GREEN MIOUNTAIN BOYh HISTORICAL TALE OF THE EARLY SETTLEMENT OF VER3MONT BY THE AUTHOR OF "MAY MARTIN, OR THE MONEY DIGGERS " "LOCKE AMISDEN, OR THE SCIIOOLMASTER" &C. - "'T is a rough land of rock, and stone, and tlee, Where breathes no castled lord, nor cabin'd slave Where thoughts, and hands, and tongues are free, And frionds will find a welcome -foes a grave." TWO VOLUMES IN ONE. BOSTON: SANBORN, CARTER, BAZIN & CO. 185 7. Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year 1848, BY BENJAMIN B. MUSSEY & CO. In the Clerk's Office of the District Court of the District of Massachusett. _._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ t A _ _ _ _ A _,@~~~~~-11-1 —"-, — INSCRIBED TO THE HONORABLE HEMAN ALLEN, Late U. a. intlster to CfUf. TO NO ONE CAN THIS WORK BE MORE APPROPRIATELY DEDICATIED THAN TO THE DISTINGUISHED SON OF ONE OF THAT INTELLIGENT, ENTERPRISING, PATRIOTIO AND FEARLESS BAND OF BROTHERS, THE ALLENS, ro WTIOSE ENERGETIC CHARACTERS, AND VARIED SERVICES, VERMONT IS SO DEEPLY INDEBTED FOR HER EXISTENCE AS AN INDEPENDENT STATE, AND FOR THE FOUNDATION OF HER PRESENT PROSPERITY. PREFACE TO THE SECOND EDITION. Tnsr favor with which this work has been received, even with al; its typographical errors, and its uninviting dress, has induced the author to offer another and revised edition to the public, who have done his poor efforts so unexpected and, as he fears, undeserved an honor. The materials of the work, consisting of veritable incident, collected from original sources, were undoubtedly good; and the author can only regret that they were not wrought up with an ability corresponding to their richness. He would gladly make several alterations in the work, particularly in the appellation of one of the most conspicuous personages, CHARLES WARRINGTON, whose prototype was intended to be the chivalrous Colonel SETH WARNER, whom he always regretted he had not introduced, like ALLEN, BAKER, MRS. STORY, and other historical characters, under his own name. But as this, and other like alterations could not be made without somewhat varying the construction of the whole Tale, he has concluded to present it, with the exception of corrections and a few additional notes, rn the original form. TIIE AUTHOR. 1* PREFACE. THE following pages are intended to embody and illustrate a portion of the more romantic incidents which actually occurred in the early settlements of Vermont, with the use of but little more of fiction than was deemed sufficient to weave them together, and impart to the tissue a connected interest. In doing this, the author has ventured, for the sake of more unity of design, upon one or two anachronisms; or, in other words, he has brought together, or nearly so, some incidents, connected with the portions of the two different periods embraced in the work, viz. the New York controversy and the revolution —whick occurred at intervals. Other than this, he is sensible of no violations of historical truth. Without consulting, as perhaps he should, the models to be found in the works of approved writers in this department of literature, he has endeavored to give a true delineation of the manners and feelings of those among whom the scene is laid, together with the deeds and characters of some of the leading actors in the events he has attempted to describe, as gathered from the imperfect published histories of the times, from the private papers to which he has had access, and more particularly from the lips of the few aged relics of that period who actively participated in the wild and stirring scenes which peculiarly marked the settlement of this part of the country. How far he has succeeded in the attempt it is for the public, not for him, to decide. THE AUTHOR. MONTPELIER, MARCH, 1839. INTRODUCTION. THE events which transpired in the early settlement of Vermont, and especially during the seven years immediately preceding our great struggle for national independence, deserve a conspicuous place in what has been termed the romance of history. The situation in which the settlers found themselves placed, about the beginning of the last mentioned period, was one very peculiarly calculated to arouse the individual feelings of men, and raise their minds to that pitch of desperate excitement, when, spurning all further restraints, they, like the pent fires of the earth, break through the barriers that circumscribe the ordinary course of human action, and leap at once into the arena of daring deeds and chivalrous exploits. They had derived the titles to their lands from patents made under the authority of the British crown, and issued by the royal governor of New Hampshire, — to which province it was then generally understood their territory unquestionably belonged. A claim to this territory, however, was soon set up by the government of New York: and in the process of time certain statesmen of the latter province, corruptly combining with influential land speculators, procured, by their intrigues at the British court, a decree, establishing Connecticut river as the boundary line between the two belligerent provinces, and thus throwing, the whole of the disputed territory within the governmental jurisdiction of New York.' In a change of jurisdiction merely, the settlers of the New Hampshire (Grants, as this tract of country was then usually designated, would have doubtless peaceably acquiesced. But when, by one of the most bold and singular perversions of law and justice to be found on record, the tribunals of New York decided this decree to have a retrospective operation, so as to involve the titles of the lands as well as the jurisdiction of the territory, the voice of the indignant settlers unitedly rose from every part of their Green Mlountains, in loud and determined remonstrances: for this decision, which was of itself a legal paradox, going to destroy the right of property already irrevocably granted by the crown - the very same source of power by which it was now proposed a new right, with new conditions, should be irrevocably established - subjected them to the exasperating alternative of either ViI INTRODUCTION. relinquishing their farms, which they had once honestly purchased and paid for, with all those improvements that had cost them so much labor and privation, or of purchasing and paying for them again on such terms as those who claimed to be their new masters might choose to exact. The latter, with their limited pecuniary resources, they at once saw that it would be utterly impossible for most of them to do; while to the former their proud spirits would never for a moment brook the thought of submitting. Paying, therefore,. after they had vainly exhausted every argument in petition and remonstrance to the governor and his council, and as vainly attempted to defend a few of the first suits brought for' the possession of their farms before his obsequious tribunal; paying, we say, no further attention to the summonses to (quit, which now poured thickly upon them, they soon found their secluded settlement invaded by the greedy swarms of their cormorant foes, attended by sheriffs, each with a large armed posse for a forcible ejection of the inhabitants, and surveyors with their assistants for laying out and locating the unoccupied territory. Having thus found that peaceable measures were wholly unavailing, the now aroused and determined settlers unanimously resolved on resistance, and immediately put themselves in an attitude to carry their resolution into effect. An independent organization was accordingly established throughout the Grants, consisting of committees of safety, as they were termed, appointed to act as provisional courts for trying offenders, supervising the public concerns in their respective towns, and generally to serve, it is believed, as delegates to the general convention which, from time to time, assembled to consult on the public welfare, and make such regulations and decrees as the exigencies might require; while to enforce these orders and decrees, and to defend the settlers from ago'ressions of the New York authorities, military associations were formed, the members of which soon became generally known by the appellation of the Green Mountain Boys. And although the shedding of blood was generally avoided by them in repelling these intruders upon their soil, yet punishment of some kind was sure, on the commission of every offence, to be promptly administered. These punishments were various and singular — sometimes extremely ingenious and laughable. The most common mode, however, consisted in the application of the beech rod, or the Beech Seal, as they were pleased to term it, in allusion to the emblem of the great seal of New Hampshire, of which their parchsment deeds, probably, bore the impress; while this novel method of applying it, they humorously contended, was but to confirm their old titles. In this spirited manner was the contest commenced and continued by the settlers; and although armed forces were several times sent into the Grants to aid the authorities in ejecting the inhabitants, and although all the leaders of the latter were indicted and outlawed as felons by the courts of New York, and proclamation after proclama. tion issued by the governor of that province, offering large rewards for the delivery of those marked for the punishment of death, and teeming with denunciations against all those who should offer further resistance; yet so united were the people, and so determined the character of their INTRODUCTION ix opposition, that their haffled antagonists were never able to accomplish but the most insignificant iresults fobr their years of labor, in endeavoring to effect i foothold in the territory of Vermont, while the whole controversy exhibited fo the world the singular spectacle of a few thousand poor settlers, thinly scattered over a wilderness of a hundred miles in extent, successfully resisting, for a series of years, the authority of a province, apparently determined on their subjugation, and possessing perhaps fifty times their population and resources. lHaving thus glanced at the leading features of this embittered controversy, (out of the events of which a large portion of the following story is woven), to enable the reader more readily to understand many of the allusions he may find in the progress of the tale, we will now proceed with the narration. TIHE GREEN MOUNTAIN BOYS. CHAPTER I. "And now for scenes where nature in her pride Roar'd in rough floods, and wav'd in forests wide - Where men were taught the desert path to trace, And the rude pleasures 6f the mountain chase - With light canoe to plough the glassy lake, And from its depths the silvery trout to take - Where nerves of iron grew, and souls of tone To soft refinement's tranquil scenes unknown." THOSE who have wandered along the banks of the Otter Creek, in search of the beautiful and picturesque, may have extended their rambles, perhaps, to lake Dunmore, which lies embosomed among the hills a few miles to the eastward of that quiet stream. If so, their taste for natural scenery has doubt. less been amply gratified; for there is no spot in the whole range of the Green Mountains that combines more of the requisites for a perfect landscape than this romantic sheet of water and its surrounding shores. Of an oblong form, about four miles in length and one in breadth, this lake, or pond, as such bodies of water are more usually denominated among us, lies extended between the main ridge and a collateral eminence on the west, of a height but little more than sufficient to serve as a secure embankment to this noble reservoir of the hills. From the eastern shore the land rises abruptly into a lofty mountain, which, like some mighty giantess, sits enthroned in the mid heavens, her head turbaned 12 THE GREEN MOUNTAIN BOYS. with a wreath of white mist, and looking down with seeming fondness and care upon the bright daughter, that reflecting back her own rude image, lies quietly reposing in her lap, receiving the rich supply of a thousand pearly rills that come gushing to her opening lips. To the north and south open long and beautiful vistas, extending along over the bright extremities of the lake, and terminating among the far off peaks of the Green MVlountains; while from the western shore the land, after a gentle rise foi a short distance, falls off rapidly toward the Otter, leaving the broad and extensive valley of that stream open to the vision, which now wanders unobstructed to the western borders of the lake Champlain, where the long chain of mountains that rise immediately beyond, lies sleeping in the blue distance, and bounds the view of this magnificent scene. It was near sunset, on one of the last days of April, and in the same year and month which were marked by the opening scene of our great national drama, that four stout and hardy looking men, two of them of about the middle age, and two considerably younger, were seen occupying a large log canoe near the eastern shore of the lake just described, and engaged fishing for trout. Their success through the day in ensnaring " the pride of the pure waters," as the trout has been appropriately termed, had been ample, as was evinced by the large strings of this beautiful fish lying on the bottom of the boat beneath the feet of their respective captors. Now, however, as the'rapidly lengthening shadows of the dark primeval forest, that thickly lined the shores, had nearly closed over the lake, the party began to manifest a disposition to relinquish the exciting labors of the day. One sat listless and unemployed in his seat; another was taking in and winding up his line; while a third had handled the.oars, and sat patiently awaiting the movements of the fourth, who seemed intent on securing, before quitting the station, one more victim, as "a most severe large one," he said, was brushing round his hook. At length the speckled tantalizer, after playing warily round the bait awhile, seized it with a desperation that seemed to imply at once his suspicions and his determination to test them, and was drawn flapping and floundering into the boat, amidst a shout of exultation from the company, who unanimously declared the fish to be a ten-pounder, and the capital prize of all that had that day been taken. All being now in readiness, the boat was rowed slowly toward the shore in the direction of a spot indicated as the place of their temporary quarters by a slight, wreathy line of blue smoke, which had risen from their THE GREEN MOUNTAIN BOYS. 13 noon fires, and still hung undissipated along the precipitous cliffs of the mountain above. On reaching the, shore the party, after taking out their fish and carefully concealing their canoe in a thick clump of overhanging bushes, proceeded to their retreat, which proved to be a cavern in the rocks, at the foot of the mountain, here shutting down within a dozen rods of the lake. The front of this cave consisted of a sort of natural porch, eight or ten feet in length, and of, perhaps, about half that number of feet in width, formed by a projection of the rocks above and on each side, so as to enclose the intervening space. From the centre of the area' thus formed in front, an entrance, wide enough only to admit one person at a time, opened into the interior, or main part of the cavern, a spacious and lofty room branching off in several dark recesses that appeared to extend far into the rocks. This cave had once been a favorite lodge with the Indians, as was evident from the flint arrow-heads, and other indications of aboriginal life, discovered in and about the place; and in late years it had been the usual resort of professional hunters, and others of the neighboring settlement, when out for more than one day on fishing and hunting excursions on the lake or its vicinity, as it afforded them comfortable quarters for the night, and such as could easily be secured from the intrusion of wild beasts, or Indians, small parties of whom, though not generally very hostile at this period, were still occasionally seen skulking among these mountains. The party now present, as before remarked, were four in number. The two eldest of these had nothing remarkable in their appearance to distinguish them from the ordinary run of men, except their broad chests and strong muscular limbs, which they possessed in common with most of the settlers. Of the other two, whom we will more particularly describe, one was a young woodsman of very singular and striking appearance. He was full seven feet high, and as straight as an arrow. From his trunk, which, though strongly made, and quite as large as that of a common stout man, looked like a may-pole, rose a long, slender neck, surmounted by a small apple-shaped head. His features might have been regular when he slept, but in conversation, in which he was always sure to have a part, they were made to play such antics, by way of acting as gestures to the queer conceits with which his brain was forever teeming, that it would have been difficult to tell what any one of them might have been when reduced to a state of quiescence. His mouth with a peculiar twist seemed to move at will in a half circle from one ear to the other; while his nose, playing at cross purposes with his mouth, 2 14 THE GREEN MOUNTAIN BOYS. was seemingly wriggled up to the eyebrows, or let down to the chin at the option of its owner. These, with the eyes, which were no less singularly expressive, combined to form a countenance to the last degree comical, though, with all its predominating humor, great good nature and considerable native intelligence were very visibly mingled in its expression. This man went by the name of Pete Jones, or long-legged Pete, as was his more common appellation among his companions. The other person, the only one of the party now remaining to be described, was evidently far superior in every respect, except physical powers, to the rest of the company. His exterior exhibited a high degree of manly beauty, both in form and feature; while a fine dark eye, with a cleanly turned, rectilinear nose, and a high square forehead, indicated tastes of an intellectual character. His countenance was expressive of keen perceptions, and manifested also, like that of the person last described, a strong disposition to wit and mirthfulness; though his disposition unlike that of his rude companion, had been evidently chastened and trained by education and intercourse with refined society, the advantages of both of which his language and manners showed he had received. His whole appearance, indeed, was such as would induce to the probable conclusion that a romantic turn of mind, with a love of the exciting scenes of the forest, or still more exciting strife in which the settlers were engaged with the neighboring colony, had led him to a temporary adoption of his present course of life, and that he was rather an amateur woodsman than one from habit or necessity. When the party reached their quarters, the person whose description last occupied us, separated himself from the rest, and, clambering up the steep, sat down on a commanding cliff, some hundred feet above the cax e, leaving the duties of the camp to be performed by those who renmained below. The latter, after kindling up a fire in front of the cave, proceeded to bring from the interior a,light, portable kettle, and piece of sal;t:junidk; articles with which such parties usually went provided, and soon became busily engaged in dressing and preparing a portion of the fruits of their day's labors for an evening repast. " Smith," said the tall woodsman, whose peculiarities we have before noted, now turning to. one. of his comrades as they were proceeding with their culinary labors; " say, Smith, what dc you suppose Mr. Seldon has perched himself on that old crazy crag up there for? He looks as glum and hazy as a cat-owl winking at the sun with one- eye and watching a tree toad with the other?' THE GREEN MOUNTAIN BOYS. 15 "Well done for you, Pete Jones!" responded the person addressed; " I rather guess you have hit the nail, on the head this time; for Selden, I've noticed is fond of looking at prospects - scenery, I think he calls it - well, while he has an eye for that, it's my opinion he is on the look-out for mischief, which he thinks may perhaps be brewing for us somewhere - what say you, Brown?" " Well, I don't know," replied the latter, a plain, blunt, and somewhat dogged looking man;." there may be something in your idea- and come to think of it, I guess it is so: You know we caught a glimpse or two of a fellow skulking round the shore over yonder, last evening, as we were coming across to take up our quarters here; and I remember that Selden seemed to watch his movements as if he had some suspicions that the fellow migilt be a spy upon us." " That's it," rejoined Smith; " and if Selden named the affair to the Captain when he joined us last night, as I'll warrant you he did, seeing they had considerable private talk together,. most likely he got orders to keep a spare eye for breakers to-day. I have noticed several times this afternoon that he seemed to be looking round the lake rather anxiously; and it was that which sete me to thinking." " By the way," interposed Jones; "what in the world can have got the Captain, that he aint in by this time? not a single loud word has his rifle spoken to day, to my hearing." " He has doubtless taken a wide range to-day," replied Smith, who assumed to be the best guesser. of the trio; "but an eye as keen, and an aim as sure as the young Captain's, never need be exercised a whole day for nothing on these mountains. He don't come home empty to-night you'11 find." "I wish he would come, however," observed Brown; I.am anxious to know what are to be the orders for to-morrow. I hope he wont make us wait here another day for more to join us before we proceed on the business we came for. We