<h2><SPAN name="chap17"></SPAN>CHAPTER XVII.</h2>
<p class="poem">
There are, whose changing lineaments<br/>
Express each guileless passion of the breast;<br/>
Where Love, and Hope, and tender-hearted Pity<br/>
Are seen reflected, as from a mirror’s face;<br/>
But cold experience can veil these hues<br/>
With looks, invented shrewdly to encompass<br/>
The cunning purposes of base deceit.</p>
<p class="left">
—Duo.</p>
<p>The officer to whose keeping Dunwoodie had committed the peddler transferred
his charge to the custody of the regular sergeant of the guard. The gift of
Captain Wharton had not been lost on the youthful lieutenant; and a certain
dancing motion that had taken possession of objects before his eyes, gave him
warning of the necessity of recruiting nature by sleep. After admonishing the
noncommissioned guardian of Harvey to omit no watchfulness in securing the
prisoner, the youth wrapped himself in his cloak, and, stretched on a bench
before a fire, soon found the repose he needed. A rude shed extended the whole
length of the rear of the building, and from off one of its ends had been
partitioned a small apartment, that was intended as a repository for many of
the lesser implements of husbandry. The lawless times had, however, occasioned
its being stripped of everything of value; and the searching eyes of Betty
Flanagan selected this spot, on her arrival, as the storehouse for her movables
and a sanctuary for her person. The spare arms and baggage of the corps had
also been deposited here; and the united treasures were placed under the eye of
the sentinel who paraded the shed as a guardian of the rear of the
headquarters. A second soldier, who was stationed near the house to protect the
horses of the officers, could command a view of the outside of the apartment;
and, as it was without window or outlet of any kind, excepting its door, the
considerate sergeant thought this the most befitting place in which to deposit
his prisoner until the moment of his execution. Several inducements urged
Sergeant Hollister to this determination, among which was the absence of the
washerwoman, who lay before the kitchen fire, dreaming that the corps was
attacking a party of the enemy, and mistaking the noise that proceeded from her
own nose for the bugles of the Virginians sounding the charge. Another was the
peculiar opinions that the veteran entertained of life and death, and by which
he was distinguished in the corps as a man of most exemplary piety and holiness
of life. The sergeant was more than fifty years of age, and for half that
period he had borne arms. The constant recurrence of sudden deaths before his
eyes had produced an effect on him differing greatly from that which was the
usual moral consequence of such scenes; and he had become not only the most
steady, but the most trustworthy soldier in his troop. Captain Lawton had
rewarded his fidelity by making him its orderly.</p>
<p>Followed by Birch, the sergeant proceeded in silence to the door of the
intended prison, and, throwing it open with one hand, he held a lantern with
the other to light the peddler to his prison. Seating himself on a cask, that
contained some of Betty’s favorite beverage, the sergeant motioned to
Birch to occupy another, in the same manner. The lantern was placed on the
floor, when the dragoon, after looking his prisoner steadily in the face,
observed,—</p>
<p>“You look as if you would meet death like a man; and I have brought you
to a spot where you can tranquilly arrange your thoughts, and be quiet and
undisturbed.”</p>
<p>“’Tis a fearful place to prepare for the last change in,”
said Harvey, gazing around his little prison with a vacant eye.</p>
<p>“Why, for the matter of that,” returned the veteran, “it can
reckon but little in the great account, where a man parades his thoughts for
the last review, so that he finds them fit to pass the muster of another world.
I have a small book here, which I make it a point to read a little in, whenever
we are about to engage, and I find it a great strengthener in time of
need.” While speaking, he took a Bible from his pocket, and offered it to
the peddler. Birch received the volume with habitual reverence; but there was
an abstracted air about him, and a wandering of the eye, that induced his
companion to think that alarm was getting the mastery of the peddler’s
feelings; accordingly, he proceeded in what he conceived to be the offices of
consolation.</p>
<p>“If anything lies heavy on your mind, now is the best time to get rid of
it—if you have done any wrong to anyone, I promise you, on the word of an
honest dragoon, to lend you a helping hand to see them righted.”</p>
<p>“There are few who have not done so,” said the peddler, turning his
vacant gaze once more on his companion.</p>
<p>“True—’tis natural to sin; but it sometimes happens that a
man does what at other times he may be sorry for. One would not wish to die
with any very heavy sin on his conscience, after all.”</p>
<p>Harvey had by this time thoroughly examined the place in which he was to pass
the night, and saw no means of escape. But as hope is ever the last feeling to
desert the human breast, the peddler gave the dragoon more of his attention,
fixing on his sunburned features such searching looks, that Sergeant Hollister
lowered his eyes before the wild expression which he met in the gaze of his
prisoner.</p>
<p>“I have been taught to lay the burden of my sins at the feet of my<br/>
Savior,” replied the peddler.</p>
<p>“Why, yes—all that is well enough,” returned the other.
