<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0039" id="link2HCH0039"></SPAN></p>
<h2> CHAPTER XXXIX. </h2>
<p>"Selictar! unsheathe then our chief's scimetar;<br/>
Tambourgi! thy 'larum gives promise of war;<br/>
Ye mountains! that see us descend to the shore,<br/>
Shall view us as victors, or view us no more."<br/>
—Byron.<br/></p>
<p>The heavy showers that prevailed during the remainder of the day
completely stopped the progress of the flames; though glimmering fires
were observed during the night, on different parts of the hill, wherever
there was a collection of fuel to feed the element. The next day the woods
for 'many miles were black and smoking, and were stripped of every vestige
of brush and dead wood; but the pines and hemlocks still reared their
heads proudly among the hills, and even the smaller trees of the forest
retained a feeble appearance of life and vegetation.</p>
<p>The many tongues of rumor were busy in exaggerating the miraculous escape
of Elizabeth; and a report was generally credited, that Mohegan had
actually perished in the flames. This belief became confirmed, and was
indeed rendered probable, when the direful intelligence reached the
village that Jotham Riddel, the miner, was found in his hole, nearly dead
with suffocation, and burnt to such a degree that no hopes were
entertained of his life.</p>
<p>The public attention became much alive to the events of the last few days;
and, just at this crisis, the convicted counterfeiters took the hint from
Natty, and, on the night succeeding the fire, found means to cut through
their log prison also, and to escape unpunished. When this news began to
circulate through the village, blended with the fate of Jotham, and the
exaggerated and tortured reports of the events on the hill, the popular
opinion was freely expressed, as to the propriety of seizing such of the
fugitives as remained within reach. Men talked of the cave as a secret
receptacle of guilt; and, as the rumor of ores and metals found its way
into the confused medley of conjectures, counterfeiting, and everything
else that was wicked and dangerous to the peace of society, suggested
themselves to the busy fancies of the populace.</p>
<p>While the public mind was in this feverish state, it was hinted that the
wood had been set on fire by Edwards and the Leather-Stocking, and that,
consequently, they alone were responsible for the damages. This opinion
soon gained ground, being most circulated by those who, by their own
heedlessness, had caused the evil; and there was one irresistible burst of
the common sentiment that an attempt should be made to punish the
offenders. Richard was by no means deaf to this appeal, and by noon he set
about in earnest to see the laws executed.</p>
<p>Several stout young men were selected, and taken apart with an appearance
of secrecy, where they received some important charge from the sheriff,
immediately under the eyes, but far removed from the ears, of all in the
village. Possessed of a knowledge of their duty, these youths hurried into
the hills, with a bustling manner, as if the fate of the world depended on
their diligence, and, at the same time, with an air of mystery as great as
if they were engaged on secret matters of the state.</p>
<p>At twelve precisely a drum beat the "long roll" before the "Bold Dragoon,"
and Richard appeared, accompanied by Captain Hollister, who was clad in
Investments as commander of the "Templeton Light Infantry," when the
former demanded of the latter the aid of the posse comitatus in enforcing
the laws of the country. We have not room to record the speeches of the
two gentlemen on this occasion, but they are preserved in the columns of
the little blue newspaper, which is yet to be found on the file, and are
said to be highly creditable to the legal formula of one of the parties,
and to the military precision of the other. Everything had been previously
arranged, and, as the red-coated drummer continued to roll out his
clattering notes, some five-and-twenty privates appeared in the ranks, and
arranged themselves in the order of battle.</p>
<p>As this corps was composed of volunteers, and was commanded by a man who
had passed the first five-and-thirty years of his life in camps and
garrisons, it was the non-parallel of military science in that country,
and was confidently pronounced by the judicious part of the Templeton
community, to be equal in skill and appearance to any troops in the known
world; in physical endowments they were, certainly, much superior! To this
assertion there were but three dissenting voices, and one dissenting
opinion. The opinion belonged to Marmaduke, who, however, saw no necessity
for its promulgation. Of the voices, one, and that a pretty loud one',
came from the spouse of the commander himself, who frequently reproached
her husband for condescending to lead such an irregular band of warriors,
after he had filled the honorable station of sergeant-major to a dashing
corps of Virginia cavalry through much of the recent war.</p>
<p>Another of these skeptical sentiments was invariably expressed by Mr.