have now been nearly three days, coming and here, without a chance of setting our seals to the back of a single Yorker. I would n't have volunteered and left my work at this busy season but for Captain Warrington's promise to let us have right at'em, and be off again. And I would n't at no rate, if he had not fought so like a young lion for me at the time theseland sharks turned us, wife, little ones, and all, out into the snow. He aid me God's service at that time; so I thought I ought to oblige him by coming. Though, besure, I was obliging my own feelings about as 16 THE GREEN MOUNTAIN BOYS. much; for, so help me Heaven! I would go fourteen miles barefoot in January for a chance to pay off scores upon those same York gentry." " So would I," remarked Smith; "for what was your case may soon be mine, unless we all turn out, and drive the scoundrels from the Grants every time they put foot within them. So we must not grudge a little time spent in paying off our debts in this manner, seeing we shall be doing the public a service at the same time. Only think of Warrington! He has spent more than half his time in this way for the last three years; and all he has ever got by it has been to have a price set upon his head." "They have set a price on my head too," gloomily resumed the other; * " but as for the Captain, he will have, his reward in heaven; while they have macle me so savage and murderous in my feelings that I begin to fear that heaven will be no place for me." "Well, I owe the scamps nothing in particular myself, I believe," observed Jones; " but not knowing how soon I might, seeing as how I had lately bought a new lot down there near Old Ti, I thought I might as well join you a spell to learn the way and manner of fixing the chaps. And I calculated if any body could show me't was Captain Charley, who they say is a trifle braver than Julius Ctsar, besides having a heart as big as a meeting-house." " What would you say of Ethan Allen at that rate? " asked Smith, laughing. "Ethan Allen? Lordy! why, two Alexanders, with half a dozen Turks thrown in to stiffen the upper lip, would be used up in making the priming to Ethan Allen! But hoo! what in the devil's name has come among us now?" continued the speaker, pointing to a new figure that had arrived unperceived, and noiselessly taken a station within a few y'ards of the company. All eyes were now turned to the spot indicated by the words and odd gesticulations of their companion. There stood a young Indian, quietly looking at the compjany, or rather, after the peculiarity of his race, looking at every thing else but the company, the moment they turned and confronted him. He held a rifle in his hand, while his dress differed but little from the ordinary garb of the settlers. * The persons outlawed by the New York Assembly, for the apprehension of whom a reward of fifty pounds for each was offered, were Ethan Allen, Seth Warner, Remember Baker, Rob't Cochran, P. Sunderland, S. Brown, J. Smith, and J. Brackenridge. THE GREEN MOUNTAIN BOYS. jI'Umph!" he at length exclaimed in the peculiar, jerkihg guttural of the native Indian; " Massa Cappen - him no here! "Guessed exactly right, Tawney!" cried Jones, awakening from the momentary surprise into which he, as well as his companions, had been thrown by the unexpected appearance of such a visitor; "but what do you want with the Captain, my beauty?" "Umph! you ask; when me tell, then you know," quickly replied the Indian, with the apparent object both to evade the question and retort on the interrogator for the manner in which it was put. "Right, again! " exclaimed Smith, pleased at the rebuff thus received by the professed joker of the party; "here, Jones, let me manage him. Where did you leave your company, friend?" he continued, addressing the native coaxingly —" I conclude there are more of your people somewhere hereabouts?" " Umph! " answered the native with a sarcastic smile; "Now you fraid - scare -why you no run? " "Righter than ever!" shouted Jones, laughing heartily in turn at his baffled comrade, who had fared even worse than himself in the rencounter. Other methods were then taken to draw from the Indian his name and business, but without the least success. He either stood mute, or answered with such odd evasions, that they soon gave over the attempt, and called to Selden on the hill, intimating that his presence was needed below. That person, who proved to be second in command in the expedition, as if partly apprized of what was going on, immediately came down and appeared among them.'(' eftenant Selden," said Jones, " they say you can make poetry out of rocks and trees, if you are a mind to- now we want to see what you can make out of this fellow." " He is very evidently a domesticated Indian," seriously replied the person addressed, who appeared just then in no humor to relish the jokes of the other. "T He probably resides with some family in the vicinity. I think I have heard Warrington speak of meeting one of his description in a hunting adventure in thisquarter." "Well, he inquired for the Captain," observed Smith. "Then he has some business with him, I presume," rejoined Selden; "some friendly message,, perhaps." " Umph! that man say it," said the subject of their discour', pointing to the former with an expressive and respectful loot,. 2* 3B 18 THE GREEN MOUNTAIN BOYS. "We will try then to hasten the Captain's return," obsei ved Selden, and taking from his pocket a sort of whistle, formed from the leg-bone of a deer, he blew a blast whose loud, shrill bnote was capable of being heard at a great distance. A strict silence of several moments was now observed by the whole party in listening for a reply from their leader, who, it was understood, carried about him a corresponding instrument. At length, instead of a reply from a whistle, the sharp report of a rifle burst from a neighboring glen, and, echoing wildly firom cliff to cliff in the surrounding stillness, died slowly away on the distant mountains. " There he is!" " There goes the Captain's rifle - I should know her voice among a thousand," simultaneously burst from the lips of several of the company. "Just as I told you," said Smith; "I knew he would never return empty. That shot, mark me, brought down a deer, which he had in his eye when the Leftenant whistled, and prevented his answering the call, which no small game would." The event soon proved the truth of the last speaker's conjecture. The heavy, slow tread, as of one carrying some weighty load, now became distinguishable at a distance in the woods, the sounds falling more and more distinctly'on the ear every moment, as they approached the spot where the expectant and excited party stood, eagerly straining their eyes to catch the first glimpse of their huntsman leader. At length he emerged from the bushes, bearing a noble buck upon his shoulders. Advancing, amidst the congratulations of his followers, he came up to the spot, and, with the air of one relieved f-om a heavy burden, threw down his prize to the ground before them. Of the probable age of twenty-six or eight, he was a man of a very fine and even majestic appearance. Though tall and muscular, so compactly and finely set were his limbs, that his contour presented wqthing to the eye in the least disproportioned or ungainly. His features seemed to correspond in regularity of formation to the rest of his person, while his countenance was rather of the cool and deliberate cast, indicative, however, of a mild, benevolent disposition, as well as a sound, reflecting intellect. Every development, indeed, whether of his shapely head or manly countenance, went to show a strong, well balanced character, and one capable of action beyond the scope of ordinary men. IIis dress, which was that of a huntsman, was neat - not rich - but tastefully arranged and well fitted. A mahogany-stocked rifle, richly TIHE GREEN MOUNTAIN BOYS. 19 chased with silver, with small arms partially concealed in his dress, completed his equipments. " Heaven save me from another such jaunt," were his first words after he had thrown down his load an(l recovered himself a little; " a noble buck, indeed, but the chase has been rather a dear one." " I do n't see how it could well have been otherwise, Captain," observed Selden, now evidently in high spirits and disposed for a little merriment"Your huntsmen, wheneveg'~ deer's in the race, Like your lovers, of cou4i_, must expect a dear chase." " Mine has been somewhatdiearer, however, I think," replied. the former with an alpreciating smile, " than was necessary to give zest to those savory trodt, whichll, by the ways I am right glad to see so nearly ready for the partaking " Yes," rejoined the other, glancing round at the Indian, who stood demure and silent in the back-ground, with his face partly averted from the company, " and yet I know not, really, Captain Warrington, but you may have other fish to fry- first." "And just about the oddest fish too that we have caught today, Captain," said Jones, instantly understanding the allusion of the last speaker; " I rather think he must be a sort of shellfish, from the difficulty we found in getting his mouth open." " 0 ho!" exclaimed Warrington, his eye now for the first time resting on the form of the Indian, and his countenance clearing up from the puzzled expression that had come over it for the instant at the enigmatical words of his friends; "a new recruit.! that explains your call, the wherefore I was about to ask —a new recruit of doubtful credentials, eh?" So saying, he advanced to the side of the Indian youth and attentively examined his features; while the object of his scru-' tiny stood perfectly immovable, and apparently unconscious of the examination he was undergoing, till perceiving by the hesitation of the other that he was not likely to be recognized, he, without looking up, or varying the expression of a single muscle of his face, quietly observed. " Massa Cappen no remember Neshobee- no remember shoot three wolf." "' Aha?" said the other, recalled by the last allusion; the same poor fellow that I so providentially came across, and relieved firom that savage pack of wolves last year, on these very mountains? 20 THE GREEN MOUNTAIN BOYS. You may well remember that escape, my friend. But it is strange I did not know you." "Neshobee hunt all day," resumed the Indian, intent on rehearsing the event, the remembrance of which seemed to light up his countenance to something like the indications of feeling, and incline him to unusual loquacity; "hunt, hunt- kill no deer - dark come fast. Now hear wolf'way out there, howl! howl! Now'way out here, howl! howl! Now um come together, howl! howl! Now near off, howl! howl! Now me know what um want, and climb small tree quick. Wolf' come, five, six, hungry, and lap um mouth. MAle shoot; kill one, and go to load umn up again - so no think nothing, and drop umrn rifle low down - wolf jump high, catch um away- now rifle all gone - no get um - wolf get mad fast —bite um tree, gnaw, gnaw, wolf no do so'fore. Now tree begin shake, shake to fall soon. Now bend, bend, slow'long down - wolf jump, jump, snap um white teeth, and'most jest catch um Neshobee. Now hoo! bang! one wolf kick over dead - Cappen out there in the bush. Shoot again, two dead! Shoot again, three dead! Now the rest two wolf begin to mistrust to run away afore they dead too. Now Neshobee come down - stay all night in cave with um Cappenhim very good, no forget um." "Very nearly correct, I believe, Neshobee," observed Warrington, as the Indian closed his recital, the longest, perhaps, he ever made in his life, for unluckily, it may be, for the romance of our tale, Neshobee was no Logan or Red Jacket, either in length of speech, or that peculiar eloquence, which most of our writers seem to delight in attributing to the sons of the forest; "very nearly correct, but are you out on another hunt in this quarter, or does other business bring you here at this time?" "No much hunt, me come for." " What then?" "' Missus Story talk um on paper for Cappen better nor Nesh. obee say," replied the Indian, handing Warrington a small dingy scrap Qf paper. The latter, after running hastily over the contents of the billet, which caused his eye to kindle with enthusiasm as he read, im. mediately turned to the company, and, with a cheerful, animated air observed, " it is fiom our friend, Widow Story, of the Creek down here, and contains news of interest, my boys - shall I read: it to you?" "Aye, aye, Captain," was the eager response. " Listen then." THE GREEN MOUNrTAIN BOYS. 21 "CAPT. W. — I tear out the blank leaf of my bible to say,'the Philistines be upon thee, Sampson.' They came over the Creek somewhere north of here, and, after a short consultation near the edge of my clearing, from which I luckily espied them, struck off towards the lake. Munroe, as usual, heads the party ten in number, as I counted. There are five of you, at least; and that is enough, if you are are of the stuff I think you, to attend to confirming our titles in this neighborhood. My messenger is a chance one, but true and friendly, and may be enlisted, I think, for the night's work, if needed. God speed you all, ANN STORY." This spirited epistle was received by the company with a loud "hurra for the widow! " and notwithstanding it brought them the startling intelligence that the sheriff of Albany county, with an armed force of twice their own number, was on the march to seize them, two of whom, at least, were known to be under sentence of outlawry for former resistance to the New York authorities, while attempting to execute their cruel mandates on the persons or property of the settlers - notwithstanding this, the news was received with the liveliest expressions of joy and enthusiasm. An escape from their pursuers into the forest, or on to the water in their canoe, which was the only one in the lake, they well knew might easily be effected. But this was no part of the plan of this resolute little band of Green Mountain Boys; nor was the possibility of their being overpowered and taken deemed by them scarce more worthy of their consideration. Their object was the punishment of their foes, for the accomplishment of which this was hailed by them all as a golden opportunity. From the unwonted boldness with which this noted troubler of the Grants was attempting to push so far into the interior with so small a number of men, all of whom were supposed to be unacquainted with the forest in this part of the country, it was rightly conjectured that he must have been apprized by some traitorous settler, not only of the exact situation of the present rendezvous, but also of the number of those occupying it; and for similar reasons it was concluded that this person must now be with the approaching enemy, acting as guide in conducting them to the spot, where they doubtless anticipated taking their intended victims by complete surprise, and then hurrying with them by night over the country to the British fort at Ticonderoga, before the settlers tould be rallied for a rescue. In this opinion our band were 22 THE GREEN MOUNTAIN BOYS. confirmed by the suspicious appearance of a man, who, as i -: de intimated, had been seen the evening before lurking rouri the shores of' the lake, and who, it was now scarcely longer to be dhbbted, was a spy, dogging them to such place as they might select for their encampment. Next to the sheriff, therefore, and even before him, was this person, whose offence was considered the most heinous of the two, particularly marked for punishment; and it was determined to identify and seize him, if possible, and, whoever he might prove, make him an example to all future traitors. To retain their strong hold, the cavern, however defensible it might be, was no object with our party, as their leader had already determined to leave it the following morning to proceed on the main purpose of their excursion, which was to break up an establishment of their opponents, who had obtained a strong foothold at the lower falls of Otter Creek, and to seize a York surveyor, locating lands in that vicinity - from which purpose they had only turned aside for a day or two to give others an opportunity to join them on the lake, the appointed rendezvous, and a pleasant spot for employing the interim in fishing and hunting Accordingly, it was soon concluded to make no regular defence of the calve, but, using it only so far as might best favor them in their object of discomfiting the enemy, the modes of doing which were yet to be devised, leave it to their possession, and quit the place that night. Their game and such movables as were not immediately wanted, were therefore now transferred to the boat, which was removed to a secret landing, where the party were ordered to repair at the signal-call of the whistle. These brief arrangements having been completed, and the young Indian, who seemed to enter with great spirit into the enterprize, being em. ployed to stand on the look-out, the company, with their loaded rifles by their sides, sat down to their sylvan meal, over which they discussed, in gleeful mood, the various and ingenious methods which were successively proposed for the reception and chastise. ment of their assailants, who were expected to make their appear. ance as soon as it was fairly dark. TE GREEIN MOUNTAIN BOYS. 2? CHAPTER II. "Thus, spite of prayers, her scfiemes pursuing, She went on still to work our ruin; Annul'd our charters of releases, And tore our title-deeds to pieces; Then signed her warrants of ejection, And gallows raised to stretch our necks on; And straightway sent, like dogs to bait us, MUNROE, with posse comitatus." LEAVING our little band of Green Mountain Boys to discuss and settle the manner of receiving their expected visitors, and to make their dispositions for carrying such plan, as should be finally adopted, into effect, we will now change the scene a little, and introducing the reader to those visitors themselves, accompany him and them to the scene of action. In a thickly wooded swamp, near the northern extremity of the lake before described, were assembled a group of ten men, awaiting the approach of darkness, which was already beginning to settle in successive and fast increasing shades upon. the low lands and glens along the foot of the mountain. They were all ai med, though variously - some having muskets, some large pistols, and some only oaken cudgels. Apart from the rest stood their leader, a stern, rough looking.personage, engaged in a low, earnest conversation with another individual, of the apparent age of twentyfive,'whose dress and general demeanor seemed to forbid the conclusion that he was either a common follower, or one in an) comnmand; and yet, from the interest he manifested in the busi. ness in hand, it was evident he was in some way connected with the expedition. As the last named person may occupy considerable space in our tale, we will pause to note his personal appearance nlore particularly: he was of about the middle height, well made, though of rather slight proportions. His features, though regular, were common-place and inexpressive, with the exception of a pair of small, twinkling, black eyes, in which an observant spectator might often read meaning considerably at variance with the import of his language, his plausible manners, and the obse. quious, smirking smile, which he usually assumed while address THE GREEN MOUNTAIN BOYS. ibn those with whom he had a point to carry. The construction of his head seemed to be. somewhat peculiar —his forehead, which was very tall, being nearly in the shape of a triangle, with the base resting on the eyebrows, andthe sides narrowing to an apex at the hair above; while his head, as far back as the ears, swelling upwards into large protuberances, might be better represented by a triangle reversed. His dress was of a finer texture than that of any of his present associates, or that ordinarily worn by the settlers, and his whole appearance, indeed, denoted some connection with the more wealthy and fashionable classes of society. " You say, Sherwood," observed the former of the two last mentioned persons, at that part of their dialogue which it conc(,rns us to repeat: " you say that, from having been yourself at this cave, you know all the surrounding localities? " " Exactly —just as I described to you when I reached you last night. There can be no mistaking the place. They are still there, as is evident from the smoke which we saw rising over the spot just now, while passing the head of the lake. The path is now plain, and the game sure, without further guidance; so I think, as I began to suggest to your honor a few minutes ago, that you may now dispense with my further attendance. If I should be seen by any of their party, I should be delicately situated here in the settlement." "To the devil with your delicacy!. Why, nosiu, do you think I am going on in the dark, stumbling over logs and through bogs, without a guide? Even you are'none too good a one for this cursed hole; but such as you are, in the king's name I retain you; so not another word about quitting us till the scoundrels are secured." " I am certainly aware, Mr. Munroe, of the ini-rortande of securing this Warrington, so great a disturber of the public peace, but-"' "Disturber! doubly damned rebel! W'hy, no nsn in the settlement, has caused me so much trouble con;idering his audacious assault on me, and all. It will do me more good -t see him hung than to sit at the king's banquet." "0, certainly- it would me; and I would 1by all nans aid you even to the capture, if your honor's well known sags,ity and bravery on such occasions did not render my assistance wholly unnecessary." "Well, well, Jake," replied the Sheriff, relaxing a litJe from V.;a wonted roughness at the flattering expressions of th, other; THE GREEN MOUNTAIN BOYS. 25 "suppose