<h2><SPAN name="chap33"></SPAN>CHAPTER XXXIII.</h2>
<p class="poem">
Green be the turf above thee,<br/>
Friend of my better days;<br/>
None knew thee but to love thee,<br/>
None named thee but to praise.</p>
<p class="left">
—HALLECK.</p>
<p>While the scenes and events that we have recorded were occurring, Captain
Lawton led his small party, by slow and wary marches, from the Four Corners to
the front of a body of the enemy; where he so successfully maneuvered, for a
short time, as completely to elude all their efforts to entrap him, and yet so
disguised his own force as to excite the constant apprehension of an attack
from the Americans. This forbearing policy, on the side of the partisan, was
owing to positive orders received from his commander. When Dunwoodie left his
detachment, the enemy were known to be slowly advancing, and he directed Lawton
to hover around them, until his own return, and the arrival of a body of foot,
might enable him to intercept their retreat.</p>
<p>The trooper discharged his duty to the letter but with no little of the
impatience that made part of his character when restrained from the attack.</p>
<p>During these movements, Betty Flanagan guided her little cart with
indefatigable zeal among the rocks of Westchester, now discussing with the
sergeant the nature of evil spirits, and now combating with the surgeon sundry
points of practice that were hourly arising between them. But the moment
arrived that was to decide the temporary mastery of the field. A detachment of
the eastern militia moved out from their fastnesses, and approached the enemy.</p>
<p>The junction between Lawton and his auxiliaries was made at midnight, and an
immediate consultation was held between him and the leader of the foot
soldiers. After listening to the statements of the partisan, who rather
despised the prowess of his enemy, the commandant of the party determined to
attack the British, the moment daylight enabled him to reconnoiter their
position, without waiting for the aid of Dunwoodie and his horse. So soon as
this decision was made, Lawton retired from the building where the consultation
was held, and rejoined his own small command.</p>
<p>The few troopers who were with the captain had fastened their horses in a spot
adjacent to a haystack, and laid their own frames under its shelter, to catch a
few hours’ sleep. But Dr. Sitgreaves, Sergeant Hollister, and Betty
Flanagan were congregated at a short distance by themselves, having spread a
few blankets upon the dry surface of a rock. Lawton threw his huge frame by the
side of the surgeon, and folding his cloak about him, leaned his head upon one
hand, and appeared deeply engaged in contemplating the moon as it waded through
the heavens. The sergeant was sitting upright, in respectful deference to the
surgeon, and the washerwoman was now raising her head, in order to vindicate
some of her favorite maxims, and now composing it to sleep.</p>
<p>“So, sergeant,” continued Sitgreaves, following up a previous
position, “if you cut upwards, the blow, by losing the additional
momentum of your weight, will be less destructive, and at the same time effect
the true purpose of war, that of disabling your enemy.”</p>
<p>“Pooh! pooh! sergeant dear,” said the washerwoman, raising her head
from the blanket, “where’s the harm of taking a life, jist in the
way of battle? Is it the rig’lars who’ll show favor, and they
fighting? Ask Captain Jack there, if the country could get free, and the boys
no strike their might. I wouldn’t have them disparage the whisky so
much.”</p>
<p>“It is not to be expected that an ignorant female like yourself, Mrs.
Flanagan,” returned the surgeon, with a calmness that only rendered his
contempt more stinging to Betty, “can comprehend the distinctions of
surgical science; neither are you accomplished in the sword exercise; so that
dissertations upon the judicious use of that weapon could avail you nothing
either in theory or in practice.”</p>
<p>“It’s hut little I care, anyway, for such botherment; but fighting
is no play, and a body shouldn’t be particular how they strike, or who
they hit, so it’s the inimy.”</p>
<p>“Are we likely to have a warm day, Captain Lawton?”</p>
<p>“’Tis more than probable,” replied the trooper; “these
militia seldom fail of making a bloody field, either by their cowardice or
their ignorance, and the real soldier is made to suffer for their bad
conduct.”</p>
<p>“Are you ill, John?” said the surgeon, passing his hand along the
arm of the captain, until it instinctively settled on his pulse; but the
steady, even beat announced neither bodily nor mental malady.</p>
<p>“Sick at heart, Archibald, at the folly of our rulers, in believing that
battles are to be fought and victories won, by fellows who handle a musket as
they would a flail; lads who wink when they pull a trigger, and form a line
like a hoop pole. The dependence we place on these men spills the best blood of
the country.”</p>
<p>The surgeon listened with amazement. It was not the matter, but the manner that
surprised him. The trooper had uniformly exhibited, on the eve of battle, an
animation, and an eagerness to engage, that was directly at variance with the
admirable coolness of his manner at other times. But now there was a
despondency in the tones of his voice, and a listlessness in his air, that was
entirely different. The operator hesitated a moment, to reflect in what manner
he could render this change of service in furthering his favorite system, and
then continued,—</p>
<p>“It would be wise, John, to advise the colonel to keep at long shot; a
spent ball will disable—”</p>
<p>“No!” exclaimed the trooper, impatiently, “let the rascals
singe their whiskers at the muzzles of the British muskets, if they can be
driven there. But, enough of them. Archibald, do you deem that moon to be a
world like this, containing creatures like ourselves?”</p>