Pump, whenever the company paraded generally in some such terms as these,
which were uttered with that sort of meekness that a native of the island
of our forefathers is apt to assume when he condescends to praise the
customs or character of her truant progeny:</p>
<p>"It's mayhap that they knows summat about loading and firing, d'ye see,
but as for working ship? why, a corporal's guard of the Boadishey's
marines would back and fill on their quarters in such a manner as to
surround and captivate them all in half a glass." As there was no one to
deny this assertion, the marines of the Boadicea were held in a
corresponding degree of estimation.</p>
<p>The third unbeliever was Monsieur Le Quoi, who merely whispered to the
sheriff, that the corps was one of the finest he had ever seen second only
to the Mousquetaires of Le Boa Louis! However, as Mrs. Hollister thought
there was something like actual service in the present appearances, and
was, in consequence, too busily engaged with certain preparations of her
own, to make her comments; as Benjamin was absent, and Monsieur Le Quoi
too happy to find fault with anything, the corps escaped criticism and
comparison altogether on this momentous day, when they certainly had
greater need of self-confidence than on any other previous occasion.
Marmaduke was said to be again closeted with Mr. Van der School and no
interruption was offered to the movements of the troops. At two o'clock
precisely the corps shouldered arms, beginning on the right wing, next to
the veteran, and carrying the motion through to the left with great
regularity. When each musket was quietly fixed in its proper situation,
the order was given to wheel to the left, and march. As this was bringing
raw troops, at once, to face their enemy, it is not to be supposed that
the manoeuver was executed with their usual accuracy; but as the music
struck up the inspiring air of Yankee-doodle, and Richard, accompanied by
Mr. Doolittle preceded the troops boldly down the street, Captain
Hollister led on, with his head elevated to forty-five degrees, with a
little, low cocked hat perched on his crown, carrying a tremendous dragoon
sabre at a poise, and trailing at his heels a huge steel scabbard, that
had war in its very clattering. There was a good deal of difficulty in
getting all the platoons (there were six) to look the same way; but, by
the time they reached the defile of the bridge, the troops were in
sufficiently compact order. In this manner they marched up the hill to the
summit of the mountain, no other alteration taking place in the
disposition of the forces, excepting that a mutual complaint was made, by
the sheriff and the magistrate, of a failure in wind, which gradually'
brought these gentlemen to the rear. It will be unnecessary to detail the
minute movements that succeeded. We shall briefly say, that the scouts
came in and reported, that, so far from retreating, as had been
anticipated, the fugitives had evidently gained a knowledge of the attack,
and were fortifying for a desperate resistance. This intelligence
certainly made a material change, not only in the plans of the leaders,
but in the countenances of the soldiery also. The men looked at one
another with serious faces, and Hiram and Richard began to consult
together, apart.</p>
<p>At this conjuncture, they were joined by Billy Kirby, who came along the
highway, with his axe under his arm, as much in advance of his team as
Captain Hollister had been of his troops in the ascent. The wood-chopper
was amazed at the military array, but the sheriff eagerly availed himself
of this powerful reinforcement, and commanded his assistance in putting
the laws in force. Billy held Mr. Jones in too much deference to object;
and it was finally arranged that he should be the bearer of a summons to
the garrison to surrender before they proceeded to extremities. The troops
now divided, one party being led by the captain, over the Vision, and were
brought in on the left of the cave, while the remainder advanced upon its
right, under the orders of the lieutenant. Mr. Jones and Dr. Todd—for
the surgeon was in attendance also—appeared on the platform of rock,
immediately over the heads of the garrison, though out of their sight.
Hiram thought this approaching too near, and he therefore accompanied
Kirby along the side of the hill to within a safe distance of the
fortifications, where he took shelter behind a tree. Most of the men
discovered great accuracy of eye in bringing some object in range between
them and their enemy, and the only two of the besiegers, who were left in
plain sight of the besieged, were Captain Hollister on one side, and the
wood-chopper on the other. The veteran stood up boldly to the front,
supporting his heavy sword in one undeviating position, with his eye fixed
firmly on his enemy, while the huge form of Billy was placed in that kind
of quiet repose, with either hand thrust into his bosom, bearing his axe
under his right arm, which permitted him, like his own oxen, to rest
standing. So far, not a word had been exchanged between the belligerents.