I am all that you say, it wont serve me in finding a fox's hole in these woods any better than the instinct of any country booby, nor half' so well. I tell you, Sherwood, you must conduct us to the place, at least; for we shall then have enough to do to take the fellow, and, what is worse, to get him through the. settlement to Ticonderoga. Why, there is not an old woman in all the Grants but will fight for the scoundrel as if he was one of her own brats." "0, there can be no great trouble, the surprise will be so great; but as your honor desires it, I. will go so far as to point out the place, on condition that I then be allowed to keep out of sight." "Yes, but your half of the reward for taking the fellows, for you say that there is at least one outlaw besides Warrington; ou wont claim all that, unless you help us through the whole affair, will you?"' Your honor forgets that I was only to conduct you so far aa to point out their retreat."'" Have it your own way, then — but I hate to see a fellow so keen on the chase, and then become so devilish prudent the moment he approaches the game," grumbled Munroe, turning away to give some orders to his men, preparatory to resuming their ma rch. It having now become sufficiently dark for their purpose, the party were put in motion for the prosecution of their enterprise. And after striking a light, and procuring some materials for torches from the pine knots gathered in the surrounding windfalls, they set forward towards the place of their destination, then about a mile distant. Keeping as far from the shore of the lake as the nature of the ground would permit, lest the gleams of their light, striking across the water to the vicinity of the cave, should betray their approach, they pursued their way along the foot of the mountain with all possible silence and caution; while the glare of their torches, glittering on the points of the crags, and thrown back on to the dark forms, and eager and flushed visages of the party, gliding stealthily along in Indian file beneath the overhanging cliffs, like tigers for their prey, gave them a singularly wild and almost unearthly appearance. At length they arrived at a sharp knoll, which, running down fiom the main ridge above to the water, had so far screened their approach, and enabled them to advance with their lights unseen within a few hundred yards of the cavern. Here they made a brief halt to arrange their forces for the onset. As soon as this was effected, Munroe and 3 26 THE GREEN MOUNTAIN BOYS. Sherwood crept noiselessly over the intervening rise, followed at short intervals by the rest of the party, with the exception of one rna, left behind in charge of the torches. Having descended to the level beyond, they again paused to listen and reconnoiter before venturing any farther. All was dark and silent before them. And concluding that their intended victims had retired within the cave and were, probably, by this time, reposing in unsuspecting slumbers, they now congratulated themselves on a certain and easy conquest, and, with freshened impulse, once more began to move. briskly forward; when the loud whoo 1 whoo! - whoo! whoo! of the " dismal bird of night," or of something strikingly resembling it in note, proceeding from some point above, came pealing through the darkness, with fearful distinctness, to the ears of the company. All gave an involuntary start. Even the stout-hearted Munroe, for the instant, could scarcely avoid quaking at the strangely dismal notes that thus broke fiom utter stillness so unexpectedly upon them. The next moment, however, as the consciousness of the insignificant cause of their affright came over them, a half stifled giggling ran through the company; while their leader muttering a dry'umph! scared at a damned owl!" motioned Sherwood to proceed. But the latter, more accustomed to the notes of the supposed animal, and thinking he detected something not quite natural in the sounds they had just heard, became secretly impressed with the fears of an ambush, and, without imparting his suspicions, he hastily pointed out to the sheriff the mouth of the cave, whose dim outlines had now become discernible, and, instantly returning to the rear, quickly retreated over the hill, With a few muttered expressions of contempt at the flight of the wary and timid guide, Munroe once more set forward with the determined motions of one who is resolved not again to be interrupted by any slight causes. And being now promptly followed by his men, he soon, and without further obstacle, arrived at the mouth of the cave, and, bringing up his forces, immediately surrounded it. Here they all paused, standing motionless and silent, listening long and intensely. Every thing within and around was as still as if no living being was within a mile of the place. " Iallo!" at length sharply uttered the sheriff, after waiting till lie began to doubt whether his anticipated captives had escaped, or were all snugly asleep in the cave, " hallo! within there " "Hallo, without there! " was the ready reply from the cavern. 6Ha! ye rebel dogs!" exultingly exclaimed Munroe;:' you THE GREEN MOUNTAIN BOYS. 27 are there, are ye? We have kennelled ye at last, then. Now hear me -I command ye to surrender yourselves to the king's warrant, every scoundrel of ye -but first of all, Charles Warrington - do you hear the summons? " " We hear the summons, and well comprehend its import," coolly replied the voice from the cave, which was evidently that of the person especially named by the sheriff; "but touching your last demand, mine ancient friend -for in your voice I think I recognize the person with whom I once exchanged civilities in the southern part of our favored settlement - touching your last demand, I beg leave to observe, that being somewhat personally interested myself in the decision to be made in regard to the requirement, I would respectfully refer you to my firiends here, who will doubtless give you such answer as their unbiassed judgments shall dictate." " Do you think to dally with me, scoundrel?" stormed Mlunroe, nettled at the provoking coolness of his antagonist, and especially at his ironical allusion to a personal chastisement received from his hands the year before; " such attempts will but little avail you'11 find. Nor will it be of the least use, let me tell you all, to think of contending against our numbers: and the longer you hold out the worse it shall be for ye. So yield yourselves instantly, or, so help me Beeizebub, every dog of you shall swing for it." " Assertions," observed Selden, who being Warrington's only companion in the cave, now took up the discourse on the hint of his superior; " assertions, sir sheriff, sometimes, unfortunately, tre more easily made than proved. You may not find us, perhaps, so entirely unprepared for your visit as you have expected, notwithstanding our warder thought fit, in his owl-like wisdom, to be somewhat tardy in announcing your approach. It may not be prudent in us, however, to speak wholly without reserve in this matter, as we know not how much aid your honor may expect from the friend you last invoked." The intimations which they gathered from these replies, together with the jeering calmness attending them, which seemed to imply a sense of security in the assailed from resources unknown to the assailants, considerably dampened the ardor of the sheriff and his band; and they began to suspect that their triumphs might not prove so cheaply won as they had anticipated. The men, indeed, now began to show symptoms of fear and uneasiness at standing longer before the mouth of the cave, from which, for aught they could see or know, a dozen loaded rifles might be 28 THE GREEN MOUNTAIN BOYS. pointed against them; and their leader shouted loudly to the man left in the rear, directing him to come on with lights, and declaring at the same time with a tremendous oath, that if the stubborn rascals did n't instantly yield, he would send a volley of balls in among them, and if that failed, he would smoke them out like so many burroughed foxes. He was not allowed, however, mluch time to attempt the fulfilment of his menaces; for the Green Mountain Boys, two of whom only, as before raentioned, were in the cave, the rest being stationed in the netrest surrounding coverts, now deemed it time to begin their plan of operations. Suddenly a fearful screech, something between that of a man and a wild brute, issuing fiom the thicket above the cave, resounded through the forest, sending its startling thrill to the very hearts of the appalled and astonished assailants. All eyes were involuntarily turned upwards to the spot from which these terrific sounds seemed to proceed. " A catamount! a catamount!" wildly shouted several of the party. " Where? where? " eagerly exclaimed others. " There! up there in the fork of that tree!" hurriedly replied the former, pointing to the top of a leaning tree that projected nearly over the mouth of the cave, in a broad fork of which the outlines of a dark body, as if some large animal crouching for a leap upon his prey, with great fiery eye-balls glaring down upon them, was sufficiently discernible to justify their alarm. " Hie moves!" cried one, " hark! hear him fixing his claws in the bark! There, he stirs again! look out! he's going to leap down upon us -fire! quick, all hands, fire! " " IHold! hold! " shouted Munroe, the suspicion of a trick now for the first time flashing across his mind. But the command came too late; for while the words were in his mouth, every gun and pistol in the party except his own, were discharged at the object of their terror, which was seen, in the expiring flash, to bound out from the tree directly over the place where they stood; and all, in their eagerness -to avoid the clutches of the leaping animal, well known to be terrible when wounded, even if in the, last agonies of death, broke away, and fled in confusion from the spot, wholly unmindfill of their duty in guarding the mouth of the cave, and every thing else, but their own safety, in the general panic that had seized them. A momentary pause followed the explosion of the fire-arms, in which nothing was heard save the hasty scrambling of the terrified Yorkers in their eager efforts to escape. In an instant, however, a rushing from THE GREEN MOUNTAIN BOYS. 29 other quarters was heard - dark forms were seen swiftly gliding firom the cave and the thickets above, in the direction of the retreating party, among whom, in a moment more, a cry of dismay rose wildly on the air. Munroe, and three of his men, were suddenly seized round their waists or legs, from behind, by the iron grasp of grappling arms, and, being lifted from the -ground, were upborne with resistless force and rapidity towards the shore of the lake; all of them but their leader verily believing, in the fright and confusion of the moment, that it was the catamount, whose fearful image was still uppermost in their minds, that had seized them and was bearing them off in his grasp. "Help! help here! He has got me! for God's sake help me! " screamed one in an agony of terror. s" Murder! " exclaimed another; "Oh! get him off — get him off! murder! murder!"' Oh! aw!" cried the third in a yell of despair; "he has got his claws in my throat - he'11 kill me - he will! he will! yah I yah!" Munroe alone, of all the thus oddly captured party, was mute. Rightly judging the character of the foe into whose hands he had fallen, and boiling with silent rage, he made the most desperate struggles to free himself from the vice-like grasp of his captor, who, he at once concluded from his great strength, the effects of which he had before experienced, could be no other than Warrington. But wholly failing in this attempt, and finding himself still carried rapidly onward, he knew not to what destination, he next tried to disengage his dirk from its sheath, in which it was confined beneath the grappling arm of his opponent. Before succeeding in this, however, and while intent only on his murderous design, he was borne by his intended victim to the margin of the water, and, with a giant effort, hurled headlong over the bank. The loud splashing that succeeded, told that he was now struggling in the embrace of a different, though not a much more comfortable, antagonist; while three more heavy plunges, following in irregular succession along the bank, still further announced that the vanquished sheriff was not without the company of a good share of his friends to console him in the discomforts of the new element, into which they all had been so suddenly and unexpectedly translated. The shrill notes of Warrington's signal whistle now sdunded the preconcerted retreat. In a moment more the victorious party were assembled at the appointed landing-in another, they were embarked; while their boat, by the strong push of the last man springing in, was sent, by the single 80 THE GREEN MOUNTAIN BOYS. impulse, so far into the lake as to put a safe distance between them and their foes, now beginning to rally, with cries of rage, on the shore. An uncontrollable peal of laughter, ending in three loud and lively cheers, now burst from the Green Mountain Boys, rending the welkin above, and startling the deep recesses of the surrounding forests with the triumphant shout. " The battle being over," observed Warrington, after the noise of their merriment and exultation had measurably subsided; " let us now turn our attention to the wounded and missing." "All whole of skin, I imagine," said Selden; "though here is one, Smith, I believe it is, who comes from the fight, as near as I can discover, like the Benjaminite of the Scripture, just escapae from the Philistines, with head bare and garments rent." "i must leave my old otter-skin cap in their hands, I s'posc," coolly replied Smith; "I had to take it to finish off the catamount's head with; for I couldn't fix the fox-fire for the eyes into the end of that bundle of dry grass, that I made the body of, so as to look any how natural without it, and when I pushed the thing out of the crotch, as I stood behind the tree with my pole, I gave it such a hoist over into the bushes among the scared devils, that't was out of the question to think of looking for the cap, and grabbing one of the scamps too. But as. to my coat being tore here a little, I do n't valley it a fraction, seeing as how the ragamuffin I hove into the lake got pretty well choked to pay for it." "Ah, you have done well, Smith," said the leader; "all of you, indeed, have done nobly; but of that. hereafter - one of our number I believe is missing - which is it?" "It is Pete Jones," replied Brown. "And the Indian chap," added Smith. "The Indian," resumed Warrington, "after announcing the enemy for us by his admirable imitation of the owl, departed by himself, I presume. As near as I could gather from him, he did not wish to be known as acting against the Yorkers. He probably lives with some family in the vicinity, who are trying to stand neutral in this warfare, and who have cautioned him to govern himself accordingly. His absence, therefore, does nosurprise me. But what can have become of Jones. He sur ly?, is not a fellow to be easily ensnared, or overpo- ered." "I rather suspect," replied Brown, " he is after that traitor. As, when the Yorkers were creeping on toward the cave, lihe whispered to me he thought he saw a fellow pointing out the place, and slipping back over the hill, who, he guessed, was the THE GREEN MOUNTAIN BOYS. 31 one - and the last I saw of Pete, he was working off that way. Suppose, Captain, that we row along so as to stand off the shore in that direction, to be ready to take him in, should he give the vword? " In pursuance of this prudent suggestion, the boat was immediately headed round to the north, and rowed noiselessly along the shore in the direction supposed to be taken by their missing companion. They had made but little progress, however, before they were startled by the sudden flash and sharp report of a pistol, in a thicket near the shore, about a furlong ahead. "There goes trouble for poor Jones, I fear,- the dastard has attempted his life!" cried Warrington, in the varying tones of fear for the result, and indignation for the attempt; " but if help be of any further use to him, he shall Lave it. So, men, pull for it! pull for the spot with every nerve you have got, or the Yorkers will be there before us." In an instant the canoe, almost leaping from its element at every stroke of the excited and strong-armed oarsmen, was surging through the waters, with bird-like velocity, towards the place. As Warrington had predicted, the enemy on shore, on hearing the report of the pistol, immediately started for this new scene of action. And, quickly perceiving their opponents on the lake making rapidly for the spot, they redoubled their speed, and rushed on as fast as the obstacles of the woods, and the wet clothes and benumbed limbs of those who had been ducked, would permit, to arrive in time to assist, or rescue, as the case might require, their absent guide, whom they readily concluded to be an actor in the fracas, and- revenge themselves, if possible, on the whole band of their foes, for the sad discomfiture just experienced. The race between the two contending parties was a close one. The Green Mountain Boys, however, were again in fortune. Their boat came whirling up to the shore, adjoining the scene of action, while the foremost of. the enemy was yet fifty yards (listant. "'You may kick till all is blue," muttered Jones, whose tall form at that instant came peering from the thicket, while with irregular motions he made toward the boat, bearing bolt upright in his arms before him his grappled foe, who was struggling with terrible violence, and kicking desperately against every tree within reach of his feet, with the hope of retarding the progress of his captor till succor arrived; " you may kick, and be hanged! but you have jest got to go, my sweet lad, and into a little better company, too, than you hoped for, I guess. No help for it - so 32 THE GREEN MOUNTAIN BOYS. in with you - there! - now make yourself comfortable, friend," concluded the woodsman, pitching his captive headlong into the boat, and leaping in himself, just in time to escape the pursuers, now close at his heels. " Escaped again, by the pains of tophet!" exclaimed the enraged M1unroe from the bank, as the boat, previously headed round, shot out into the lake beyond the reach of the twice baffled Yorkers; "fire! fire! upon the damned rascals! " The command was scarcely uttered, before Jones, having as quick as thought again grappled his captive, and faced round toward the shore, was holding the deprecating victim before him in the stern, so as to cover the range of the expected volley. "Let drive, there! " exclaimed Pete, with the utmost nonchalance, " you need n't feel any delicacy, gentlemen, for I'11 agree to take all the bullets you'll send through this beautifiul target I'm holding for you." "Do n't fire! for God's sake don't let'em fire, Munroe!" screamed the struggling and terrified prisoner. "You need not be much alarmed, I think, fellow," said Warrington; "the sheriff's pistols must be rather too wet to be very dangerous, and as to the arms of the rest, which were all discharged at the catamount, we shall have but little to fear firom them by the time they can be loaded." " I mistrusted as much, myself;," observed Jones, releasing the prisoner; "but I thought I would scare the fellow a little, for his scurvy treatment to me." " The pistol we heard, then, was meant, as we suspected, for you? " asked the leader.' O0, yes, replied the other, carelessly; "to be sure he showed the best good will in the world to make a hole in me; but I should n't have laid that up much, seeing he missed his aim, which is a sort of punishment of itself, you know, if he had n't afterwards offered me money to let him. go, and keep his name and all close - why, I never was so insulted in my life! " " His name? who is it? what is his name?" eagerly asked several of the company. "Mayhap you from down south never heard of him, and do n't know him, but I did, the moment I saw his face as he passed the fellow bringing the torch-light. His name is Sherwood, living down in New Haven, and hV is jest one of the smoothest fellows that ever wore two faces in a day, asking his pardon." " Sherwood - Sherwood," said Warrington, musingly; "aha! I now remember to have heard of his having been at Benning THE GREEN MOUNTAIN BOYS. ~] ton, and also of his having made some suspicious visits to Albany. But we will examine his merits more particularly, when we reach the opposite shore." "See how wishful those fellows are looking after us!" observed Jones, pointing back to the shore, now about fifty rods distant, where the Yorkers, having procured a light, were still standing in a dark group, evidently trying to trace the course of the receding boat; "I swan! if I was only bloody minded enough, how I would like to take a shot into that flock of York buzzards!" "Hold up a little, oarsmen," said the leader; "and we will give them a kinder compliment than that, before entirely parting. So good night, Mr. Munroe," he continued, rising in the boat, and raising his loud clear voice to a pitch, which. in the dead stillness of night, might have been distinctly audible to a far greater distance; "good night! my old friend I hope for the pleasure of many such meetings and partings before we diepleasant dreams and a good night to you!" " Good night, sir sheriff," added Selden, in the same strain of mock courtesy; "we humbly trust you will duly appreciate our late reception of yourself and fellows, in imitation of the much lauded oriental custom of regaling friends with the luxury of the cool bath, which, together with the honor done you of being carried, like other immortal heroes, on the shoulders