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+<html>
+<head>
+<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=us-ascii">
+<title>The Project Gutenberg eBook of The Bride of Fort Edward,
+ by Delia Bacon.</title>
+<style type="text/css">
+ <!--
+ * { font-family: Times;}
+ P { text-indent: 1em;
+ margin-top: .75em;
+ margin-bottom: .75em; }
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+ HR { width: 33%; }
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+<body>
+
+
+<pre>
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Bride of Fort Edward, by Delia Bacon
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The Bride of Fort Edward
+
+Author: Delia Bacon
+
+Posting Date: October 14, 2012 [EBook #7235]
+Release Date: January, 2005
+First Posted: March 30, 2003
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE BRIDE OF FORT EDWARD ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by David Garcia, Eric Eldred, Charles Franks, and
+the Online Distributed Proofreading Team
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+
+
+&nbsp;<br>
+&nbsp;<br>
+&nbsp;<br>
+&nbsp;<br>
+&nbsp;<br>
+
+<h1>THE BRIDE OF FORT EDWARD.</h1>
+
+<p align="center">
+FOUNDED ON
+<br>
+AN INCIDENT OF THE REVOLUTION
+</p>
+
+<p align="center">
+BY
+<br>
+DELIA BACON
+</p>
+
+&nbsp;<br>
+&nbsp;<br>
+&nbsp;<br>
+&nbsp;<br>
+&nbsp;<br>
+<!--Published 1839-->
+
+<!--NewPage-->
+
+<h2>PREFACE.</h2>
+
+<p>
+I am extremely anxious to guard against any misconception
+of the <i>design</i> of this little work. I therefore
+take the liberty of apprising the reader beforehand,
+that it is <i>not</i> a <i>Play</i>. It was not intended for the
+stage, and properly is not capable of representation.
+I have chosen the form of the DIALOGUE as best
+suited to my purpose in presenting anew the passions
+and events of a day long buried in the past, but
+it is the dialogue in scenes arranged simply with
+reference to the impressions of the <i>Reader</i>, and
+wholly unadapted to the requirements of the actual
+stage. The plan here chosen, involves throughout
+the repose, the thought, and sentiment of Actual life,
+instead of the hurried action, the crowded plot, the
+theatrical elevation which the Stage necessarily demands
+of the pure Drama. I have only to ask that
+I may not be condemned for failing to fulfil the conditions
+of a species of writing which I have not attempted.
+</p>
+<p>
+The story involved in these Dialogues is essentially
+connected with a well-known crisis in our National
+History; nay, it is itself a portion of the historic record,
+and as such, even with many of its most trifling
+minutiae, is imbedded in our earliest recollections;
+but it is rather in its relation to the <i>abstract truth</i> it
+embodies,&mdash;as exhibiting a law in the relation of the
+human mind to its Invisible protector&mdash;the apparent
+sacrifice of the <i>individual</i> in the grand movements for
+the <i>race</i>,&mdash;it is in this light, rather than as an historical
+exhibition, that I venture to claim for it, as here
+presented, the indulgent attention of my readers.
+</p>
+
+<p align="right">THE AUTHOR.</p>
+<p><i>New-York, July 7th</i>, 1839.</p>
+
+<!--NewPage-->
+
+&nbsp;<br>
+&nbsp;<br>
+
+<h2>THE BRIDE OF FORT EDWARD,
+<br>
+A DRAMATIC STORY.
+</h2>
+
+<center><b>
+SCENE. <i>Fort Edward and its vicinity, on the Hudson, near Lake George</i>.
+</b></center>
+&nbsp;<br>
+<center>
+PERSONS INTRODUCED.
+</center>
+
+<p>
+<i>British and American officers and soldiers</i>.
+</p>
+<p>
+<i>Indians employed in the British service</i>.
+</p>
+<p>
+ELLISTON&mdash;<i>A religious missionary residing in the adjacent woods</i>.
+</p>
+<p>
+GEORGE GREY&mdash;<i>A young American</i>.
+</p>
+<p>
+LADY ACKLAND&mdash;<i>Wife of an English Officer</i>.
+</p>
+<p>
+MARGARET&mdash;<i>Her maid</i>.
+</p>
+<p>
+MRS. GREY&mdash;<i>The widow of a Clergyman residing near Fort Edward</i>.
+</p>
+<p>
+HELEN, <i>and</i> ANNIE,&mdash;<i>Her daughters</i>.
+</p>
+<p>
+JANETTE&mdash;<i>A Canadian servant</i>.
+</p>
+<p>
+<i>Children, &amp;c</i>.
+</p>
+<center>
+<i>Time included&mdash;from the afternoon of one day to the close of the
+following</i>.
+</center>
+
+<!--NewPage-->
+
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+
+<p>
+<a href="#part1">
+PART I. THE CRISIS AND ITS VICTIM
+</a>
+</p>
+<p>
+<a href="#part2">
+PART II. LOVE
+</a>
+</p>
+<p>
+<a href="#part3">
+PART III. FATE
+</a>
+</p>
+<p>
+<a href="#part4">
+PART IV. FULFILMENT
+</a>
+</p>
+<p>
+<a href="#part5">
+PART V. FULFILMENT
+</a>
+</p>
+<p>
+<a href="#part6">
+PART VI. RECONCILIATION
+</a>
+</p>
+
+&nbsp;<br>
+&nbsp;<br>
+&nbsp;<br>
+&nbsp;<br>
+&nbsp;<br>
+
+<!--NewPage-->
+<h1>
+THE BRIDE OF FORT EDWARD.
+</h1>
+
+<hr width="33%">
+
+<a name="part1"><!--MARKER--></a>
+<h2>PART FIRST.</h2>
+
+<hr width="33%">
+
+<center>
+INDUCTION.
+</center>
+
+<h3>DIALOGUE I.</h3>
+
+<h4>SCENE. <i>The road-side on the slope of a wooded hill near Fort Edward. The speakers, two young soldiers,&mdash;Students in arms</i>.</h4>
+
+<p>
+<i>1st Student</i>. These were the evenings last year, when the bell<br>
+From the old college tower, would find us still<br>
+Under the shady elms, with sauntering step<br>
+And book in hand, or on the dark grass stretched,<br>
+Or lounging on the fence, with skyward gaze<br>
+Amid the sunset warble. Ah! that world,&mdash;<br>
+That world we lived in then&mdash;where is it now?<br>
+Like earth to the departed dead, methinks.<br>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>2nd Stud</i>. Yet oftenest, of that homeward path I think,<br>
+Amid the deepening twilight slowly trod,<br>
+And I can hear the click of that old gate,<br>
+As once again, amid the chirping yard,<br>
+I see the summer rooms, open and dark,<br>
+And on the shady step the sister stands,<br>
+Her merry welcome, in a mock reproach,<br>
+Of Love's long childhood breathing. Oh this year,<br>
+This year of blood hath made me old, and yet,<br>
+Spite of my manhood now, with all my heart,<br>
+I could lie down upon this grass and weep<br>
+For those old blessed times, the times of peace again.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>1st Stud</i>. There will be weeping, Frank, from older eyes,<br>
+Or e'er again that blessed time shall come.<br>
+Hearts strong and glad now, must be broke ere then:<br>
+Wild tragedies, that for the days to come<br>
+Shall faery pastime make, must yet ere then<br>
+Be acted here; ay, with the genuine clasp<br>
+Of anguish, and fierce stabs, not buried in silk robes,<br>
+But in hot hearts, and sighs from wrung souls' depths.<br>
+And they shall walk in light that we have made,<br>
+They of the days to come, and sit in shadow<br>
+Of our blood-reared vines, not counting the wild cost.<br>
+Thus 'tis: among glad ages many,&mdash;one&mdash;<br>
+In garlands lies, bleeding and bound. Times past,<br>
+And times to come, on ours, as on an altar&mdash;<br>
+Have laid down their griefs, and unto us<br>
+Is given the burthen of them all.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>2nd Stud</i>.
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+ And yet,<br>
+See now, how pleasantly the sun shines there<br>
+Over the yellow fields, to the brown fence<br>
+Its hour of golden beauty&mdash;giving still.<br>
+And but for that faint ringing from the fort,<br>
+That comes just now across the vale to us,<br>
+And this small band of soldiers planted here,<br>
+I could think this was peace, so calmly there,<br>
+The afternoon amid the valley sleeps.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>1st Stud</i>. Yet in the bosom of this gentle time,<br>
+The crisis of an age-long struggle heaves.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>2nd Stud</i>. <i>Age-long?</i>&mdash;Why, this land's history can scarce<br>
+Be told in ages, yet.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>1st Stud</i>.
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+ But this war's can.<br>
+In that small isle beyond the sea, Francis,<br>
+Ages, ages ago, its light first blazed.<br>
+This is the war. Old, foolish, blind prerogative,<br>
+In ermines wrapped, and sitting on king's thrones;<br>
+Against young reason, in a peasant's robe<br>
+His king's brow hiding. For the infant race<br>
+Weaves for itself the chains its manhood scorns,<br>
+(When time hath made them adamant, alas!&mdash;)<br>
+The reverence of humanity, that gold<br>
+Which makes power's glittering round, ordained of God<br>
+But for the lovely majesty of right,<br>
+Unto a mad usurper, yielding, all,<br>
+Making the low and lawless will of man<br>
+Vicegerent of that law and will divine,<br>
+Whose image only, reason hath, on earth.<br>
+This is the struggle:&mdash;<i>here</i>, we'll fight it out.<br>
+'Twas all too narrow and too courtly <i>there</i>;<br>
+In sight of that old pageantry of power<br>
+We were, in truth, the children of the past,<br>
+Scarce knowing our own time: but here, we stand<br>
+In nature's palaces, and we are <i>men</i>;&mdash;<br>
+Here, grandeur hath no younger dome than this;<br>
+And now, the strength which brought us o'er the deep,<br>
+Hath grown to manhood with its nurture here,&mdash;<br>
+Now that they heap on us abuses, that<br>
+Had crimsoned the first William's cheek, to name,&mdash;<br>
+We're ready now&mdash;for our last grapple with blind power.
+</p>
+<p align="right">
+[<i>Exeunt</i>.
+</p>
+
+<hr width="33%">
+
+<!--NewPage-->
+
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+
+<h3>DIALOGUE II.</h3>
+
+<h4>SCENE. <i>The same. A group of ragged soldiers in conference</i>.</h4>
+
+<p>
+<i>1st Soldier</i>. I am flesh and blood myself, as well as
+the rest of you, but there is no use in talking. What
+the devil would you do?&mdash;You may talk till dooms-day,
+but what's to hinder us from serving our time out?&mdash;
+and that's three months yet. Ay, there's the point.
+Show me that.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>2nd Sol</i>. Three months! Ha, thank Heaven mine is
+up to-morrow; and, I'll tell you what, boys, before the
+sun goes down to-morrow night, you will see one Jack
+Richards trudging home,&mdash;trudging home, Sirs! None of
+your bamboozling, your logic, and your figures. A good
+piece of bread and butter is the figure for me. But you
+should hear the Colonel, though, as the time draws
+nigh. Lord! you'd think I was the General at least.
+Humph, says I.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>3d Sol</i>. Ay, ay,&mdash;feed you on sugar-candy till they get
+you to sign, and then comes the old shoes and moccasins.&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>2nd Sol</i>. And that's true enough, Ned. I've eaten myself,
+no less than two very decent pair in the service. I'll
+have it out of Congress yet though, I'll be hanged if I
+don't. None of your figures for me! I say, boys, I am
+going home.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>1st Sol</i>. Well, go home, and&mdash;can't any body else
+breathe? Why don't you answer me, John?&mdash;What
+would you have us do?&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>4th Sol</i>. Ask Will Wilson there.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>1st Sol</i>. Will?&mdash;Where is he?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>4th Sol</i>. There he stands, alongside of the picket there,
+his hands in his pockets, whistling, and looking as wise
+as the dragon. Mind you, there's always something
+pinching at the bottom of that same whistle, though its
+such a don't-care sort of a whistle too. Ask Will, he'll
+tell you.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>3d Sol</i>. Ay, Will has been to the new quarters to-day.
+See, he's coming this way.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>5th Sol</i>. And he saw Striker there, fresh from the Jerseys,
+come up along with that new General there, yesterday.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>3d Sol</i>. General Arnold?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>5th Sol</i>. Ay, ay, General Arnold it is.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>6th Sol</i>. [<i>Advancing</i>.] I say, boys&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>4th Sol</i>. What's the matter, Will?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>6th Sol</i>. Do you want to know what they say below?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>All</i>. Ay, ay, what's the news?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>6th Sol</i>. All up there, Sirs. A gone horse!&mdash;and he
+that turns his coat first, is the best fellow.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>4th Sol</i>. No?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>6th Sol</i>. And shall I tell you what else they say?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>4th Sol</i>. Ay.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>6th Sol</i>. Shall I?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>All</i>. Ay, ay. What is it?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>6th Sol</i>. That we are a cowardly, sneaking, good-for-nothing
+pack of poltroons, here in the north. There's
+for you! There's what you get for your pains, Sirs.
+And for the rest, General Schuyler is to be disgraced, and
+old Gates is to be set over us again, and&mdash;no matter for
+the rest. See here, boys. Any body coming? See here.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>3d Sol</i>. What has he got there?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>2nd Sol</i>. The Proclamation! The Proclamation!
+Will you be good enough to let me see if there is
+not a picture there somewhere, with an Indian and a
+tomahawk?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>6th Sol</i>. Now, Sirs, he that wants a new coat, and a
+pocket full of money&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>3d Sol</i>. That's me fast enough.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>2nd Sol</i>. If he had mentioned a shirt-sleeve now, or a
+rim to an old hat&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>4th Sol</i>. Or a bit of a crown, or so.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>6th Sol</i>. He that wants a new coat&mdash;get off from my
+toes, you scoundrel.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>All</i>. Let's see. Let's see. Read&mdash;read.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>7th Sol</i>. (<i>Spouting</i>.) "And he that don't want his
+house burned over his head, and his wife and children,
+or his mother and sisters, as the case may be, butchered
+or eaten alive before his eyes&mdash;"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>3d Sol</i>. Heavens and earth! It 'ant so though, Wilson, is it?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>7th Sol</i>. "Is required to present himself at the said village
+of Skeensborough, on or before the 20th day of August
+next. Boo&mdash;boo&mdash;boo&mdash;Who but I. Given under my
+hand."&mdash;If it is not <i>it</i>&mdash;it is something very like it, I can
+tell you, Sirs. I say, boys, the old rogue wants his neck
+wrung for insulting honest soldiers in that fashion; and
+I say that you&mdash;for shame, Will Willson.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>4th Sol</i>. Hush!&mdash;the Colonel!&mdash;Hush!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>2nd Sol</i>. And who is that proud-looking fellow, by his side?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>4th Sol</i>. Hush! General Arnold. He's a sharp one&mdash;roll
+it up&mdash;roll it up.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>6th Sol</i>. Get out,&mdash;you are rumpling it to death.
+</p>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>Two American officers are seen close at hand, in a bend of the ascending road; the soldiers enter the woods</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<hr width="33%">
+
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+
+<!--NewPage-->
+
+<h3>DIALOGUE III.</h3>
+
+<h4>SCENE. <i>The same</i>.</h4>
+
+<p>
+<i>1st Officer</i>. I cannot conceal it from you, Sir; there is
+but one feeling about it, as far as I can judge, and I had
+some chances in my brief journey&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>2nd Off</i>. Were you at head-quarters?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>1st Off</i>. Yes,&mdash;and every step of this retreating army
+only makes it more desperate. I never knew any thing
+like the mad, unreasonable terror this army inspires.
+Burgoyne and his Indians!&mdash;"<i>Burgoyne and the Indians</i>"&mdash;there
+is not a girl on the banks of the Connecticut
+that does not expect to see them by her father's
+door ere day-break. Colonel Leslie, what were those
+men concealing so carefully as we approached just now?&mdash;Did
+you mark them?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>2nd Off</i>. Yes. If I am not mistaken, it was the
+paper we were speaking of.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>1st Off</i>. Ay, ay,&mdash;I thought as much.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>2nd Off</i>. General Arnold, I am surprised you should
+do these honest men the injustice to suppose that such
+an impudent, flimsy, bombastic tirade as that same proclamation
+of Burgoyne's, should have a feather's weight
+with any mother's son of them.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Arnold</i>. A feather's, ay a feather's, just so; but when
+the scales are turning, a feather counts too, and that is
+the predicament just now of more minds than you think
+for, Colonel Leslie. A pretty dark horizon around us just
+now, Sir,&mdash;another regiment goes off to-morrow, I hear.
+Hey?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Leslie</i>. Why, no. At least we hope not. We think
+we shall be able to keep them yet, unless&mdash;that paper
+might work some mischief with them perhaps, and it
+would be rather a fatal affair too, I mean in the way of
+example.&mdash;These Green Mountain Boys&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Arnold</i>. Colonel Leslie, Colonel Leslie, this army is
+melting away like a snow-wreath. There's no denying
+it. Your General misses it. The news of one brave
+battle would send the good blood to the fingers' ends
+from ten thousand chilled hearts; no matter how fearful
+the odds; the better, the better,&mdash;no matter how large
+the loss;&mdash;for every slain soldier, a hundred better would
+stand on the field;&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Leslie</i>. But then&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Arnold</i>. By all that's holy, Sir, if I were head here,
+the red blood should smoke on this grass ere to-morrow's
+sunset. I would have battle here, though none but the
+birds of the air were left to carry the tale to the nation.
+I tell you, Colonel Leslie, a war, whose resources are
+only in the popular feeling, as now, and for months to
+come, this war's must be; a war, at least, which depends
+wholly upon the <i>unselfishness</i> of a people, as this war
+does, can be kept alive by excitement only. It was
+wonderful enough indeed, to behold a whole people, the
+low and comfort-loving too, in whose narrow lives that
+little world which the sense builds round us, takes such
+space, forsaking the tangible good of their merry firesides,
+for rags and wretchedness,&mdash;poverty that the thought of
+the citizen beggar cannot reach,&mdash;the supperless night
+on the frozen field; with the news perchance of a home
+in ashes, or a murdered household, and, last of all, on some
+dismal day, the edge of the sword or the sharp bullet
+ending all;&mdash;and all in defence of&mdash;what?&mdash;an idea&mdash;an
+abstraction,&mdash;a thought:&mdash;I say this was wonderful
+enough, even in the glow of the first excitement. But
+now that the Jersey winter is fresh in men's memories,
+and Lexington and Bunker Hill are forgotten, and all
+have found leisure and learning to count the cost; it
+were expecting miracles indeed, to believe that this army
+could hold together with a policy like this. Every step
+of this retreat, I say again, treads out some lingering
+spark of enthusiasm. Own it yourself. Is not this
+army dropping off by hundreds, and desertion too,
+increasing every hour, thinning your own ranks and
+swelling your foes?&mdash;and that, too, at a crisis&mdash;Colonel
+Leslie, retreat a little further, some fifty miles further;
+let Burgoyne once set foot in Albany, and the business
+is done,&mdash;we may roll up our pretty declaration as fast
+as we please, and go home in peace.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Leslie</i>. General Arnold, I have heard you to the
+end, though you have spoken insultingly of councils in
+which I have had my share. Will you look at this little
+clause in this paper, Sir. The excitement you speak of
+will come ere long, and that at a rate less ruinous than
+this whole army's loss. There's a line&mdash;there's a line,
+Sir, that will make null and void, very soon, if not on
+the instant, all the evil of these golden promises.
+There'll be excitement enough ere long; but better blood
+than that shed in battle fields must flow to waken it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Arnold</i>. I hardly understand you, Sir. Is it this threat you point at?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Leslie</i>. Can't you see?&mdash;They have let loose these
+hell-hounds upon us, and butchery must be sent into our
+soft and innocent homes;&mdash;beings that we have sheltered
+from the air of heaven, brows that have grown pale at
+the breath of an ungentle word, must meet the red knife
+of the Indian now. Oh God, this is war!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Arnold</i>. I understand you, Colonel Leslie. There
+was a crisis like this in New Jersey last winter, I know,
+when our people were flocking to the royal standard, as
+they are now, and a few fiendish outrages on the part of
+the foe changed the whole current in our favor. It may
+be so now, but meanwhile&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Leslie</i>. Meanwhile, this army is the hope of the
+nation, and must be preserved. We are wronged, Sir.
+Have we not done all that men could do? What were
+twenty pitched battles to such an enemy, with a force
+like ours, compared with the harm we have done them?
+Have we not kept them loitering here among these hills,
+wasting the strength that was meant to tell in the quivering
+fibres of men, on senseless trees and stones,
+paralyzing them with famine, wearying them with unexciting,
+inglorious toil, until, divided and dispirited, at
+last we can measure our power with theirs, and fight,
+not in vain? Why, even now the division is planning
+there, which will bring them to our feet. And what to
+us, Sir, were the hazards of one bloody encounter, to
+the pitiful details of this unhonored warfare?&mdash;We are
+wronged&mdash;we are wronged, Sir.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Arnold</i>. There is some policy in the plan you speak
+of,&mdash;certainly, there is excellent policy in it if one had
+the patience to follow it out; but then you can't make
+Congress see it, or the people either; and so, after all,
+your General is superseded. Well, well, at all events he
+must abandon this policy now,&mdash;it's the only chance left
+for him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Leslie</i>. Why; howso?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Arnold</i>. Or else, don't you see?&mdash;just at the point
+where the glory appears, this eastern hero steps in,
+and receives it all; and the laurels which he has been
+rearing so long, blow just in time to drop on the brow of
+his rival.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Leslie</i>. General Arnold,&mdash;excuse me, Sir&mdash;you do
+not understand the man of whom you speak. There
+is a substance in the glory he aims at, to which,
+all that you call by the name is as the mere shell
+and outermost rind. Good Heavens! Do you think
+that, for the sake of his own individual fame, the
+man would risk the fate of this great enterprize?&mdash;What
+a mere fool's bauble, what an empty shell of honor,
+would that be. If I thought he would&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Arnold</i>. It might be well for you to lower your voice
+a little, Sir; the gentleman of whom you are speaking is
+just at hand.