<p>“Nothing more probable, dear John; we know its size and, reasoning from
analogy, may easily conjecture its use. Whether or not its inhabitants have
attained to that perfection in the sciences which we have acquired, must depend
greatly on the state of its society, and in some measure upon its physical
influences.”</p>
<p>“I care nothing about their learning, Archibald; but ’tis a
wonderful power that can create such worlds, and control them in their
wanderings. I know not why, but there is a feeling of melancholy excited within
me as I gaze on that body of light, shaded as it is by your fancied sea and
land. It seems to be the resting place of departed spirits!”</p>
<p>“Take a drop, darling,” said Betty, raising her head once more, and
proffering her own bottle. “’Tis the night damp that chills the
blood—and then the talk with the cursed militia is no good for a fiery
temper. Take a drop, darling, and ye’ll sleep till the morning. I fed
Roanoke myself, for I thought ye might need hard riding the morrow.”</p>
<p>“’Tis a glorious heaven to look upon,” continued the trooper,
in the same tone, disregarding the offer of Betty, “and ’tis a
thousand pities that such worms as men should let their vile passions deface
such goodly work.”</p>
<p>“You speak the truth, dear John; there is room for all to live and enjoy
themselves in peace, if each could be satisfied with his own. Still, war has
its advantages; it particularly promotes the knowledge of surgery;
and—”</p>
<p>“There is a star,” continued Lawton, still bent on his own ideas,
“struggling to glitter through a few driving clouds; perhaps that too is
a world, and contains its creatures endowed with reason like ourselves. Think
you that they know of war and bloodshed?”</p>
<p>“If I might be so bold,” said Sergeant Hollister, mechanically
raising his hand to his cap, “’tis mentioned in the good book, that
the Lord made the sun to stand still while Joshua was charging the enemy, in
order, sir, as I suppose, that they might have daylight to turn their flank, or
perhaps make a feint in the rear, or some such maneuver. Now, if the Lord would
lend them a hand, fighting cannot be sinful. I have often been nonplused,
though, to find that they used them chariots instead of heavy dragoons, who
are, in all comparison, better to break a line of infantry, and who, for the
matter of that, could turn such wheel carriages, and getting into the rear,
play the very devil with them, horse and all.”</p>
<p>“It is because you do not understand the construction of those ancient
vehicles, Sergeant Hollister, that you judge of them so erroneously,”
said the surgeon. “They were armed with sharp weapons that protruded from
their wheels, and which broke up the columns of foot, like dismembered
particles of matter. I doubt not, if similar instruments were affixed to the
cart of Mrs. Flanagan, that great confusion might be carried into the ranks of
the enemy thereby, this very day.”</p>
<p>“It’s but little that the mare would go, and the rig’lars
firing at her,” grumbled Betty, from under her blanket. “When we
got the plunder, the time we drove them through the Jarseys it was, I had to
back the baste up to the dead; for the divil the foot would she move, fornent
the firing, wid her eyes open. Roanoke and Captain Jack are good enough for the
redcoats, letting alone myself and the mare.”</p>
<p>A long roll of the drums, from the hill occupied by the British, announced that
they were on the alert; and a corresponding signal was immediately heard from
the Americans. The bugle of the Virginians struck up its martial tones; and in
a few moments both the hills, the one held by the royal troops and the other by
their enemies, were alive with armed men. Day had begun to dawn, and
preparations were making by both parties, to give and to receive the attack. In
numbers the Americans had greatly the advantage; but in discipline and
equipment the superiority was entirely with their enemies. The arrangements for
the battle were brief, and by the time the sun rose the militia moved forward.</p>
<p>The ground did not admit of the movements of horse; and the only duty that
could be assigned to the dragoons was to watch the moment of victory, and
endeavor to improve the success to the utmost. Lawton soon got his warriors
into the saddle; and leaving them to the charge of Hollister, he rode himself
along the line of foot, who, in varied dresses, and imperfectly armed, were
formed in a shape that in some degree resembled a martial array. A scornful
smile lowered about the lip of the trooper as he guided Roanoke with a skillful
hand through the windings of their ranks; and when the word was given to march,
he turned the flank of the regiment, and followed close in the rear. The
Americans had to descend into a little hollow, and rise a hill on its opposite
side, to approach the enemy.</p>
<p>The descent was made with tolerable steadiness, until near the foot of the
hill, when the royal troops advanced in a beautiful line, with their flanks
protected by the formation of the ground. The appearance of the British drew a
fire from the militia, which was given with good effect, and for a moment
staggered the regulars. But they were rallied by their officers, and threw in
volley after volley with great steadiness. For a short time the fire was warm
and destructive, until the English advanced with the bayonet. This assault the
militia had not sufficient discipline to withstand. Their line wavered, then
paused, and finally broke into companies and fragments of companies, keeping up
at the same time a scattering and desultory fire.</p>
<p>Lawton witnessed these operations in silence, nor did he open his mouth until
the field was covered with parties of the flying Americans. Then, indeed, he
seemed stung with the disgrace thus heaped upon the arms of his country.