of men, will make out an entertainment, we flatter ourselves, not wholly unworthy of our guests - good night " " Hallo there, sheriff!" cried Jones, determined to have a parting shot as well as the rest; " hallo, sheriff, wont you jest be kind enough to tell us by way of information, before we go, what kind of a return you calculate to make on that warrant you told us about. We should like grandly to see it when you have got it fixed. That'tother poor bothered sheriff's non comeatibus in swampo, I guess, would be a fool to it." a 84 THE GREEN MOUNTAIN BOYS. CHAPTER III. "Ah, me! what perils do environ The man that meddles with cold iron - What plaguy mischiefs and mishaps Do dog him still with afterclaps." SHERWOOD, the person we introduced in the last chapter, and left a prisoner in the hands of the Green Mountairn Boys, a fair candidate for the honors of the Beech-seal, or some other of the novel and ingenious modes of punishment, which the settlers were accustomed to inflict on their foes with equal promptitude, whether they were foreign or domestic, was a resident of New Haven, in the vicinity of the lower falls of Otter Creek, then embraced within the limits of that town, but now forming the site of Vergennes, the only incorporated city of Vermont. He had here located himself, ostensively to become a permanent settier - to share the fortunes and identify himself with the interests of the New Hampshire grantees; while, in fact, he was a secret:agent of a company of New York land-jobbers, in their pay, and himself engaged, at the same time, in speculating in the patents issued by the governor of the last named province. Through the influence of his father, a man of reputed wealth, living near Albany, he had been taken into the employment of this company. And they, soon finding him a person well fitted for their purposes, induced him, by opening to his avaricious mind the prospect of making a fortune out of the poor settlers of the New Hampshire Grants, in addition to the stated salary to be allowed him, to take a secret agency, and locate himself in some part of the settlement where he would most effectually subserve their interests. In pursuance of this object it had been agreed that he should first proceed to New Hampshire, and, taking out a patent from that source, should enter Vermont known only as a grantee of that province, in order that he might thus be effectually secured from the hostility of the settlers, and enabled to maintain with them a fiee and unsuspected intercourse, which, at the present juncture, could alone insure him any success or safety. This had been accordingly done something more than a year previous THE GREEN MOUNTAIN BOYS. 85 to the events of our tale. A single lot of land had been pur. chased and located by him near the Otter, in the manner agreed on by the company. And so speciously had this wily agent conducted, beginning and carrying on improvements just sufficient to save appearances, while mainly pursuing the objects of his residence in the settlement, that till now he had passed wholly unsuspected of being in the York interest, except in the slight question that had been raised concerning his true character, on account of his having been recognized by some settlers from the south part of the Grants, as before intimated, while on one of his secret journeys to Albany. With these remarks, which will apprize the reader with all that may at present be necessary to be known respecting the previous character and employment of this personage, we will return to the thread of our narrative. Brightly rose the waning moon over the eastern mountains, which cast their broad, wood-fringed shadows far into the lake, while a flood of silvery light, falling on the sleeping waters and towering forest beyond, was gradually unfolding the bold and magnificent outlines of this wilderness landscape, as our victorious band of Green Mountain Boys merrily sped their way to the western shore. " What a glorious spectacle!" exclaimed Selden, looking abroad over the scene, as the boat emerged from the dark gloomy line of the mountain shadows into the bright and cheerful tract of illumined waters, that now met them on their course. " Splendid! splendid, indeed!" responded Warrington, with equal enthusiasm; " such scenes, one would think, were enough to enamour the whole world of a sylvan life." "And yet," observed Selden, "those city smoked exquisites, who claim all the taste and refinement of the country, are horrified at the thought of the life we here lead in the Green Mountains." " I don't think the creturs are so much to be blamed for that," said Pete Jones; " for bringing them here I calculate would be putting them pretty nearly in the plight.of frogs that are dug from the bottom of a well — always sure to shiver and die the minute they are brought to the pure air." "If all this be so," rejoined Warrington, significantly glancing at the dress and comparatively delicate appearance of the prisoner; t' I hope that such of this class, as are connected with a certain city to the west of us, will be less inclined to favor our settlement with their presence hereafter. Let them stick to their mode of life and its luxuries, and we will to our mountains. But I am reminded, 36 THE GREEN MOUNTAIN BOYS. Lieutenant," he continued, turning gaily to Selden, " of the possibility of our being favored with something on this subject in a more agreetable form, if I rightly divined the nature of your employment, and the theme that occupied your mind there at the fire before the cave last evening, after the rest of us had retired to our stone couches for the night. Can you 6blige us with the fruits o0' your vigil, in the shape of a song?" " 0, yes, such as it is - that is, if my music will not jar upon the feelings of our friend in durance here, and you are all willing to risk the same effect on yourselves," jocosely replied the other, as he pulled from his pocket a small roll of white birch bark, (the soft, smooth inner surface of which he had made, as was in those times not unfrequently the case, his papyrus in noting down his hasty effusion,) and turning to the moonlight, commenced: In the courts of high life, and in Fashion's domain, Where Folly is licensed hv birth-ri ght to reign, Let the gay idle throng, in their old reckless measure, Their phantoms still follow, and christen them Pleasure. But we, who disdain not to follow the plough, And our livelihood gain by the sweat of the browWhat have we here to.do with the fashions of cities? Their levees, theatrics, and opera ditties? What to do with the trappings around them display'd? Their half dress, their full dress, their dress promenade - Their turtle-soup dinners, their port and champagne, And knick-knacks unnumbered that follow in train? All these we will leave, and without one regret, To the poor pamper'd wights of that butteirfly set,.And turn to our dainties, the fruits of our mountains, Our wines sparkling up in their health-giving fountains, And wear with just pride, as forever we ought, Our woollens and checks by our fire-sides wrought, While we scout from our country those exquisite goats Who measure their worth by the cloth of their coats. As the clear, melodious voice of the singer, floating free anti wide over the hushed waters of the lake, died away in the distance, and, while the shouts of applause, which greeted him at the close of his performance, (intended, as was supposed, to hit off the York gentry, and the last couplet to apply to the prisoner in particular,) were yet echoing around, the boat of the elated Green Mountain Boys reached its destined landing. And immediately disembarking with their prisoner, they proceeded to a THE GREEN MOUNTAIN BOYS. 37 rude, bark-covered shantee, built by former visitors to the lake, and standing amidst a group of large evergreens a few rods from the water. There, after striking a light and kindling up a cheerful fire, they promptly set about the business of deciding upon the case of the supposed traitor. For this purpose they formally resolved themselves, as was usual in such cases where a resort could not readily be had to a committee of safety, into a sort of tribunal, very nearly resembling, we suppose, a modern Lynch court, a form of dispensing justice which, if ever justifiable, was undoubtedly so in the acts of our early settlers in resisting that system of legalized plunder attempted to be enforced on them by their oppressors. And if the right of defending their homes and possessions from unwarrantable seizures be conceded them, it was certainly not only justifiable but honorable in them to resort, as they did, to such measures as they judged most effectual in shielding from arrest and threatened punishment those of their fellow settlers, who, by their patriotism in the common cause, had rendered themselves obnoxious to the arbitrary enactments of the usurping government. For soon after the settlers had begun openly to resist the authorities of New York in attempting to dispossess them, a law, more despotic perhaps than any to be found in the annals of legislation, had been enacted by the Assembly of that province requiring some six or eight of the settlers, who had been most conspicuous in the controversy, to surrender themselves, on the order of the executive, within seventy days, to a magistrate for imprisonment, and, in case of neglect, to be adjudged convicted, and, without hearing or trial, condemned to suffer death. And not delivering themselves up, as might well be expected, the governor issued his proclamation proscribing them as felons, and offering large rewards for their apprehension, which, while it led to many secretly laid plots, and several open, though fruitless attempts to seize them by the Yorkers, in concert with a few traitorous settlers, served only to endear them to an indignant and aroused people, who publicly resolved to protect at every hazard their proscribed leaders, and, at the same time, prepare to defend the general interest of the settlement even at the price of their lives. Of this goodly company of outlaws, embracing some of the first and most talented men of the Grants, two, as before intimated, were among the band whom we have introduced to the reader, and to whom we will now return. Pete Jones, the principal witness in the case now to be decided, being called on for his testimony, related at large, and in his own 4 38 THE GREEN MOUNTAIN BOYS. vein of peculiar drollery, what he knew of the previous life and character of the prisoner, who, it appeared, had been frequently absent from home, though his excursions were generally undertaken under the professed character of a sportsman, for the employments of which he pretended a great liking, but for what reason nobody could imagine, as it never could be ascertained that he was ever successful. It also appeared that he had been loud in his denunciations against the Yorkers, and, as far as words could go, a great stickler for the rights of the settlers. The witness then related all the particulars of his detecting and capturing the prisoner. After this, the accused was requested to make his defence, when, to the surprise of all, he wholly denied any hostile intention, or any willing participation in the recent attempt of MIunroe to surprise and seize the present party at the cave, deliberately stating, that while hunting in the woods near the Creek that afternoon, he was met, made prisoner by the Yorkers, and compelled to accompany them on their expedition, the object of which they did not reveal to him. And in confirmation of the truth of his statements, and of his asserted innocence, he cited the general character he had always sustained as a friend of the settlers. " Do you generally manifest your friendship for the settlers by firing pistols at their heads, sir?" asked Warrington, casting a look of withering contempt on the prisoner. " O, I was trying to escape," replied Sherwood, who had his ready answer to a question he had anticipated; " I was on the point of escaping, and discharged my pistol at this man, who beset me, to prevent being retaken, supposing him all the while to be one of the Yorkers." " Whew! " uttered Jones, with a whistle, prolonged into an exclamation; "now, honestly, friend, I must crave leave to tell you - but that would n't be manners, and so I wont - though I should really like to ask you, if there.was any one Yorker there to-night that a fellow of my short stature - only six foot eleven, in shirt flaps - could be taken for with any sort7`! conscience?" "Yes, in the dark." "But you may remember, possibly, friend, thb you had to raise your pistol considerably higher than your head to get aim at mine, which you seemed to fancy shooting at in preference. Besides that, we took what I call a fair measure of lengths on the ground in the bit of grapple we had afterwards - now most folks that I am acquainted with, can feel in the dark. if they can't 611ee." THE GREEN MOUNTAIN' BOYS. 39 " O, I was so confused and frightened, that I noticed none of these circumstances, but really supposed it was one of the Yorkers till you had got with me nearly to the boat." "W Sell, now," exclaimed Pete, dropping his head in affected chagrin; " I vow to Jeremiah, I never felt so mortified in my life! To be taken for a Yorker! only think of that!" "A sad mistake, truly," observed Selden, addressing his companions, while in a side glance he kept an eye keenly fixed on the prisoner; " but still it was scarcely a more singular one than I made as we struck a light just now, when, turning to look at this man, I could have sworn he was the identical fellow we detected skulking about the shore yesterday - the make, motion, and dress of the two being so very similar." " That's false!" hastily exclaimed Sherwood, completely thrown off his guard by the round about way, and designedly incorrect statement of the other, made for the purpose of seeing its effect on the prisoner; "that's false, for this was not the dress I wore yest -" and he stopped short in visible confusion at the thought of the admission he was inadvertently making; while meaning and triumphant glances were exchanged among the company. Soon recovering in some degree his self-possession, however, and seeing how he had been entrapped, he attempted to mend the matter by explaining that he was about to say that this was not the dress he wore yesterday, even had he been here, instead of a dozen miles off, as he was, and could prove, as well as his innocence of all the charges brought against him, if time were but allowed him for the purpose. And this, or his acquittal, he continued for some time to demand, becoming, however, every moment less assured in his tone, and more abject in his manner, as he stealthily glanced round, and read his doom in the countenances of his judges. "X Well, gentlemen," said the leader, breaking the brief interval of silence, which followed the last somewhat broken and confused remarks of the accused; "you have heard the evidence against the prisoner, as well as his defence and avowals of innocence. Will you offer your individual opinions on the question of his guilt? And we will first hear what you may have to offer on the subject, Mr. Jones? " " Why, I do n't know exactly about the chap, Captain," said the latter, with a mischievous cocking of one eye, while screwing up his mouth nearly to the ear on the opposite side of his face;* "he says he is innocent of the traitor, and it is a poor story if he do n't know. But I have two other charges against him, which tG TIHE GREEN MOUNTAIN BOYS. I consider rather gravus. Firstly, according to his own story, he suffered himself, with that clean pair of legs of his, and the woods open for a run, if he chose that, or with gun and pistols if he chose to stand and fight — (now while I think on't, I wdnder what become of his gun) — he suffered himself, I say, to be taken by the Yorkers in a way and manner which is a burning shame to a Green Mountain Boy, if so be he is one, as he pretends. And secondly he missed his aim when he levelled at my head, for which a professed hunter like himself ought to be ridiculous. So I think, considering, I shall vote to have him viewed." * "And you, Smith, what is your verdict?" " My opinion is," answered the man now addressed, " that the fellow's plausible palaver is all nothing but a made up mess to bamboozle us with -I should like to know how the Yorkers knew how we were here on the lake, or how they happened to find the cave without his help. The fact is, he brought them here to seize us, and was probably calculating to see some of us swinging on a York gallows within a week. My verdict, therefore, will be pretty much such a one as the king gave Haman." " And what say you, Brown?" " Guilty! guilty as a dog, and the liar knows it." " And, lastly, your opinion, Mr. Selden?" " Briefly told — that the fellow's guilt is equalled only by his effrontery, and yet, as this is his first known offence, I would recommend a milder punishment than the one which has been hinted at." "We are unanimous, then, in a verdict, gentlemen," observed the chief, "if I understand your various modes of expressing your opinions. And it remains only to determine in what manner the prisoner shall be punished for his offence. You are all, including the prisoner himself, I presume, well aware that, by a decree of our Convention, the only source of law we feel ourselves bound to regard in cases of this kind, the crime of aiding the enemy to arrest one of our citizens, who may have happened to fall under the ban of that despotic edict by which they would terrify us into submission, is made punishable with death. If this were to be inflicted, however, on the prisoner, I should be inclined to grant him a more formal trial, before a regularly appointed committee of safety, and allow him time for his defence, as he * A cant phrase among the settlers, signifying the punishment of offenders THE GREEN MOUNTAIN BOYS. 41 requests- not that I have the least doubt of his guilt, kor I believe him to be the most precious compound of duplicity and villany that I have seen in the settlement, but I would grant it on the principle of allowing every man the best means to establish his innocence, when his life is at'stake. Yet, concurring with Mr. Selden, I think we had better adopt one of the ordinary mro(les of punishment, for which the evidence is abundantly sufficient, administer it on the spot, and dismiss him with the admonition it will give. What this punishment shall be, I will leave to you to designate." " I should like to have the title of my farm confirmed," said Smith, " seeing the Yorkers still continue to dispute it, and as the Beech-seal is a sort of legal instrument to do it with, they say, I vote that we apply it." "Just the thing for the double-faced scoundrel, if we have got to let him off so cheap," bluntly remarked Brown. " My title to my head," said Pete Jones, "seems to be rather questioned, and as it is an article that would be dreadful inconvenient for me to be without, I motion that it be confirmed too." "So be it, then," observed Selden; "I had, it is true, thought of a ducking, that he might be enabled to sympathize with his friends over the lake - I also had thought of taking him up into the top of one of these trees, and leaving him bound there for the night; but neither of these punishments, probably, would so nearly come up to the fellow's merits as the beechen remedy. I will therefore agree to its application." The prisoner's doom being thus unanimously settled, preparations were immediately commenced for carrying the sentence into effect. This was understood to be, in the quaint phrase of the times, " a chastisement with the twigs of the wilderness," or the usual number of stripes, forty, save one, faithfully applied to the back of the offender with a green beech rod, termed, as -before mentioned, the Beech-seal. Several rods, or shoots of that thus oddly consecrated tree, were accordingly selected, cut, and carefully trimmed for the purpose. The prisoner was then, in despite of his alternate threats, and promises of good behavior in future, stripped of his coat, and firmly bound to the body of a large hemlock, with his face turned to the tree. Every thing being now in readiness for the execution of the sentence, the question arose who sliould be the executioner. For this honor~ two rival candidates now presented themselves - Brown:and: Pete Jones- the former claiming it on the ground that no o'ne of the present company had received injuries that so loudly 4* 42 THE GREEN MOUNTAIN BOYS. demanded a personal reciprocation as his own, and the latter, with the greatest apparent gravity, contending that it was his peculiar right to do the duty of punishing the fellow for the unpardonable crime of missing his aim, since the shot was intended for his own benefit. The altercation, however, was settled by the interposition of their leader, who good naturedly awarded a division of the honors between them, directing that the first twenty stripes should be given by Jones, while Brown should be allowed the privilege of completing the task. In accordance with this arrangement, the tall woodsman now seized a rod of his own preparing, of dimensions fearfully portentous to the back of the trembling culprit, and giving it a furious flourish in the air, he commenced, with a look of terrible fierceness, the performance of his alotted task. But malice and revenge formed no part of the character of this jolly and good natured borderer. The manner in which the blows were given, and the comparatively slight effect they produced on their victim, made it very evident, that, notwithstanding all his assumed wrath and fury of countenance and manner, his humanity, combined with a natural love of sport, which had doubtless led him to solicit the office, was about to govern him in its