut away that vision of the stricken
field and the vivid reminder of his terrible disappointment.
The picture was still as fresh as the reality and it
sent shudders through him every time he saw it.
He would keep it from his sight whenever he could,
lest he grow too morbid.
He rose and started once more toward
the south, but the forest became more dense and tangled
and the country rougher. In his weakened state
he was not able to think with his usual clearness and
precision, and he lost the sense of direction.
He began to wander about aimlessly, and at last he
stopped almost in despair.
He was in a desperate plight.
He was unarmed, and a man alone and without weapons
in the wilderness was usually as good as lost.
He looked around, trying to study the points of the
compass. The night was not dark. Trees and
bushes stood up distinctly, and on a bough not far
away, his eyes suddenly caught a flash of blue.
The flash was made by a small, glossy
bird that wavered on a bough, and he was about to
turn away, taking no further notice of it, when the
bird flew slowly before him and in a direction which
he now knew led straight toward the south. He
remembered. Back to his mind rushed an earlier
escape, and how he had followed the flight of a bird
to safety. Had Tayoga’s Manitou intervened
again in his favor? Was it chance? Or did
he in a dazed state imagine that he saw what he did
not see?
The bird, an azure flash, flew on
before him, and hope flowing in an invincible tide
in his veins, he followed. He was in continual
fear lest the blue flame fade away, but on he went,
over hills and across valleys and brooks, and it was
always just before him. He had been worn and
weary before, but now he felt strong and active.
Courage rose steadily in his veins, and he had no
doubt that he would reach friends.
Near dawn the bird suddenly disappeared
among the leaves. Robert stopped and heard a
light foot-step in the bushes. Being apprehensive
lest he be re-taken, he shrank away and then stopped.
He listened a while, and the sound not being repeated,
he hoped that he had been mistaken, but a voice called
suddenly from a bush not ten feet away:
“Come, Dagaeoga! The Great
Bear and I await you. Tododaho, watching on his
star, has sent us into your path.”
Robert, uttering a joyful cry, sprang
forward, and the Onondaga and Willet, rising from
the thicket, greeted him with the utmost warmth.
“I knew we’d find you
again,” said Willet “How did you manage
to escape?”
“A way seemed to open for me,”
replied Robert. “The last man I saw in
the French camp was St. Luc. After that I met
no sentinel, although I passed where a sentinel would
stand.”
“Ah!” said Willet.
They gave him food, and after sunrise
they started toward the south. Robert told how
he had seen the great battle and the French victory.
“Tayoga, Black Rifle, Grosvenor
and I were in the attack,” said Willet, “but
we went through it without a scratch. No troops
ever fought more bravely than ours. The defeat
was the fault of the commander, not theirs. But
we’ll put behind us the battle lost and think
of the battle yet to be won.”
“So we will,” said Robert,
as he looked around at the great curving forest, its
deep green tinted with the light brown of summer.
It was a friendly forest now. It no longer had
the aspect of the night before, when the wolves, their
jaws slavering in anticipation, howled in its thickets.
Rabbits sprang up as they passed, but the little creatures
of the wild did not seem to be afraid. They did
not run away. Instead, they crouched under the
bushes, and gazed with mild eyes at the human beings
who made no threats. A deer, drinking at the edge
of a brook, raised its head a little and then continued
to drink. Birds sang in the dewy dawn with uncommon
freshness and sweetness. The whole world was
renewed.
Creature, as he was, of his moods,
Robert’s spirits soared again at his meeting
with Tayoga and Willet, those staunch friends of his,
bound to him by such strong ties and so many dangers
shared. The past was the past, Ticonderoga was
a defeat, a great defeat, when a victory had been
expected, but it was not irreparable. Hope sang
in his heart and his face flushed in the dawn.
The Onondaga, looking at him, smiled.
“Dagaeoga already looks to the future,”
he said.
“So I do,” replied Robert
with enthusiasm. “Why shouldn’t I?
The night just passed has favored me. I escaped.
I met you and Dave, and it’s a glorious morning.”
The sun was rising in a splendid sea
of color, tinting the woods with red and gold.
Never had the wilderness looked more beautiful to him.
He turned his face in the direction of Ticonderoga.
“We’ll come back,”
he said, his heart full of courage, “and we’ll
yet win the victory, even to the taking of Quebec.”
“So we will,” said the hunter.
“Aye, Stadacona itself will fall,” said
Tayoga.
Refreshed and strong, they plunged
anew into the forest, traveling swiftly toward the
south.
[Footnote 1: The story of Edward
Charteris and his adventures at Ticonderoga and Quebec
is told in the author’s novel, “A Soldier
of Manhattan.”]
THE END