Spurring Roanoke along the side of the hill, he called to the fugitives in all
the strength of his powerful voice. He pointed to the enemy, and assured his
countrymen that they had mistaken the way. There was such a mixture of
indifference and irony in his exhortations that a few paused in
surprise—more joined them, until, roused by the example of the trooper,
and stimulated by their own spirit, they demanded to be led against their foe
once more.</p>
<p>“Come on, then, my brave friends!” shouted the trooper, turning his
horse’s head towards the British line, one flank of which was very near
him; “come on, and hold your fire until it will scorch their
eyebrows.”</p>
<p>The men sprang forward, and followed his example, neither giving nor receiving
a fire until they had come within a very short distance of the enemy. An
English sergeant, who had been concealed by a rock, enraged with the audacity
of the officer who thus dared their arms, stepped from behind his cover, and
leveled his musket.</p>
<p>“Fire and you die!” cried Lawton, spurring his charger, which
leaped forward at the instant. The action and the tone of his voice shook the
nerves of the Englishman, who drew his trigger with an uncertain aim. Roanoke
sprang with all his feet from the earth, and, plunging, fell headlong and
lifeless at the feet of his destroyer. Lawton kept his feet, standing face to
face with his enemy. The latter presented his bayonet, and made a desperate
thrust at the trooper’s heart. The steel of their weapons emitted sparks
of fire, and the bayonet flew fifty feet in the air. At the next moment its
owner lay a quivering corpse.</p>
<p>“Come on!” shouted the trooper, as a body of English appeared on
the rock, and threw in a close fire. “Come on!” he repeated, and
brandished his saber fiercely. Then his gigantic form fell backward, like a
majestic pine yielding to the ax; but still, as he slowly fell, he continued to
wield his saber, and once more the deep tones of his voice were heard uttering,
“Come on!”</p>
<p>The advancing Americans paused aghast, and, turning, they abandoned the field
to the royal troops.</p>
<p>It was neither the intention nor the policy of the English commander to pursue
his success, for he well knew that strong parties of the Americans would soon
arrive; accordingly he only tarried to collect his wounded, and forming in a
square, he commenced his retreat towards the shipping. Within twenty minutes of
the fall of Lawton, the ground was deserted by both English and Americans. When
the inhabitants of the country were called upon to enter the field, they were
necessarily attended by such surgical advisers as were furnished by the low
state of the profession in the interior at that day. Dr. Sitgreaves entertained
quite as profound a contempt for the medical attendants of the militia as the
captain did of the troops themselves. He wandered, therefore, around the field,
casting many a glance of disapprobation at the slight operations that came
under his eye; but when, among the flying troops, he found that his comrade and
friend was nowhere to be seen, he hastened back to the spot at which Hollister
was posted, to inquire if the trooper had returned. Of course, the answer was
in the negative. Filled with a thousand uneasy conjectures, the surgeon,
without regarding, or indeed without at all reflecting upon any dangers that
might lie in his way, strode over the ground at an enormous rate, to the point
where he knew the final struggle had been. Once before, the surgeon had rescued
his friend from death in a similar situation; and he felt a secret joy in his
own conscious skill, as he perceived Betty Flanagan seated on the ground,
holding in her lap the head of a man whose size and dress he knew could belong
only to the trooper. As he approached the spot, the surgeon became alarmed at
the aspect of the washerwoman. Her little black bonnet was thrown aside, and
her hair, which was already streaked with gray, hung around her face in
disorder.</p>
<p>“John! dear John!” said the doctor, tenderly, as he bent and laid
his hand upon the senseless wrist of the trooper, from which it recoiled with
an intuitive knowledge of his fate. “John! where are you hurt?—can
I help you?”</p>
<p>“Ye talk to the senseless clay,” said Betty, rocking her body, and
unconsciously playing with the raven ringlets of the trooper’s hair;
“it’s no more will he hear, and it’s but little will he mind
yeer probes and yeer med’cines. Och hone,” och hone!—and
where will be the liberty now? or who will there be to fight the battle, or
gain the day?”</p>
<p>“John!” repeated the surgeon, still unwilling to believe the
evidence of his unerring senses. “Dear John, speak to me; say what you
will, that you do but speak. Oh, God! he is dead; would that I had died with
him!”</p>
<p>“There is but little use in living and fighting now,” said Betty.