execution. " Well, here is my respects to you, friend," he said, commencing and keeping up a sort of loose, irregular discourse, and counting the blows in a parenthetical tone, as with mighty grins and flourishes, he proceeded to apply the typical beech; " there is my respects to you, (one) miss your aim again, you lubber, eh? (two) I told you that you should n't disgrace the cloth for nothing,'three) and then (four) those kicks, (five) I thought at the time (six) that you was kicking against the pricks, (seven, eight) so here is two pricks to every kick, (eight, nine) scurvy business that of you, friend, (nine, ten) that kicking against the trees, (eleven, twelve) you did n't consider (seven - no, eleven) what a hurry I was in, (twelve, thirteen) and then again that offering me money, zounds, sir i (thirteen, fourteen) I should like (fourteen) to know, sir -" " There! there! " hastily exclaimed the prisoner, who had not been so much hurt amidst all this parade of cuts and flourishes as to prevent his taking note of the true number of the stripes which had been administered, and which the mischief-loving woodsman had wilfully miscounted; " hold-you have already struck twenty - hold! I say." "You do n't say so? " replied Jones, with affected surprise, as aIrHE GREEN MOUNTAIN BOYS. 43 he slowly lowered his uplifted arm; "why I thought I said fourteen - only fourteen last!" " I care not if you did, sir," expostulated the prisoner, now bold from the consciousness of having at last a little truth on his side; " you miscounted on purpose to prolong my torture — I appeal to the company- you have gone your twenty, I tell you, ruffian! " " Have! well, friend, just as you say, not as I care." So saying, the eccentric, but kind-hearted woodsman, hurled his rod into the lake, and bounding off into the woods, with the pretended object of procuring some better rods for the use of his successor, but, in reality, only to avoid the sight and sounds which, from the determined character and exasperated feelings of the man, he rightly anticipated would now follow, disappeared, with a finger thrust into each ear, in a neighboring thicket. The flagellation was now resumed. And never was rod more effectually applied to the deserving back of a miscreant vpy or traitor than now by the sinewy arm of Brown, doubly nerved as it was by the keen sense he harbored of the injuries he had already received from the hands of those with whom the present victim of his pent vengeance had been found leagued, to assist in dragging him to a gallows, and thus completing, on his person, that work of destruction which they had before commenced on his property. With a pause at every application of the rod, that no energy should be lost or weakened by the exertion, slow and measured fell the tremendous blows firom his relentless arm, till he had told out the full number assigned him; while at every lash of the pliant and close hugging instrument of torture, the writhing victim sent forth a screech of agony that thrilled through the forest for miles around him. This painful task being performed - for painful it was to most of the band, while the stern necessity that required it was sincerely regretted by them all - the prisoner was unbound, and with an earnest but kind admonition from Warrington to profit by the lesson he had received, set at liberty; when, muttering many a bitter execration, and breathing vows of deadlieast revenge on his captors, he sullenly departed from the camp, and soon disappeared along the border of the lake in a northern direction. 44 THE GREEN MOUNTAIN BOYS. CHAPTER IV. " That strain again! it had a dying fall! Oh, it came o'er my ear like the sweet sduth That breathes upon a bank of violeta, Stealing and giving odor." AFTER the departure of Sherwood, our band, not deeming it prudent, without precautions which must necessarily deprive most of them of their rest for the night, to encamp so near an exaspelated enemy. of double their own numbers, determined on an immediate removal from the scene of their recent exploits. Accordingly they packed up, and, without further delay, commenced their march by the beautiful moonlight, which, streaming brightly through the leafless forest, enabled them to pursue their way with as much ease and certainty as by the broadest day light. Striking off westerly from tile lake they directed their course to tile nearest part of Otter Creek, where they proposed procuring quarters for the remainder of the night in the log houses of the only two families who resided on the Creek in that vicinity. These two houses were situated nearly a mile apart, while the reslpective openings around them were separated by a dense wood of evergreens of about half that distance in extent. After proceeding on together awhile, the company separated into two parties, three of them bending their course towards the lowest, or more northerly opening, whereathey were to remain till joined in the morning by their leader, to conduct them on their enterprise down the Creek; while the latter, with Selden, taking their venison and a goodly portion of their trout, continued forward directly to thiApper clearing. This last was no other than the residence of the fair-and spirited friend, whose timely notice had not only ensured their late escape, but enabled them to gain such triumphant advantages over their foes. And it was this friendly -and patriotic act which they were now proceeding to reward, not only with suitable acknowledgement, but with the most valuable portion of their game- an offering that, they supposed would be highly acceptable to one in her situation: for this extrao-t"',,; THE GREEN MOUNTAIN BOYS. 45 woman,* with no other dependence than on her own hands, with the slight assistance rendered her by her boys, the eldest of whom was not a dozen years old, was managing to support herself and her large family of children from the products of a new lot of laqnd, which her husband had commenced clearing when he lost his life by the fall of a tree, and which she now with unexampled fortitude persisted in improving, though in the heart of a wilderness infested with wild beasts, and not wholly exempt from the hostile, or at least predatory incursions of the Indians. It Twoas nearly midnight when Warrington and his companion reached the log tenement of this fearless daughter of the wilds. Much to their surprise they found the house entirely deserted Finding the door unfastened, however, they determined on entering to note appearances within; when it became evident that the desertion had taken place but a few hours before; but whether it was intended for a temporary, or final removal, they were unable to determine. A bed of coals, yet alive, was raked up on the hearth; while the beds had been taken from the steads, and, with all the most necessary utensils of family use, removed from the house. "What means this sudden desertion of the family? " observed Warrington, musingly; " and whither can they have fled? " " To their neighbor's, down the Creek, probably," replied Selden; " the movement has been made, I should conjecture, in anticipation of the return of Munroe and his party, from whose visit to-night, a lone woman, like this widow, would doubtless wish to be excused." " It may be so," rejoined the other; " but to quit her home from any of the motives which you suggest would be very little like widow Story; there are few men in the settlement who can handle not only axe, but rifle, with more effect, though woman she be. And as for fear, it is a sensation with which, I verily believe, she is utterly unacquainted. But whate'ver may have become of the occupants of the house, we may as well, now we are here, make free and remain for the night." "It will be considered no intrusion, I suppose 4" enquiringly said Selden; " I have not the honor of an acquaintance with your heroine, you will bear'in mind." "Intrusion? not in the least; for you must know that we are * An old settler, to whom Mrs. Story and her nave were personally known, described her to the author as " a busting great woman, who would cut off a two foot log as quick as any man in the settlement." 46 THE GREEN MOUNTAIN BOYS. patriots here, -rebels, or whatever we were, on the lake to night," jocosely replied Warrington. "Patriotism," said Selden, following up the train of thought which the last remark suggested, "would seem entirely a rela. tive term, and, like beauty, which consists of black teeth, thick lips, and large eyes, with one nation, and exactly the reverse with another, wholly dependent on the preexisting opinions of those who claim it for this action, and deny it in that. Besides this, as the world estimate actions, success would seem to be quite as essential to constitute the patriot, as the merits of his cause, or the glory of his deeds. Here, with the settlers, you'are indeed called a patriot, and surely there is no one who better deserves from them the appellation; while with the people of New York, you are a rebel, outlaw, and hunted like a wild beast. And yet, if our cause prove successful, as Heaven grant it may, the world at large, coming in as umpire, will side with the settlers in establishing your name as a patriot; but if we fail, it will join with your foes in declaring you a rebel and reckless factionist." " Names and definitions, Selden, may be sometimes vague and varying, but principles are immutable. The principles which actuate us in resisting these encroachments on our rights, are the same that have animated the bosoms of all those whom the world agree in calling patriots, from the beginning of oppression to the present time. The disposition to defend our homes and property, besides being implanted in our bosoms as a law of our nature, indispensable to our self-protection, and even existence, in the world, seems to have been ordained by Providence also as the natural means by which the rapacity of tyrants should be punished. This, indeed, is the only protection ensured to industry and virtue - it constitutes the grand cement of society, and the main pillars of all government. This is the foundation of patri. otism, which consists only in the defence of justly acquired rights against wrongful aggressions. In our case, the opinions of the world may indeed be various and fluctuating, till our rights become fairly understood, and the wrongs we have received as fairly developed. But should men of the intelligence to know, and the spirit to defend their rights, stand tamely still, and see those rights wrested from them, to be placed forever beyond their recovery, while hesitating to know whether the world will call their resistance patriotism or rebellion? It is not the name of patriot that I seek, or that of Iebel or outlaw that I fear. It is results I am aiming to accomplish, and I will never rest, nor cease my exertions, till our heaven-favored cause shall triumph, THE GREEN MOUNTAIN BOYS. 47 and these rapacious intruders shall be driven from our soil, Could you have witnessed, as I have, the dismay, want, and suffering, which these grasping and shameless tyrants have occa sioned in this settlement - here, whole families turned from'their houses in the midst of winter, with no human habitation within miles of them to flee to for refuge and shelter - there, property, acquired through the severest of toil, hardship, and privation, wantonly destroyed, houses set on fire and consumed to prevent the return of the owners - and then again, females abused, and even the sick roughly ejected, and left to perish miserably in the night air, or storm, for all these ruthless aggressors could knoweould you have witnessed all this, you would not be surprised at the exasperated feelings of our people, or the indomitable spirit with which they have persevered in that cause, which brought you, till lately a stranger to our wrongs, among us to aid in sustaining. My personal interest, I know, suffers in consequence of devoting so much of my time to the service of the public. Indeed, I have, in common with my chivalrous superior, Colonel Ethan Allen, almost wholly neglected my own concerns, while guarding the. interests of others. Even now I am the owner of a large tract of land on the borders of Champlain, a part of which, as I have lately been apprised, has been for several years in possession of one of the York patentees, while my duties nearer home have prevented me from ever looking after it, or taking, since making this discovery, any steps towards dispossessing the intruder." "But you surely will neglect it no longer," observed the other; " since we are going into the vicinity, and on similar business?" "We will consider the case after we have righted the wrongs of the houseless settlers at the Lower Falls, and fulfilled the other objects of our mission into this region. But let us drop this exciting subject for to-night, that we may obtain a little rest to prepare us for the duties of to-morrow," replied Warrington, now rising to make such scanty preparations as might be required for their repose. IThe two friends, after barricading the door, and spreading their blankets before the small fire they had kindled on entering the house, now laid down to repose on the floor, which to the hardy and tired woodsman is generally more grateful than beds of the softest down to the pampered sons of luxury and ease. Selden was soon lost in slumber. But his companion, whose mind was Oppressed with more weighty cares, and whose feelings had become somewhat excited in recounting the wrongs of his countrymen, 48 THE GREEN MOUNTAIN BOYS. courted the drowsy god in vain. And these causes, together with his attempts to account for the absence of the family, for whose safety he was not wholly without apprehensions, continuing for some time to render all his- endeavors to sleep useless, he arose, unbarred the door, and, without waking his more fortunate com. panion, went out into the open air to try the effect of the cool breath of' heaven in allaying the excitement of his feelings, and disposing him to slumber. The night still continued bright and lovely. Abroad, nature seemed sunk in death-like repose; while the deep and solemn silence that pervaded the wilderness, was broken only by the low, but far-sounding hoot of the sylvan watchman of the night, or the voices of the inhabitants of the neighboring pools, who were straining their tiny throats, in notes of seeming joy and jubilee at their recent release from a wintry thraldorn. While contemplating the scene around him, and indulging in the moody reverie which the circumstances were calculated to create in the mind, the young outlaw unconsciously wandered nearly to the bank of the river, which was still bor dered by a strip of forest, extending from the water back almost to the house. Here, leaning against the trunk of a large tree, which some heavy wind had broken off about twenty feet from the ground, he stood some minutes looking listlessly down upon the placid waters, as, sparkling, in the moonlight that struggled through the trees above, they moved ceaselessly along on their journey to the deep. Now his attention would become riveted for a moment on some light float of wood sweeping by in the noiseless current. And now he would turn a half listening ear to the sportive plunges of the otter, here once found in such numbers as to have naturally suggested to the hunters who first visited this stream the name which it bears. His meditations, however, were at length interrupted by some indistinct, and at first scarcely audible sounds, the nature of which he was for some time wholly unable to determine. At last, however, he became satisfied it could be no other than the distinct murmur of human voices; but from what quarter it came he was still unable to decide. He listened intently; and now the sounds became more distinct. Presently they began to swell on the air in the low, melodious voice of a female chanting a tune, which, thoagh not recently heard by him, struck nevertheless familiarly on his ear, awakening in his mind reminiscences of persons, time, and place, which formerly occupied a prominent space among the objects of his peculiar interest. but which, in the cares and turmoils of the.last few years, had been almost forgotten. Starting as from a trance, THE GREEN MOUNTAIN BOYS. 4.4 he rallied his doubting senses, and made another effort to ascer, tain whence this mysterious music could proceed, but with no better success than before. Sometimes the sounds seemed to come from the eartlk, or some subterraneous cavern far beneath his feet. At other times the liquid notes appeared floating high in the heavens above. He now took another position, several paces distant from the one first occupied, to see whether any variation would thus be produced in the sounds. Here, however, they were scarcely audible. Several other new positions were then tried, but all with the same success; and he returned to the tree where he was standing when his attention was first arrested by these unaccountable sounds. Here he again tasked his powers of hearing to their utmost, when, to his increasing wonder, the same melodious notes fell upon his ear even more distinctly than before. Now, not only the tune seemed familiar to him, but there was something in the voice likewise which his bewildered senses seemed to recognize - something that seemed to touch a chord in his bosom that had never vibrated save under the sweet intonations of one whose words even were once music to his ears - but still one, to heighten his perplexity, who, thougn her residence had long been unknown to him, could not yet be, he felt assured, within a hundred miles of this spot. Curiosity, surprise, and wonder had now raised his feelings to a pitch of almost frantic excitement. And, without scarcely knowing why, he struck his clenched fist two or three times heavily against the tree, which seemed so strangely the conductor of the sounds in question. A deep, hollow reverberation, indicating a large and extended cavity within, was apparently the only effect produced by the blows. On applying his ear once more,-however, he found that the singing had ceased; and every sound was now hushed in silence. He listened awhile with suspended breath, in expectation of hearing the music resumed. But he listened in vain. He then renewed the experiment of listening from other positions; but being again unsuccessful, he returned to the tree, and fell to beating it again, in the absurd fancy that, if there had been any connection between his blows and the ceasing of the sounds, the same operation which had caused them to cease might revive them, though deeming it, at the same time, an utter impossibility that the cavity within the trunk could contain the invisible songstress. All his efforts, however, to gain a clue to the mystery proved wholly fruitless, and, after lingering some time near this spot of seeming enchantment, he slowly wandered back to the house, deeply pondering over the singular and incomprehensib1l 5 X 50 THE GREEN MOUNTAIN BOYS. incident which had attended his nocturnal ramble. Was it within the bounds of possibility, he asked himself, that the person, the once loved and lost one, whose voice these mysterious notes so much resembled, could now be in this almost uninhabited wilderness? No, no! What other female, then, capable of such execution, could be near at such an hour of the night? Surely none! Was it not, then, a human voice that he had heard? — Was it the voice of an angel, of " visits few and far between," floating high in the heavens, and hymning the stars? What had he done to deserve such special revealment? Or was it, as the traditions of the superstitious would inculcate, the voice of a departing spirit, permitted to break on the ear of a distant friend at the instant of departure, for the purpose of apprising him of its exit from earth, or warning him of his own dissolution? Or was it not far more probable, he said, with an effort to shake off these intruding fancies, that his senses had deceived him; and that, after all, the whole was but the work of an over-excited imagination? It must have been so. And, as if determined to satisfy himself with this last solution of the subject, since he could hit upon no other which reason would not sooner reject, he quickened his pace, and, like one resolved to end a perplexing enquiry by the best argument he can give, and call it conclusive, bustled forward, now whistling a tune, or now affecting to run over to himself the intended business of to-morrow, till he had reached the house, secured the door, and thrown himself down beside his still insensible companion, when exhausted nature soon closed the scene in a profound slumber. THE GREEN MOUJNTAIN BOYS. 51 CHAPTER V. " If you had been the wife of Heorcules, Six of his labors you'd have done, and sav'd Your husband so much sweat." CORIOLANUS. REAL causes of excitement have frequently, and perhaps generally, been found to produce the soundest slumber; while those that are artificial, or imaginary, have an equal tendency to Drevent it, Doctor Young's poetic philosophy to the contrary notwithstanding. It was thus with Warrington. While the images of the past and the future, which fancy had called up, were operating in his bosom, he vainly sought the arms of' "tired nature's sweet restorer." But after he had found a just cause for excitement, and experienced the utmost of its legitimate effects, that restorer came unbidden and instantly. And the next morning was considerably advanced before he and his companion awoke from the deep and sense-absorbing slumbers which, for many hours, had sealed their every faculty in blank oblivion. They simultaneously arose, and went to the window to ascertain from whom proceeded the noise of the axe, whose heavy, resounding blows, in the adjoining forest, had first awakened them from their quiet repose. At the border of