+
+<p align="center">
+[<i>Other officers are seen emerging from the woods</i>.]
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>3d Off</i>. Yes, if this rumor holds, Lieutenant Van
+Vechten, your post is likely to become one of more honor
+than safety. Gentlemen&mdash;Ha!&mdash;General Arnold! You
+are heartily welcome;&mdash;I have been seeking you, Sir.
+If this news is any thing, the movement that was planned
+for Wednesday, we must anticipate somewhat.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Leslie</i>. News from the enemy, General?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Gen. Schuyler</i>. Stay&mdash;those scouts must be coming
+in, Van Vechten. Why, we can scarce call it news yet, I
+suppose; but if this countryman's tale is true, Burgoyne
+himself, with his main corps, is encamping at this moment
+at the Mills, scarce three miles above us.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Arnold</i>. Ay, and good news too.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Leslie</i>. But that cannot be, Sir&mdash;Alaska&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Gen. Schuyler</i>. Alaska has broken faith with us if it is,
+and the army have avoided the delay we had planned
+for them.&mdash;That may be.&mdash;This man overheard their
+scouts in the woods just below us here.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Arnold</i>. And if it is,&mdash;do you talk of retreat, General
+Schuyler? In your power now it lies, with one hour's
+work perchance, to make those lying enemies of yours
+in Congress eat the dust, to clear for ever your blackened
+fame. Why, Heaven itself is interfering to do you right,
+and throwing honor in your way as it were! Do you talk
+of retreat, Sir, now?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Gen. Schuyler</i>. Heaven has other work on hand just
+now, than righting the wrongs of such heroes as you and I,
+Sir. Colonel Arnold&mdash;I beg your pardon, Sir, Congress
+has done you justice at last I see,&mdash;General Arnold, you
+are right as to the consequence, yet, for all that, if this
+news is true, I must order the retreat. My reputation
+I'll trust in God's hands. My honor is in my own keeping.
+</p>
+
+<p align="right">
+[<i>Exeunt Schuyler, Leslie, and Van Vechten</i>.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Arnold</i>. There's a smoke from that chimney; are those houses inhabited, my boy?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Boy</i>. Part of them, Sir. Some of our people went oft
+to-day. That white house by the orchard&mdash;the old parsonage
+there? Ay, there are ladies there Sir, but I heard
+Colonel Leslie saying this morning 'twas a sin and a
+shame for them to stay another hour.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Arnold</i>. Ay, Ay. I fancied the Colonel was not dealing
+in abstractions just now.
+</p>
+
+<p align="right">
+[<i>Exeunt</i>.
+</p>
+
+<hr width="33%">
+
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+
+<!--NewPage-->
+
+<h3>DIALOGUE IV.</h3>
+
+<h4>SCENE. <i>A room in the Parsonage,&mdash;an old-fashioned summer parlor.&mdash;-On the side a door and windows opening into an orchard, in front, a yard filled with shade trees. The view beyond bounded by a hill partly wooded. A young girl, in the picturesque costume of the time, lies sleeping on the antique sofa. Annie sits by a table, covered with coarse needlework, humming snatches of songs as she works</i>.</h4>
+
+<p>
+<i>Annie</i>, (<i>singing</i>.)<br>
+
+&nbsp;&nbsp; <i>Soft peace spreads her wings and flies weeping away.
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Soft peace spreads her wings and flies weeping away.
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And flies weeping away.
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; The red cloud of war o'er our forest is scowling,
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Soft peace spreads her wings and flies weeping away.
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Come blow the shrill bugle, the war dogs are howling,
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Already they eagerly snuff out their prey&mdash;
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; The red cloud of war&mdash;the red cloud of war</i>&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<br>
+Yes, let me see now,&mdash;with a little plotting this might
+make two&mdash;two, at least,&mdash;and then&mdash;
+<br>
+&nbsp;
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <i>The red cloud of war o'er our forest is scowling,
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Soft peace spreads her wings and flies weeping away,
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; The infants affrighted cling close to their mothers,
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; The youths grasp their swords, and for combat prepare;
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; While beauty weeps fathers, and lovers, and brothers,
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Who are gone to defend</i>&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&mdash;Alas! what a golden, delicious afternoon is blowing
+without there, wasting for ever; and never a glimpse of
+it. Delicate work this! Here's a needle might serve for
+a genuine stiletto! No matter,&mdash;it is the cause,&mdash;it is
+the cause that makes, as my mother says, each stitch in
+this clumsy fabric a grander thing than the flashing of
+the bravest lance that brave knight ever won.
+<br>
+&nbsp;
+<br>
+(<i>Singing</i>)
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; <i>The brooks are talking in the dell,
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Tul la lul, tul la lul,
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; The brooks are talking low, and sweet,
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Under the boughs where th' arches meet;
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Come to the dell, come to the dell,
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Oh come, come</i>.
+<br>
+&nbsp;
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; <i>The birds are singing in the dell,
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Wee wee whoo, wee wee whoo;
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; The birds are singing wild and free,
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; In every bough of the forest tree,
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Come to the dell, come to the dell,
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Oh come, come</i>.
+<br>
+&nbsp;
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; <i>And there the idle breezes lie,
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Whispering, whispering,
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Whispering with the laughing leaves.
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And nothing says each idle breeze,
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; But come, come, come, O lady come,
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Come to th' dell</i>.
+<br>
+</p>
+
+<p align="center">
+[<i>Mrs. Grey enters from without</i>.]
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mrs. G</i>. Do not sing, Annie.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Annie</i>. Crying would better befit the times, I know,&mdash;Dear mother, what is this?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mrs. G</i>. Hush,&mdash;asleep&mdash;is she?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Annie</i>. This hour, and quiet as an infant. Need
+enough there was of it too. See, what a perfect damask
+mother!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mrs. G</i>. Draw the curtain on that sunshine there.
+This sleep has flushed her. Ay, a painter might have
+dropped that golden hair,&mdash;yet this delicate beauty is but
+the martyr's wreath now, with its fine nerve and
+shrinking helplessness. No, Annie; put away your hat,
+my love,&mdash;you cannot go to the lodge to-night.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Annie</i>. Mother?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mrs. G</i>. You cannot go to the glen to-night. This is
+no time for idle pleasure, God knows.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Annie</i>. Why, you have been weeping in earnest, and
+your cheek is pale.&mdash;And now I know where that sad
+appointment led you. Is it over? That it should be in
+our humanity to bear, what in our ease we cannot, <i>cannot</i>
+think of!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mrs. G</i>. Harder things for humanity are there than
+bodily anguish, sharp though it be. It was not the boy,&mdash;the
+mother's anguish, I wept for, Annie.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Annie</i>. Poor Endross! And he will go, to his dying
+day, a crippled thing. But yesterday I saw him springing
+by so proudly! And the mother&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mrs. G</i>. "<i>Words, words</i>," she answered sternly
+when I tried to comfort her; "ay, words are easy.
+<i>Wait till you see your own child's blood</i>. Wait till you
+stand by and see his young limbs hewn away, and the
+groans come thicker and thicker that you cannot soothe;
+and then let them prate to you of the good cause."
+Bitter words! God knows what is in store for us;&mdash;all
+day this strange dread has clung to me.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Annie</i>. Dear mother, is not this the superstition you
+were wont to chide?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mrs. G</i>. Ay, ay, we should have been in Albany ere
+this. In these wild times, Annie, every chance-blown
+straw that points at evil, is likely to prove a faithful index;
+and if it serve to nerve the heart for it, we may call
+it heaven-sent indeed. Annie,&mdash;hear me calmly, my
+child,&mdash;the enemy, so at least goes the rumor, are nearer
+than we counted on this morning, and&mdash;hush, not a word.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Annie</i>. She is but dreaming. Just so she murmured
+in her sleep last night; twice she waked me with the
+saddest cry, and after that she sat all night by the window
+in her dressing-gown, I could not persuade her to
+sleep again. Tell me, mother, you say <i>and</i>&mdash;and what?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mrs. G</i>. I cannot think it true, 'tis rumored though,
+that these savage neighbors of ours have joined the enemy.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Annie</i>. No! no! Has Alaska turned against us?
+Why, it was but yesterday I saw him with Leslie in
+yonder field. 'Tis false; it must be. Surely he could
+not harm us.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mrs. G</i>. And false, I trust it is. At least till it is
+proved otherwise, Helen must not hear of it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Annie</i>. And why?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mrs. Grey</i>. She needs no caution, and it were useless
+to add to the idle fear with which she regards them all,
+already. Some dark fancy possesses her to-day; I have
+marked it myself.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Annie</i>. It is just two years to-morrow, mother, since
+Helen's wedding day, or rather, that sad day that should
+have seen her bridal; and it cannot be that she has quite
+forgotten Everard Maitland. Alas, he seemed so noble!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mrs. G</i>. Hush! Never name him. Your sister is
+too high-hearted to waste a thought on him. Tory!
+Helen is no love-lorn damsel, child, to pine for an unworthy
+love. See the rose on that round cheek,&mdash;it
+might teach that same haughty loyalist, could he see her
+now, what kind of hearts 'tis that we patriots wear,
+whose strength they think to trample. Where are you
+going, Annie?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Annie</i>. Not beyond the orchard-wall. I will only
+stroll down the path here, just to breathe this lovely air
+a little; indeed, there's no fear of my going further now.
+
+<p align="right">
+[<i>Exit</i>.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mrs. G</i>. Did I say right, Helen? It cannot be feigned.
+Those quick smiles, with their thousand lovely
+meanings; those eyes, whose beams lead straight to the
+smiling soul. Principle is it? There is no principle in
+this, but joy, or else it strikes so deep, that the joy grows
+up from it, genuine, not feigned; and yet I have found
+her weeping once or twice of late, in unexplained agony.
+Helen!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. Oh mother! is it you? Thank God. I thought&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mrs. G</i>. What did you think? What moves you thus?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. I thought&mdash;'tis nothing. This <i>is</i> very strange.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mrs. G</i>. Why do you look through that window thus?
+There's no one there! What is it that's so strange?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. Is it to-morrow that we go?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mrs. G</i>. To Albany? Why, no; on Thursday. You
+are bewildered, Helen! surely you could not have forgotten that.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. I wish it was to-day. I do.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mrs. G</i>. My child, yesterday, when the question was
+debated here, and wishing might have been of some
+avail, 'tis true you did not say much, but I thought, and
+so we all did, that you chose to stay.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. Did you? Mother, does the road to Albany
+wind over a hill like that?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mrs. G</i>. Like what, Helen?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. Like yonder wooded hill, where the soldiers
+are stationed now?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mrs. G</i>. Not that I know of? Why?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. Perhaps we may cross that very hill,&mdash;no&mdash;could we?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mrs. G</i>. Not unless we should turn refugees, my
+love; an event of which there is little danger just now, I
+think. That road, as indeed you know yourself, leads
+out directly to the British camp.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. Yes&mdash;yes&mdash;it does. I know it does. I will
+not yield to it. 'Tis folly, all.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mrs. G</i>. You talk as though you were dreaming still;
+my child. Put on your hat, and go into the garden for
+a little, the air is fresh and pleasant now; or take a ramble
+through the orchard if you will, you might meet Annie
+there,&mdash;no, yon she comes, and well too. It's quite
+time that I were gone again. I wish that we had nothing
+worse than dreams on hand. Helen, I must talk with
+you about these fancies; you must not thus unnerve
+yourself for real evil.
+</p>
+
+<p align="right">
+[<i>Exit</i>.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. It were impossible,&mdash;it could not be!&mdash;how
+could it be?&mdash;Oh! these are wild times. Unseen powers
+are crossing their meshes here around us,&mdash;and, what
+am I&mdash;Powers?&mdash;there's but one Power, and that&mdash;
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; &mdash;"He careth for the little bird,
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Far in the lone wood's depths, and though dark weapons
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And keen eyes are out, it falleth not
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; But at his will."
+</p>
+
+<p align="right">
+[<i>Exit</i>.
+
+</p>
+
+&nbsp;<br>
+&nbsp;<br>
+&nbsp;<br>
+&nbsp;<br>
+&nbsp;<br>
+&nbsp;<br>
+
+<!--NewPage-->
+
+<a name="part2"><!--MARKER--></a>
+<h2>PART SECOND</h2>
+
+<hr width="33%">
+
+<center>
+LOVE
+</center>
+
+<hr width="33%">
+
+<h3>DIALOGUE I.</h3>
+
+<h4>SCENE. <i>A little glen in the woods near Fort Edward. A young British Officer appears, attended by a soldier in the American uniform; the latter with a small sealed pacquet in his hand</i>.</h4>
+
+<p>
+<i>Off</i>. Hist!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Sol</i>. Well, so I did; but&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Off</i>. Hist, I say!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Sol</i>. A squirrel it is, Sir; there he sits.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Off</i>. By keeping this path you avoid the picket on
+the hill. It will bring you out where these woods skirt
+the vale, and scarcely a hundred rods from the house itself.
+
+<p align="center">
+[<i>Calling without</i>.]
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Sol</i>. Captain Andre&mdash;Sir.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Off</i>. It were well that the pacquet should fall into no
+other hands. With a little caution there is no danger.
+It will be twilight ere you get out of these woods&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Sol</i>. I beg your pardon, Sir; but here is that young
+Indian guide of mine, after all, above there, beckoning me.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Off</i>. Stay&mdash;you will come back to the camp ere midnight?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Sol</i>. Unless some of these quick-eyed rebels see through my disguise.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Off</i>. Do not forget the lodge as you return. A little
+hut of logs just in the edge of the woods, but Siganaw
+knows it well.
+</p>
+
+<p align="right">
+[<i>Exit the Soldier</i>.
+</p>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>The call in the thicket above is repeated, and another young officer enters the glen</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>2nd Off</i>. Hillo, Maitland! These woods yield fairies,&mdash;come this way.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>1st Off</i>. For God's sake, Andre! (<i>motioning silence</i>.) Are you mad?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Andre</i>. Well, who are they?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mait</i>. <i>Who</i>? Have you forgotten that we are on the
+enemy's ground? Soldiers from the fort, no doubt.
+They have crossed that opening twice since we stood here.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Andre</i>. Well, let them cross twice more. I would run
+the risk of a year's captivity, at least, for one such glimpse.
+Nay, come, she will be gone.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mait</i>. Stay,&mdash;not yet. There, again!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Andre</i>. Such a villainous scratching as I got in that
+pass just now. It must have cost the rogues an infinite
+deal of pains though. A regular, handsome sword-cut
+is nothing to a dozen of these same ragged scratches,
+that a man can't swear about. After all, Captain Maitland,
+these cunning Yankees understand the game.
+They will keep out of our way, slyly enough, until we
+are starved, and scratched, and fretted down to their proportions,
+meanwhile they league the very trees against us.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mait</i>. As to that, we have made some leagues ourselves,
+I think, quite as hard to be defended, Sir.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Andre</i>. It may be so. Should we not be at the river by this?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mait</i>. Sunset was the time appointed. We are as
+safe here, till then.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Andre</i>. 'Tis a little temple of beauty you have lighted
+on, in truth. These pretty singers overhead, seem to
+have no guess at our hostile errand. Methinks their
+peaceful warble makes too soft a welcome for such warlike
+comers. Hark! [<i>Whistling</i>.] That's American.
+One might win bloodless laurels here. Will you stand
+a moment just as you are, Maitland;&mdash;'tis the very thing.
+There's a little space in my unfinished picture, and with
+that <i>a la Kemble</i> mien, you were a fitting mate for this
+young Dian here, (<i>taking a pencil sketch from his
+portfolio</i>,)&mdash;the beauty-breathing, ay, beauty-breathing, it's no
+poetry;&mdash;for the lonesome little glen smiled to its darkest
+nook with her presence.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mait</i>. What are you talking of, Andre? Fairies and
+goddesses!&mdash;What next?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Andre</i>. I am glad you grow a little curious at last.
+Why I say, and your own eyes may make it good if you
+will, that just down in this glen below here, not a hundred
+rods hence, there sits, or stands, or did some fifteen
+minutes since, some creature of these woods, I suppose
+it is; what else could it be? Well, well, I'll call no
+names, since they offend you, Sir; but this I'll say, a young
+cheek and smiling lip it had, whate'er it was, and
+round and snowy arm, and dimpled hand, that lay
+ungloved on her sylvan robe, and eyes&mdash;I tell you plainly,
+they lighted all the glen.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mait</i>. Ha? A lady?&mdash;there? Are you in earnest?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Andre</i>. A lady, well you would call her so perchance.
+Such ladies used to spring from the fairy nut-shells, in the
+old time, when the kings' son lacked a bride; and if this
+were Windsor forest that stretches about us here, I might
+fancy, perchance, some royal one had wandered out, to
+cool the day's glow in her cheek, and nurse her love-dream;
+but here, in this untrodden wilderness, unless
+your ladies here spring up like flowers, or drop down on
+invisible pinions from above, how, in the name of reason,
+came she here?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mait</i>. On the invisible pinions of thine own lady-loving
+fancy; none otherwise, trust me.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Andre</i>. Come, come,&mdash;see for yourself. On my word
+I was a little startled though, as my eye first lighted on
+her, suddenly, in that lonesome spot. There she sat, so
+bright and still, like some creature of the leaves and
+waters, such as the old Greeks fabled, that my first
+thought was to worship her; my next&mdash;of you, but I
+could not leave the spot until I had sketched this; I
+stood unseen, within a yard of her; for I could see her
+soft breath stirring the while. See, the scene itself was
+a picture,&mdash;the dark glen, the lonesome little lodge, on the
+very margin of the fairy lake&mdash;here she sat, motionless
+as marble; this bunch of roses had dropped from her
+listless hand, and you would have thought some tragedy
+of ancient sorrow, were passing before her, in the invisible
+element, with such a fixed and lofty sadness she
+gazed into it. But of course, of course, it is nothing to <i>your</i>
+eye; for me, it will serve to bring the whole out at
+my leisure. Indeed, the air, I think, I have caught a little
+as it is.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mait</i>. A little&mdash;you may say it. She is there, is she?&mdash;sorrowful;
+well, what is't to me?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Andre</i>. What do you say?&mdash;There?&mdash;Yes, I left her
+there at least. Come, come. I'll show you one will
+teach you to unlearn this fixed contempt of gentle woman.
+Come.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mait</i>. Let go, if you please, Sir. She who gave me
+my first lesson in that art, is scarcely the one to bid me
+now unlearn it, and I want no new teaching as yet,
+thank Heaven. Will you come? We have loitered
+here long enough, I think.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Andre</i>. What, under the blue scope&mdash;what the devil
+ails you, Maitland?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mait</i>. Nothing, nothing. This much I'll say to you,
+&mdash;<i>that lady is my wife</i>.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Andre</i>. Nonsense!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mait</i>. There lacked&mdash;three days, I think it was, three
+whole days, to the time when the law would have given
+her that name; but for all that, was she mine, and is;
+Heaven and earth cannot undo it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Andre</i>. Are you in earnest? Why, are we not here
+in the very heart of a most savage wilderness, where
+never foot of man trod before,&mdash;unless you call these
+wild red creatures men?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mait</i>. You talk wildly; that path, followed a few
+rods further, would have brought you out within sight of
+her mother's door.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Andre</i>. Ha! you have been in this wilderness then, ere now?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mait</i>. Have you forgotten the fortune I wasted once
+on a summer's seat, some few miles up, on the lake above?
+These Yankees did me the grace to burn it, just as the
+war broke out.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Andre</i>. Ay, ay, that was <i>here</i>. I had forgotten the
+whereabouts. Those blackened ruins we passed last
+evening, perchance;&mdash;and the lady&mdash;my wood-nymph,
+what of her?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mait</i>. Captain Andre, I beg your pardon, Sir. That
+sketch of yours reminded me, by chance perhaps, of one
+with whom some painful passages of my life are linked;
+and I said, in my haste, what were better left unsaid.
+Do me the favor not to remind me that I have done so.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Andre</i>. So&mdash;so! And I am to know nothing more of
+this smiling apparition; nay, not so much as to speak
+her name? Consider, Maitland, I am your friend it is
+true; but, prithee, consider the human in me. Give her
+a local habitation, or at least a name.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mait</i>. I have told you already that the lady you speak
+of resides not far hence. On the border of these woods
+you may see her home. I may point it out to you securely,
+some few days hence;&mdash;to-night, unless you
+would find yourself in the midst of the American army,
+this must content you.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Andre</i>. A wild risk for a creature like that! Have
+these Americans no safer place to bestow their daughters
+than the fastnesses of this wilderness?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mait</i>. It would seem so. Yet it is her home. Wild
+as it looks here, from the top of that hill, where our men
+came out on the picket just now so suddenly, you will
+see as fair a picture of cultured life as e'er your eyes
+looked on. No English horizon frames a lovelier one.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Andre</i>. <i>Here</i>? No!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mait</i>. Between that hill and the fort, there stretches a
+wide and beautiful plain, covered with orchards and meadows
+to the wood's edge; and here and there a gentle
+swell, crowned with trees, some patch of the old wilderness.