“But justice should be done while there is opportunity. There have been
stirring times in this country since the war began, and many have been deprived
of their rightful goods I oftentimes find it hard to reconcile even my lawful
plunder to a tender conscience.”</p>
<p>“These hands,” said the peddler, stretching forth his meager, bony
fingers, “have spent years in toil, but not a moment in pilfering.”</p>
<p>“It is well that it is so,” said the honest-hearted soldier,
“and, no doubt, you now feel it a great consolation. There are three
great sins, that, if a man can keep his conscience clear of, why, by the mercy
of God, he may hope to pass muster with the saints in heaven: they are
stealing, murdering, and desertion.”</p>
<p>“Thank God!” said Birch, with fervor, “I have never yet taken
the life of a fellow creature.”</p>
<p>“As to killing a man in lawful battle, that is no more than doing
one’s duty. If the cause is wrong, the sin of such a deed, you know,
falls on the nation, and a man receives his punishment here with the rest of
the people; but murdering in cold blood stands next to desertion as a crime in
the eye of God.”</p>
<p>“I never was a soldier, therefore never could desert,” said the
peddler, resting his face on his hand in a melancholy attitude.</p>
<p>“Why, desertion consists of more than quitting your colors, though that
is certainly the worst kind; a man may desert his country in the hour of
need.”</p>
<p>Birch buried his face in both his hands, and his whole frame shook; the
sergeant regarded him closely, but good feelings soon got the better of his
antipathies, and he continued more mildly,—</p>
<p>“But still that is a sin which I think may be forgiven, if sincerely
repented of; and it matters but little when or how a man dies, so that he dies
like a Christian and a man. I recommend you to say your prayers, and then to
get some rest, in order that you may do both. There is no hope of your being
pardoned; for Colonel Singleton has sent down the most positive orders to take
your life whenever we met you. No, no—nothing can save you.”</p>
<p>“You say the truth,” cried Birch. “It is now too late—I
have destroyed my only safeguard. But <i>he</i> will do my memory justice at
least.”</p>
<p>“What safeguard?” asked the sergeant, with awakened curiosity.</p>
<p>“’Tis nothing,” replied the peddler, recovering his natural
manner, and lowering his face to avoid the earnest looks of his companion.</p>
<p>“And who is he?”</p>
<p>“No one,” added Harvey, anxious to say no more.</p>
<p>“Nothing and no one can avail but little now,” said the sergeant,
rising to go. “Lay yourself on the blanket of Mrs. Flanagan, and get a
little sleep; I will call you betimes in the morning; and from the bottom of my
soul I wish I could be of some service to you, for I dislike greatly to see a
man hung up like a dog.”</p>
<p>“Then <i>you</i> might save me from this ignominious death,” said
Birch, springing to his feet, and catching the dragoon by the arm. “And,
oh! what will I not give you in reward!”</p>
<p>“In what manner?” asked the sergeant, looking at him in surprise.</p>
<p>“See,” said the peddler, producing several guineas from his person;
“these are nothing to what I will give you, if you will assist me to
escape.”</p>
<p>“Were you the man whose picture is on the gold, I would not listen to
such a crime,” said the trooper, throwing the money on the floor with
contempt. “Go—go, poor wretch, and make your peace with God; for it
is He only that can be of service to you now.”</p>
<p>The sergeant took up the lantern, and, with some indignation in his manner, he
left the peddler to sorrowful meditations on his approaching fate. Birch sank,
in momentary despair, on the pallet of Betty, while his guardian proceeded to
give the necessary instructions to the sentinels for his safe-keeping.</p>
<p>Hollister concluded his injunctions to the man in the shed, by saying,
“Your life will depend on his not escaping. Let none enter or quit the
room till morning.”</p>
<p>“But,” said the trooper, “my orders are, to let the
washerwoman pass in and out, as she pleases.”</p>
<p>“Well, let her then; but be careful that this wily peddler does not get
out in the folds of her petticoats.” He then continued his walk, giving
similar orders to each of the sentinels near the spot.</p>
<p>For some time after the departure of the sergeant, silence prevailed within the
solitary prison of the peddler, until the dragoon at his door heard his loud
breathings, which soon rose into the regular cadence of one in a deep sleep.