the woods, a short distance to the south of the house, and in plain sight of their loop-hole, for the window was nothing more, stood the amazon owner, and almost sole creator of this little opening in the dark wilderness, plying her axe, with masculine dexterity and effect, into the huge trunk of a standing hemlock. In a short time this princely tenant of the Green Mountain forest began to tremble, totter, and bow beneath the supple arm of its life-sapping foe, and at length came down with a thundering crash upon the ground, filling the air around with a cloud of dust, splinters, broken and powdered limbs, and causing the earth and surrounding woods to rebound at the shock. When the obstructing cloud had cleared away from the spot, our observant friends beheld the object of their attention mounted on the trunk of the prostrate tree, and proceeding to mark- it off into such lengths for chopping, as suited her purpose. While thus engaged, her attention seemed to A2 THE GREEN MOUNTAIN BOYS. be suddenly arrested b1y something she observed about the house, or in a line with it beyond. Hastily descending from her stand on the trunk, and seizing her rifle, which stood at the foot of a tree, near the stump of the one just felled, she approached with a rapid step, and'with some appearance of concern, till within a few rods of the house, when she slackened her pace and soon halted. " Tall, stout, and stately," said Selden, still standing with his friend so near the window as to have a fair view of the person of their hostess; " tall, stout and stately," he repeated, running his admiring eye over her erect and imposing figure; " face and features even yet handsome, despite the ravages and cares of forty! And then that queenly port! Heavens! what a specimen of Eve's daughters! Surely, Warrington, she must be the very Juno of -your Green Mountains! But why not unbar the door and go out to meet her? We shall appear a pretty brace of heroes, if she come here and find us hid up like a couple of runaways! She has perceived us I presume, but is doultful whether we are friends or foes." " Stay a moment," said the other, who had been regarding the movements of the woman quite as intensely as his friend, though for different purposes; "I suspect you will soon see that other objects than ourselves are engrossing her attention." Scarcely had the last speaker ceased, when they caught an oblique view of the approaching forms of a number of men, whom they instantly recognized to be Munroe and his party. Hastily retreating from the window, and preparing their arms for action, should their use become necessary either for defending themselves within the house, or protecting their hostess without, our two friends took positions at small apertures between the logs of the wall, where, without revealing themselves, they could easily observe their foes, and stood silently watching the progress of events in the yard. Meanwhile the h,,-rdy widow had planted herself directly in-the path in which the forkers were approaching from the main road to her door. Atil now boldly advancing and confronting them, she demanded what might be their object in turning into a lone woman's dwelling. "Why, my good woman," said the sheriff, pausing and hesitating in evident surprise at the commanding appearance and determined tone of the person he was addressing; " we are all as hungry as so many kites, after the long morning's march we has e had; and now can't you contrive to work up something in the shape of a breakfast for us?" THE GREEN MOUNTAIN BOYS. 53 "I know of but two reasons, sir, why I may not comply with your request," replied the woman, with an air of quiet scorn. " And what may they be, woman? " asked Munroe, in doubt as to the drift of her discourse. " The lack of means, and the lack of inclination, sir," rejoined the other in the same calm and scornful manner. " Short and sweet," said Munroe; " but I think we can remove your objections easily enough, mistress; my men here have a plenty of salt junk, and some bread, which will make out the main materials for a meal; so you will have nothing to do but cook and serve up for us, and if we pay you well for your trouble, this will cure both your objections at once I suppose." "Think you, sir, I would be hired to serve a Yorker of your stamp? " replied the woman, with increasing disdain; " why the money got in that manner would burn through my pockets as quick as if it came at the call of one in league with the arch fiend, and all hissing hot from the burning mint in the regions below! Even the very food bought with it would stick my throat, and poison my children to death in the eating." "Tut, tut! madam madcap!" exclaimed the sheriff, resuming his wonted roughness, and now beginning to chafe under the biting sarcasms of the other; " you show about as much of the tartar as any thing I have met with in my travels for a long while. I wish the rebels much joy in their petticoat champion! But it is time to look a little to such as you. The authorities of the king are neither to be resisted nor insulted with impunity, you will do well to bear in mind, perhaps." " Cowards are always allowed the privilege of blustering before women," tartly rejoined the other; "your threats, valiant sheriff, will hurt me about as much, probably, as they frighten me, and if anything further is attempted, you will find I can defend myself." " We will see, my trooper!" muttered Munroe, making a sudden movement towards the other, apparently to disarm or seize her. Eluding his grasp, and hastily retreating a few steps, the fearless woman cocked her rifle and brought it to her shoulder. " Another step towards me, sir, and your blood be on your own head," she cried, in a cool, determined tone. " Hang me! " exclaimed Munroe, after standing a moment in mute surprise at this bold and unexpected movement of the woman, who, he began to suspect, could scarcely have been brought to show such singular fearlessness, but from a knowledge 54 THE GREEN MOUNTAIN BOYS. that help was near; " hang me if I do n't believe the termagant is standing guard to some of these skulking outlaws, whom she has concealed in the house! We must see to this immediately," he continued, moving round his opponent toward the house, and beckoning his men to follow. O0, is that all you want," said the widow, taking her piece in her hand, and moving aside with the air of one relieved from a personal fear; you are welcome to all the outlaws you will find here, but you must beware how you attempt to touch me. However, you had better look out for yourself, brave sheriff," she added in a sneering laugh; " take care, sir, that some of those terrible Green Mountain Boys concealed within there, do n't blow you through the head with their rifles! " " The door is fastened, woman," said Munroe, as, stepping up, he tried in vain to open it; " the door is fastened on the inside; see that it is opened, or I will force it!" " 0, no, no! why, you would spoil my door, man!" cried the widow, with the utmost apparent concern for the safety of her door; " yes, ruin it entirely,'t would cost me a hard dollar to get it mended. I forgot to tell you it was barred up inside. We do not stay here nights for fear of the visits of such strolling gentry as yourselves. But if you really wish to handle over my greasy pots and kettles, or crawl under my beds, you can go in as I came out, by going up on the ends of the logs at the corner yonder, and remo~cing a piece of that bark roof." "But honestly, woman, have you seen nothing of Warrington and his band this way last night, or this morning?" asked the sheriff, his suspicions seeming to be pretty much allayed by the well managed demeanor and conduct of the other. "Warrington -Warrington," said she, musingly, as if attempting to recall the name of one of whom she might have perhaps heard; "not Captain Warrington? Yes, I have heard of him,. I am sure. Is he in this section? Where is he? I should like to. see that brave fellow. Why, he was the one that so handsomely beech-sealed one of the York authorities down Bennington way, last year - now what was his name - I will think in a minute " "O, no matter, no matter," hastily interrupted the sheriff, unwilling that the story of his own former discomfiture should be made known to his present followers; " come, boys," he contin. ued, moving away from the house and calling to his men; " we shan't be able to make anything of this crabstick of a woman, so we may as well be on the move again, and as we have lost our guide, instead of going back through the woods, we will THE GREEN MOUItTAIN BOYS. 55 up the Creek to the ford, and then down the military road to Ticonderoga." "Adroitly done, by heavens!" exclaimed Selden to his con.panion, as the sounds of the retreating footsteps of their foes died away on their ears; " the woman's tact has saved us, to say the least, Captain, from a troublesome contest. But shall I now unbar the door? " " No - let her continue to manage, in her own way, replied the other; the Yorkers may take it into their heads to stop and reconnoitre ble house awhile from the woods. And she may deem it prudent to guard against their making any discoveries in that way by remaining a while without, or by entering the house in the manner she pointed out to Munroe." The woodswoman, if the term be admissible, wary as she was fearless, immediately adopted one of the precautions anticipated by Warnington. And the sheriff and his posse had no sooner fairly disappeared in the forest than our friends heard her mounting the house, removing one of the broad pieces of spruce bark, which constituted the rude covering of the roof, and descending into the chamber or garret above them. In another moment she stood before them with a countenance animated with a look of triumph and a smile of congratulation. "Now a thousand thanks to mistress Story," warmly exclaimed Warrington, after presenting his friend, and exchanging the ordinary salutations; " a thousand thanks, not only for yesterday's timely notice, but for the shield which a woman's tact only could have so successfully thrown over us this morning! But how came you apprised that we were in possession of your castle, as we were without the shadow of a license from its owner? " "Partly anticipating a visit from some of you," replied the widow, " I purposely left the door unfastened when we left last night. And a peep through the cracks when I returned this morning, and found it barred, told me very nearly the character of the occupants. But you do n't know," she added, jocosely, " how sorely I was tempted, as I saw you lying there on the floor asleep, as helpless as children, to creep in, bind you, deliver you over to Munroe, and claim the reward! " "When you was praying,' lead us not into temptation,' at this moment of your trial," said Warrington laughingly, " and thought of the next sentence,' deliver us from evil,' you concluded it best to take sides with the Green Mountain Boys, - did you? " "Why,"' replied she, " it might certainly be a matter of some. consideration, who it were wisest to make friends, and who foes, in e r THE GREEN MOUNTAIN BOYS. such a case; and especially so, since it now seems that ten York. ers can be put to flight by one old woman." "Ay, ay!" gaily responded the Captain; "and that fact, sir," he added, turning with an arch look to Selden, shows the wisdom of the doubts and apprehensions you seemed to entertain last night, in approaching, without leave, the house of one who might become so formidable a foe." " I should be sorry to spoil the Captain's joke," replied Selden, in the same spirit; " but in taking possession thus unceremoniously, I think we both depended somewhat on the effect of the peace offering we brought," he continued, pointing to the game suspended on the wall, " in appeasing the household gods for the outrage." "An ample atonement! " said the dame; "' so much so, indeed, that I suspect my nine little hungry household gods will think the obligation wholly on their side. Yes, yes, that mark of your kindness, gentlemen, I noticed when I took my stolen peep in here, and my heart has been thanking you ever since; for my larder, as you may well imagine, is none of the filllest, considering the number depending upon it. It makes my heart ache to put the little kites on so short an allowance, as I am often compelled to do here, in a place so difficult to obtain provisions." " But where are your children? " asked Warrington. " My children? all in T'other World, sir! " replied the woman, with a sort of comic gravity. "In the other world! what can the woman mean?" asked Warrington, turning a puzzled look upon his hostess. " But for the mention you have just made of your children, and your roguish looks, which belie your assertions, one might be startled at the import of your words!" " Not so much of a belieing, neither," said the woman, "but come, we will open Sesame now," she continued, proceeding to unbar the door, "and after seeing if my brood cannot be conjured back into the world again, for the purpose of assisting me, and quieting your apprehensions for their safety, Captain, we will see; what can be done in the way of breakfast." " Let me attend you, to witness the process of conjuration," said Warrington, who had more reasons for making the request than were known to either of his companions. " No, sir, no 1 keep house till I return, or, my word for it, you get no breakfast this time," replied the other, in a sportive, yet determined manner, as she quitted the house on her proposed errand, leaving her guests to indulge in such conjectures as they THE GREEN MOUNTAIN BOYS. 57 ~hose respecting the place to which she had gone to summon her concealed family. They were not allowed much time, however, for discussing this curious question: for in a short time their ears were saluted by the mingled sounds of jabbering voices approaching from the woods in the rear of the house, and in a moment more the dame came up to the door, with her nearly half'-score of' hardy little urchins, trooping along in noisy glee at her side. "I will shake hands with the young Captain first! " exclaimed one of the boys, endeavoring to outstrip the rest, as they all made aL rush at the door. "You shan't!" vociferated another, springing forward, and eagerly elbowing his way through the throng that was now choking up the entrance. "I say you shan't now, Dick! He likes me best; Ned, you hold him back!" " I do n't care, I will have the first kith!" cried a lisping little image of her mother; " I will, may n't I, ma! " she added, throwing back her long unfettered hair from before her laughing black eyes with a pretty toss of the head, and entering with high glee into the keen strife going forward for obtaining the first notice of one, who, in former calls at the house, seemed to have made warm friends of the whole band of these tiny rivals for his favors..The next moment the person of Warrington, like that of Gulliver among the Lilliputians, was almost literally covered by the little beings, two sitting on each knee, shaking his imprisoned hands with all their might; the little Julia standing between, turning up her pretty cheek invitingly for the expected kiss, which, for all her declaration, instinctive modesty forbade her to ask for; one or two hold of each arm, and one more daring and active than the rest, having clambered aloft, was sitting astride the neck, and crowing loud over the rest from his elevated situation; while all were clinging, laughing, and chattering like a bevy of monkies exhibiting on an elephant, at the show of some travelling menagerie. Those fashionable misanthropes of the Rochefacauldt or Lacon school, who are forever moralizing and mourning over the selfishness of man; who can see no unadulterated benevo-'lence; no disinterested friendship in the moral deserts of the human heart, might find one oasis, at least, to relieve their jaundiced vision, and go to refute the sweeping dictums of their cold and cheerless philosophy, would they but turn their eyes to the artless actions, and examine the untutored and guileless hearts 58 THE GREEN MOUNTAIN BOYS. of children. How spontaneous their affections! With- what intuitive and unerring certainty and quickness they single out those who love them, whether kindred or stranger; and with what confiding readiness and generous ardor is the firiendship thus bestowed upon them forever reciprocated; and that, too, with no detracting alloy of selfish feeling, no worldly calculating of results, and no influencing considerations of interest! Verily! while they go to school to us for the improvement of the head, methinks it would be well for us if the tables were so far turned, that they could become our only instructors in the lessons of the heart. The dame, now calling off such of her children as she needed to assist her, and despatching one for water, another for wood, and a third to go on some whispered destination, proceeded rapidly in her preparations for the promised repast. And in a short space of time, a tempting meal from the offering of her guests was smoking on the table. The meal, which was enlivened by a recital of the adventures of the band the preceding evening, was no sooner ended, than Selden, rising first from the table, departed, at the suggestion of his superior, to see that the party at the other house were in readiness to commence their march.' Now, Captain, where are you going with your men?" earnestly asked the widow, as soon as Selden was fairly gone; "I have reasons for wishing to know." Warrington, after a slight hesitation, imparted the desired information.. Will you make me one promise?" resumed the woman, "and at the same time receive from me in kindness one caution?" "On conditions, I will venture to say yes." "What may they be? If any thing that I can properly comply with, -" " I would impose no other terms, certainly- so now for the promise you would exact?" " Simply this - that the family, with whom the young Indian I sent you last evening resides — no question now about their names or residence! - that this family, I say, shall not be molested, should you or your men ever come across them. They hold under a Yolrk title, besure, but turned no one off' to ge,t possession. Will you promise?" "For your sake, and the Indian's sake, if the facts are as you state, I will promise my influence in their behalf." " Now hear my caution - beware of that fellow you chastised last night - beware of that Sherwood - he will be a serpent in your path." THE GREEN MOUNTAIN BOYS. 59 " Do you know him?" "I think I do, but must say no more. And now, let's hear your conditions." " Only that you shall expound my dream, or vision, of last night." " A dream! vision!" "Yes! a something, at all events, which conveyed to my ear, as I thought, the sounds of a voice discoursing most heavenly music." "A sleeping, or a waking dream?" "The latter, I afterwards made up my mind to believe, as the readiest way of solving the mystery; but this morning I have begun to suspect -" " At what time last night, and on what particular spot, did this strange trance fall on you, sir?"