+The infant Hudson winds through it, circling in
+its deepest bend one little fairy isle, with woods enough
+for a single bower, and a beauty that fills and characterizes,
+to its remotest line, the varied landscape it centres;
+and far away in the east, this same azure mountain-chain
+we have traced so long, with its changeful light and
+shade, finishes the scene.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Andre</i>. You should have been a painter, Maitland.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mait</i>. The first time I beheld it&mdash;one summer evening
+it was, from the woods on the hill's brow;&mdash;we were a
+hunting party, I had lost my way, and ere I knew it
+there I stood;&mdash;its waters lay glittering in the sunset
+light, and the window-panes of its quiet dwellings were
+flashing like gold,&mdash;the old brown houses looked out
+through the trees like so many lighted palaces; and even
+the little hut of logs, nestling on the wood's edge, borrowed
+beauty from the hour. I was miles from home;
+but the setting sun could not warn me away from such
+a paradise, for so it seemed, set in that howling wilderness,
+and&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Andre</i>. Prithee, go on. I listen.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mait</i>. I know not how it was, but as I wandered slowly
+down the shady road, for the first time in years of
+worldliness, the dream that had haunted my boyhood revived
+again. Do you know what I mean, Andre?&mdash;that
+dim yearning for lovelier beings and fairer places, whose
+ideals lie in the heaven-fitted mind, but not in the wilderness
+it wakes in; that mystery of our nature, that
+overlooked as it is, and trampled with unmeaning things
+so soon, hides, after all, the whole secret of this life's dark
+enigma.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Andre</i>. But see,&mdash;our time is well-nigh gone,&mdash;this is
+philosophy&mdash;I would have heard a love tale.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mait</i>. It was then, that near me, suddenly I heard the
+voice that made this dull, real world, thenceforth a richer
+place for me than the gorgeous dream-land of childhood
+was of old.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Andre</i>. Ay, ay&mdash;go on.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mait</i>. Andre, did you ever meet an eye, in which the
+intelligence of our nature idealized, as it were, the very
+poetry of human thought seemed to look forth?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Andre</i>. One such.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mait</i>.&mdash;That reflected your whole being; nay, revealed
+from its mysterious depths, new consciousness, that
+yet seemed like a faint memory, the traces of some old
+and pleasant dream?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Andre</i>. Methinks the heavenly revelation itself doth that.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mait</i>. Such an eye I saw then shining on me. A
+clump of stately pines grew on the sloping road-side, and,
+looking into its dark embrasure, I beheld a group of merry
+children around a spring that gurgled out of the hillside
+there, and among them, there sat a young girl clad
+in white, her hat on the bank beside her, tying a wreath
+of wild flowers. That was all&mdash;that was all, Andre.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Andre</i>. Well, she was beautiful, I suppose? Nay, if it
+was the damsel I met just now I need not ask.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mait</i>. Beautiful? Ay, they called her so. <i>Beauty</i>
+I had seen before; but from that hour the sun shone with
+another light, and the very dust and stones of this dull
+earth were precious to me. <i>Beautiful?</i> Nay, it was
+<i>she</i>. I knew her in an instant, the spirit of my being;
+she whose existence made the lovely whole, of which
+mine alone had been the worthless and despised fragment.
+There are a thousand women on the earth the
+artist might call as lovely,&mdash;show me another that I can
+worship.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Andre</i>. Worship! This is Captain Everard Maitland.
+If I should shut my eyes now&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mait</i>. Well, go on; but I tell you, ne'ertheless, there
+have been times, even in this very spot,&mdash;we often wandered
+here when the day was dying as it is now,&mdash;here
+in her soft, breathing loveliness, she has stood beside me,
+when I have,&mdash;<i>worshipped?</i>&mdash;nay, feared her, in her
+holy beauty, as we two should an angel who should
+come through that glade to us now.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Andre</i>. True it is, something of the Divinity there is
+in beauty, that, in its intenser forms, repels with all its
+winningness, until the lowliness of love looks through it.
+Well&mdash;you worshipped her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mait</i>. Nay, you have told the rest. I would have worshipped;
+but one day there came a look from those beautiful
+eyes, when I met them suddenly, with a gaze that
+sought the mystery of their beauty,&mdash;a single look, and
+in an instant the drooping lash had buried it forever;
+but I knew, ere it fell, that the world of her young being
+was all mine already. Another life had been forever
+added unto mine; a whole creation; yet, like Eden's
+fairest, it but made another perfect; a new and purer <i>self</i>;
+and in it grew the heaven, and the fairy-land of
+my old dreams, lovelier than ever. You have loved
+yourself, Andre, else I should weary you.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Andre</i>. Not a bit the more do I understand you
+though. You talk most lover-like; that's very clear, yet I
+must say I never saw the part worse played. Why,
+here's your ladye-love, this self-same idol of whom you
+rave, at this moment perchance, breathing within these
+woods,&mdash;years too&mdash;two mortal years it must be, since
+you have seen her face; and yet&mdash;you stand here yet,
+with folded arms;&mdash;a goodly lover, on my word!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mait</i>. Softly, Sir! you grace me with a title to which
+I can lay no claim. Lover I <i>was</i>, may be. I am no
+lover now, not I&mdash;not I; you are right; I would not walk
+to that knoll's edge to see the lady, Sir.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Andre</i>. Well, I must wait your leisure, I see.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mait</i>. And yet, the last time that we stood together
+here, her arm lay on mine, my promised wife. A few
+days more, and by <i>my</i> name, all that loveliness had gone.
+There needed only that to make that tie holy in all
+eyes, the holiest which the universe held for us; but
+needed there that, or any thing to make it such in ours.
+Why, love lay in her eye, that evening, like religion,
+solemn and calm.&mdash;We should have smiled then at
+the thought of any thing in height or depth, ending, what
+through each instant seemed to breathe eternity from
+its own essence;&mdash;we were one, <i>one,</i>&mdash;that trite word
+makes no meaning in your ear.&mdash;to me, life's roses burst
+from it; music, sunshine, Araby, should image what it
+means; what it meant rather, for it is over.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Andre</i>. What was it, Maitland?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mail</i>. Oh,&mdash;well,&mdash;she did not love me; that was all.
+So far my story has told the seeming only, but ere long
+the trial came, and then I found it <i>was</i> seeming, in good
+sooth. The Rebellion had then long been maturing, as
+you know; but just then came the crisis. It was the
+one theme everywhere. Of course I took my king's
+part against these rebels, and at once I was outraged,
+wronged beyond all human bearing. Her mad brother,
+her's, <i>her's</i> what a world of preciousness, Andre, that little
+word once enshrined for me; and still it seems like
+some broken vase, fragrant with what it held.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Andre</i>. And ever with that name, a rosy flash
+Paints, for an instant, all my world.
+Nay, 'tis a little love-poem of my own; go on, Maitland.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mait</i>. This brother I say, quarrelled with me, though
+I had borne from him unresentingly, what from another
+would have seemed insult. We quarrelled at last, and
+the house was closed against me, or would have been
+had I sought access; for I walked sternly by its pleasant
+door that afternoon, though I remember now how the
+very roses that o'erhung the porch, the benched and
+shaded porch, that lovely lingering place, seemed to
+beckon me in. It was a breathless summer day, and the
+vine curled in the open window,&mdash;even now those lowly
+rooms make a brighter image of heaven to me than the
+jewelled walls that of old grew in the pageant of our
+sabbath dreams.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Andre</i>. And thus you abandoned your love? A quarrel
+with her brother?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mait</i>. I never wronged her with the shadow of a
+doubt. Directly, that same day, I wrote to her to fix
+our meeting elsewhere, that we might renew our broken
+plans in some fitter shape for the altered times.
+She sent me a few lines of grave refusal, Sir; and the
+next letter was returned unopened.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Andre</i>. 'Twas that brother! Pshaw! 'twas that brother,
+Maitland. I'll lay my life the lady saw no word of it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mait</i>. I might have thought so too, perchance; but that
+same day,&mdash;the morning had brought the news from Boston,&mdash;I
+met her by chance, by the spring in the little grove
+where we first met; and&mdash;Good Heavens! she talked of
+brothers! Brothers, mother, sisters!&mdash;What was their
+right to mine? All that the round world holds, or the
+universe, what could it be to her?&mdash;that is, if she had
+loved me ever; which, past all doubt, she never did.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Andre</i>. Maitland! Heavens, how this passion blinds
+you! And you expected a gentle, timid girl like that to
+abandon all she loved. Nay, to make her home in the
+very camp, where death and ruin unto all she loved, was
+the watchword?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mait</i>. I beg your pardon, Sir. I looked for no such
+thing. I offered to renounce my hopes of honor here for
+her; a whole life's plans, for her sake I counted nothing.
+I offered her a home in England too, the very real of her
+girlhood's wish; my blighted fortunes since, or a home
+in yonder camp,&mdash;never, never. But if I had, ay, if I
+had,&mdash;that is not <i>love</i>, call it what you will, it is not love,
+to which such barriers were any thing.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Andre</i>. Oh well, a word's a word. That's as one
+likes. Only with your definition, give me leave to say,
+marvellous little love, Captain Maitland, marvellous little
+you will find in this poor world of ours.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mait</i>. I'll grant ye.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Andre</i>. If there is any thing like it outside of a poet's
+skull, ne'er credit me.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mait</i>. Strange it should take such shape in the creating
+thought and in the yearning heart, when all reality
+hath not its archetype.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Andre</i>. Hist!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mait</i>. A careful step,&mdash;one of our party I fancy.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Andre</i>. 'Tis time we were at the rendezvous. If we
+have to recross the river as we came, on the stumps of
+that old bridge, we had best keep a little day-light with
+us, I think.
+</p>
+
+<p align="right">
+[<i>Exeunt</i>.
+</p>
+
+<hr width="33%">
+
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+
+<!--NewPage-->
+
+<h3>DIALOGUE II.</h3>
+
+<h4>SCENE. <i>A chamber in the Parsonage. Helen leaning from the open window</i>.</h4>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>Annie enters</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Annie</i>. Helen Grey, where on earth have you been? <i>Wood flowers!</i>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. Come and look at this sunset.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Annie</i>. Surely you have not, you cannot have been in
+those woods, Helen: and yet, where else could this periwinkle
+grow, and these wild roses?&mdash;Delicious!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. Hear that flute. It comes from among those
+trees by the river side.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Annie</i>. It is the shower that has freshened every
+thing, and made the birds so musical. You should
+stand in the door below, as I did just now, to see the fort
+and the moistened woods stands out from that black sky,
+with all this brightness blazing on them.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. 'Tis lovely&mdash;all.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Annie</i>. There goes the last golden rim over the blackening
+woods; already even a shade of tender mourning
+steals over all things, the very children's voices under this
+tree,&mdash;how soft they grow.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. Will the day come when we shall see him
+sink, for the last time, behind those hills?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Annie</i>. Nay, Helen, why do you mar this lovely hour
+with a thought like that?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. And in another life, shall we see light, when
+his, for us, shines no more?&mdash;What sound is that?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Annie</i>. That faint cry from the woods?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. No,&mdash;more distant,&mdash;far off as the horizon, like
+some mighty murmur, faintly borne, it came.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Annie</i>. I wish that we had gone to-day. I do not
+like this waiting until Thursday;&mdash;just one of that elder
+brother's foolish whims it was. I cannot think how your
+consent was won to it. Did you meet any one in your
+walk just now?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. No&mdash;Yes, yes, I did. The little people where
+I went, I met by hundreds, Annie. Through the dark
+aisles, and the high arches, all decked in blue, and gold,
+and crimson, they sung me a most merry welcome.
+And such as these&mdash;see&mdash;You cannot think how like
+long-forgotten friends they looked, smiling up from their
+dark homes, upon me.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Annie</i>. You have had chance enough to forget them,
+indeed,&mdash;it is two years, Helen, since you have been in
+those woods before. What could have tempted you there
+to-day?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. Was there <i>danger</i> then?&mdash;was there danger
+indeed?&mdash;I was by the wood-side ere I knew it, and
+then,&mdash;it was but one last look I thought to take&mdash;nay,
+what is it, Annie? George met me as I was coming
+home, and I remember something in his eye startled me
+at first; but if there was danger, I should have known of
+it before.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Annie</i>. How could we dream of your going there
+this evening, when we knew you had never set your
+foot in those woods since the day Everard Maitland left
+Fort Edward?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. Annie!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Annie</i>. For me, I would as soon have looked to see
+Maitland himself coming from those woods, as you.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. Annie! Annie Grey! You must not, my sister&mdash;do
+not speak that name to me, never again, <i>never</i>.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Annie</i>. Why, Helen, I am sorry to have grieved you
+thus; but I thought&mdash;Look! look! There go those officers
+again,&mdash;there, in the lane between the orchards,
+Scarcely half an hour ago they went by to the fort in
+just such haste. There is something going on there, I
+am sure.
+</p>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>Helen rises from the window, and walks the room</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Annie</i>. In truth there was a rumor this afternoon,&mdash;you
+are so timid and fanciful, our mother chose you
+should not hear it while it was rumor only; but 'tis said
+that a party of the enemy have been seen in those woods
+to-day, and, among them, the Indians we have counted
+so friendly. Do you hear me, Helen?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. That he should <i>live</i> still! Yes, it is all real
+still! That heaven of my thought, that grows so like a
+pageant to me, is still <i>real</i> somewhere. Those eyes&mdash;they
+are darkly shining now; this very moment that
+passes <i>me</i>, drinks their beauty;&mdash;that voice,&mdash;that tone,&mdash;that
+very tone&mdash;on some careless ear, even now it wastes
+its luxury of blessing. Continents of hail and darkness,
+the polar seas&mdash;all earth's distance, could never have
+parted me from him; but now I live in the same world
+with him, and the everlasting walls blacken between
+us. Those looks may shine on the dull earth and senseless
+stones, but not on me; on uncaring eyes, but not on
+mine; though for one moment of their lavished wealth,
+I could cheaply give a life without them; never again,
+never, never, never shall their love come to me.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Annie</i>. Who would have thought she could cherish in
+secret a grief like this? Dear sister, we all believed
+you had forgotten that sad affair long ago,&mdash;we thought
+that you were happy now.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. Happy?&mdash;I am, you were right; but I have been
+to-day down to the very glen where we took that last
+lovely walk together, and all the beautiful past came
+back to me like life.&mdash;I <i>am</i> happy; you must count me
+so still.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Annie</i>. With what I have just now heard, how can I?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. It is this war that has parted us; and so, this
+is but my part in these noble and suffering times, and
+that great thought reaches overall my anguish. But for
+this war I might have been&mdash;hath this world such flowers,
+and do they call it a wilderness?&mdash;I might have been,
+even now, you know it, Annie, his wife, his wife, <i>his</i>.
+But our hearts are cunningly made, many-stringed; and
+often much good music is left in them when we count
+them broken. That which makes the bitterness of this
+lot, the inconceivable, unutterable bitterness of it, even
+that I can bear now, calmly, and count it God's kindness
+too.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Annie</i>. I do not understand you, sister.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. What if this young royalist, Annie, when he
+quarrelled with my brother, and took arms against my
+country, what if he had kept faith to <i>me?</i>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Annie</i>. Well.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen. Well?</i> Oh no, it would not have been well.
+Why, my home would have been with that pursuing
+army now, my fate bound up with that hollow cause,&mdash;these
+very hands might have fastened the sword of oppression;
+nay, the sword whose edge was turned against
+you, against you all, and against the cause, that with
+tears, night and morning, you were praying for, and with
+your heart's best blood stood ready to seal every hour.
+No, it is best as it is; or if my wish grows deeper still, if
+in my heart I envy, with murmuring thought, the blessed
+brides, on whose wedding dawns the laughing sun of
+peace, then with a wish I cast away the glory of these
+suffering times.&mdash;It is best as it is. I am content.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Annie</i>. I wish I could understand you, Helen. You
+say, "if he had kept faith to you;"&mdash;carried you off, you
+mean! Do you mean, sister Helen, that of your own
+will you would ever have gone with him, with Everard
+Maitland,&mdash;that traitor?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen. Gone with him</i>? Would I not? Would I
+not? Dear child, we talk of what, as yet, you know nothing
+of. Gone with <i>him</i>? Some things are holy, Annie,
+only until the holier come.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Annie</i>. (<i>looking toward the door</i>.) Stay, stay. What
+is it, George?
+</p>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>George Grey comes in</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>George</i>. I was seeking our mother. What should it
+be, but ill news? This tide is against us, and if it be
+not well-nigh full, we may e'en fold our arms for the rest.
+There, read that. (<i>Throwing her a letter</i>.)
+</p>
+<p>
+Every face you see looks as if a thunder-cloud were
+passing it. I heard one man say, just now, as I came in,
+that the war would be over in a fortnight's time.
+There'll be some blood spilt ere then, I reckon though.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. What paper is that that reddens her cheek so suddenly?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Annie</i>. The McGregor's!&mdash;think of it, Helen,&mdash;gone
+over to the British side, and St. John of the Glens, and&mdash;who
+brought you this letter, George? 'Tis false! I
+do not believe it, not a word of it. Why, here are twenty
+names, people that we know, the most honorable,
+too,&mdash;forsaking us now, at such a crisis!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>George</i>. Self-defence, self-defence, sister; their lands
+and their houses must be saved from devastation. What
+sort of barracks think you, would that fine country-seat of
+McGregor's make?&mdash;and St. John's&mdash;<i>he</i> is a farmer you
+know, and his fields are covered with beautiful grain,
+that a week will ripen, and so, he is for turning his sword
+into a sickle;&mdash;besides, there are worse things than pillage
+threatened here. Look, (<i>unfolding a hand-bill</i>.)
+Just at this time comes this villainous proclamation
+from Skeensborough, scattered about among our soldiers
+nobody knows how, half of them on the eve of desertion
+before, and the other half&mdash;what ails you, Helen?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. There he stands!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Annie</i>. Is she crazed? Why do you clasp your hands
+so wildly? for Heaven's sake, Helen!&mdash;her cheek is
+white as death.&mdash;Helen!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. Is he gone, Annie?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Annie</i>. As I live, I do not know what you are talking
+of. Nay, look; there is no one here, none that you
+need fear, most certainly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. I saw him, his eye was on me; there he
+stood, looking through that window, smiling and beckoning me.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>George</i>. Saw him? Who, in Heaven's name? This is fancy-work.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. I saw him as I see you now. He stood on
+that roof,&mdash;an Indian,&mdash;I saw the crimson bars on his
+face, and the blanket, and the long wild hair on his
+shoulders; and&mdash;and, I saw the gleaming knife in his
+girdle,&mdash;Oh God! I did.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>George</i>. Ay, ay, 'twas that scoundrel that dogged us
+in our way home, I'll lay my life it was.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. In our way home? An <i>Indian</i>, I said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>George</i>. Well, well, and I say an Indian, a rascal Indian,
+was watching and following us all the way home just now.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. George!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>George</i>. Then you did not see him after all. In truth,
+I did not mean you should, for we could not have hurried
+more, but all the time we sat in that shanty, while it
+rained, about as far off as that chair from me, stood this
+same fellow among the bushes, watching us, or rather
+you. And you saw him here t He might have crept
+along by that orchard wall. What are you laughing at,
+Annie?&mdash;I will go and see what sort of a guard we
+have.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Annie</i>. If you knew as much of Helen's Indians as I
+do, you would hardly be in such a hurry, George, I mean
+about this one that was here just now, for there are Indians
+in yonder forest I suppose; but since we were so
+high, I never walked in the woods with her once, but
+that we encountered one, or heard his steps among the
+bushes at least; and if it chanced to be as late as this,
+there would be half a dozen of them way laying us in
+the road,&mdash;but sometimes they turned out squirrels,
+and sometimes logs of wood, and sometimes mere air,
+air of about this color. We want a little light, that is all.
+There is no weapon like that for these fancy-people. I
+can slay a dozen of them with a candle's beams.
+</p>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>George goes out</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. Do not laugh at me to-night, Annie.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Annie</i>. But what should the Indians want of you,
+pry'thee; tell me that, Helen?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. God knows. Wait till the sun sets to-morrow,
+and I will laugh with you if you are merry then.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Annie</i>. Why to-morrow?&mdash;because it is our last day
+here? Tuesday&mdash;Wednesday&mdash;yes; the next day we
+shall be on the road to Albany.
+</p>
+
+<p align="right">
+[<i>Exit</i>.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. I am awake now. Watched me in the glen?&mdash;followed
+me home? Those woods are full of them.&mdash;But
+what has turned their wild eyes on me?
+</p>
+<p>
+It is but one day longer;&mdash;we have counted many, in
+peril and fear, and <i>this</i>, is the last;&mdash;even now how softly
+the fearful time wastes. <i>One day!</i>&mdash;Oh God, thou
+only knowest what its shining walls encircle. (<i>She leans
+on the window, musing silently</i>.) Two years ago I
+stood here, and prayed to die.-On that same tree my
+eye rested then. With what visions of hope I played
+under it once, building bowers for fairies I verily thought
+would come, and dreaming, with yearning heart, of glorious
+and beautiful things this world <i>hath not</i>. But, that wretched
+day, through blinding tears, I saw the sunlight on its glossy leaves,
+and I said, 'let me see that light no more.' Surely the bitterness
+is deep when that which hath colored all our unfolded being, is a
+weariness. For what more hath life for me I thought, its lesson is
+learned and its power is spent,&mdash;it can please, and it can
+trouble me no more; and why should I stay here in vain
+and wearily?
+</p>
+<p>
+It was sad enough, indeed, to see the laughing spring
+returning again, when the everlasting winter had set in
+within, to link with each change of the varied year,
+sweet with a life's memories, such mournfulness; laying
+by, one by one, all hope's blessed spells, withered and
+broken forever,&mdash;the moonlight, the songs of birds, the
+blossom showers of April, the green and gold of autumn's
+sunset,&mdash;it was sad, but it was not in vain.&mdash;Not in vain,
+Oh God, didst thou deny that weeping prayer.
+</p>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>A merry voice is heard without, and a child's face peeps through the window that overlooks the orchard</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Child</i>. Look! look! sister Helen! see what I have
+found on the roof of the piazza here,&mdash;all covered with
+wampum and scarlet, and here are feathers too&mdash;two
+feathers in it, blue and yellow&mdash;eagle's feathers they are,
+I guess.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i> (<i>approaching the window</i>.) Let me see, Willy.