The man continued walking his post, musing on an indifference to life which
could allow nature its customary rest, even on the threshold of the grave.
Harvey Birch had, however, been a name too long held in detestation by every
man in the corps, to suffer any feelings of commiseration to mingle with these
reflections of the sentinel; for, notwithstanding the consideration and
kindness manifested by the sergeant, there probably was not another man of his
rank in the whole party who would have discovered equal benevolence to the
prisoner, or who would not have imitated the veteran in rejecting the bribe,
although probably from a less worthy motive. There was something of
disappointed vengeance in the feelings of the man who watched the door of the
room on finding his prisoner enjoying a sleep of which he himself was deprived,
and at his exhibiting such obvious indifference to the utmost penalty that
military rigor could inflict on all his treason to the cause of liberty and
America. More than once he felt prompted to disturb the repose of the peddler
by taunts and revilings; but the discipline he was under, and a secret sense of
shame at the brutality of the act, held him in subjection.</p>
<p>His meditations were, however, soon interrupted by the appearance of the
washerwoman, who came staggering through the door that communicated with the
kitchen, muttering execrations against the servants of the officers, who, by
their waggery, had disturbed her slumbers before the fire. The sentinel
understood enough of her maledictions to comprehend the case; but all his
efforts to enter into conversation with the enraged woman were useless, and he
suffered her to enter her room without explaining that it contained another
inmate. The noise of her huge frame falling on the bed was succeeded by a
silence that was soon interrupted by the renewed respiration of the peddler,
and within a few minutes Harvey continued to breathe aloud, as if no
interruption had occurred. The relief arrived at this moment.</p>
<p>The sentinel, who felt nettled at the contempt of the peddler, after
communicating his orders, while he was retiring, exclaimed to his
successor,—</p>
<p>“You may keep yourself warm by dancing, John; the peddler spy has tuned
his fiddle, you hear, and it will not be long before Betty will strike up, in
her turn.”</p>
<p>The joke was followed by a general laugh from the party, who marched on in
performance of their duty. At this instant the door of the prison was opened,
and Betty reappeared, staggering back again toward her former quarters.</p>
<p>“Stop,” said the sentinel, catching her by her clothes; “are
you sure the spy is not in your pocket?”</p>
<p>“Can’t you hear the rascal snoring in my room, you dirty
blackguard?” sputtered Betty, her whole frame shaking with rage.
“And is it so ye would sarve a dacent famale, that a man must be put to
sleep in the room wid her, ye rapscallion?”</p>
<p>“Pooh! Do you mind a fellow who’s to be hanged in the morning? You
see he sleeps already; to-morrow he’ll take a longer nap.”</p>
<p>“Hands off, ye villain,” cried the washerwoman, relinquishing a
small bottle that the trooper had succeeded in wresting from her. “But
I’ll go to Captain Jack, and know if it’s orders to put a
hang-gallows spy in my room; aye, even in my widowed bed, you tief!”</p>
<p>“Silence, old Jezebel!” said the fellow with a laugh, taking the
bottle from his mouth to breathe, “or you will wake the gentleman. Would
you disturb a man in his last sleep?”</p>
<p>“I’ll awake Captain Jack, you reprobate villain, and bring him here
to see me righted; he will punish ye all, for imposing on a dacent widowed
body, you marauder!”</p>
<p>With these words, which only extorted a laugh from the sentinel, Betty
staggered round the end of the building, and made the best of her way towards
the quarters of her favorite, Captain John Lawton, in search of redress.
Neither the officer nor the woman, however, appeared during the night, and
nothing further occurred to disturb the repose of the peddler, who, to the
astonishment of the different sentinels, continued by his breathing to manifest
how little the gallows could affect his slumbers.</p>
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