- interrupted the widow in a bantering tone, which was accompanied, however, with a look betraying considerable curiosity and uneasiness. " O, about the usual time of such visitations — the witching hour of midnight. And the scene should be laid, I think, more particularly than at any other spot, near the foot of a certain charmed tree, or rather the hollow trunk of one, standing not far from the bank of the Creek down here, to which, leaving my companion asleep, I had wandered alone to shake off a fit of watchfulness, that the spirits of the air, or something else, had unaccountably sent me." " And did you relate your adventures to your companion, on your return or since?" "No!" "That settles the question with me, then, as to what I should now do," seriously observed the woman; " Captain Warrington, I clearly see that you have accidentally, and very singularly, hit upon a clue to matters which I thought most prudent to conceal, even from you, friend to the settlers and my family, as you are. Follow me, and you shall know more." So saying, with rapid step she led the way in silence toward the Creek, closely followed by her guest, eager to witness the promised development. Passing directly by the hollow tree, to which she pointed with a significant smile as they went along, she conducted him to the brink of the high, steep bank, which was here covered with a thick growth of young evergreens, whose tangled boughs overhung the waters below. Now grasping firmly hold of a projecting root, she swung herself down on to a narrow shelf or offset in the bank, a few feet above the surface of the 60 THE GREEN MOUNTAIN BOYS. water. As soon as this position was gained by them both, she proceeded along the shelf a few yards, and, removing a small firtree top, which had been, to all appearance, blown down the bank, disclosed the mouth of a narrow passage running back horizontally into the earth. Into this she immediately entered, still followed by her companion. After groping their way about a rod through the dark zigzag windings of this passage, they emerged into a spacious room, formed entirely by an artificial excavation of the earth, which, from a beginning at the outside, had been removed in small parcels and thrown into the stream, till the whole was completed. The walls or sides, which had been cut down perpendicularly from the solid mould and plastered over with thin mud, now presented a hard compact surface. The ceiling, which was in the form of an arch, coming, probably, at the top or centre, within a foot of the surface above, was supported by the thickly spreading roots of the trees, standing, many of them,' directly over the excavation, and forming a kind of network, curiously, and so strongly interwoven as effectually to prevent the earth from caving in from above. The whole interior was divided into two parts of unequal dimensions, by a slight willow-work partition, the lesser of which, being designed for the sleeping apartment, was neatly carpeted with a thick dry moss, collected from the spruce knolls in the vicinity; while on one side was extended, at suitable intervals, a row of little oblong platforms, raised about a foot above the general level by repeated doublings of the same light, springy substance. These, on which were laid iuch beds as the occupant could furnish, afforded, with, or withue?. any further additions, soft and pleasant couches, safely protected against the damps of a ground floor. Beside one of the walls of the larger room was a rude fire-place, constructed of flat stones, and built up several feet high to receive fuel and give direction to the smoke, which, ascending through a sort of retreating flue cut into the bank, escaped through the cavity of the identical hollow stub that Warrington had discovered to be in some way connected with the mysterious melody heard by him the evening before. "This, Captain Warrington," said the dame, after showing her admiring guest every part of her subterraneous establishment, which she had lit up, on entering, by throwing a few light combustibles on the fire still remaining on the hearth; " this is my city of refuge - my strong hold, or my' T'other World,' as I have accustomed myself and children to call it, fancying, in my wish to keep the secret of its existence to ourselves, il, >t some such THE GREEN MOUNTAIN BOYS. 61 name would lessen the chances of a discovery, which might accidentally be made, perhaps, by referring to it before others by a proper designation. It was dug out by myself and my little boys, who took to digging as naturally as young foxes, and greatly assisted me. My neighbor below, however, aided me in the most difficult parts of the work; and in case of danger he is to occupy it with me." "But what were the immediate dangers you apprehended, that led you to so uncommon an undertaking? " asked the other. " For myself I might feel, perhaps, no apprehensions," replied the provident mother. " For my children, I feel differently. All parents, Captain, however brave they may be for themselves, are always cowards for their'children. No real dangers, it is true, might beset us here for years;, and then again; they might come like a thief in the night. To say nothing of the heartless Yorkers, who might burn my house, or turn us out shelterless into the snow —to say nothing of the wolves that have been known, in the desperation of hunger, to attack folks in their houses —to say nothing of these, which are sufficiently fearful for most people, what security have we, in these outposts of the settlement, even in times of peace, against a hostile visit from the Indians? But when, as now, the rumors of war come floating on every breeze, that danger is daily increasing. The sad experience of my father's family, who were half slain by these hellhounds of the wilderness at the outbreak of the last war, has taught me the wisdom of precaution. In peace they are even to be distrusted; and the first rumor of war that strikes their ears will put them to whetting their knives for slaughter; while they are sure to anticipate the coming contest by striking the first blow on the defenseless families of the frontiers. Now with these views, is it strange," she added with a smile, " that the mother of nine children, with but one neighbor within miles of her, should foresee the evil and hide herself? " "Surely not," replied Warrington, struck not less by the forcible language of the woman, than by her prudent forecast; "you are right in believing that the storm of a new war is gathering over us; and if you think of remaining here, these precautions are but the part of wisdom, as we know not when or where the storm may burst. But do you occupy this retreat every night, now?" " We do."' You enter as we did, taking your children down the bank, I suppose?" 6 62 THE GREEN MOUNTAIN BOYS. "Sometimes, but more generally by approaching from the Creek in my canoe, (which is kept hid in the bushes a few rods below,) lest by coming down the bank constantly, we wear a path, which might lead to a discovery of our retreat." "And you all lodged here last night, of course?" " Yes." " Part of the mystery, then, stands explained-why should the rest be kept back?" "What is there more thatyou do not comprehend?" "The singing-" " Might have been my own, if you heard any. You never heard any of my lullaby performances before, I suppose? " said the woman, with an evasive smile. "No, but I have once heard the performances of another, whose voice is not easily to be forgotten," replied Warrington, turning a keen, searching gaze on the slightly confused face of the widow. "Warrington, Warrington!" said the woman, resuming a tone of seriousness, and intently reading the looks of the other; " as much as I hate deception, I wish I could have misled you. But I saw by your disappointed looks, when you entered, and glanced around these empty apartments, that you expected to find here what you have not. And I now see, that you still have certain impressions, which I wish could have been done away. But as you seem bent on following up your clue, I will not attempt to mislead you. From what I have gathered from you and others, I have for some time secretly suspected the identity of persons yet supposed to be different, and that I have long known those whose present residence you have little dreamed of: Captain Warrington, there is indeed a rose-bud in this wilderness, which I should not have been displeased to see placed in your bosom. But seek it not now - there is a hedge about it too high for your leaping." "Where is she? I ask but to know where," enquired the other with impatient eagerness. " Not here, nor near here, now," replied the woman; the secret is not mine to reveal: I have said too much already; so question me no further. But come, let us leave for the upper world," she added, rapidly leading the way out, and allowing the other no further chance to resume his importunities till they had gained the top of the bank. " But surely you will not leave the matter here, after informing me so far? " said Warrington, in an expostulating tone, as he per. ceived that the other seemed to expect that he would now depart. THE GREEN MOUNTAIN BOYS. 63 "For the present, I surely shall," replied the woman, decidedly; " you will urge in vain one who understands her duties to all! Go! your men await you - good morning, and God speed you in the cause of the settlers," and, imperiously waving her hand for the departure of her reluctant and tantalized guest, she suddenly turned away and disappeared in the forest. CHAPTER VI. "The sons of our mountains will sheath not the brand Till the last base intruder is forced from the land." ONE of the most considerable openings in the wilderne;s in the northwestern part of the New Hampshire Grants, at tl 3 period of our story, was at the Lower Falls of Otter Creek, at the head of the lake navigation of that stream, and on, and around that fine and fertile swell of land, now occupied as the site of a pleasant and flourishing village, to which, as before mentioned, the more dignified name of city has long since been legally applied; though not without sometimes eliciting, probably, from the traveller, approaching the place with the expectations which the appellation would naturally raise, a feeling, somewhat akin, perhaps, to that which might be experienced on hearing the address of ly Lord, applied to some urchin scion of nobility, at marbles, in his first jacket and trowsers. A pitch had been made on this spot, some years before, by one or more of the New Hampshire patentees, a saw and grist mill erected, and a large piece of forest felled, and partially cleared; when the whole tract, embracing the Falls and all the improvements, was purchased of some of the York land jobbers by one Colonel Reed. Reed had been the commander of a regiment of Scotch Highlanders, that came over with General Wolfe, and was engaged with his army in that memorable battle which gave Quebec and the Canadas to the British crown. This regiment, having been subsequently disbanded, the Colonel, still continuing in the new world, and, in his intercourse between Canada and New York, becoming acquainted with the Vermont lands, entered into the speculations then going forward, 64 THE,4-GREEN MOUNTAIN BOY.S and nlade the purchase, as above stated. Finding his new purchase already in the occupancy of the New Hampshire grantees, and not inclining to be bothered with the delays of a civil process by the York authorities to put him in possession, what should this military land speculator do, but revair immediately to Montreal, and, collecting a file of his old d^Tbanded soldiers, go on, armed and provisioned, to conquer and keep, and forcibly drive the occupants from the ground, takfing possession of the mills, lumber, and all other improvements? - After making ample provisions fbr continuing the improvement of his purchase, he left it to be managed and defended by the men who came on with him, pla-ced under the command of one of his old fear-naught IHighlanders, by the name of Donald Mcintosh, formerly a brave and trusty sergeant in his regiment, to whom he now delivered written military instructions, setting Torth the manner in which the improvements were to be conducted, and the post defended against any, or all, who should offer to intrude on the premises. The Colonel, being a shrewd man, and a close observer of character, national as well as individual, and well knowing that the inherent respect of Scotchmen for discipline, and the orders of a superior, would ensure him more determined defenders of his possessions, as well as more faithful laborers in their improvement, than all the rewards, bribes, or other inducements he could offer, had thrown over the whole transaction the appearance of a military service. And, hiring his men at the monthly compensation they had formerly received as soldiers, and terming it an enlistment during the war, and conducting them to their post under the discipline to which they had been accustomed in the army, he had the address to make these men, not tle most intelligent, certainly, honestly believe that they were acting under their old commander, in a military capacity only, and were really in the service of the king, to whom this settlement, they were told, was in a state of rebellion. And right faithfully and rigidly did the straight-going Donald, ever continuing to act under these impressions, execute the, trust committed to his charge. Immediately proceeding to tlrow up a large log-house, and enclose a yard around it with a heavy, compact fence -of hewn timber, he soon gave the post such an impregnable and threatening aspect:as effectually deterred the former occupants from attempting, with any force they could rally in the neighborhood, to dislodge the intruders. And, after watch. ing awhile, and seeing no diminution of the strength of their antagonists, or relaxation of their caution, these ejected and plun. dered settlers, who happened to be among the less spirited of THE GREEN MOUNTAIN BOYS. 65 their countrymen, at lerj pretty much relinquished the hope of regaining their possessio,' except in a favorable termination of the negociation still going forward at intervals between the settlers and the government of New Y-ork. In this manner, for ne:y..two years, did the minions of Reed hold and manage these v le possessions; clearing land, raising crops, and exporting lumberkand other products, without being at all molested by the settle:rs~or the attending circumstances being known, indeed, to those -iwhohad exercised any general agency in resisting the ag ressionsa of the Yorkers.: At length, however, the tranquility of the iuders became' accidentally endangered. Ira Allen, the Green Mountain M:af'iich of after times, and one of the cabinet council of those:we are describing, cominog through this section, on his return to his residence in Bennington from an excursion to the Winooski river, sought lodgings on a stormy December night at the quarters of McIntosh and his men -a call which came near costing the former his life at the outset: for, while he was unsuspectingly knocking for admission, the wary Scotchman, who had been accustomed to consider all his foes, who did not give the watchword, noiselessly opened the door wide enough to protrude one arm, and made several desperate lunges at his body, hit or miss, with a naked sabre. Providentially, however, the weapon, missing the body, only wounded the great coat of the traveller, who, at last succeeding in making the other believe that he wanted nothing more than a shelter for the night, was now admitted, and entertained till next morning. This singular reception, as well as the odd and warlike appearance of every thing connected with the establishment, awakened the curiosity and excited the asuspicions of Allen, who, from the information he obtained by pumping the cautious Donald, and making inquiries of the settlers before leaving the vicinity, returned home in possession of the full history of the case. And the consequence was, that before many months, a small band of Green Mountain Boys came on from the south, and finding no one about the premises, were proceeding to clear the house and yard of all they contained; when the occupants, who had been at work in the woods, returned, and after holding a council of war a short distance from the house, made such a furious charge with fixed bayonets on the new comers, that they, little dreaming of so warlike an onset, were fairly routed from the works, and were compes.lled to decamp amidst the victorious shouts of the elated Highilanders. Chagrined and vexed an the result of this attempt, the Green Mountain Boys, early the next spring, set oni foot 6* E 66 THE GREEN MOUNTAIN BOYS. another expedition for dispersing these military tenants of the usurping Colonel. And for this, among other objects, Warring. ton and his companions were now on their way to the spot. It was not till an advanced hour in the afternoon of the day, which commenced by the adventures related in the last chapter, that our band arrived at the outskirts of the singularly guarded possession just described. Their force, swelled by the numbers who had joined them on the last part of their route, now amounted to about a dozen men. They halted in the woods, adjoining the clearing, for the purpose of consultation, with a view to fix on the best mode of attacking the place, which they were not without hope of carrying by surprise. They had scarcely come menced discussing these points, however, before their attention was arrested by two quickly successive reports of firie-arms, proceeding from a thicket, on the opposite side of the Creek. c" What will you bate I do n't know the bark of, that dog, Captain?" exclaimed Jones, tipping one of his comical winks to his superior. " Aha! who do you suspect, Jones?" asked Warrington, with a look of interest. " Why, I should n't like to make bodily oath of it, besure," replied the other, " but unless my ear lies like the mischief, one of those popping noises over there was the voice of an old acquaintance." " To the point, man, if you possibly can!" rather impatiently spoke the leader; "what acquaintance do you mean?";" The one that I was introduced to, up on the lake there, last ~night, asking your pardon, Captain," replied Pete, lowering his tone a little under the slightly rebuking manner of his commander. "You are in the right, Mr. Jones," said the other, kindly, though a flash of anger passed over his face at the discovery that now burst on his mind; " I see it all, at last. Those were the reports of a pair of pistols, and in the hands, too, of that traitorous Sherwood, who has been hovering round us on our march, and now fires his pistols as a preconcerted signal, to give notice of our approach. It is well for the fellow that he was wise enough to put the Creek between us and himself, before tak. ing this last step." "That comes of suffering the scoundrel to go unhanged last night," grumbled Brown. " If I had been the Captain, I would have strung him up to the limb of a tree like a sheep-killing dog, and left him kicking in the air." THE GREEN MOUNTAIN BOYS. 67 "It is not always," said Warrington, "nor often, I think, that we find cause to repent of the mtercies we have shown; but this fellow- let him beware!" he added, knitting his brow, "let him beware how he is taken again! " All hope of taking the place by surprise being now relinquished by our band, it was soon settled, as the most probable way of accomplishing their object without bloodshed, which they would.gladly avoid, that a feint should be made in the open field, with a view of drawing out the enemy from their works, while the part of their force, not thus to be engaged, should go round in the woods, and, approaching in the rear, endeavor to get possession of' the house and enclosure. In pursuance of this plan, Warrington, taking Selden and two of the men with him, started off for the purpose of carrying the last part of the arrangement into execution, leaving the rest of the force under the command of Jones, whose genius, it was thought, was calculated to conduct the other part of the enterprise now entrusted to his charge, with orders to advance through the open grounds towards the house, and adopt such measures on the way as circumstances might suggest for bringing about the desired result. After waiting a sufficient time to allow the other party to gain a post in the woods in the rear of the works, Pete, the new commandant, put his men in motion, and emerging from the bushes, they commenced, in a wide-spread platoon, their ostentatious march through the field, in order to attract the attention of the enemy, supposed to be concealed in their enclosures at the house. It so happened that, directly in the course of the advancing party, there lay a series of large log-heaps, which, either by accident or design, had been placed, in clearing the land, very nearly in a straight line, at intervals of about a dozen rods, beginning near the house and extending almost to the woods. When the party had arrived within a few rods of the first log-heap, their attention was arrested by the sound of a human voice, issuing from behind it, and, in an eager, suppressed tone, giving off some brief orders, resembling those of military command. " A' ready? up then, an' gie til the louns!" exclaimed the voice of the unseen leader, in broad Scotch, as a platoon of armed men suddenly rose from behind the logs, and, raising their guns breast high, discharged them full in the faces of the Green 3lountain Boys. " Noo, right aboot face! and rin as if the deevil was after ye, as he is, and mair too," resumed the military Donald, for it was no other than he and his men, waho had thus been lying, in conceal 68 THE GREEN MOUNTAIN BOYS. mernt behind the log-heap, patiently awaiting the approach of their unsuspecting assailants. The balls, just clearing the heads of our band, whistled through the air, and struck with a crash among the dry limbs of the forest behind them. As soon as they had recovered from the surprise into which they had been thrown by the suddenness of this unexpected attack, they all sprang forward in the screening smoke of the enemy's fire, and gained the cover of the log-heap, just relinquished by the latter for the next one in the line of their defences. " Well, this is what I should call rather a curious how-d'ye-do, boys," coolly said Jones, when they had gained their shelter; " who would have guessed the scamps were packed away behind this old log-heap? But one thing beats my philosophy —if the bloody dogs really wanted to give us the lead, (and they shot dreadful careless if they did n't,) why in natur did n't they take aim?" "They are all regular sarvice men," replied a settler from the vicinity, " and breast-high is the rule of firing in the army." "Then we may thank the rule for our lives, and not the pesky fools who used it," replied the former. "It would not be a great deal more than right to send our rifle bullets througho the whole tote of'em. But I should some rather not kill thte aygpents, if we can get along without; and I guess as how We:can, seeing they were kind enough to sound their rattles before trying to bite, as that queer old codger did, in giving off word before they let drive at us. And if they will go on as they have begun, we'll just be making our manners when they fire, so that the balls may pass over us, and then follow'em up as before — but hark! the old chap is at it again! going the motions as regular as the nightmare; there! he has got to' cock fire-lock Now, down with you, boys i" Jones and his men had scarcely thrown themselves on to their knees behind their log-heap breast-work, before another volley of balls, discharged with the same military precision, whistled over them; and again the old dry hemlocks that skirted the woods appeared to be the only sufferers. Again retreating to their next post, tJUse kilted defenders of the place were followed up as at first by their crafty assailants, who were now becoming highly delighted with the fun of so unique a warfare. And in this,nanner the fight, if fight it be called, continued through the whole field- one party blazing away at random from every logheap they reached, and then scudding on for the next, quite satis. fied with this way of doing their duty of defending these supposed THE GREEN MOUNTAIN BOYS. 69 possessions of the king, since they were conducting their defence, as they believed, according to military rule: while the olher party, occasionally discharging their pieces into the air, to keep up