+What, did you find it here?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Willy.</i> Just under the window here. Frank and I
+were swinging on the gate; and&mdash;there is something
+hard in it, Helen,&mdash;feel.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. Yes, it is very curious; but&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Willy</i>. There comes Netty with the candle; now we
+can see to untie this knot.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. Willy, dear Willy, you must give it to me, you
+must indeed, and&mdash;I will paint you a bird to-morrow.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Willy</i>. A blue-bird, will you? A real one?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. Yes, yes;&mdash;run down little climber; see how
+dark it grows, and Frank is waiting, see.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Willy</i>. Well. But mind you, it must be a blue bird
+then. A real one. With the red on his breast, and all.
+</p>
+
+<p align="right">
+[<i>Exit</i>.
+</p>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>She walks to the table, unfastening the envelope</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. What sent that thrill of forgotten life through
+me then?&mdash;that wild, delicious thrill? This is strange,
+indeed. A sealed pacquet within! and here&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>She glances at the superscription, and the pacquet drops from her hand</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+No&mdash;no. I have seen that hand-writing in my dreams
+before, but it dissolved always. What's joy better than
+grief, if it pierce thus? Can never a one of all the soul's
+deep melodies on this poor instrument be played out, then
+&mdash;trembling and jarring thus, even at the breath of its
+most lovely passion.&mdash;And yet, it is some cruel thing, I
+know.
+</p>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>The pacquet opened, discovers Helen's miniature, a book, a ring, and other tokens</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<br>
+Cruel indeed! That little rose!&mdash;He might have spared
+me this. A dull reader I were, in truth, if this needed
+comment,&mdash;but I knew it before. He might have spared
+me this.
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>She leans over the recovered relics with a burst of passionate weeping</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<br>
+Yet, who knows&mdash;(<i>lifting her head with a sudden
+smile</i>,) some trace, some little curl of his pencil I may
+find among these leaves yet, to tell me, as of old,&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>A letter drops from the book, she tears it eagerly open</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<br>
+(<i>Reading</i>.) These cold words I understand, but&mdash;<i>letters!</i>&mdash;He
+wrote me none! Was there ever a word between
+us, from the hour when he left me, his fancied bride, to
+that last meeting, when, at a word, and ere I knew what
+I had said, he turned on me that cold and careless eye,
+and left me, haughtily and forever? And now&mdash;(<i>reading</i>)&mdash;misapprehension,
+has it been! Is the sun on
+high again?&mdash;in this black and starless night&mdash;the noonday
+sun? He loves me still.&mdash;Oh! this joy weighs like
+grief.
+</p>
+<p>
+Shall I see him again? Joy! joy! Beautiful sunshine
+joy! Who knows the soul's rich depths till joy
+hath lighted them?&mdash;from the dim and sorrowful haunts
+of memory will he come again into the living present!
+Shall I see those eyes, looking on me? Shall I hear my
+name in that lost music sound once more?&mdash;His?&mdash;Am
+I his again? New mantled with that shining love, like
+some glorious and beautiful stranger I seem to myself, <i>Helen</i>&mdash;the
+bright and joy-wreathed thing his voice
+makes that name mean&mdash;My life will be all full of that
+blest music. I shall be Helen, evermore his&mdash;his.
+</p>
+<p>
+No,&mdash;it would make liars of old sages,&mdash;and all books
+would read wrong. A life of such wild blessedness? It
+would be fearful like living in some magic land, where
+the honest laws of nature were not. A life?&mdash;a moment
+were enough. Ages of common life would shine in it.
+(<i>Reading again</i>.) "Elliston's hut?"&mdash;"If I choose that
+the return should be mutual,&mdash;and the memorials of a despised
+regard can at best be but an indifferent possession;&mdash;a
+pacquet reinclosed directly in this same envelope,
+and left at the hut of the missionary, cannot fail to reach
+him safely."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Safely."&mdash;Might he not come there safely then?
+And might I not go thither safely too, in to-morrow's
+light?
+</p>
+<p>
+O God, let not Passion lead me now. The centre
+beaming truth, not passion's narrow ray, must light me
+here!&mdash;But am I not his?
+</p>
+<p>
+Once more, one horizon circles, for a day, our long-parted
+destinies; another, and another wave of these
+wild times will drift them asunder again, forever; and
+I count myself his wife. His wife?&mdash;nay, his bride, his
+two years' bride, to-night, his wife, to-morrow. He must
+meet me there, (<i>writing</i>) at noon, I will say.&mdash;I did not
+think that little hut of logs should have been my marriage-hall;&mdash;he
+must meet me there, and to-morrow is
+my bridal day.
+</p>
+
+<hr width="33%">
+
+&nbsp;<br>
+&nbsp;<br>
+&nbsp;<br>
+&nbsp;<br>
+&nbsp;<br>
+&nbsp;<br>
+
+<!--NewPage-->
+
+<a name="part3"><!--MARKER--></a>
+<h2>PART THIRD.</h2>
+
+<hr width="33%">
+
+<center>
+FATE.
+</center>
+
+<hr width="33%">
+
+<h3>DIALOGUE I.</h3>
+
+<h4>SCENE. <i>The hill&mdash;Night&mdash;Large fires burning&mdash;Sentinels dimly seen in the back-ground. A young Indian steals carefully from the thicket. He examines the ground and the newly-felled trees.</i></h4>
+
+<p>
+<i>Indian</i>. One, two, three. And this is ringed. The
+dogs have spoiled the council-house.
+</p>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>Soldiers rush forward</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>1st Sol</i>. So, Mr. Red-skin! would not you like a scalp
+or two now, to string on your leggings? Maybe we can
+help you to one or so. Hold fast. Take care of that
+arm, I know him of old.
+</p>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>The Indian, with a violent struggle, disengages himself, and darts into the thicket</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<br>
+No? well,&mdash;dead or alive, we must have you on our side
+again. (<i>Firing</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>2nd Sol</i>. <i>He's</i> fixed, Sir.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>1st Sol</i>. Hark. Hark,&mdash;off again! Let me go.
+What do you hold me for, you scoundrel?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>2nd Sol</i>. Don't make a fool of yourself, Will Wilson.
+There will be a dozen of them yelling around you there.
+Besides, he is half way to the swamp by this. Look
+here; what's this, in the grass here?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>1st Sol</i>. There was something in his hand, but he
+clenched it through it all,&mdash;this is a letter. Bring it to
+the fire.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>2nd Sol</i>. (<i>reading</i>.) "<i>This by the Indian, as in case
+I am taken, he may reach the camp in safety. Not
+over three thousand men in all, I should think,&mdash;very
+little ammunition, soldiers mostly discouraged.&mdash;In
+Albany, they are tearing the lead off the windows of the
+houses, and taking the weights from the shops for ball.
+Talk of retreating on Thursday to the new encampment,
+five miles below. More when I get to you</i>."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>More!</i> Humph! A pretty string of lies he has got
+here already. This must go to the General, Dick.
+</p>
+
+<p align="right">
+[<i>Exeunt</i>.
+</p>
+
+<hr width="33%">
+
+&nbsp;<br>
+&nbsp;<br>
+&nbsp;<br>
+&nbsp;<br>
+&nbsp;<br>
+&nbsp;<br>
+
+<!--NewPage-->
+
+<h3>DIALOGUE II.</h3>
+
+<h4>SCENE. <i>Chamber in the Parsonage. Moonlight. Annie sitting by the window, the door open into an adjoining room</i>.</h4>
+
+<p>
+<i>Annie</i>. (<i>Calling</i>.) Come, come,&mdash;why do you sit
+there scribbling so late, Helen? Come, and enjoy this
+beautiful night with me. Ay, what a world of invisible
+life amid the dew and darkness utters its glad voices;
+even the little insect we never saw by day, makes us feel
+for once the great brotherhood of being. This day week
+we shall be in Albany,&mdash;no more such scenes as this
+then.
+</p>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>Helen approaches the window, and puts her arm gently around her sister</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. No more!&mdash;It was a sad word you were saying, Annie.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Annie</i>. How you startled me. Your hands are cold,&mdash;cold
+as icicles, and trembling too. What ails you, Helen?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. 'Tis nothing.&mdash;How often you and I have
+stood together thus, looking down on that old bridge.&mdash;Summer
+and winter.&mdash;Do you remember the cold snowy
+moonlights of old, when the sound of the distant bell
+had hope in it? We shall stand together thus, no more.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Annie</i>. Do not speak so sadly, Helen. I cannot think
+they will destroy our home in mere wantonness. Was
+there not some one coming up the path just now?
+Hark! there is news with that tone.
+</p>
+
+<p align="right">
+[<i>Exit</i>.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. A little more, an hour perchance, and he will
+read my letter. Why do I tremble thus? Is it because
+I have done wrong, that these dark misgivings haunt
+me? No,&mdash;it is not remorse&mdash;'tis very like&mdash;yet remorse
+it is not. Danger, there is none. I shall but walk to the
+wood-side as to-day, that little path to the hut is quickly
+trod, and he will be waiting there. I shall be safe then,
+safe as I care to be.&mdash;Why do I stand here reasoning
+thus? Safe? And if I were not, what is it to me now?
+The dark plan is laid. The fearful acting now is all
+that's left for me.
+</p>
+<p>
+This must go to the lodge to-night, and ere my mother
+returns;&mdash;to tell them now, would be to make my scheme
+impossible.
+</p>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>She begins, with a reluctant air, to fold the dresses, which are lying loosely by her</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<br>
+Oh God! whence do these dark and horrible thoughts
+grow?&mdash;Nay, feeling not born of thought. That wedding
+robe looks like a shroud to me! I cannot. Shadows
+from things unseen are upon me. The future is a
+night of tempest, where I hear nothing but the breaking
+boughs, and the whirl and crash of the mourning blast.
+Oh God! there is no refuge for the fearful, but in thee.&mdash;To
+thee&mdash;no. If there is power in prayer of mine, hath
+it not already doomed that wicked cause, my fate is linked
+with now. I cannot pray.&mdash;Can I not?&mdash;How the
+pure strength comes welling up from its infinite depths.
+</p>
+<p>
+Hear me&mdash;not with lip service, I beseech thee now,
+but with the earnestness that stays the rushing heart's
+blood in its way.&mdash;Hear me. Let the high cause of
+right and freedom, whose sad banner, now, on yonder
+hill, floats in this summer air; whose music on this soft
+night-breeze is borne&mdash;let it prevail&mdash;though <i>I</i>, with all
+this sensitive, warm, shrinking life; with all this new-found
+wealth of love and hope, lie on its iron way.
+</p>
+<p>
+I am safe now.&mdash;This life that I feel now, steel cannot
+reach.
+</p>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>Annie enters</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Annie</i>. Dear Helen, dress yourself. It is all true!
+We must go to-night, we must indeed. They are dismantling
+the fort now.&mdash;Come to the door, and you can
+hear them if you will; and here is word from Henry, we
+must be ready before morning&mdash;the British are within
+sight. Do you hear me, Helen? Do not stand looking
+at me in that strange way.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. To-night!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Annie</i>. I was frightened myself at first, sadly; but
+there is no danger, not the least. We shall be in Albany
+to-morrow, Henry says. Come, Helen, there is no one
+to see to any thing but ourselves. They are running
+about like mad creatures there below, and the children,
+are crying, and such a time you never saw.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. To-night! That those beautiful lips should
+speak it! Take it back. It cannot be. It must not be.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Annie</i>. Why do you look so reproachfully at me?
+Helen, you astonish and frighten me!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. Yes&mdash;yes&mdash;I see it all. And why could I not
+have known this one hour sooner?&mdash;Even now it may
+not be too late. Annie&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Annie</i>. Thank Heaven,&mdash;there is my mother's voice at last.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. Annie, stay. Do not mark what I have
+said in the bewilderment of this sudden fear. Is George
+below?&mdash;Who brought this news?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Annie</i>. One of the men from the fort.&mdash;George has
+not been home since you sent him to Elliston's. She is
+calling me. Make haste and come down, Helen.
+</p>
+
+<p align="right">
+[<i>Exit</i>.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. They will leave me alone. They will leave
+me here alone. And why could I not have known this
+one hour sooner?&mdash;I could have bid him come to-night&mdash;If
+the invisible powers are plotting against me, it is well.
+Could I have thought of this?&mdash;and yet, how like something
+I had known before, it all comes upon me.&mdash;Can I
+stay here alone?&mdash;Could I?&mdash;No never, never! He
+must come for me to-night. Perchance that pacquet
+still lies at yonder hut, and it is not yet too late to recal
+my letter;&mdash;if it is&mdash;if it is, I must find some other messenger.
+Thank God!&mdash;there is one way. Elliston can
+send to that camp to-night. He can&mdash;even now,&mdash;He
+can&mdash;he will.&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p align="right">
+[<i>Exit</i>.
+</p>
+
+
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+
+<!--NewPage-->
+
+<h3>DIALOGUE III.</h3>
+
+<h4>SCENE. <i>The porch. Helen waiting the return of her messenger from the hut</i>.</h4>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. How quiet and soft it all lies in this solemn
+light. Is it illusion?&mdash;can it be?&mdash;that old, familiar look,
+that from these woods and hills, and from this moon-lit
+meadow, seems to smile on me now with such a holy
+promise of protection and love?&mdash;The merry trill in this
+apple-tree is the very sound that, waking from my infant
+sleep in the hush of the summer midnight, of old lulled,
+nay, wakened my first inward thought. Oh that my heart's
+youngest religion could come again, the feeling with
+which a little child looks up to these mighty stars, as the
+spangles on his home-roof, while he stands smiling beneath
+the awful shelter of the skies, as under a father's
+dome. But these years show us the evil that mocks that
+trust.
+</p>
+<p>
+'Tis he,&mdash;What a mere thread of time separates me
+from my fate, and yet the darkness of ages could not hide
+it more surely. Already he has reached the lane. Another
+minute will show me all. Will the pacquet be in
+his hand, or will it not? I will be calm&mdash;it shall be like
+a picture to me.
+</p>
+<p>
+Ah! there is an immeasurable power about us, a foreign
+and strange thing, that answers not to the soul, that
+seems to know or to heed nothing of the living suffering,
+rejoicing being of the spirit. Why should I struggle
+with it any longer? From my weeping childhood to this
+hour, it hath set its iron bars about me; no&mdash;softly yielding,
+hath it not sometimes, the long, undreamed-of vistas
+opened, bright as heaven,&mdash;and now, maybe&mdash;how
+slow he moves&mdash;even now perchance.&mdash;This is wrong.
+The Infinite is One. The Goodness Infinite, whose
+everlasting smile lighteth the inner soul, and the Power
+Infinite, whose alien touch without, in darkness comes,
+they are of One, and the good know it.
+</p>
+
+<center>
+<i>The Messenger</i>. (<i>Coming up the path</i>.)
+</center>
+
+<p>
+Bless you, Miss! The pacquet had been gone this hour!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. Gone! Well.&mdash;And Elliston&mdash;what said he?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mess</i>. I brought this note of yours back, Miss Helen.
+Father Elliston was gone. Here has been an Indian
+killed on Sandy Hill this evening, Alaska's own son as
+it turns out, and such a hubbub as they are making about
+it you never heard. I met a couple of squaws myself,
+yelling like mad creatures, and the woods are all alive
+with them. The priest has gone down to their village
+to pacify them if it may be,&mdash;so I brought the note back,
+Miss Helen, for there was no one there but a little rascal
+of an Indian, and I would not trust the worth of a feather
+with one of them. Was I right?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. Yes. Give it to me. How far is it to the British camp?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mess</i>. Why, they are just above here at Brandon's
+Mills they say, that is, the main body. It can't be over
+three miles, or so.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen. Three</i> miles! only three miles of this lovely
+moonlight road between us.&mdash;William McReady, go to
+that camp for me to-night.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mess</i>. To the British camp?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. Ay.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mess</i>. To the British camp! Lord bless you, Miss.
+I should be shot&mdash;I should be shot as true as you are a
+living woman. I should be shot for a deserter, or, what's
+worse, I should be hanged for a spy.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. What shall I do!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mess</i>. And besides, there's Madame Grey will be
+wanting me by this time. See how the candles dance
+about the rooms there.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. Yes, you are right. We must go in and help them. Come.
+</p>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>They enter the house</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+
+<!--NewPage-->
+
+<h3>DIALOGUE IV.</h3>
+
+<h4>SCENE. <i>The British camp. Moonlight. A lady in a rich travelling dress, standing in the door of a log-hut</i>.</h4>
+
+<p>
+<i>Lady Ackland</i>. (<i>Talking to her maid within</i>.)
+What is the matter, Margaret? What do you go stealing
+about the walls so like a mad woman for, with that
+shoe in your hand?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Maid</i>. (<i>Within</i>.) There, Sir!&mdash;your song is done!&mdash;there's
+one less, I am certain of that. <i>Coming to the
+door</i>.) If ever I get home alive, my lady&mdash;Ha!&mdash;(<i>striking
+the door with her slipper</i>.) If ever&mdash;you are there,
+are you? I believe I have broken my ear in two. The
+matter? Will your ladyship look here?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Lady A</i>. Well.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Maid</i>. And if ever I get back to London, I'll say well
+too. If ever I get back to London alive, my lady,&mdash;I'll see&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Lady A</i>. What will you see, Margaret? Nothing
+lovelier than this, I am sure. Are you not ashamed to
+stand muttering there? Come here, and look at this
+beautiful night.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Maid</i>. La, Lady Harriet!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Lady A</i>. Listen! How still the camp is now! You
+can hear the rush of those falls we passed, distinctly.
+How pretty the tents look there, in that deep shade.
+These tuneful frogs and katy-dids must be our nightingales
+to-night. Indeed, as I stand now, I could almost
+fancy that fine wood there was my father's park; nay, methinks
+I see the top of the old gray turrets peeping out
+among the shadows there. Look, Margaret, do you see?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Maid</i>. La! I can see woods enough, my lady, if that
+is what you mean,&mdash;nothing else, and I have seen
+enough of them already to last me one life through. Yes,
+here's a pretty tear I have got amongst them!&mdash;Two
+guineas and a half it cost me in London,&mdash;I pray I may
+never set my eyes on a wood again,
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Lady A</i>. This was some happy home once, I know.
+See that rose-bush, and this little bed of flowers.&mdash;Here
+was a pretty yard&mdash;there went the fence,&mdash;and there,
+where that waggon stands, by that broken pear-tree,
+swung the gate. And pleasant meetings there have
+been at this door, no doubt, and sorrowful partings too,&mdash;and
+hearts within have leaped at the sound of that
+gate, and merry tales have been told by that desolate
+hearth. In this little lonely unthought-of place, the mysterious
+world of the human soul has unfolded,&mdash;the drama
+of life been played, as grandly in the eyes of angels as
+in the proud halls where my life dawned. And there are
+hearts that cling to this desolate spot as mine does to
+that far-off home. We have driven them away in sorrow
+and fear. This is war!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Maid</i>. I wonder who is fluting under that tree there,
+so late. They are serenading that Dutch woman, as I live.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Lady A</i>. The Baroness, are you talking of, Margaret?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Maid</i>. A baroness! Good sooth!&mdash;she looks like it,
+in that yellow silk, and those odious beads, fussing about.
+If your ladyship will believe me, I saw her sitting in
+her tent to-night, ay, in the door, feeding that wretched
+child with her own hands. We can't be thankful
+enough they did not put her in here with us, I'll own.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Lady A</i>. Hush, hush, for shame! We might well
+have spared that empty room. Come, we'll go in&mdash;It's
+very late. Strange that Sir George should not be here
+ere this.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Maid</i>. Look, my lady! Here's some one at the gate.
+</p>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>An officer enters the little court, with a hasty step</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Officer</i>. Good evening to your ladyship.&mdash;Is Captain
+Maitland here?&mdash;Sir George told me that he left him here.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Lady A</i>. Ay, but he has been gone this hour. Stay,
+it is Andre's flute you hear below there, and some one
+has joined him just now&mdash;yes, it is he.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Off</i>. Under that tree;&mdash;thank you, my lady.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Lady A</i>. Stay, Colonel Hill,&mdash;I beg your pardon, but
+you spoke so hastily.&mdash;This young Maitland is a friend
+of ours, I trust there is nothing that concerns him painfully.&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Off</i>. Oh nothing, nothing, except that he is ordered
+off to Fort Ann to-night. There are none of us that
+know these wild routes as well as he.
+</p>
+
+<p align="right">
+[<i>Exit</i>.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Lady A</i>. Good Heavens! What noise is that?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Maid</i>. Lord 'a mercy! The battle is coming?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Lady A</i>. Hush! (<i>To a sentinel who goes whistling
+by</i>.) Sirrah, what noise is that?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Sentinel</i>. It's these Indians, my lady; they have found
+the son of some chief of theirs murdered in these woods,
+and they are bringing him to the camp now. That's the
+mourning they make.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Lady A</i>. The Lord protect us!
+</p>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>They enter the house</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<hr width="33%">
+
+&nbsp;<br>
+&nbsp;<br>
+&nbsp;<br>
+&nbsp;<br>
+&nbsp;<br>
+&nbsp;<br>
+
+<!--NewPage-->
+
+<h3>DIALOGUE V.</h3>
+
+<h4>SCENE. <i>The interior of a tent. Maitland, in travelling equipments, pacing the floor</i>.</h4>
+
+
+<p>
+<i>Maitland</i>. William! Ho there!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Servant</i>. (<i>Looking in</i>.) Your honor?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mait</i>. Is not that horse ready yet?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Ser't</i>. Presently, your honor.
+</p>
+
+<p align="right">
+[<i>Exit</i>.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mait</i>. So the fellow has been here, it seems, and returned
+again to Fort Edward without seeing me. Of
+course, my lady deigns no answer.&mdash;An answer! Well,
+I thought I expected none. Ten minutes ago I should
+have sworn I expected none. Why, by this time that
+letter of mine has gone the rounds of the garrison, no
+doubt. William!