“Both him and the baste! see, there is the poor cratur, and here is the
master! I fed the horse with my own hands, the day; and the last male that
<i>he</i> ate was of my own cooking. Och hone! och hone!—that Captain
Jack should live to be killed by the rig’lars!”</p>
<p>“John! my dear John!” said the surgeon, with convulsive sobs,
“thy hour has come, and many a more prudent man survives thee; but none
better, nor braver. O John, thou wert to me a kind friend, and very dear; it is
unphilosophical to grieve; but for thee I must weep, in bitterness of
heart.”</p>
<p>The doctor buried his face in his hands, and for several minutes sat yielding
to an ungovernable burst of sorrow; while the washerwoman gave vent to her
grief in words, moving her body in a kind of writhing, and playing with
different parts of her favorite’s dress with her fingers.</p>
<p>“And who’ll there be to encourage the boys now?” she said.
“O Captain Jack! ye was the sowl of the troop, and it was but little we
knowed of the danger, and ye fighting. Och! he was no maly-mouthed, that
quarreled wid a widowed woman for the matter of a burn in the mate, or the want
of a breakfast. Taste a drop, darling, and it may be, ’twill revive ye.
Och! and he’ll niver taste ag’in; here’s the doctor, honey,
him ye used to blarney wid, waping as if the poor sowl would die for ye. Och!
he’s gone, he’s gone; and the liberty is gone with him.”</p>
<p>A thundering sound of horses’ feet came rolling along the road which led
near the place where Lawton lay, and directly the whole body of Virginians
appeared, with Dunwoodie at their head. The news of the captain’s fate
had reached him, for the instant that he saw the body he halted the squadron,
and, dismounting, approached the spot. The countenance of Lawton was not in the
least distorted, but the angry frown which had lowered over his brow during the
battle was fixed even in death. His frame was composed, and stretched as in
sleep. Dunwoodie took hold of his hand, and gazed a moment in silence; his own
dark eye kindled, and the paleness which had overspread his features was
succeeded by a spot of deep red in either cheek.</p>
<p>“With his own sword will I avenge him!” he cried, endeavoring to
take the weapon from the hand of Lawton; but the grasp resisted his utmost
strength. “It shall be buried with him. Sitgreaves, take care of our
friend, while I revenge his death.”</p>
<p>The major hastened back to his charger, and led the way in pursuit of the
enemy.</p>
<p>While Dunwoodie had been thus engaged, the body of Lawton lay in open view of
the whole squadron. He was a universal favorite, and the sight inflamed the men
to the utmost: neither officers nor soldiers possessed that coolness which is
necessary to insure success in military operations; they spurred after their
enemies, burning for vengeance.</p>
<p>The English were formed in a hollow square, which contained their wounded, who
were far from numerous, and were marching steadily across a very uneven country
as the dragoons approached. The horse charged in column, and were led by
Dunwoodie, who, burning with revenge, thought to ride through their ranks, and
scatter them at a blow. But the enemy knew their own strength too well, and,
standing firm, they received the charge on the points of their bayonets. The
horses of the Virginians recoiled, and the rear rank of the foot throwing in a
close fire, the major, with a few men, fell. The English continued their
retreat the moment they were extricated from their assailants; and Dunwoodie,
who was severely, but not dangerously wounded, recalled his men from further
attempts, which must be fruitless.</p>
<p>A sad duty remained to be fulfilled. The dragoons retired slowly through the
hills, conveying their wounded commander, and the body of Lawton. The latter
they interred under the ramparts of one of the Highland forts, and the former
they consigned to the tender care of his afflicted bride.</p>
<p>Many weeks were gone before the major was restored to sufficient strength to be
removed. During those weeks, how often did he bless the moment that gave him a
right to the services of his beautiful nurse! She hung around his couch with
fond attention, administered with her own hands every prescription of the
indefatigable Sitgreaves, and grew each hour in the affections and esteem of
her husband. An order from Washington soon sent the troops into winter
quarters, and permission was given to Dunwoodie to repair to his own
plantation, with the rank of lieutenant colonel, in order to complete the
restoration of his health. Captain Singleton made one of the party; and the
whole family retired from the active scenes of the war, to the ease and plenty
of the major’s own estate. Before leaving Fishkill, however, letters were
conveyed to them, through an unknown hand, acquainting them with Henry’s
safety and good health; and also that Colonel Wellmere had left the continent
for his native island, lowered in the estimation of every honest man in the
royal army.</p>
<p>It was a happy winter for Dunwoodie, and smiles once more began to play around
the lovely mouth of Frances.</p>
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