The besieged had drawn together a pile of black logs and branches of
trees, which they had formed into a chevaux-de-frise, making a little
circular abatis in front of the entrance to the cave. As the ground was
steep and slippery in every direction around the place, and Benjamin
appeared behind the works on one side, and Natty on the other, the
arrangement was by no means contemptible, especially as the front was
sufficiently guarded by the difficulty of the approach. By this time,
Kirby had received his orders, and he advanced coolly along the mountain,
picking his way with the same indifference as if he were pursuing his
ordinary business. When he was within a hundred feet of the works, the
long and much-dreaded rifle of the Leather-Stocking was seen issuing from
the parapet, and his voice cried aloud:</p>
<p>"Keep off! Billy Kirby, keep off! I wish ye no harm; but if a man of ye
all comes a step nigher, there'll be blood spilt atwixt us. God forgive
the one that draws it first, but so it must be."</p>
<p>"Come, old chap," said Billy, good-naturedly, "don't be crabb'd, but hear
what a man has got to say I've no consarn in the business, only to see
right 'twixt man and man; and I don't kear the valie of a beetle-ring
which gets the better; but there's Squire Doolittle, yonder be hind the
beech sapling, he has invited me to come in and ask you to give up to the
law—that's all."</p>
<p>"I see the varmint! I see his clothes!" cried the indignant Natty: "and if
he'll only show so much flesh as will bury a rifle bullet, thirty to the
pound, I'll make him feel me. Go away, Billy, I bid ye; you know my aim,
and I bear you no malice."</p>
<p>"You over-calculate your aim, Natty," said the other, as he stepped behind
a pine that stood near him, "if you think to shoot a man through a tree
with a three-foot butt. I can lay this tree right across you in ten
minutes by any man's watch, and in less time, too; so be civil—I
want no more than what's right."</p>
<p>There was a simple seriousness in the countenance of Natty, that showed he
was much in earnest; but it was also evident that he was reluctant to shed
human blood. He answered the taunt of the wood-chopper, by saying:</p>
<p>"I know you drop a tree where you will, Billy Kirby; but if you show a
hand, or an arm, in doing it, there'll be bones to be set, and blood to
staunch. If it's only to get into the cave that ye want, wait till a two
hours' sun, and you may enter it in welcome; but come in now you shall
not. There's one dead body already, lying on the cold rocks, and there's
another in which the life can hardly be said to stay. If you will come in,
there'll be dead with out as well as within."</p>
<p>The wood-chopper stepped out fearlessly from his cover, and cried:</p>
<p>"That's fair; and what's fair is right. He wants you to stop till it's two
hours to sundown; and I see reason in the thing. A man can give up when
he's wrong, if you don't crowd him too hard; but you crowd a man, and he
gets to be like a stubborn ox—the more you beat, the worse he
kicks."</p>
<p>The sturdy notions of independence maintained by Billy neither suited the
emergency nor the impatience of Mr. Jones, who was burning with a desire
to examine the hid den mysteries of the cave. He therefore interrupted
this amicable dialogue with his own voice;</p>
<p>"I command you Nathaniel Bumppo, by my authority, to surrender your person
to the law," he cried. "And I command you, gentlemen, to aid me in
performing my duty. Benjamin Penguillan I arrest you, and order you to
follow me to the jail of the county, by virtue of this warrant."</p>
<p>"I'd follow ye, Squire Dickens," said Benjamin, removing the pipe from his
month (for during the whole scene the ex-major-domo had been very
composedly smoking); "ay! I'd sail in your wake, to the end of the world,
if-so—be that there was such a place, where there isn't, seeing that
it's round. Now mayhap, Master Hollister, having lived all your life on
shore, you isn't acquainted that the world, d'ye see."</p>
<p>"Surrender!" interrupted the veteran, in a voice that startled his
hearers, and which actually caused his own forces to recoil several paces;
"surrender, Benjamin Pengullan, or expect no quarter.'"</p>
<p>"Damn your quarter!" said Benjamin, rising from the log on which he was
seated, and taking a squint along the barrel of the swivel, which had been
brought on the hill during the night, and now formed the means of defence
on his side of the works. "Look you, master or captain, thof I questions
if ye know the name of a rope, except the one that's to hang ye, there's
no need of singing out, as if ye was hailing a deaf man on a topgallant
yard. May-hap you think you've got my true name in your sheep skin; but
what British sailor finds it worth while to sail in these seas, without a
sham on his stern, in case of need, d'ye see. If you call me Penguillan,
you calls me by the name of the man on whose hand, dye see, I hove into
daylight; and he was a gentleman; and that's more than my worst enemy will
say of any of the family of Benjamin Stubbs."</p>
<p>"Send the warrant round to me, and I'll put in an alias," cried Hiram,
from behind his cover.</p>
<p>"Put in a jackass, and you'll put in yourself, Mister Doo-but-little,"
shouted Benjamin, who kept squinting along his little iron tube, with
great steadiness.</p>
<p>"I give you but one moment to yield," cried Richard. "Benjamin! Benjamin!