+</p>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>The servant enters</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bring that horse round, you rascal,&mdash;must I be under
+your orders too, forsooth?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Ser't</i>. Certainly, your honor,&mdash;but if he could but just,
+&mdash;I am a-going, Sir,&mdash;but if he could but just take a
+mouthful or two more. There's never a baiting-place till&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mait</i>. Do you hear?
+</p>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>The Servant retreats hastily</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mait</i>. The curse of having lived in these wilds cleaves
+to me in all things. Here are Andre and Mortimer, and
+a hundred more, and none but I for this midnight service.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Ser't</i>. (<i>Re-entering</i>.) The horse is waiting, Sir,&mdash;but
+here's two of these painted creturs hanging about the
+door, waiting to see you. (<i>Handing him a packet</i>.)
+There's no use in swearing at them, Sir, they don't understand it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mait</i>. (<i>Breaking the seals hastily, he discovers the
+miniature</i>.) Back again! Well, we'll try drowning
+next,&mdash;nay, this is as I sent it! That rascal dropped it
+in the woods perhaps! Softly,&mdash;what have we here!
+</p>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>He discovers, and reads the letter</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Who brought this?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Ser't</i>. The Indian that was here yesterday.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mait</i>. Alaska! Here's blood on the envelope, on the
+letter too, and here&mdash;This packet has been soaked in
+blood. (<i>Re-reading the letter</i>.)
+</p>
+<p>
+"To-morrow"&mdash;"twelve o'clock" to-morrow&mdash;Look
+if the light be burning in the Lady Ackland's window,&mdash;she
+was up as I passed. "Twelve o'clock"&mdash;There are
+more horses on this route than these cunning settlers
+choose to reckon. Why, there are ten hours yet&mdash;I
+shall be back ere then. Helen&mdash;do I dream?&mdash;This is
+love!&mdash;How I have wronged her.&mdash;This <i>is</i> love!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Ser't</i>. (<i>At the door</i>.) The horse is waiting, Sir,&mdash;and
+this Indian here wont stir till he sees you.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mait</i>. Alaska&mdash;I must think of it,&mdash;<i>risk?</i>&mdash;I would
+pledge my life on his truth. He has seen her too,&mdash;I remember
+now, he saw her&mdash;with me at the lake. Let him
+come in.&mdash;No, stop, I will speak with him as I go.
+</p>
+
+<p align="right">
+[<i>Exeunt</i>.
+</p>
+
+<hr width="33%">
+
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+
+<!--NewPage-->
+
+<h3>DIALOGUE VI.</h3>
+
+<h4>SCENE. <i>Lady Ackland's door</i>.</h4>
+
+<p>
+<i>Lady Ackland</i>. Married!&mdash;His wife?&mdash;Well, I think
+I'll not try to sleep again. There goes Orion with
+his starry girdle.&mdash;Married&mdash;is he?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Maid</i>. Was not that Captain Maitland that was talking
+here just now, Lady Harriet?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Lady A</i>. Go to bed, Margaret,&mdash;go to bed,&mdash;but look
+you though. To-morrow with the dawn that furnishing
+gear we left in the tent must be unpacked, and this
+empty room&mdash;whose wife, think you, is my guest tomorrow,
+Margaret?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Maid</i>. Bless me! If I were to guess till daylight, my lady&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Lady A</i>. This young Maitland, you think so handsome, Margaret&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Maid</i>. I?&mdash;la, it was not I, my lady, I am sure.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Lady A</i>.&mdash;He will bring us his wife home here tomorrow,
+a young and beautiful wife.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Maid</i>. Wife?&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Lady A</i>. Poor child,&mdash;we must give her a gentle welcome.
+Do you remember those flowers we saw in the
+glen as we passed?&mdash;I will send for them in the morning,
+and we will fill the vacant hearth with these blossoming
+boughs.&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Maid</i>. But, here&mdash;in these woods, a wife!&mdash;where on
+earth will he bring her from, my lady?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Lady A</i>. Ay, we shall see, to-morrow we shall see,&mdash;go
+dream the rest.
+</p>
+
+<p align="right">
+[<i>Exit the maid</i>.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Lady A</i>. Who would have thought it?&mdash;so cold and
+proud he seemed, so scornful of our sex.&mdash;And yet I
+knew something there lay beneath it all.&mdash;Even in that
+wild, gay mood, when the light of mirth filled and o'er-flowed
+those splendid eyes,&mdash;deeper still, I saw always
+the calm sorrow-beam shining within.
+</p>
+<p>
+That picture he showed me&mdash;how pretty it was!&mdash;The
+face haunts me with its look of beseeching loveliness.&mdash;Was
+there anything so sorrowful about it though?&mdash;Nay,
+the look was a smile, and yet a strange mourn-fulness
+clings to my thought of it now. Well, if the painter
+hath not dissembled in it&mdash;the <i>painter</i>?&mdash;no. The
+spirit of those eyes was of no painter's making. From
+the <i>Eidos</i> of the Heavenly Mind sprung that.
+</p>
+<p>
+I shall see her to-morrow.&mdash;Nay, I must meet her in
+the outskirts of the camp,&mdash;so went my promise,&mdash;if
+Maitland be not here ere then.
+</p>
+
+<p align="right">
+[<i>Exit</i>.
+</p>
+
+<hr width="33%">
+
+&nbsp;<br>
+&nbsp;<br>
+&nbsp;<br>
+&nbsp;<br>
+&nbsp;<br>
+&nbsp;<br>
+
+<!--NewPage-->
+
+<h3>THOUGHTS.</h3>
+
+<h4>SCENE. <i>The Hill. The Student's Night-watch</i>.</h4>
+
+<p>
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; How beautiful the night, through all these hours
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Of nothingness, with ceaseless music wakes
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Among the hills, trying the melodies
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Of myriad chords on the lone, darkened air,
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; With lavish power, self-gladdened, caring nought
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; That there is none to hear. How beautiful!
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; That men should live upon a world like this,
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Uncovered all, left open every night
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; To the broad universe, with vision free
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; To roam the long bright galleries of creation,
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Yet, to their strange destiny ne'er wake.
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Yon mighty hunter in his silver vest,
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; That o'er those azure fields walks nightly now,
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; In his bright girdle wears the self-same gems
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; That on the watchers of old Babylon
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Shone once, and to the soldier on her walls
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Marked the swift hour, as they do now to me.
+<br>
+&nbsp;<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Prose is the dream, and poetry the truth.
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; That which we call reality, is but
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Reality's worn surface, that one thought
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Into the bright and boundless all might pierce,
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; There's not a fragment of this weary real
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; That hath not in its lines a story hid
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Stranger than aught wild chivalry could tell.
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; There's not a scene of this dim, daily life,
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; But, in the splendor of one truthful thought
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; As from creation's palette freshly wet,
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Might make young romance's loveliest picture dim,
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And e'en the wonder-land of ancient song,&mdash;
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Old Fable's fairest dream, a nursery rhyme.
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; How calm the night moves on, and yet
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; In the dark morrow, that behind those hills
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Lies sleeping now, who knows what waits?&mdash;'Tis well.
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; He that made this life, I'll trust with another.
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; To be,&mdash;there was the risk. We might have waked
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Amid a wrathful scene, but this,&mdash;with all
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Its lovely ordinances of calm days,
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; The golden morns, the rosy evenings,
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Its sweet sabbath hours and holy homes,&mdash;
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; If the same hidden hand from whence these sprung,
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; That dark gate opens, what need we fear there?&mdash;
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Here's wrath, but none that hath not its sure pathway
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Upward leading,&mdash;there are tears, but 'tis
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; A school-time weariness; and many a breeze
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And lovely warble from our native hills,
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Through the dim casement comes, over the worn
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And tear-wet page, unto the listening ear
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Of our home sighing&mdash;to the <i>listening</i> ear.
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Ah, what know we of life?&mdash;of that strange life
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; That this, in many a folded rudiment,
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; With nature's low, unlying voice, doth point to.
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Is it not very like what the poor grub
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Knows of the butterfly's gay being?&mdash;
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; With its colors strange, fragrance, and song,
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And robes of floating gold with gorgeous dyes,
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And loveliest motion o'er wide, blooming worlds.
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; That dark dream had ne'er imaged!&mdash;
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Ay, sing on,
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Sing on, thou bright one, with the news of life,
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; The everlasting, winging o'er our vale.
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Oh warble on, thy high, strange song.
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; What sayest thou?&mdash;a land o'er these dark cliffs,
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; A land all glory, where the day ne'er setteth&mdash;
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Where bright creatures, mid the deathless shades,
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Go singing, shouting evermore? And yet
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; 'Twere vain. That wild tale hath no meaning here,
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Thou warbler from afar. Like music
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Of a foreign tongue, on our dull sense,
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; The rich thought wastes.&mdash;We have been nursed in tears,
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Thro' all we've known of life, we have known grief,
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And is there none in life's deep essence mixed?
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Is sorrow but the young soul's garment then?&mdash;
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; A baby mantle, doffed forever here,
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Within these lowly walls.
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And we were born
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Amid a glad creation!&mdash;-then why hear we ne'er
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; The silver shout, filling the unmeasured heaven?&mdash;
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Why catch we e'er the rich plume's rustle soft,
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Or sweep of passing lyre! Our tearful home
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Hung 'mid a gay, rejoicing universe,
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And ne'er a glimpse adown its golden paths?&mdash;
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Oh are there eyes, soft eyes upon us,
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; In the dark and in the day, shining unseen,
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And everlasting smiles, brightening unfelt
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; On all our tears: News sweet and strange ye bring.
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Hither we came from our Creator's hands,
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Bright earnest ones, looking for joy, and lo,
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; A stranger met us at the gate of life,
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; A stranger dark, and wrapped us in her robe,
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And bore us on through a dim vale.&mdash;Ah, not
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; The world we looked for,&mdash;for an image in.
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Our souls was born, of a high home, that yet
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; We have not seen. And were our childhood's yearnings,
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Its strange hopes, no dreams then,&mdash;dim revealings
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Of a land that yet we travel to?&mdash;
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; But thou, oh foster-mother, mournful nurse,
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; So long upon thy sable vest we're leaned,
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Thou art grown dear to us, and when at last
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; At yonder blue and burning gate
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Thou yieldest up thy trust, and joy at last
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; In her own wild embrace enfolds us once, e'en
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; From the jewelled bosom of that dazzling one,
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; From the young roses of that smiling face,
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Shall we not turn to thee, for one last glimpse
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Of that wan cheek, and solemn eye of love,
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And watch thy stately step, far down
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; This dim world's fading paths? Take us, kind sorrow!
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; We will lean our young head meekly on thee;
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Good and holy is thy ministry,
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Oh handmaid of the Halls thou ne'er mayst tread.
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And let the darkness gather round that world,
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Not for the vision of thy glittering walls
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; We ask, nor glimpse of brilliant troops that roam
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Thine ancient streets, thou sunless city,&mdash;
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Wrap thy strange pavillions still in clouds,
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Let the shades slumber round thy many homes,
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; By faith, and not by sight, through lowly paths
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Of goodness, sorrow-led, to thee we come.
+<br>
+</p>
+
+<hr width="33%">
+
+&nbsp;<br>
+&nbsp;<br>
+&nbsp;<br>
+&nbsp;<br>
+&nbsp;<br>
+&nbsp;<br>
+
+<!--NewPage-->
+
+<a name="part4"><!--MARKER--></a>
+<h2>PART FOURTH.</h2>
+
+<hr width="33%">
+
+<center>
+FULFILMENT.
+</center>
+
+<hr width="33%">
+
+<h3>DIALOGUE I.</h3>
+
+<hr width="33%">
+
+<h4>SCENE. <i>The ground before the fort. Baggage wagons. Cannon dismounted. Confused sounds within. A soldier is seen leaning on his rifle</i>.</h4>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>Another soldier enters</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>2nd Sol</i>. It's morning! Look in the east there. What
+are we waiting for?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>1st Sol</i>. Eh! The devil knows best, I reckon, Sir.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>2nd Sol</i>. Hillo, John! What's the matter there?
+Here's day-break upon us! What are we waiting for?
+</p>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>Another soldier enters</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>3d Sol</i>. To build a bridge&mdash;that is all.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>2nd Sol</i>. A bridge?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>3d Sol</i>. We shall be off by to-morrow night, no doubt of
+it,&mdash;if we don't chance to get cooked and eaten before
+that time,&mdash;some little risk of that.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>2nd Sol</i>. But what's the matter below there, I say?
+The bridge? what ails it?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>3d Sol</i>. Just as that last wagon was going over, down
+comes the bridge, Sirs, or a good piece of it at least.&mdash;What
+else could it do?&mdash;timbers half sawn away!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>2nd Sol</i>. Some of that young jackanape's work! <i>Aid-de-camp!</i>
+I'd <i>aid</i> him. He must be ordering and fidgetting,
+and fuming.&mdash;Could not wait till we were over.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>1st Sol</i>. All of a piece, boys!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>3d Sol</i>. Humph. I wish it had been,&mdash;the bridge, I mean.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>1st Sol</i>. But, I say, don't you see how every thing,
+little and great, goes one way, and that, against us?
+Chance has no currents like this! It's a bad side that
+Providence frowns on. I think when Heaven deserts a
+cause, it's time for us poor mortals to begin to think about it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>3d Sol</i>. Now, if you are going to do so mean a thing
+as that, don't talk about Heaven&mdash;prythee don't.
+
+<p align="right">
+[<i>They pass on</i>.
+</p>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>Two other soldiers enter</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>4th Sol</i>. (<i>singing</i>.)
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+&nbsp;&nbsp; <i>Yankee doodle is the tune
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Americans delight in,
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+&nbsp;&nbsp; 'Twill do to whistle, sing, or play,
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; And just the thing for fighting.
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Yankee doodle, boys, huzza&mdash;</i>
+<br>
+&nbsp;<br>
+(<i>Breaking off abruptly</i>.) I do not like the looks of it, Will.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>5th Sol</i>. Of what?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>4th Sol</i>. Of the morning that begins to glimmer in the east there.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>5th Sol</i>. No? Why, I was thinking just now I never
+saw a handsomer summer's dawning. That first faint
+light on the woods and meadows, there is nothing I like
+better. See, it has reached the river now.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>4th Sol</i>. But the mornings we saw two years ago
+looked on us with another sort of eye than this,&mdash;it is not
+the glimmer of the long, pleasant harvest day that we see
+there.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>5th Sol</i>. We have looked on mornings that promised
+better, I'll own. I would rather be letting down the bars
+in the old meadow just now, or hawing with my team
+down the brake; with the children by my side to pick
+the ripe blackberries for our morning meal, than standing
+here in these rags with a gun on my shoulder. Let
+well alone.&mdash;We could not though.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>4th Sol</i>. (<i>Handing him a glass</i>.) See, they are beginning
+to form again. It looks for all the world like a funeral train.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>5th Sol</i>. What was the Stamp Act to us, or all the
+acts beyond the sea that ever were acted, so long as
+they left us our golden fields, our Sabbath days, the quiet
+of the summer evening door, and the merry winter
+hearth. <i>The Stamp Act?</i> It would have been cheaper
+for us to have written our bills on gold-leaf, and for
+tea, to have drunk melted jewels, like the queen I read
+of once; cheaper and better, a thousand times, than the
+bloody cost we are paying now.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>4th Sol</i>. It was not the money, Will,&mdash;it was not the
+money, you know. The wrong it was. We could not
+be trampled on in that way,&mdash;it was not in us&mdash;we could not.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>5th Sol</i>. Ay, ay. A fine thing to get mad about was
+that when we sat in the door of a moonlight evening and
+the day's toils were done. It was easy talking then.
+<i>Trampled on!</i> I will tell you when I was nearest being
+trampled on, Andros,&mdash;when I lay on the ground below
+there last winter,&mdash;on the frozen ground, with the blood
+running out of my side like a river, and a great high-heeled
+German walking over my shoulder as if I had
+been a hickory log. I can tell you, Sir, that other was a
+moon-shiny sort of a trampling to that. I shall bear to be
+trampled on in figures the better for it, as long as I live.
+Between ourselves now&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>4th Sol</i>. There's no one here.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>5th Sol</i>. There are voices around that corner, though.
+Come this way.
+</p>
+
+<p align="right">
+[<i>They pass on</i>.
+</p>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>Another group of Soldiers</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>1st Sol</i>. Then if nothing else happens, we are off now.
+Hillo, Martin! Here we go again&mdash;skulking away.
+Hey? What do you say now? Hey, Mr. Martin, what do you say now?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>2nd Sol</i>. (<i>Advancing</i>.) What I said before.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>1st Sol</i>. But where is all this to end, Sir? Tell us
+that&mdash;tell us that.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>3d Sol</i>. Yes, yes,&mdash;tell us that. If you don't see Burgoyne
+safe in Albany by Friday night, never trust me, Sirs.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>1st Sol</i>. A bad business we've made of it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>4th Sol</i>. Suppose he gets to Albany;&mdash;do you think
+that would finish the war?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>3d Sol</i>. Well, indeed, I thought that was settled on all
+hands, Sir. I believe the General himself makes no secret
+of that.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>4th Sol</i>. And what becomes of us all then? We
+shall go back to the old times again, I suppose;&mdash;weren't
+so very bad though, Sam, were they?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>1st Sol</i>. We have seen worse, I'll own.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>3d Sol</i>. And what becomes of our young nation here,
+with its congress and its army, and all these presidents,
+and generals, and colonels, and aide-de-camps?&mdash;wont it
+look like a great baby-house when the hubbub is over,
+and the colonies settle quietly down again?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>2nd Sol</i>. Faith, you take it very coolly. Before that
+can happen, do you know what must happen to you?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>1st Sol</i>. Nothing worse than this, I reckon.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>2nd Sol</i>. (<i>makes a gesture to denote hanging</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>4th Sol</i>. What would they hang us though? Do you
+think they would really hang us, John?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>2nd Sol</i>. Wait and see.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>1st Sol</i>. Nonsense! nonsense! A few of the ringleaders,
+Schuyler, and Hancock, and Washington, and a
+few such, they will hang of course,&mdash;but for the rest,&mdash;we
+shall have to take the oath anew, and swallow a few
+duties with our sugar and tea, and&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>2nd Sol</i>. You talk as if the matter were all settled already.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>1st Sol</i>. There is no more doubt of it, than that you
+and I stand here this moment. Why, they are flocking
+to Skeensborough from all quarters now, and this poor
+fragment,&mdash;this miserable skeleton of an army, which is
+the only earthly obstacle between Burgoyne and Albany,
+why, even this is crumbling to pieces as fast as one can
+reckon. Two hundred less than we were yesterday at
+this hour, and to-morrow&mdash;how many are off to-morrow?
+Ay, and what are we doing the while? Bowing and
+retreating, cap in hand, from post to post, from Crown
+Point to Ticonderoga, from Ticonderoga to Fort Edward,
+from Fort Edward onward; just showing them
+down, as it were, into the heart of the land. Let them
+get to Albany&mdash;Ah, let them once get to Albany, they'll
+need no more of our help then, they'll take care of themselves
+then and us too.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>2nd Sol</i>. They'll never get to Albany.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>1st Sol</i>. Hey?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>2nd Sol</i>. They'll never get to Albany.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>1st Sol</i>. What's to hinder them?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>2nd Sol</i>. We,&mdash;yes we,&mdash;and such as we, craven-hearted
+as we are. They'll never get to Albany until we
+take them there captives.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>3d Sol</i>. Then they'll wait till next week, I reckon.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>1st Sol</i>. Ha ha ha! Ha ha ha! How many prisoners
+shall we have a-piece, John? How many regiments,
+I mean? They'll open the windows when we get there,
+won't they? I hope the sun will shine that day. How
+grandly we shall march down the old hill there, with our
+train behind us. I shall have to borrow a coat of one of
+them though, they might be ashamed of their captor else.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>3d Sol</i>. When is this great battle to be, John? This
+don't look much like it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>4th Sol</i>. I think myself, if the General would only give
+us a chance to fight&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>2nd Sol</i>. A chance to throw your life away,&mdash;he will
+never give you. A chance to fight, you will have ere
+long,&mdash;doubt it not. Our General might clear his blackened
+fame, by opposing this force to that,&mdash;this day he
+might;&mdash;he will not do it. The time has not yet come.
+But he will spare no pains to strengthen the army, and
+prepare it for victory, and the glory he will leave to his
+rival. Recruits will be pouring in ere long. General
+Burgoyne's proclamation has weakened us,&mdash;General
+Schuyler will issue one himself to-day.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>1st Sol</i>. Will he? will he? What will he proclaim?&mdash;As
+to the recruits he gets, I'll eat them all, skin and
+bone. What will he proclaim? You see what Burgoyne
+offers us. On the one hand, money and clothing,
+and protection for ourselves and our families; and on the
+other, the cord, and the tomahawk, and the scalping-knife.
+Now, what will General Schuyler set down over
+against these two columns?&mdash;What will he offer us?&mdash;To
+lend us a gun, maybe,&mdash;leave to follow him from one
+post to another, barefooted and starving, and for our
+pains to be cursed and reviled for cowards from one end
+of the land to the other. And what will he threaten?
+Ha, we were cowards indeed, if we feared what he could
+threaten. What thing in human nature will he speak
+to?&mdash;say.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>2nd Sol</i>. I will tell you. To that spirit in human nature
+which resists the wrong, the fiendish wrong threatened
+there. Ay, in the basest nature that power sleeps,
+and out of the bosom of Omnipotence there is nothing
+stronger. It has wakened here once, and this war is its
+fruit. It slumbers now. Let Burgoyne look to it that
+he rouse it not himself for us. Let him look to it. For
+every outrage of those fiendish legions, thank God.&mdash;It
+lays a finger on the spring of our only strength. <i>What</i>
+will he offer us? I will tell you.&mdash;A chance to live, or to
+die,&mdash;<i>men</i>,&mdash;ay, to leave a sample of manhood on the
+earth, that shall wring tears from the selfish of unborn
+ages, as they feel for once the depths of the slumbering
+and godlike nature within them. And Burgoyne,&mdash;oh!