the appearance of a hostile pursuit, and sometimes raising their hats on their ramrods, just high enough above the logs, behind which they were ensconced, to become visible to their foes when they fired, that they might be thus encouraged to continue the sport, were no less content with this fashion of fighting, as it answered all the objects in view, without putting them to the necessity of killing others, and, what was quite as agreeable, without running any risk of being killed themselves. But leaving these belligerents for the present, we will now follow those who departed to execute the other part of this novel enterprise. Keeping within the border of the woods, Warrington and his attendants soon made the circuit round the clearing, and arrived at the bank of the Creek, in the rear of the buildings, before the attack was made on the other detachment. They had scarcely gained this position, however, before they were aroused by the rattling of Mclntosh's salutatory volley on their companions, at the other extremity of the opening. And, though the rise of land which intervened between them and the scene of action, prevented them from ascertaining by sight the exact situation of affairs, yet readily concluding that the enemy, in full force, had taken the open field, as had been anticipated, they made for the house with all possible speed, to get possession of the works before the occupants could find time to return. On reaching the enclosure round the house, Warrington, leaving his men in the rear, went round to the front side, and, after a moment spent in reconnoitring, from behind a wood-pile, the parties in the field, crept up and made an attempt to open the gate. But to his disappointment, he soon discovered that it was securely barred on the inside-; while the noise of some slight movement within apprised him that the place had not been left wholly unguarded. On making these discoveries, he immediately retreated to the rear, without being seen by the enemy. There, standing beside the wall of the enclosure and eagerly gazing through a snmall crevice between the timbers, he found Selden, who, now turning with an expressive look, silently beckoned him to approach. Obeying the sign, Warrington carefully stepped up to the spot and put his eye to the aperture, which the other, now yielding the place, pointed out with his finger; when all that part of the arena within, which was in front of the house, was opened to his view. And the object 70 THE GREEN MOUNTAIN BOYS. that there met his eye struck him with scarce less surprise than what had been just manifested by his more romantic companion. Near the barricaded entrance into the yard, instead of a bearded warrior, stood a young and neatly dressed female, of striking beauty, holding a musket, and apparently enacting the part of a sentry to fire an alarm gun, or open the gate on the signal of her friends. She had evidently heard the movements of those without, and was now standing, like a startled fawn, her bosoml heaving with suppressed alarm, her lips slightly drawn apart, and her head turned in the attitude of intense listening -all combining to give an air of charming and picturesque wildness to her whole appearance. A swarthy faced girl was timidly peeping from the nearly shut door of the house, to which, on hearing the noise, she had apparently just retreated. From the dress and appearance of the latter, Warrington was but at little loss in tracing between these two females the relation of mistress and maid. And now, with a rapid survey of the situation of the whole interior, as far as could be si en, he hastily quitted his stand at the crevice and turned to Selden. " Is n't she a vision of a creature?" eagerly whispered the latter, his fine dark eyes sparkling with animation; "what, in the name of feminine wonders, will you show us next, Warrington? But who and what can she be?" " I am scarcely wiser than yourself, in that respect." "If the other was a Juno, this, I suppose, must be some warrior sylph of the Green Mountains." " Not of the Green Mountains, I suspect," rejoined Warrington; "but be she sylph or satan in heavenly guise, we must pay her a visit, and have possession of the works, within ten minutes - the enemy are on the retreat for the gate, and there is no time to lose - advance, boys, and lend me your shoulders for a stepping stone to scale this wall." The walls of the enclosure were about ten feet high, exclusive of the pickets which surmounted them, and which were formed of stakes three or four feet long, sharply pointed at the top, and set into large auger holes, bored in the upper layer of timber. Taking his men to a part of the wall in rear of the house, which would screen them, in their attempt, from the view of the inmates in front, and thus afford them a better chance to gel over unmolested, and without causing an alarm to be given too soon, the leader mounted the shoulders of one of his men, leaped on to the top of the timbers, and soon luckily, and without noise, sueceeded in wrenching out pickets enough to give him a rely THE GREEN MOUNTAIN BOYS. 71 ingress. And taking up his rifle from the hands of those below, and ordering two of them to follow, and the other, who would have no means of getting up, to act in concert with.Jones, he now swung himself down upon the ground. In another moment, Selden and the man he had selected, having been equally success. ful, they all three stood undiscovered on the ground, in the narrow space between the wall and the back side of the house. "Well, Selden," said Warrington, with a humorous look; in what manner shall we proceed with this formidable garrison - by storm or parley?" "'rhe latter, certainly, unless the storm is to be a storm of kisses," replied the other, in the same spirit; " but seriously, lest the appearance of all of us at once occasion unnecessary alarm, I propose that one of' us go forward alone, for this purpose." " Yours shall be the chance, then, of displaying your bravery, gallantry, or diplomacy, as the case may require, in treating with the fair commander." "Thank'ee, Captain." " But have a caution, sir - remember that other things sometimes inflict wounds besides leaden bullets! " " O, borrow no trouble on my account, on either score," gaily responded Selden, as he disappeared round the corner of the house, on his delicate mission. The merry boast of the last speaker, however, had, but for his good fortune, been a vain one: For the next moment after he passed out of the sight of his friends, the stunning report of a musket saluted their ears, while a bullet whistled by them and buried itself in the wall.of the enclosure, a few feet from where they stood. Instantly springing forward toward the scene of action, they found Selden standing in mute surprise, but unhurt, a few yards in front of the house, and as ma-ny rods from the mad girl, who, in the suddenness of the alarm and trepidation that seized her, as she accidentally turned round and unexpectedly beheld an enemy within the enclosure and approaching her, had just committed the half involuntary, half frenzied act of discharging at him a well-loaded musket, whose fatal contents he had but narrowly escaped. For a moment there was a- dead pause, during which neither of the parties stirred from their respective positions, being nearly invisible to each other in the smoke which was rising in eddying whirls between them. Soon, however, the light and airy form of the warrior damsel became visible to her astonished besiegers. There, pale, agitated, and alrmost frantic with conflicting emotions, she still stood, as if 72 THE GREEN MOUNTAIN BOYS. chained to the spot, holding with convulsive grasp the yet smoking musket, and apparently scarcely less frightened at what she had done than for her own personal safety. After gazing an instant with increasing consternation and alarm, as she beheld the now treble number of the enemy, she suddenly threw down her gun, and made a desperate push to unbar the gate. "Nay, nay! lady," exclaimed Warrington, leaping forward to her side, and placing his hands firmly upon the bars;" this we cannot suffer now, though we intend you no harm," he continued in a gentler tone: "but you had better retire - this is no place for one of your sex. Mlr. Selden, will you conduct her into the house?" "Touch me not!" -half shrieked the baffled and maddened girl, shrinking from the touch of Selden, who now approached, and offered to lead her to the house; "touch me not, villain — monster! " " Be calm -calm'your fears, dear lady!" said Selden, in a soothing and respectful tone, " will you hear me? Will you look me in the face? There! do I appear like a villain? Now hear me: although we may try to restore these possessions to their former, and, as we believe, rightful owners, yet, in doing this, we would not willingly injure a single man of' the defenders - much less a female. Be prevailed on, then, to retire, and I pledge myself, on the honor of a gentleman, that no hair of your head shall be injured." During this address, the kind and tender manner of which seemed to strike unexpectedly on her ears, she turned, and looking full upon the manly and handsome face of Selden, a change passed over her agitated countenance. Her overtasked nerves gave way, and her assumed nature melting away into its original softness, like a storm of March dissolving into the tears of April, she burst into a fit of hysteric weeping, and now suffered herself to be conducted unresistingly into the hpuse. By this time Donald and his men, who, on hearing the report of the musket just fired, as they were making a stand behind the last log-heap of their line of defence, hastily discharged a parting round at the enemy, and fled for the works, had reached the'enclosure; and the former was now.vociferating the watchword, and rattling away at the gate for admittance. Meanwhile, Jones with his detachment, being apprise; that-his friends were in possession of the works by a handkerchief which the latter had, as a preconcerted signal, hung on a corner picket, rushed on after THE GREEN MOUNTAIN BOYS. 73 the retreating Scotchmen on their way to the gate, intending to follow them so closely that they could have no time to reload their guns before they should be compelled to surrender. Looking round and seeing his foes close upon him, McIntosh redloubled his clamor to get in. "0, why dinna ye open the gaet?" exclaimed the. impatient and distressed Highlander, still ignorant that any others were within than those he left there; "thae feckfu' deevils are hard at our heels. Och! oigh! Jessy, Jessy Reed! is it my ain Colonel's dochter that wad be doylt at sic a time? An' Zilpah, is your mistress dead, or ye a' fear't an' fasht thegither, that ye nae ken the coming o' us?" "Your ladies are all safe in the house, my honest friend, cried out Warrington in reply, "but your quarters are now in possession of other hands. You had better surrender, sir, as it will be of little use to contend against those who are now too strong for you, both within and without." The astonishment and dismay of the simple-minded Scotchman at the discovery that his foes had obtained a lodgment within his strong hold, was unbounded; for, having perceived nothing wrong about his works at the time his attention was arrested by the report of the musket within them, and soon after seeing the man left outside by Warrington running out into the field, he supposed the gun was fired by the bold and wayward girl who had volunteered for the service, only to apprise him that some one was round the outside of the works. And he and his men, having given a merry hurra! for the braw lassie who frightened away the skulking tramper, had come on and reached the gate in the confident expectation that in another moment they should be safely ensconced within their works, and beyond the reach of all pursuers. " Gude guide us!" he ejaculated, looking hurriedly around him, whiile his countenance exhibited the very picture of perplexity and distress;" Gade guide us! gor't by the rake-hells wi'in an' wi'out! O what wad I do! what wad I do!" "I'11 jest tell you what to do, you queer old divil!" sung out Jones, catching the last part of these exclamations, as he brought his men to a halt within -two rods of the Scotchmen, who now, mechanically facing about, and presenting their fixed bayonets to their opponents, stood glumly awaiting the commands of their leader. "I will tell you what to do," he repeated, 1" you must knuckle to, old fellow. What's the particular use in your standing out against these six loaded rifles, to say nothing of the Cap7 74 THE GREEN MOUNTAIN BOYS. tain and his folks inside, if they should take a notion to wake you up a little? so I take it the cunningest thing you can do jest now is, for you all to throw down your guns and surrender." " Hoot awa' mon!" exclaimed McIntosh, aroused by this fresh summons to surrender; " an' I rede ye'11 find wese fight and defend til the last drap o' our bluide! Attention there i" he continued, hastily turning to his men, "prime an' load " Warrington now sternly repeated his demand for an immediate surrender; but the obstinate Highlander, knowing no way of obeying the military instruction of his Colonel, "to fight and defend," but to fight on at whatever odds, or whatever the consequences to him and his men, deigned no other answer to this repetition of the summons than by urging his men to despatch in loading their pieces. " What is to be done, Captain? " coolly said Jones, calling to his superior, and at the same time giving a nod to his men, at which they all promptly cocked their rifles and brought them to their shoulders; " speak tolerable quick, if you'e any orders, for they are about loaded, and we some rather give than take under all the circumstances." "Neither!" shouted Warrington, " do neither — knock up their guns! disarm them! grapple with them, and if too many for you, we'11 soon be among you." " A sudden, furious rush was now made by the Green Mountain Boys on their astonished antagonists, who, not dreaming of this mode of attack, and being busily intent on loading their guns, were taken by complete surprise, and to a great disadvantage to themselves. And before they had recovered from their astonishment sufliciently to put themselves in a posture of' defence, most of their guns were wrenched from their hands, their bodies seized round the waist, and some of them thrown to the ground; while grappling man with man, all were instantly involved helter skelter, in the tremendous scuffle that now ensued. And although the Green Mountain Boys were now in the exercise of their favorite athletics, and notwithstanding their great strength and suppleness of limb, they soon found that the entire subjection of these brawny and resolute Highlanders was no very easy task. Though thrown to the ground, they had to be held there; though knocked down, they again rose to the fight, and though beaten, they yielded not. And the victory had, perhaps, been even doubtful, had not Warrington new thrown open the gate, and come, with a fresh force, to the rescue. Then, indeed, it was not till they saw their leader lying bound and helpless on the ground, THE GREEN MOUNTAIN BOYS. 75 that the pugnacious Scotchmen could be brought to say that they yielded themselves prisoners. " I have na yielded yet, ye hogshoutherin rap scallions!" roa,d Donald, scornfully, as he lay on the ground with scarcely a mrnmber of his body, except his tongue, at liberty; "I hae na yielded, an' as muckle victory as ye think to mak it, ye sal never say th k Donald McIntosh ca'd himsel prisoner wi'out first settling the coni'tions o' the surrender." " Whl? conditions vrkould you have, brave Scot," asked Warrington, w'th great show of respect, as soon as he could be heard amidst the shouts of laughter that followed this ludicrous declaration of the vanquished leader. "What conditions? Why to be allowed to march out wi' a' the honors o' war, an' a safe passport for thae women an' a' the gear, an' property, " i.plied McIntosh, somewhat soothed by the respectful mannel of the other. " And will you quietly yield up the place and depart, if we will allow you these conditions?" rejoined Warrington, evidently disposed to humor the fallen warrior in his laughable demand. " We wael bide thae terms of surrender," replied the other, " an' ye hae the word o' Donald McIntosh til the bargain." "We will let the man have his way for the bravery he has shown," said Warrington, turning to his men. " Take away their ammunition, but restore them their guns, and unbind their leader. Now Captain McIntosh, arise —parade your men, and conduct the surrender in such manner as suits your pleasure." Deeply impressed with a sense of what he deemed the honnr.of his profession required in surrendering so important a military post of the king, as he considered this, McIntosh arose, formed his men, marched into the enclosure, halted, faced about, sent a corporal to bring out the ladies and place them in the rear, marched out again, grounded arms, and, with an air of great formality and consequence, pronounced himself and followers prisoners of war, to depart on parole, to serve no more on this coast during the war. Warrington, from his knowledge of the national character of his prisoners, entertaining no doubts of their fidelity in strictly observing all the stipulations of their leader, now cordially invited them to remain at the post through the night. And the invitation being as cordially accepted, both parties, within an hour, were commingling in the greatest amity and good feeling, the Green Mountain Boys secretly elated with their success in reducing this 76 THE GREEN MOUNTAIN BOYS. strong hold of the Yorkers, and their late opponents resting satisfied with the gallant efforts they had made in its defence. The next day, the vanquished, availing themselves of the permission granted them by the victors, conveyed all the mov. able property of their master on board several large batteaux, which had been kept there for the purpose'of exporting lumber or other products of the farm, and set sail down the Creek for St. Johns, or some one of Colonel Reed's possessions on the York side of the lake, near its northern extremity. Thus terminated this unique and curious contest, which proved to be the last one of any magnitude that occurred between the New Hampshire grantees and the Yorkers, for the possession of the soil within the disputed territory. The place being thus left in the hands of the Green Mountain Boys, they immediately reinstated the owners and former occupants, and soon after, strengthening and enlarging the defences into a more regular fortress, they posted a small, permanent force there to prevent so important a position from falling again intoothe hands of the Yorkers, or any new set of minions which the late military aggressor might see fit to send on for a second forcible seizure. No further attempt, however, was made to wrest the place from their hands; nor did any of the late offenders ever make their appearance in the place, except the brave and honest, though strangely mistaken McIntosh, who, indeed, after a while returned, but with views not a little altered: For becoming by some means undeceived as to the nature of his late trust, and being excessively mortified at the development, which robbed him, in his own estimation, of nearly all the glory he had gained in defending it, he seemed to have forsworn the military, for a more quiet profession. And purchasing a farm in the neighborhood, he settled down upon it, and, in the peaceable pursuits of agriculture, spent the remainder of an unusually long life, no less respected for scrupulous honesty, than distinguished for the whimsical absurdities that occasionally marked his conduct.* But there is one of the conquered band whom we have no notion of disposing of in so summary a manner- we mean the heroine of the party the spirited, wild, wayward, and beautiful Jessy Reed, who was, indeed, no other than the daughter of the usurping Colonel. The singularity of the position which our band found her occupying at this place, and the attending circum-' Mcintosh died in the town of Panton, Vt., near the place of the exploits here described, in the year 1813, I think. THE GREEN MOUNTAIN BOYS. 77 stances, we will give her an opportunity of hereafter explaining, and content ourselves. for the present with a few words respecting her destination, and the manner of her departure from the scene where she was introduced to the reader. Instead of going with HcIntosh and his men to the north, she had expressed a wish to proceed to the residence of a family with whom her father was intimate, living near the south end of the lake. But the large boats being all required to transport the effects, and the hands needed to man them, an open skiff, and one man to row it, were the only accommodations that could well be afforded her. Still she persisted in her determination. But should she be permitted to embark with no more attendants? The air of extreme novelty attending this singular girl, together with her personal attractions, had from the first made a strong impression on the mind of Selden. He began with playing the soother -succeeded, and became her attendant, the evening after the affray, in a twilight walk along the banks of the Otter, during which he was as much surprised at the exhibition of intelligence and wit, into which he had artfully drawn her, as charmed and interested with her beauty, and a. certain piquancy and dash of romance which nature an(L a semimilitary education had thrown into her character. But how far this interest was reciprocated, he had no means of judging. Aild should he now offer to become her attendant on her proposed voyage through the lake, would the offer be received? Would she suffer to attend her one of those who had wrested