this is not the gratitude I expected from you."</p>
<p>"I tell you, Richard Jones," said Natty, who dreaded the sheriff's
influence over his comrade; "though the canister the gal brought be lost,
there's powder enough in the cave to lift the rock you stand on. I'll take
off my roof if you don't hold your peace."</p>
<p>"I think it beneath the dignity of my office to parley further with the
prisoners," the sheriff observer to his companion, while they both retired
with a precipitancy that Captain Hollister mistook for the signal to
advance.</p>
<p>"Charge baggonet!" shouted the veteran; "march!"</p>
<p>Although this signal was certainly expected, it took the assailed a little
by surprise, and the veteran approached the works, crying, "Courage, my
brave lads! give them no quarter unless they surrender;" and struck a
furious blow upward with his sabre, that would have divided the steward
into moieties by subjecting him to the process of decapitation, but for
the fortunate interference of the muzzle of the swivel. As it was, the gun
was dismounted at the critical moment that Benjamin was applying his pipe
to the priming, and in consequence some five or six dozen of rifle bullets
were projected into the air, in nearly a perpendicular line. Philosophy
teaches us that the atmosphere will not retain lead; and two pounds of the
metal, moulded into bullets of thirty to the pound, after describing an
ellipsis in their journey, returned to the earth rattling among the
branches of the trees directly over the heads of the troops stationed in
the rear of their captain. Much of the success of an attack, made by
irregular soldiers, depends on the direction in which they are first got
in motion. In the present instance it was retrograde, and in less than a
minute after the bellowing report of the swivel among the rocks and
caverns, the whole weight of the attack from the left rested on the
prowess of the single arm of the veteran. Benjamin received a severe
contusion from the recoil of his gun, which produced a short stupor,
during which period the ex-steward was prostrate on the ground. Captain
Hollister availed himself of this circumstance to scramble ever the
breastwork and obtain a footing in the bastion—for such was the
nature of the fortress, as connected with the cave. The moment the veteran
found himself within the works of his enemy, he rushed to the edge of the
fortification, and, waving his sabre over his head, shouted:</p>
<p>"Victory! come on, my brave boys, the work's our own!"</p>
<p>All this was perfectly military, and was such an example as a gallant
officer was in some measure bound to exhibit to his men but the outcry was
the unlucky cause of turning the tide of success. Natty, who had been
keeping a vigalent eye on the wood-chopper, and the enemy immediately
before him, wheeled at this alarm, and was appalled at beholding his
comrade on the ground, and the veteran standing on his own bulwark, giving
forth the cry of victory! The muzzle of the long rifle was turned
instantly toward the captain. There was a moment when the life of the old
soldier was in great jeopardy but the object to shoot at was both too
large and too near for the Leather-Stocking, who, instead of pulling his
trigger, applied the gun to the rear of his enemy, and by a powerful shove
sent him outside of the works with much greater rapidity than he had
entered them. The spot on which Captain Hollister alighted was directly in
front, where, as his feet touched the ground, so steep and slippery was
the side of the mountain, it seemed to recede from under them. His motion
was swift, and so irregular as utterly to confuse the faculties of the old
soldier. During its continuance, he supposed himself to be mounted, and
charging through the ranks of his enemy. At every tree he made a blow, of
course, as at a foot-soldier; and just as he was making the cut "St.