+a coat and a pair of shoes, he offers, and&mdash;how many
+pounds?&mdash;Are you men?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>4th Sol</i>. What do you say, Sam?&mdash;Talks like a minister, don't he?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>1st Sol</i>. Come, come,&mdash;there's the drum, boys. You
+don't bamboozle me again! I've heard all that before.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>3d Sol</i>. Nor me.&mdash;I don't intend to have my wife and
+children tomahawked,&mdash;don't think I can stand that, refugee or not.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>2nd Sol</i>. Here they come.
+</p>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>Other Soldiers enter</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>5th Sol</i>. All's ready, all's ready.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>6th Sol</i>. (<i>singing</i>.)
+<br>
+"<i>Come blow the shrill bugle, the war dogs are howling</i>,"&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p align="right">
+[<i>Exeunt</i>.
+</p>
+
+<hr width="33%">
+
+&nbsp;<br>
+&nbsp;<br>
+&nbsp;<br>
+&nbsp;<br>
+&nbsp;<br>
+&nbsp;<br>
+
+<!--NewPage-->
+
+<h3>DIALOGUE II.</h3>
+
+<h4>SCENE. <i>Before the door of the Parsonage. Trunks, boxes, and various articles of furniture, scattered about the yard. Two men coming down the path</i>.</h4>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>George Grey enters</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>George</i>. Those trunks in the forward team. Make
+haste. We've no time to lose. This box in the wagon
+where the children are.&mdash;Carefully&mdash;carefully, though.
+</p>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>A Soldier enters</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Sol</i>. Hurra, hurra, the house there! Are you ready?
+Ten minutes more.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>George</i>. Get out. What do you stand yelling there
+for? We know all about it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Sol</i>. But your brother, the Captain, says, I must hurry
+you, or you'll be left behind.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>George</i>. Tell my brother, the Captain, I'll see to that.
+We want no more hurrying. We have had enough of
+that already, and much good it has done us too. Stop,
+stop,&mdash;not that. We must leave those for the Indians to
+take their tea in.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Workman</i>. But the lady said&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>George</i>. Never mind the lady. Well, Annie, are you
+ready? Don't stand there crying; there's no use. We
+may come back here again yet, you know. Many a
+pleasant sunrise we may see from these windows yet.
+Heaven defend us, here is this aunt of ours.&mdash;What on
+earth are they bringing now?
+</p>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>A Lady in the door with a couple of portraits, followed by others bringing baskets and boxes, etc</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Lady</i>. That will do, set them down; now, the Colonel
+and his lady, on the back room wall, just over against
+the beaufet. Stop a moment. I'll go with you myself.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Betty</i>. (In, the door.) Lord 'a mercy! Here it is
+broad day-light. What are we waiting for? I am all
+ready. Why don't we go?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>George</i>. I tell you, Aunt Rachael, the thing is impossible.
+This trumpery can't go, and there's the end of it.
+St. George and the Dragon&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Miss Rachael</i>. Never mind this young malapert&mdash;do as I bid you.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Betty</i>. Lord 'a mercy, we shall all be murdered and
+scalped, every soul of us. Bless you&mdash;there it is in the
+garret now!&mdash;just hold this umberell a minute, Mr.
+George,&mdash;think of those murderous Indians wearing my
+straw bonnet. Lord bless you! What are you doing?
+a heaving my umberell over the fence, in that fashion!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>George</i>. These women will drive me mad I believe.
+Let that box alone, you rascal. Lay a finger on that
+trumpery there I say, and you'll find whose orders you
+are under; as for the Colonel and his lady, they'll get a
+little drink out of the first puddle we come to, I reckon.
+</p>
+
+<p align="right">
+[<i>Goes out</i>.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Miss R</i>. (<i>Coming from the house</i>.) That will do.
+That is all,&mdash;in the green wagon, John&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Ser't</i>. But the children&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Miss R</i>. Don't stand there, prating to me at a time
+like this. Make haste, make haste!
+</p>
+<p>
+How perfectly calm I am! I would never have believed
+it;&mdash;just tie this string for me, child, my hands
+twitch so strangely,&mdash;they say the British are just down
+in the lane here, with five thousand Indians, Annie.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Annie</i>. It is no such thing. Aunt Rachael. The British
+are quietly encamped on the other side of the river;
+three miles off at least.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Miss R</i>. I thought as much. A pretty hour for us to
+be turned out of house and home to be sure. Not a wink
+have I slept this blessed night. Hark! What o'clock
+is that? George, George! where is that boy? Just run
+and tell your mother, Annie, just tell her, my dear, will
+you, that we shall all be murdered. Maybe she will make
+haste a little. Well, are they in?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Ser't</i>. The pictures? They are in,&mdash;yes'm. But
+Miss Kitty's a crying, and says as how she won't go,
+and there's the other one too; because, Ma'am, their toes&mdash;you
+see there's the trunk in front gives 'em a leetle slope
+inward, and then that chest under the seat&mdash;If you
+would just step down and see yourself, Ma'am.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Miss R</i>. I desire to be patient.
+
+<p align="right">
+[<i>They go out</i>.
+</p>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>Annie sits on the bench of the little Porch, weeping. Mrs. Gray enters from within</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Annie</i>. Shall I never walk down that shady path
+again? Shall I enter those dear rooms no more?
+There are voices there they cannot hear. From the life
+of buried years, ten thousand scenes, all vacancy toother
+eyes, enrich those walls for us; the furniture that money
+cannot buy, that only the joy and grief of years can purchase.
+They will spoil our pleasant home,&mdash;will they
+not, mother?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mrs. G</i>. Pleasant, ay, pleasant indeed, has it been to
+us. God's will be done. Do not weep, Annie. We
+have counted the cost;&mdash;many a safe and happy home
+there will be in the days to come, whose light shall spring
+from this forgotten sorrow. God's will be done.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Annie</i>. Mother, they are all ready now; is Helen in
+her room still?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mrs. G</i>. Go call her, Annie. Hours ago it was I sent
+her there. I thought she might get some little sleep ere
+the summons came. Call her, my child. How deadly
+pale she was!
+</p>
+
+<p align="right">
+[<i>Annie goes in</i>.
+</p>
+
+<hr width="33%">
+
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+
+<!--NewPage-->
+
+<h3>DIALOGUE III.</h3>
+
+<h4>SCENE. <i>A Chamber partly darkened, the morning air steals faintly through the half-open shutters. Helen before the mirror, leaning upon the toilette, her face buried in her hands, her long hair unbound, and flowing on her shoulders</i>.</h4>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>Annie enters</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Annie</i>. Helen! Why, Helen, are you asleep there?
+Come, we are going now. After keeping us on tiptoe
+for hours, the summons has come at last. Indeed, there
+is hardly time for you to dress. Shall I help you?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. (<i>Rising slowly</i>.) God help me. Bid my
+mother come here, Annie.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Annie</i>. What ails you, Helen?&mdash;there is no time,&mdash;you
+do not understand me,&mdash;there is not one moment to
+be lost. Let me wind up this hair for you.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. Let go!&mdash;Oh God&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Annie</i>. Helen Grey!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. It was a dream,&mdash;it was but a foolish dream.
+It must not be thought of now,&mdash;it will never do. Bid
+my mother come here, I am ready now.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Annie</i>. Ready, Helen!&mdash;ready?&mdash;in that dressing-gown,
+and your hair&mdash;see here,&mdash;are you ready, Helen?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. Yes,&mdash;bid her come.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Annie</i>. Heaven only knows what you mean with this
+wild talk of yours, but if you are not mad indeed, I intreat
+you, sister, waste no more of this precious time.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. No, no,&mdash;we must not indeed. It was wrong,
+but I could not&mdash;go,&mdash;make haste, bid her come.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Annie</i>. She is crazed, certainly!
+</p>
+
+<p align="right">
+[<i>Goes out</i>.
+</p>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>Helen stands with her arms folded, and her eye fixed on the door</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>Mrs. Grey enters</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mrs. G</i>. My child! Helen, Helen! Why do you stand there thus?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. Mother&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mrs. G</i>. Nay, do not stay to speak. There&mdash;throw
+this mantle around you. Where is your hat?&mdash;not here!&mdash;Bridal gear!
+</p>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>George enters</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>George</i>. On my word! Well, well, stand there a
+little longer, to dress those pretty curls of yours, and
+&mdash;humph&mdash;there's a style in vogue in yonder camp
+for rebels just now; we'll all stand a chance to try, I think.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. George!&mdash;George Grey!&mdash;Be still,&mdash;be still.&mdash;
+We must not think of that. It was a dream.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>George</i>. Is my sister mad?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. Mother&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mrs. G</i>. Speak, my child.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. Mother&mdash;my blessed mother,&mdash;(<i>aside</i>.) 'Tis
+but a brief word,&mdash;it will be over soon.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mrs. G</i>. Speak, Helen.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. I cannot go with you, mother.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mrs. G</i>. Helen?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>George</i>. Not go with us?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mrs. G</i>. Helen, do you know what you are saying?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>George</i>. You are in jest, Helen; or else you are
+mad,&mdash;before another sunset the British army will be encamping here.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. Hear me, mother. A message from the British
+camp came to me last night,&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mrs. G</i>. The British camp?&mdash;Ha!&mdash;ha! Everard
+Maitland! God forgive him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. Do not speak thus. It was but a few cold
+and careless lines he sent me,&mdash;my purpose is my own.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mrs. G</i>. And&mdash;what, and he does not know?&mdash;Helen
+Grey, this passes patience.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. He does, Here is the answer that has just
+now come; for I have promised to meet him to-day at
+the hut of the missionary in yonder woods.&mdash;I can
+hardly spell these hasty words; but this I know, he will
+surely come for me,&mdash;though he bids me wait until I
+hear his signal,&mdash;so I cannot go with you, mother.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mrs. G</i>. Where will you go, Helen?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. Everard is in yonder camp;&mdash;where should the
+wife's home be?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mrs. G</i>. The wife's?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. These two years I have been his bride;&mdash;his
+wedded wife I shall be to-day. Yonder dawns my bridal day.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>George</i>. What does she say? What does Helen say?
+I do not understand one word of it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mrs. G</i>. She says she will go to the British camp.
+Desertions thicken upon us. Hark!&mdash;they are calling us.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>George</i>. To the British camp?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mrs. G</i>. Go down, George, go down. Your sister
+talks wildly and foolishly, what you should not have
+heard, what she will be sorry for anon; go down, and
+tell them they must wait for us a little,&mdash;we will be there
+presently.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>George</i>. Hark! (<i>going to the door</i>.)&mdash;another message.
+Do you hear?&mdash;Helen may be ready yet, if she will.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mrs. G</i>. Blessed delay! Go down, George; say
+nothing of this. There is time yet. Tell them we will
+be there presently.
+</p>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>George goes out</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mrs. G</i>. Did you think I should leave you here to accomplish
+this frantic scheme?&mdash;Did you dream of it, and
+you call me mother?&mdash;but what do you know of that
+name's meaning? Do not turn away from me thus, my
+child; do not stand with that fixed eye as though some
+phantom divinity were there. I shall not leave you here,
+Helen, never.
+</p>
+<p>
+Come, come; sit down with me in this pleasant window,
+there is time yet,&mdash;let us look at this moonlight
+scheme of yours a little. Would you stay here in this
+deserted citadel, alone? My child, our army are already
+on their march. In an hour more you would be the only
+living thing in all this solitude. Would you stay here
+alone, to meet your lover too?&mdash;Bethink yourself, Helen.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. This Canadian girl will stay with me, and&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mrs. G</i>. A girl!&mdash;Helen, yesterday an army's
+strength, the armies of the nation, the love of mother,
+and brothers, and sisters, all seemed nothing for protection
+to your timid and foreboding thought; and now,
+when the enemy are all around us,&mdash;do you talk of a
+single girl? Why, the spirit of some strange destiny is
+struggling with your nature, and speaks within you, but
+we will not yield to it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. You have spoken truly, mother. There is one
+tie in these hearts of ours, whose strength makes destiny,
+and where that leads, there lie those iron ways that are
+of old from everlasting. This is Heaven's decree, not
+mine.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mrs. G</i>. Do not charge the madness of this frantic
+scheme on Heaven, my child.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen. Everard!</i>&mdash;no, no, I cannot show to another
+the lightning flash, that with that name reveals my destiny,&mdash;yet
+the falling stone might as soon&mdash;question of its
+way. Renounce him?&mdash;you know not what you ask!
+all there is of life within me laughs at the wild impossibility.
+</p>
+<p>
+Mother, hear me. There is no danger in my staying
+here,&mdash;none real. The guard still keep their station on
+yonder hill, and the fort itself will not be wholly abandoned
+to-day. Everard will come for me at noon.&mdash;It is
+impossible that the enemy should be here ere then; nay,
+the news of this unlooked-for movement will scarce have
+reached their camp.&mdash;<i>Real</i> danger there is none, and&mdash;Do
+not urge me. I know what you would say; the bitter
+cost I have counted all, already, all&mdash;<i>all</i>. That Maitland
+is in yonder camp, that&mdash;is it not a strange blessedness
+which can sweeten anguish such as this?&mdash;that he
+loves me still, that he will come here to-day to make me
+his forever,&mdash;this is all that I can say, my mother.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mrs. G</i>. Will you go over to the British side, Helen?
+Will you go over to the side of wrong and oppression?
+Would you link yourself with our cruel and pursuing
+enemy? Oh no, no no,&mdash;that could not be&mdash;never,
+Amid the world of fearful thoughts that name brings, how
+could we place your image? Oh God, I did not count
+on this. I knew that this war was to bring us toil, and
+want, and fear, and haply bloody death; and I could have
+borne it unmurmuringly; but&mdash;God forgive me,&mdash;that the
+child I nursed in these arms should forsake me, and join
+with our deadly foes against us&mdash;I did not count on this.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. Yes&mdash;that's the look,&mdash;the very look&mdash;all night
+I saw it;&mdash;it does not move me now, as it did then. It is
+shadows of these things that are so fearful, for with the real
+comes the unreckoned power of suffering.
+Mother, this dark coil hath Heaven wound, not we.
+The tie which makes his path the way of God to me,
+was linked ere this war was,&mdash;and war cannot undo it
+now. It is a bitter fate, I know,&mdash;a bitter and a fearful one.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mrs. G</i>. Ay, ay,&mdash;thank God! You had forgotten,
+Helen, that in that army's pay, nay, all around us even now
+are hordes and legions.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. I know it,&mdash;I know it all. I do indeed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mrs. G</i>. Helen, will you place yourself defenceless
+amidst that savage race, whose very name from your
+childhood upwards, has filled you with such strange fear?
+Yesterday I chid you for those fancies,&mdash;I was wrong,&mdash;they
+were warnings, heaven-sent, to save you from this
+doom. What was that dream you talked of then?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. Dreams are nothing. Will you unsay a life's
+lessons now when most I need them?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mrs. G</i>. Yesterday, all day, a shadow as of coming
+evil lay upon me, but now I remember the forgotten vision
+whence it fell. Yesternight I had a dream, Helen,
+such as yours might be; for in my broken and fevered
+slumbers, wherever I turned, one vision awaited me.
+There was a savage arm, and over it fell a shower of
+golden hair, and ever and anon, in the shadowy light of
+my dream, a knife glittered and waved before me. We
+were safe, but over one,&mdash;some young and innocent and
+tender one it was&mdash;there hung a hopeless and inexorable
+fate. Once methought it seemed the young English girl
+that was wedded here last winter, and once she turned
+her eye upon me&mdash;Ha!&mdash;I had forgotten that glance of
+agony&mdash;surely, Helen, it was <i>yours</i>.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mrs. G</i>. Helen! my child&mdash;(<i>Aside</i>.) There it is,
+that same curdling glance,&mdash;'twas but a dream, Helen.
+Why do you stand there so white and motionless&mdash;why
+do you look on me with that fixed and darkening eye?&mdash;'twas
+but a dream!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. And where were you?&mdash;tell me truly. Was it
+not by a gurgling fountain among the pine trees there?
+and was it not noon-day in your dream, a hot, bright, sultry
+noon, and a few clouds swelling in the western sky,
+and nothing but the trilling locusts astir?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mrs. G</i>. How wildly you talk; how should I remember
+any thing like this?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. I will not yield to it; tempt me not. 'Tis folly
+all, I know it is. Danger there is none. Long ere yonder
+hill is abandoned, Everard will be here; and who
+knows that I am left here alone, and who would come
+here to seek me out but he? Oh no, I cannot break
+this solemn faith for a dream. What would he give to
+know I held my promise and his love lighter than a
+dream? I must <i>stay</i> here, mother.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mrs. G</i>. No, my child. Hear me. If this must be indeed,
+if all my holy right in you is nothing, if you will indeed
+go over to our cruel enemy, and rejoice in our sorrows
+and triumph in our overthrow&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. Hear her&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mrs. G</i>. Be it so, Helen,&mdash;be it so; but for all that, do
+not stay here to-day. Bear but a little longer with our
+wearisome tenderness, and wait for some safer chance
+of forsaking us. Come.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. If I could&mdash;Ah, if I could&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mrs. G</i>. You can&mdash;you will. Here, let me help you,
+we shall be ready yet. No one knows of this wild
+scheme but your brother and myself, no one else shall
+ever know it. Come.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. If I could. 'Tis true, I did not know when I
+sent him this promise you would leave me alone ere the
+hour should come. Perhaps&mdash;no, it would never do.
+When he comes and finds that, after all, I have deserted
+him, once with a word I angered him, and for years it
+was the last between us;&mdash;and what safer chance will
+there be in these fearful times of meeting him? No, no.
+If we do not meet now, we are parted for ever;&mdash;if I do
+not keep my promise now, I shall see him no more.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mrs. G</i>. See him no more then. What is he to us&mdash;this
+stranger, this haughty, all-requiring one? Think of
+the blessed days ere he had crossed our threshold. You
+have counted all, Helen? The anguish that will bring
+tears into your proud brother's eyes, your sister's comfortless
+sorrow?&mdash;did you think of her lonely and saddened
+youth? You counted the wild suffering of this
+bitter moment,&mdash;did you think of the weary years, the
+long sleepless nights of grief, the days of tears; did you
+count the anguish of a mother's broken heart, Helen?
+God only can count that.
+</p>
+<p>
+You did not&mdash;there come the blessed tears at last.
+Here's my own gentle daughter, once again. Come,
+Helen, see, they are waiting for us. There stands the
+old chaise under the locust tree. You and I will ride
+together. Come, 'tis but a few steps down that shady
+path, and we are safe&mdash;a few steps and quickly trod.
+Hark! the respite is past even now. Do you stand
+there marble still? Helen, if you stay here, we shall
+see you no more. This lover of yours hates us all. He
+will take you to England when the war is over if you
+outlive its bloody hazards, and we are parted for ever.
+I shall see you no more, Helen, my child; my child, I shall
+see you no more. (<i>She sinks upon the chair, and
+weeps aloud</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. Has it come to this? Will you break my
+heart? If it were continents and oceans that you bade
+me cross, but those few steps&mdash;Ah, they would sever me
+from him for ever, and I cannot, I cannot, I can <i>not</i> take
+them,&mdash;there is no motion so impossible. Yes, they are
+calling us. Do not stay.
+</p>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>Annie enters</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Annie</i>. Mother, will you tell me what this means?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mrs. G</i>. Yes, come in. We will waste no more time
+about it. She will stay here to meet her lover, she will
+forsake us for a traitor. We have nursed an enemy
+among us. The babe I cherished in this bosom, whose
+sleeping face I watched with a young mother's love,
+hath become my enemy. Oh my God&mdash;is it from thee?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Annie</i>. Helen! my sister! Helen!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mrs. G</i>. Ay, look at her. Would you think that the
+spirit which heaves in that light frame, and glances in
+those soft eyes, held such cruel power? Yesterday I
+would have counted it a breath in the way of my lightest
+purpose, and now&mdash;come away, Annie&mdash;it is vain, you
+cannot move her.
+</p>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>George enters</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>George</i>. Mother, if Helen will not go now, we must
+leave her to her fate or share it with her. Every wagon
+is on the road but ours. A little more, and we shall be
+too late for the protection of the army. Shall I stay with her?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mrs. G</i>. No, never. That were a sure and idle
+waste of life. Helen, perhaps, may be safe with them.
+Oh. yes, the refugees are safe, else desertion would grow
+out of fashion soon.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Annie</i>. Refugees! Refugee! Helen!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mrs. G</i>. It sounds strange for one of us I know. You
+will grow used to it soon. Helen belongs to the British
+side, she will go over to them to-day, but she must go
+alone, for none of us would be safe in British hands, at
+least I trust so&mdash;this morning's experience might make
+me doubtful, but I trust we are all true here yet beside.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Annie</i>. Have I heard aright, Helen?&mdash;or is this all
+some fearful dream? You and I, who have lived together
+all the years of our lives, to be parted this moment,
+and for ever,&mdash;no, no!
+</p>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>A young American Officer enters hastily</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Capt. Grey</i>. Softly, softly! What is this? Are you in
+this conspiracy to disgrace me, mother? Oh, very well;
+if you have all decided to stay here, I'll take my leave.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Annie</i>. Oh, Henry, stay. You can persuade her it may be.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Capt. G. Persuade</i>! What's all this! A goodly
+time for rhetoric forsooth! Who's this that's risking all
+our lives, waiting to be persuaded now?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mrs. G</i>. That Tory, Henry! We should have thought
+of this. Ah, if we had gone yesterday,&mdash;that haughty
+Maitland,&mdash;she will stay here to meet him! She will
+marry him, my son.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Capt. G</i>. Maitland!&mdash;and stay here!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. Dear Henry, let us part in kindness. Do not
+look on me with that angry eye. It was I that played
+with you in the woods and meadows, it was I that
+roamed with you in those autumn twilights,&mdash;you loved
+me then, and we are parting for ever it may be..
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Capt. G</i>. (<i>To the children at the door</i>.) Get you
+down, young ones, get you down. Pray, mother, lead
+the way, will you?&mdash;break up this ring. Come, Helen,
+you and I will talk of this as we go on, only in passing
+give me leave to say, of all the mad pranks of your novel
+ladies, this caps the chief. You have outdone them,
+Helen; I'll give you credit for it, you have outdone them all.
+</p>
+<p>
+Why you'll be chronicled,&mdash;there's nothing on record
+like it, that ever I heard of; I am well-read in romances
+too. We'll have a new love-ballad made and set to tune,
+under the head of "Love and Murder," it will come
+though, if you don't make haste a little. Come, come.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. Henry!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Capt. G</i>. Are you in earnest, Helen? Did you suppose
+that we were mad enough to leave you here?
+You'll not go with us? But you will, by Heaven!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. Henry! Mother!&mdash;Nay, Henry, this is vain. I
+shall stay here, I shall&mdash;I shall stay here,&mdash;so help me
+Heaven.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Capt. G</i>. Helen Grey! Is that young lioness there
+my sometime sister?&mdash;my delicate sister?&mdash;with her foot
+planted like iron, and the strength of twenty men nerving her arm?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. Let go.&mdash;I shall stay here.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Capt. G</i>. Well, have your way, young lady, have your
+way; but&mdash;Mother, if you choose to leave that mad girl
+here, you can,&mdash;but as for this same Everard Maitland,
+look you, my lady, if I don't stab him to his heart's core,
+never trust me.
+</p>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>He goes out&mdash;Mrs. Grey follows him to the door</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mrs. G</i>. Stay, Henry,&mdash;stay. What shall we do?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Capt. G</i>. Do!&mdash;Indeed, a straight waistcoat is the
+only remedy I know of, Madam, for such freaks as these.
+If you say so, she shall go with us yet.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mrs. G</i>. Hear me. This is no time for passion now
+Hear me, Henry. This Maitland, <i>Tory</i> as he is, is her betrothed
+husband, and she has chosen her fate with him;
+we cannot keep her with us; nay, with what we have
+now seen, it would be vain to think of it, to wish it even.
+She must go to him,&mdash;it but remains to see that she meets
+him safely. Noon is the hour appointed for his coming.
+Could we not stay till then?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Capt. G</i>. Impossible. Noon?&mdash;well.&mdash;Oh, if its all
+fixed upon;&mdash;if you have settled it between yourselves
+that Helen is to abandon us and our protection, for
+Everard Maitland's and the British, the sooner done, the
+better. She's quite right,&mdash;she's like to find no safer
+chance for it than this. Noon,&mdash;there is a picket left on
+yonder hill till after that time, certainly, and a hundred
+men or so in the fort. I might give Van Vechten a hint
+of it&mdash;nay, I can return myself this afternoon, and if she
+is not gone then, I will take it upon me she is not left a
+second time. Of course Maitland would be likely to
+care for her safety. At all events there's nothing else
+for us to do, at least there's but one alternative, and
+that I have named to you.
+</p>
+
+<p align="right">
+[<i>They go out together</i>.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. (<i>She has stood silently watching them</i>.) He
+has gone, without one parting look&mdash;he has gone! So
+break the myriad-tied loves, it hath taken a life to weave.
+This is a weary world.
+</p>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>She turns to her sister, who leans weeping on the window-seat</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<br>
+Come, Annie, you and I will part in kindness, will we
+not? No cruel words shall there be here. Pleasant hath
+your love been unto me, my precious sister. Farewell, Annie.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Annie</i>. Shall I never hear your voice again, that
+hath been the music of my whole life? Is your face
+henceforth to be to me only a remembered thing? Helen,
+you must not stay here. The Indians,&mdash;it was no idle
+fear, the half of their bloody outrages you have not heard;
+they will murder you, yes, <i>you</i>. The innocence and loveliness
+that is holy to us, is nothing in their eyes, they
+would as soon sever that beautiful hair from your brow&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. Hush, hush. There is no danger, Annie. The
+dark things of destiny are God's; the heart, the heart only, is ours.
+</p>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>Mrs. Grey re-enters</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mrs. G</i>. (<i>to Annie</i>.) Come, come, my child. This is
+foolish now. All is ready. Janette will stay with you, Helen.
+</p>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>Laughing voices are heard without, and the children's faces are seen peeping in the door</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Willy</i>. Dear mother, are you not ready yet? We have
+been in the wagon and out a hundred times. Oh, Helen,
+make haste. The sun is above the trees, and the grass
+on the roadside is all full of diamonds. The last soldiers
+are winding down the hollow now. Is not Helen
+going, Mother?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mrs. G</i>. Your sister Helen is going from us forever.
+Come in and kiss her once, and then make haste&mdash;you
+must not all be lost.
+</p>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>They enter</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Willy</i>. Ah, why don't you go with us, sister?&mdash;Such
+a beautiful ride we shall have. You never heard such a
+bird-singing in all your life.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Frank</i>. We shall go by the Chesnut Hollow, George
+says we shall. Smell of these roses, Helen. Must she
+stay here? Hark, Willy, there's the drum. Good-bye,
+How sorry I am you will not go with us.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Willy</i>. So am I. What makes you stand so still and
+look at us so? Why don't you kiss me? Good-bye, Helen.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. (<i>Embracing them silently</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Annie</i>. Will you leave her here alone, mother? Will you?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mrs. G</i>. No. There is a guard left on yonder hill,
+and the fort is not yet abandoned wholly. Besides, the
+army encamp at the creek, and Henry himself will
+return this afternoon. She will be gone ere then, though.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. Those merry steps and voices, those little, soft
+clinging hands and rosy lips, have vanished forever. For
+all my love I shall be to them but as the faint trace of
+some faded dream. This is a weary world.
+</p>
+<p>
+Come, George, farewell. How I have loved to look on
+that young brow. Be what my dreams have made you.
+Fare you well.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>George</i>. Farewell, Helen.
+</p>
+
+<p align="right">
+[<i>He goes out hastily</i>.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. Will he forget me?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mrs. G</i>. And farewell, Helen. Fare ye well.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. Will she leave me thus?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mrs. G</i>. Do not go to the hut&mdash;do not leave this door
+until you are sure of the signal you spoke of, Helen.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. She will not look at me,&mdash;Mother!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mrs. G</i>. Farewell, Helen; may the hour never come
+when you need the love you have cast from you now so freely.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. Will you leave me thus? Is not our life together
+ending here? In that great and solemn Hereafter
+our ways may meet again; but by the light of sun, or
+moon, or candle, or underneath these Heavens, no more.
+Oh! lovely, lovely have you been unto me, a spirit of
+holiness and beauty, building all my way.&mdash;Part we thus?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mrs. G</i>. Farewell, Helen.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. Part we thus?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mrs. G</i>. Fare ye well, Helen Grey, my own sweet
+and precious child, my own lovely, lovely daughter, fare
+ye well, and the Lord be with you. The Lord keep you,
+for I can keep you now no more. The Lord watch over
+you, my helpless one, mine, mine, mine, all mine, though
+I leave you thus; my world of untold wealth, unto another.
+Nay, do not sorrow, my blessed child,&mdash;you will
+be happy yet. Fear nothing,&mdash;if this must be, I say, fear
+nothing. You think that you are doing right in forsaking
+us thus;&mdash;it may be that you are. If in the strength
+of a pure conscience you stay here to-day,&mdash;be not afraid.
+When you lay here of old, a lisping babe, I told you of
+One whose love was better than a mother's. Now farewell,
+and trust in Him. Farewell, mine eye shall see thee
+yet again. Farewell.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. No, no; leave me not.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mrs. G</i>. Unclasp these hands, I cannot stay.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. Never&mdash;never.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mrs. G</i>. Untwine this wild embrace, or, even now,&mdash;even
+now&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. Farewell, mother. Annie Grey, farewell.
+</p>
+
+<p align="right">
+[<i>They go</i>.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. This is a weary world. Take me home. To
+the land where there is no crying or bitterness, take me home.
+</p>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>The noise of retreating steps is heard, and the sound of the outer door closing heavily</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. They are gone,&mdash;not to church,&mdash;not for the
+summer's ride. I shall see them no more.&mdash;In heaven
+it may be; but by the twilight hearth, or merry table, at
+morn, or noon, or evening, in mirth or earthly tenderness, no more.
+</p>
+<p>
+Hark! There it is!&mdash;that voice,&mdash;I hear it now, I do.
+A dark eternity had rolled between us, and I hear it yet
+again. They are going now. Those rolling wheels, oh
+that that sound would last. There is no music half so
+sweet. Fainter&mdash;fainter&mdash;it is gone&mdash;no&mdash;that was but
+the hollow.&mdash;Hark&mdash;
+</p>
+<p>
+Now they are gone, indeed. So breaks the sense's last
+link between me and that world.
+</p>
+
+<hr width="33%">
+
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+
+<!--NewPage-->
+
+<a name="part5"><!--MARKER--></a>
+<h2>PART FIFTH.</h2>
+
+<hr width="33%">
+
+<center>
+FULFILLMENT
+</center>
+
+<hr width="33%">
+
+<h3>DIALOGUE I.</h3>
+
+<h4>SCENE. <i>The hill. A young Soldier enters</i>.</h4>
+
+<p>
+How gloriously, with what a lonely majesty the morning
+wastes in that silent valley there; with its moving
+shadows, and breeze and sunshine, and its thousand delicious
+sounds mocking those desolate homes&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>He stops suddenly, and looks earnestly into the thicket</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This is strange, indeed. This feeling that I cannot
+analyze, still grows upon me. <i>Presentiment?</i> Some
+dark, swift-flying thought, leaves its trace, and the cause-seeking
+mind, in the range of its own vision finding none,
+looks to the shadowy future for it.
+</p>
+
+<p align="right">
+[<i>He passes on</i>.
+</p>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>Two Indian Chiefs, in their war-dress, emerge from the thicket, talking in suppressed tones</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>1st Chief</i>. Hoogh! Hoogh! Alaska fights to revenge
+his son,&mdash;we spill our blood to revenge his son, and he
+thinks to win gifts besides. Hugh! A brave chief he is!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>2nd Chief</i>. Your talk is not good, Manida. They are
+our enemies,&mdash;we shall conquer them, we shall see their
+chestnut locks waving aloft, we shall dance and shout
+all night around them, and the eyes of the maidens shall
+meet ours in the merry ring, sparkling with joy, as we
+shout "Victory! victory! our enemies are slain,&mdash;our
+foot is on their necks, we have slain our enemies!" What
+more, Manida? Is it not enough?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>1st Chief</i>. No. I went last night with Alaska to the
+camp above, to the tent of the young sachem of the lake,
+and he promised him presents, rich and many, for an errand
+that a boy might do. I asked Alaska to send me for
+him, and he would not.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>2nd Chief</i>. The young white sachem was Alaska's
+friend, many moons ago, when Alaska was wounded and
+sick.&mdash;He must revenge young Siganaw, but he must
+keep his faith to his white friend, too.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>1st Chief</i>. Ah, but I know where the horse is hidden
+and the paper. When the tomahawks flash here, and
+the war-cry is loudest, we will steal away. Come, and I
+will share the prize with you.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>2nd Chief</i>. No, I will tell my brother chief that Manida
+is a treacherous friend.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>1st Chief</i>. You cannot. It is too late. Hist! Quick,
+lower&mdash;lower&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p align="right">
+[<i>They crouch among the trees</i>.
+</p>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>Another Soldier emerges from the wood-path, singing</i>.)
+</p>
+<p>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+&nbsp;&nbsp; "<i>Then march to the roll of the drum,
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; It summons the brave to the plain,
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Where heroes contend for the home
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Which perchance they may ne'er see again</i>."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+(<i>Pausing abruptly</i>.) Well, we are finely manned here!
+</p>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>1st Soldier re-enters</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>2nd Sol</i>. How many men do you think we have in all,
+upon this hill, Edward?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>1st Sol</i>. Hist!&mdash;more than you count on, perhaps.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>2nd Sol</i>. Why? What is the matter? Why do you
+look among those bushes so earnestly?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>1st Student</i>. It is singular, indeed. I can hardly tell
+you what it is, but twice before in my round, precisely
+in this same spot, the same impression has flashed upon
+me, though the sense that gives it, if sense it is, will not
+bide an instant's questioning. There! Hist! Did
+nothing move there then?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>2nd Sol</i>. I see nothing. This comes of star-gazing,
+when you should have slept. Though as to that, I have
+nothing to complain of, certainly. I had to thank your
+taste that way, last night, for an hour of the most delicious
+slumber. It was like that we used to snatch of
+old, between the first stroke of the prayer-bell and its dying peal.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>1st Sol</i>. I am glad you could sleep. For myself, such
+a world of troubled thoughts haunted me, I found more
+repose in waking.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>2nd Sol</i>. Then I wish you could have shared my
+dream with me, as indeed you seemed to, for you were
+with me through it all. A blessed dream it was, and yet&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>1st Sol</i>. Well, let me share it with you now.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>2nd Sol</i>. I cannot tell you how it was, that in honor
+and good conscience we had effected it, but somehow,
+methought our part in this sickening warfare was accomplished,
+and we were home again. Oh the joy of
+it! oh the joy of it! Even amid my dream, methought
+we questioned its reality, so unearthly in its perfectness,
+it seemed. We stood upon the college-green, and the
+sun was going down with a strange, darkling splendor;
+and from afar, ever and anon came the thunder roll of
+battle; but we had nought to do with it; our part was
+done; our time was out; we were to fight no more. And
+there we stood, watching the students' games; and there
+too was poor <i>Hale</i>, merry and full of life as e'er he was,
+for never a thought of his cruel fate crossed my dream.
+Suddenly we saw two ladies, arm in arm, come swiftly
+down the shady street, most strangely beautiful and
+strangely clad, with long white robes, and garlands in
+their hair, and such a clear and silvery laugh, and something
+fearful in their loveliness withal; and one of them,
+as she came smiling toward us&mdash;do you remember that
+bright, fair-haired girl we met in yonder lane one noon?
+&mdash;Just such a smile as hers wore the lady in my dream.
+Then, into the old chapel we were crowding all; that
+long-deferred commencement had come on at last; we
+stood upon a stage, and a strange light filled all the
+house, and suddenly the ceiling swelled unto the skiey
+dome, and nations filled the galleries; and I woke, to find
+myself upon a soldier's couch, and the reveille beating.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>1st Sol</i>. Well, if it cheered you, 'twas a good dream
+most certainly, though, yet&mdash;the dream-books might not
+tell you so. Will you take this glass a moment?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>2nd Sol</i>. What is it?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>1st Sol</i>. That white house by the orchard, in the door
+&mdash;do you see nothing?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>2nd Sol</i>. Yes, a figure, certainly;&mdash;yes, now it moves.
+I had thought those houses were deserted,&mdash;it is time
+they were I think, for all the protection we can give
+them. How long shall we maintain this post, think you,
+with such a handful?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>1st Sol</i>. Till the preparations below are complete, I
+trust so at least, for we have watchers in these woods, no
+doubt, who would speedily report our absence.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>2nd Sol</i>. Well, if we all see yonder sun go down, 'tis
+more than I count on.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>1st Sol</i>. A chance if we do&mdash;a chance if we do. Will
+the hour come when this infant nation shall forget her
+bloody baptism?&mdash;the holy name of truth and freedom,
+that with our hearts' blood we seal upon her in these days of fear?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>2nd Sol</i>. Ay, that hour may come.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>1st Sol</i>. Then, with tears, and <i>blood</i> if need be, shall
+she learn it anew; and not in vain shall the bones of the
+martyrs moulder in her peopled vales. For human nature,
+in her loftiest mood, was this beautiful land of old
+built, and for ages hid. Here&mdash;her cradle-dreams behind
+her flung; here, on the height of ages past,
+her solemn eye down their long vistas turned, in a
+new and nobler life she shall arise here. Ah, who knows
+but that the book of History may show us at last on its
+long-marred page&mdash;<i>Man</i> himself,&mdash;no longer the partial
+and deformed developments of his nature, which each
+successive age hath left as if in mockery of its ideal,&mdash;but,
+man himself, the creature of thought,&mdash;the high, calm,
+majestic being, that of old stood unshrinking beneath
+his Maker's gaze. Even, as first he woke amid the gardens
+of the East, in this far western clime at last he shall
+smile again,&mdash;a perfect thing.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>2nd Sol</i>. In your earnestness, you do not mark these
+strange sounds, Edward. Listen. (<i>He grasps his sword</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>A Soldier rushes down the path</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>3d Sol</i>. We are surrounded! Fly. The Indians are upon us. Fly.
+</p>
+
+<p align="right">
+[<i>Rushes on</i>.
+</p>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>Another Soldier bursts from the woods</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>4th Sol</i>. God! They are butchering them above there,
+do not stand here!
+</p>
+
+<p align="right">
+[<i>Rushes down the hill</i>.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>2nd Sol</i>. Resistance is vain. Hear those shrieks!
+There is death in them. Resistance is vain.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>1st Sol</i>. Flight is vain. Look yonder! Francis,&mdash;
+the dark hour hath come!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>2nd Sol</i>. Is it so? Mother and sister I shall see no more.
+</p>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>A number of Indians, disfigured with paint and blood, and brandishing their knives, come rushing down the road, uttering short, fierce yells. Others from below, bringing back the fugitives</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>1st Sol</i>. We shall die together. God of Truth and
+Freedom, unto thee our youthful spirits trust we.
+</p>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>The Indians surround them. Fighting to the last, they fall</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<hr width="33%">
+
+&nbsp;<br>
+&nbsp;<br>
+&nbsp;<br>
+&nbsp;<br>
+&nbsp;<br>
+&nbsp;<br>
+
+<!--NewPage-->
+
+<h3>DIALOGUE II.</h3>
+
+<h4>SCENE. <i>The deserted house&mdash;the chamber&mdash;Helen by the table&mdash;her head bowed and motionless. She rises slowly from her drooping posture</i>.</h4>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. It is my bridal day. I had forgotten that.
+(<i>Looking from the window</i>.) Is this real? Am I here
+alone? My mother gone? The army gone? brothers
+and sisters gone, and those woods full of armed Indians?
+I am awake. This is not the light of dreams,&mdash;'tis the
+sun that's shining there. Not the fresh arid tender morning
+sun, that looked in on that parting. Hours he has
+climbed since then, to turn those shadows thus,&mdash;hours that
+to me were nothing.&mdash;Alone?&mdash;deserted&mdash;defenceless?
+Of my own will too? There was a <i>law</i> in that will,
+though, was there not? (<i>Turning suddenly from the
+window</i>.) Shall I see him again? The living real of
+my thousand dreams, in the light of life, will he stand
+here to-day?&mdash;to-day? No, no. Is this swift flow of
+being leading on to <i>that</i>? Oh day of anguish, if in
+thine awful bosom, still, that dazzling instant sleeps, I
+can forgive the rest.
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>She stands by the toilette, and begins to gather once more the long hair from her shoulders. Suddenly a low voice at the door breaks the stillness. The Canadian servant looks in</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Jan</i>. I ask your pardon&mdash;Shall I come in, Ma'amselle?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. Ay, ay, come in. How strangely any voice
+sounds amid this loneliness. I am glad you are here.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Jan</i>. (<i>Entering</i>.) Beautiful! Santa Maria! How
+beautiful! May I look at these things, Ma'amselle?
+(<i>Stopping by the couch strewn with bridal gear</i>.) Real
+Brussels! And the plume in this bonnet, was there ever
+such a lovely droop?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. Come, fasten this clasp for me, Netty. I thought
+to have had another bridesmaid once, but&mdash;that is past&mdash;
+Yes, I am a bride to-day, and I must not wait here unadorned.
+(<i>Aside</i>.) He shall have no hint from me this
+day of "<i>altered fortunes</i>." As though these weary
+years had been but last night's dream, and my wedding-day
+had come as it was fixed, so will I meet him.&mdash;Yet
+I thought to have worn my shroud sooner than this robe.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Jan</i>. This silk would stand alone, Ma'amselle,&mdash;and
+what a lovely white it is! Just such a bodice as this
+I saw my Lady Mary wear, two years ago this summer,
+in Quebec; only, this is a thought deeper. But, Santa
+Maria! how it becomes a shape like yours!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. What a world of buried feeling lives again as
+I feel the clasp of this robe once more! Will he say
+these years have changed me?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Jan</i>. (<i>Aside</i>) I do not like that altered mien. How
+the beauty flashes from her? Is it silk and lace that can
+change one so? Here are bracelets too, Ma'amselle; will you wear them?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. Yes. Go, look from the window, Janette,
+down the lane to the woods. I am well-high ready now.
+He will come,&mdash;yes, he will come.
+</p>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>Janette retreats to the window,&mdash;her eye still following the lady</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Jan</i>. I have seen brides before, but never so gay a one
+as this. It is strange and fearful to see her stand here
+alone, in this lonesome house, all in glistening white,
+smiling, and the light flashing from her eyes thus. She
+looks too much like some radiant creature from another
+world, to be long for this.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. He will come, why should he not? Netty, fix
+your eye on that opening in the woods, and if you see
+but a shadow crossing it, tell me quickly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Jan</i>. I can see nothing&mdash;nothing at all. Marie sanctissima!&mdash;how
+quiet it is! The shadows are straight here now, Miss Helen.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. Noon&mdash;the very hour has come! Another
+minute it may be.&mdash;Noon, you said, Netty?