George" at a half burnt sapling he landed in the highway, and, to his
utter amazement, at the feet of his own spouse. When Mrs. Hollister, who
was toiling up the hill, followed by at least twenty curious boys, leaning
with one hand on the staff with which she ordinarily walked, and bearing
in the other an empty bag, witnessed this exploit of her husband,
indignation immediately got the better, not only of her religion, but of
her philosophy.</p>
<p>"Why, sargeant! is it flying ye are?" she cried—"that I should live
to see a husband of mine turn his hack to an inimy! and such a one! Here I
have been telling the b'ys, as we come along, all about the saige of
Yorrektown, and how ye was hurted; and how ye'd be acting the same agin
the day; and I mate ye retraiting jist as the first gun is fired. Och! I
may trow away the bag! for if there's plunder, 'twill not be the wife of
sich as yerself that will be privileged to be getting the same. They do
say, too, there is a power of goold and silver in the place—the Lord
forgive me for setting my heart on woorldly things; but what falls in the
battle, there's scriptur' for believing, is the just property of the
victor."</p>
<p>"Retreating!" exclaimed the amazed veteran; "where's my horse? he has been
shot under me—I——"</p>
<p>"Is the man mad?" interrupted his wife—"devil the horse do ye own,
sargeant, and ye're nothing but a shabby captain of malaishy. Oh! if the
ra'al captain was here, tis the other way ye'd be riding, dear, or you
would not follow your laider!"</p>
<p>While this worthy couple were thus discussing events, the battle began to
rage more violently than ever above them. When Leather-Stocking saw his
enemy fairly under headway, as Benjamin would express it, he gave his
attention to the right wing of the assailants. It would have been easy for
Kirby, with his powerful frame, to have seized the moment to scale the
bastion, and, with his great strength, to have sent both of its defenders
in pursuit of the veteran; but hostility appeared to be the passion that
the wood-chopper indulged the least in at that moment, for, in a voice
that was heard by the retreating left wing, he shouted:</p>
<p>"Hurrah well done, captain! keep it up! how he handles his bush-hook! he
makes nothing of a sapling!" and such other encouraging exclamations to
the flying veteran, until, overcome by mirth, the good-natured fellow
seated himself on the ground, kicking the earth with delight, and giving
vent to peal after peal of laughter.</p>
<p>Natty stood all this time in a menacing attitude, with his rifle pointed
over the breastwork, watching with a quick and cautions eye the least
movement of the assail ants. The outcry unfortunately tempted the
ungovernable curiosity of Hiram to take a peep from behind his cover at
the state of the battle. Though this evolution was performed with great
caution, in protecting his front, he left, like many a better commander,
his rear exposed to the attacks of his enemy. Mr. Doolittle belonged
physically to a class of his countrymen, to whom Nature has denied, in
their formation, the use of curved lines. Every thing about him was either
straight or angular. But his tailor was a woman who worked, like a
regimental contractor, by a set of rules that gave the same configuration
to the whole human species. Consequently, when Mr. Doolittle leaned
forward in the manner described, a loose drapery appeared behind the tree,
at which the rifle of Natty was pointed with the quickness of lightning. A
less experienced man would have aimed at the flowing robe, which hung like
a festoon half-way to the earth; but the Leather-Stocking knew both the
man and his female tailor better; and when the smart report of the rifle
was heard, Kirby, who watched the whole manoeuvre in breath less
expectation, saw the bark fly from the beech and the cloth, at some
distance above the loose folds, wave at the same instant. No battery was
ever unmasked with more promptitiude than Hiram advanced from behind the
tree at this summons.</p>
<p>He made two or three steps, with great precision, to the front and,
placing one hand on the afflicted part, stretched forth the other with a
menacing air toward Natty, and cried aloud:</p>
<p>"Gawl darn ye: this shan't he settled so easy; I'll follow it up from the
'common pleas' to the 'court of errors.'"</p>
<p>Such a shocking imprecation, from the mouth of so orderly a man as Squire
Doolittle, with the fearless manner in which he exposed himself, together
with, perhaps, the knowledge that Natty's rifle was unloaded, encouraged
the troops in the rear, who gave a loud shout, and fired a volley into the
tree-tops, after the contents of the swivel. Animated by their own noise,
the men now rushed on in earnest; and Billy Kirby, who thought the joke,
good as it was, had gone far enough, was in the act of scaling the works,
when Judge Temple appeared on the opposite side, exclaiming:</p>
<p>"Silence and peace! why do I see murder and blood shed attempted? Is not
the law sufficient to protect itself, that armed bands must be gathered,
as in rebellion and war, to see justice performed?"</p>
<p>"'Tis the posse comitatus," shouted the sheriff, from a distant rock,
"who-"</p>
<p>"Say rather a posse of demons. I command the peace."</p>
<p>"Hold shied not blood!" cried a voice from the top of the Vision. "Hold,
for the sake of Heaven, fire no more! all shall be yielded! you shall
enter the cave!"</p>
<p>Amazement produced the desired effect. Natty, who had reloaded his piece,
quietly seated himself on the logs, and rested his head on his hands,
while the "Light Infantry" ceased their military movements, and waited the
issue in suspense.</p>
<p>In less than a minute Edwards came rushing down the hill, followed by
Major Hartman, with a velocity that was surprising for his years. They
reached the terrace in an instant, from which the youth led the way, by
the hollow in the rock, to the mouth of the cave, into which they both
entered, leaving all without silent, and gazing after them with
astonishment.</p>
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