+</p>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>Joining Janette at the window</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Jan</i>. Yes, quite&mdash;you can see; and hark, there's the
+clock. Oh, isn't it lonesome though? See how like the
+Sunday those houses look, with the doors all closed and
+the yards and gardens still as midnight. If we could but
+hear a human voice!&mdash;whose, I would not care.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. How like any other noon-day it comes! The
+faint breeze plays in those graceful boughs as it did yesterday;
+that little, yellow butterfly glides on its noiseless
+way above the grass, as then it did;&mdash;just so, the shadows
+sleep on the grassy road-side there;&mdash;yes, Netty,
+yes, <i>'tis</i> very lonely.&mdash;Hear those merry birds!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Jan</i>. But I would rather hear that signal, Miss Helen,
+a thousand times, than the best music that ever was played.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. I shall see him again. That wild hope is wild
+no longer. To doubt were wilder now. Ay, Fate must
+cross my way with a bold hand, to snatch that good from
+me now. And yet,&mdash;alas, in the shadowy future it lieth
+still, and a dark and treacherous realm is that! The joys
+that blossom on its threshold are not ours&mdash;It may be, even
+now, darkness and silence everlasting lie between us.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Jan</i>. Hark&mdash;Hark!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. What is it?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Jan</i>. Hark!&mdash;There!&mdash;Do you hear nothing?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. Distant voices?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Jan</i>. Yes&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. I do&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Jan</i>. Once before,&mdash;'twas when I stood in the door below,
+I heard something like this; but the breeze just then
+brought the sound of the fall nearer, and drowned it.
+There it is!&mdash;Nearer. The other window, Miss Helen.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. From that hill it comes, does it not?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Jan</i>. Yes&mdash;yes, I should think it did. Oh yes. There
+is a guard left there&mdash;I had forgotten that. Mon Dieu!
+How white your lips are! Are you afraid, Ma'amselle?
+</p>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>Helen stands gazing silently from the window</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Jan</i>. There is no danger. It must have been those
+soldiers that we heard,&mdash;or the cry of some wild animal
+roaming through yonder woods&mdash;it might have been,&mdash;how
+many strange sounds we hear from them. At another
+time we should never have thought of it. I think
+we should have heard that signal though, ere this,&mdash;I do, indeed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. What is it to die? Nor wood nor meadow, nor
+winding stream, nor the blue sky, do <i>they</i> see; nor the voice
+of bird or insect do they hear; nor breeze, nor sunshine,
+nor fragrance visits them. Will there be nothing left that
+makes this being then? The high, Godlike purpose&mdash;the
+life whose breath it is,&mdash;can <i>that</i> die?&mdash;the meek
+trust in Goodness Infinite,&mdash;can <i>that</i> perish? No.&mdash;This
+is that building of the soul which nothing can dissolve,
+that house eternal, that eternity's wide tempests cannot
+move. No&mdash;no&mdash;I am not afraid. No&mdash;Netty, I am not
+afraid.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Jan</i>. Will you come here, Miss Helen?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. Well.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Jan</i>. Look among those trees by the road-side&mdash;those
+pine trees, on the side of the hill, where my finger
+points.&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. Well&mdash;what is it?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Jan</i>. Do you see&mdash;what a blinding sunshine this is&mdash;do
+you see something moving there?&mdash;wait a moment&mdash;they
+are hid among the trees now&mdash;you will see them
+again presently&mdash;There!&mdash;there they come, a troop of them, see.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. Yes&mdash;<i>Indians</i>&mdash;are they not?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Jan</i>. Ay&mdash;it must have been their yelling that
+we heard.&mdash;We need not be alarmed.&mdash;They are from
+the camp&mdash;they have come to that spring for water. The
+wonder is, your soldiers should have let them pass.&mdash;You
+will see them turning back directly now.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. (<i>Turning from the window</i>.) Shelter us&mdash;all
+power is thine.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Jan</i>. Holy Virgin!&mdash;they are coming this way. Those
+creatures are coming down that hill, as I live. Yes,
+there they come.
+</p>
+<p>
+This strip of wood hides them now. What keeps
+them there so long? Ay, ay,&mdash;I see now&mdash;I am sorry I
+should have alarmed you so, Ma'amselle, for nothing
+too&mdash;They have struck into those woods again, no doubt;
+they are going back to their camp by the lower route.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. No.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Jan</i>. It must be so. There is no doubt of it. Indeed,
+we might be sure they would never dare come here.&mdash;They
+cannot know yet that your army are gone. Besides,
+we should have heard from them ere this. They
+could never have kept their horrid tongues to themselves
+so long, I know.&mdash;Well, if it were to save me, I
+cannot screw myself into this shape any longer. (<i>Rising
+from the window</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. Listen.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Jan</i>. 'Tis nothing but the sound of the river. You
+can make nothing else of it, Ma'amselle,&mdash;unless it is
+these locusts that you hear. I wish they would cease
+their everlasting din a moment.
+</p>
+<p>
+How that breeze has died away! Every leaf is still
+now! There's not a cloud or a speck in all the sky.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. Look in the west&mdash;have you looked there?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Jan</i>. Yes, there are a few little clouds beginning to
+gather there indeed. We shall have a shower yet ere night.
+</p>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>The war-whoop is heard, loud and near</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Jan</i>. Mon Dieu! Here they are! It is all over with
+us! We shall be murdered!
+</p>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>She clasps her hands, and shrieks wildly</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. Hush! hush! Put down that window, and
+come away. We must be calm now.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Jan</i>. It is all over with us,&mdash;what use is there? Do
+you hear that trampling?&mdash;in the street!&mdash;they are coming!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. Janette&mdash;Hear me. Will you throw away
+your life and mine? For shame! Be calm. These
+Indians cannot know that we are here. They will see
+these houses <i>all</i> deserted. Why should they stop to
+search <i>this?</i> Hush! hush! they are passing now.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Jan</i>. They have stopped!&mdash;the trampling has stopped!&mdash;I
+hear the gate,&mdash;they have come into the yard.
+</p>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>A long wild yell is heard under the window. They stand, looking silently at each other. Again it trembles through the room, louder than before</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. I am sorry you stayed here with me.
+Perhaps&mdash;Hark! What was that? What was that? Was it
+not <i>Maitland</i> they said then? It was&mdash;it is&mdash;Don't
+grasp me so.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Jan</i>. Nay&mdash;what would you do?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. I must speak with them. Let go my arm! Do
+you not hear? 'Tis Maitland they are talking of. How
+strangely that blessed name sounds in those tones!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Jan</i>. You must not&mdash;we have tempted Heaven already&mdash;this
+is madness.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. Let go, Janette. It is not you they seek. You
+can conceal yourself. You shall be safe.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Jan</i>. She is wild! Nay, I was mad myself, or I should
+never have stayed here. It were better to have lived
+always with them, than to be murdered thus.
+</p>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>Helen opens the window, and stands for a moment, looking silently down into the court. She turns away, shuddering</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. Can I meet those eyes again?
+</p>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>Again the name of Maitland mingles with the wild and unintelligible sounds that rise from without</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. Can I? (<i>She turns to the window</i>.) What
+can it mean? His own beautiful steed! How fiercely
+he prances beneath that unskilful rein. Where's your
+master, Selma, that he leaves me to be murdered here?
+A letter! He bids me unfasten the door, Janette.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Jan</i>. And will you?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. They are treacherous I know. This will
+do.&mdash;(<i>Taking a basket from the toilette</i>.) Give me that cord.
+(<i>She lets down the basket from the window, and draws
+it up, with a letter in it</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. (<i>Looking at the superscription</i>.) 'Tis his!
+I thought so. Is it ink and paper that I want now?
+(<i>Breaking it open</i>.) Ah, there's no forgery in this, 'Tis
+his! 'tis his!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Jan</i>. How can she stand to look at that little lock of
+hair now?&mdash;smiling as if she had found a bag of diamonds.
+But there's bad news there. How the color
+fades out, and the light in her eye dies away. What can it be?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. (<i>Throwing the letter down, and walking the
+floor hastily</i>.) This is too much! I cannot, I cannot,
+<i>I cannot go with them</i>! How could he ask it of me?
+<i>This is</i> cruel.
+</p>
+<p>
+He knew, perfectly well, how I have always feared
+them&mdash;I cannot go with them.
+</p>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>She takes up the letter</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<br>
+(<i>Reading</i>.) "Possible"&mdash;"If it were possible"&mdash;he
+does not read that word as I did when I kept this promise&mdash;<i>Possible</i>? He does not know the meaning that
+love gives that word&mdash;"If I had known an hour sooner,"
+&mdash;Ay, ay, an hour sooner!&mdash;"Trust me, dear Helen,
+they will not harm you." <i>Trust me</i>, trust me. Won't I?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Jan</i>. She is beckoning them, as I live!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. Bring me that hat and mantle, Netty. I must
+go with these savages.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Jan</i>. <i>Go</i> with them!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. There is no help for it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Jan</i>. With these wild creatures,&mdash;with these painted
+devils?&mdash;No&mdash;Like nothing human they look, I am
+sure. Ah see, see them in their feathers and blankets,
+and that long wild hair. See the knives and the tomahawks
+in their girdles! Holy Mary! Here's one within
+the court!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. Yes, there he stands&mdash;there's life in it
+now.&mdash;There
+they stand&mdash;the chesnut boughs wave over them&mdash;this
+is the filling up of life. They <i>are</i> waiting for me.
+'Tis no dream.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Jan</i>. Dare you go with them? They will murder you.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. If they were but human, I could move them&mdash;and
+yet it is the human in them that is so dreadful. To
+die were sad enough&mdash;to die by violence, by the power
+of the innocent elements, were dreadful, or to be torn of
+beasts; to meet the wild, fierce eye, with its fixed and
+deadly purpose, more dreadful; but ah, to see the human
+soul, from the murderers eye glaring on you, to encounter
+the human will in its wickedness, amid that wild
+struggle&mdash;Oh God! spare me.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Jan</i>. If you fear them so, surely you will not go with them.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. This letter says they are kind and innocent.
+One I <i>should</i> believe tells me there is no cause for fear.
+In his haste he could not find no other way to send for
+me.&mdash;The army will be here soon,&mdash;I <i>must</i> go with them.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Jan</i>. But Captain Grey will come back here again
+this afternoon. Stay,&mdash;stay, and we will go with him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. You can&mdash;yes, you will be safe. For myself, I
+will abide my choice. Surely I need not dread to go
+where my betrothed husband trusts me so fearlessly. I
+count my life worth little more than the price at which he
+values it. Clasp this mantle, Netty.&mdash;And is it thus I go
+forth from these blessed walls at last?&mdash;Through all those
+safe and quiet hours of peace and trust, did this dark end
+to them lie waiting here?&mdash;Are they calling me?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Jan</i>. Yes.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. Well,&mdash;I am ready. (<i>Lingering in the door</i>.) I
+shall sit by that window no more. Never again shall I
+turn those blinds to catch the breeze or the sunshine.
+Yes&mdash;(<i>returning</i>), let me look down on that orchard
+once again. Never more&mdash;never more.
+</p>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>She walks to the door, again pausing on the threshold</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. (<i>solemnly</i>.) Oh God, here, from childhood to
+this hour, morning and evening I have called on thee&mdash;forget
+me not. Farewell, Netty, you will see my mother&mdash;you
+will see them all&mdash;that is past.&mdash;Tell her I had
+seen the Indians, and was not afraid.
+</p>
+
+<p align="right">
+[<i>She goes out</i>.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Jan</i>. It won't take much to make an angel of her,
+there's that in it.
+</p>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>Looking cautiously through the shutters</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There she comes! How every eye in that wild group
+flashes on her! And yet with what a calm and stately
+bearing she meets them. Holy Mary! she suffers that
+savage creature to lift her to her horse, as though he
+were her brother, and the long knife by his side too, glancing
+in the sunshine! The horse, one would think, he
+knew the touch of that white hand on his neck. How
+gently he rears his beautiful head. There they go.
+Adieu! Was there ever so sad a smile?
+</p>
+<p>
+Another glimpse I shall have of them yet beyond those
+trees.&mdash;Yes, there they go&mdash;there they go. I can see
+that lovely plume waving among the trees still.&mdash;Was
+there ever so wild a bridal train?
+</p>
+
+<hr width="33%">
+
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+
+<!--NewPage-->
+
+<h3>DIALOGUE III.</h3>
+
+<h4>SCENE. <i>British Camp. The interior of a Tent richly furnished. An Officer seated at a table covered with papers and maps. A Servant in waiting</i>.</h4>
+
+<p>
+<i>The Officer</i>. (<i>Sipping his wine, and carefully examining
+a plan of the adjacent country</i>.) About here,
+we must be&mdash;let me see.&mdash;I heard the drum from their
+fort this morning, distinctly. Turn that curtain; we
+might get a faint breeze there now.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Ser't</i>. But the sun will be coming that side, Sir. It's
+past two o'clock.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Off</i>. Past two&mdash;a good position&mdash;very. Well, well,&mdash;we'll
+take our breakfast in Albany on Friday morning,
+and if our soldiers fast a day or two ere then, why
+they'll relish it the better;&mdash;once in the rich country beyond&mdash;Ay,
+it will take more troops than this General will
+have at his bidding by that time, to drain the Hudson's
+borders for us.
+</p>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>A Servant enters with a note</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Off</i>. (<i>Reading</i>.) "<i>The Baroness Reidesel's compliments&mdash;do
+her the honor&mdash;-Voisin has succeeded</i>."&mdash;Ay,
+ay,&mdash;Voisin has succeeded,&mdash;I'll warrant that. That
+caterer of hers must be in league with the powers of
+the air, I am certain. General Burgoyne will be but too
+happy, my Lady&mdash;(<i>writing the answer</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p align="right">
+[<i>The Servant goes out</i>.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Off</i>. Past two! The cannon should be in sight ere
+this. This to Sir George Ackland.
+</p>
+
+<p align="right">
+[<i>Exit the Attendant</i>.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Off</i>. Tuesday&mdash;Wednesday.&mdash;If the batteaux should
+get here to-morrow. One hundred teams&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>Another Officer enters the tent</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>1st Off</i>. How goes it abroad, Colonel St. Leger?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>2nd Off</i>. Indeed, Sir, the camp is as quiet as midnight.
+It's a breathless heat. But there are a few dark heads
+swelling in the west. We may have a shower yet ere night.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Bur</i>. Good news that. But here is better, (<i>giving
+the other an open letter</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>St. Leger</i>. Ay, ay, that reads well, Sir.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Bur</i>. And here is another as good. Yes Sir, yes Sir,&mdash;they
+are flocking in from all quarters&mdash;the insurgents are
+laying down their arms by hundreds. It must be a
+miserable fragment that Schuyler has with him by this.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>St. L</i>. General Burgoyne, is not it a singular circumstance,
+that the enemy should allow us to take possession
+of a point like that without opposition,&mdash;so trifling a
+detachment, too? Why, that hill commands the fort,&mdash;certainly
+it does.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Bur</i>. Well&mdash;well. They are pretty much reduced,
+I fancy, Sir. We shall hardly hear much more from
+them. Let me see,&mdash;this is the hill.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>St. L</i>. A pity we could not provoke them into an
+engagement, though! They depend so entirely upon
+the popular feeling for supplies and troops, and the whole
+machinery of their warfare, that it is rather hazardous
+reckoning upon them, after all. If we could draw
+them into an engagement <i>now</i>, the result would be certain.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Bur</i>. Yes, yes; we must contrive to do that ere
+long. Rather troublesome travelling companions they
+make, that's certain. Like those insects that swarm
+about us here,&mdash;no great honor in fighting them, but a
+good deal of discomfort in letting them alone. We must
+sweep them out of our way, I think, or at all events give
+them a brush, that will quiet them a little.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>St. L</i>. Or they might prove, after all, like the gadfly
+in the fable. I do not think this outbreak will be
+any disadvantage in the end, General.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Bur</i>. Not a whit&mdash;not a whit&mdash;they have needed this.
+It will do them good, Sir.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>St. L</i>. The fact is, these colonies were founded in
+the spirit of insubordination, and all the circumstances
+of their position have hitherto tended to develope only
+these disorganizing elements.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Bur</i>. It will do them good, Sir. Depend upon it,
+they'll remember this lesson. Pretty well sickened of
+war are they all. They'll count the cost ere they try it again.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>St. L</i>. We can hardly expect the news from General
+Reidesel before sunset, I suppose.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Bur</i>. If my messenger returns by to-morrow's sunrise,
+it is better fortune than I look for.
+</p>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>Col. St. Leger goes out</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>Burgoyne resumes his plan</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>A Ser't</i>. (<i>At the door</i>.) Capt. Maitland, Sir.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Bur</i>. Capt. Maitland!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Ser't</i>. From Fort Ann, Sir.
+</p>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>Maitland enters</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Bur</i>. Captain Maitland! Good heavens, I thought
+you were at Skeensborough by this,&mdash;what has happened?
+or am I to congratulate myself that the necessity of your
+embassy is obviated. You met them, perhaps?&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Maitland</i>. There's but little cause of congratulation,
+Sir, as these dispatches will prove to you. I returned
+only because my embassy was accomplished.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Bur</i>. Do you mean to say, Captain Maitland, that you
+have seen the waters of Lake Champlain, since you left
+here this morning?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mait</i>. I do, Sir.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Bur</i>. On my word, these roads must have improved
+since we travelled them some two days agone. I am
+sorry for your horses, Sir. You saw General Reidesel?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mait</i>. I left him only at nine o'clock this morning.
+</p>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>Burgoyne examines the dispatches</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Bur</i>. "Twelve oxen to one batteaux!"&mdash;"and but fifty
+teams!" This news was scarcely worth so much haste,
+I think,&mdash;but fifty teams?&mdash;Captain Maitland, had those
+draught horses from Canada not arrived yet?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mait</i>. They were just landing this morning as I left,
+but only one-fourth of the number contracted for.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Bur</i>. Humph! I would like to know what time, at
+this rate&mdash;sit down, Captain Maitland, sit down&mdash;we
+are like to spend the summer here, for aught I see,
+after all. (<i>A long pause, in which Burgoyne resumes
+his reading</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mait</i>. General Burgoyne, I am entrusted with a message
+from General Reidsel to the Baroness. If this is all&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Bur</i>. What were you saying?&mdash;The Baroness&mdash;ay,
+ay&mdash;that's all well enough,&mdash;but Captain Maitland is
+aware, no doubt, there are more important subjects on
+the tapis just now than a lady's behests.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mait</i>. Sir?&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Bur</i>. (<i>Pushing the papers impatiently from him</i>.)
+This will never do. St. George! We'll give these
+rebels other work ere many days, than driving away cattle
+and breaking down bridges for our convenience. Meanwhile
+we must open some new source of supplies, or
+we may starve to death among these hills yet. Captain
+Maitland, I have a proposal to make to you. You are
+impatient, Sir.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mait</i>. General Burgoyne!&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Bur</i>. Nay, nay,&mdash;there's no haste about it. It were
+cruel to detain you now, after the toil of this wild journey.
+You'll find your quarters changed, Captain Maitland.
+We sent a small detachment across the river just
+now. Some of our copper-colored allies had got into a
+fray with the enemy there.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mait</i>. Ha! (<i>returning</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Bur</i>. Nothing of consequence, as it turns out. We
+hoped it would have ended in something. A few of the
+enemy, who were stationed as a guard on a hill not far
+from Fort Edward, were surprised by a party of Indians,
+and killed, to a man, I believe. Afterwards, the victors
+got into a deadly fray among themselves as usual. A
+quarrel between a couple of these chiefs, at some famous
+watering place of theirs, and in the midst of it, a party
+from the fort drove them from the ground;&mdash;this is
+Alaska's own story at least.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mait</i>. <i>Alaska's!</i>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Bur</i>. Alaska?&mdash;Alaska?&mdash;yes, I think it was,&mdash;one of
+these new allies we have picked up here.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mait</i>. (<i>In a whisper</i>.) Good God!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Bur</i>. By the time our detachment arrived there, however,
+the ground was cleared, and they took quiet possession.
+Are you ill, Captain Maitland?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mait</i>. A little,&mdash;it is nothing. I am to cross the river.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Bur</i>, Yes. You will take these papers to Captain
+Andre. You have over-fatigued yourself. You should
+have taken more time for this wild journey.
+</p>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>Maitland goes out</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Bur</i>. I do not like the idea of division, but it cannot be
+helped now. This gallant young soldier were a fitting
+leader for such an enterprize.
+</p>
+
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+
+<!--NewPage-->
+
+<h3>DIALOGUE IV.</h3>
+
+<h4>SCENE. <i>The ground before Maitland's Tent</i>.</h4>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>Maitland and the Indian Chief, Manida, enter</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mait</i>. This is well. (<i>He writes on a slip of paper,
+and gives it to the Indian</i>.) Take that, they will give
+you the reward you ask for it. Let me see your face no
+more, that is all.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Manida</i>. Ha, <i>Monsieur</i>?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mait</i>. Let me see your face no more, I say. Do you understand me?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Manida</i>. (<i>Smiling</i>.) Oui.
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>Maitland turns from him. The Indian goes off in the opposite direction. He stops a moment, and steals a look at Maitland,&mdash;throws his head back with a long silent laugh, and then goes on toward the woods</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mait</i>. (<i>Musing</i>.) I like this. <i>This</i> is womanly!
+Nay, perhaps there is no caprice about it. I may have
+misinterpreted that letter in my haste last night. Very
+likely. Well,&mdash;better this, than that Helen Grey should
+come to evil through fault of mine,&mdash;better this, than the
+anguish of the horrible misgivings that haunted me amid
+my journey.
+</p>
+<p>
+And so pass these faery visions! Nay, not thus. It
+will take longer than this to unlink this one day's hope
+from its thousand fastnesses. I thought, ere this, to have
+met the spirit of those beaming eyes, to have taken to my
+heart for ever this soft, pure being of another life.
+And yet, even as I rode through those lonely hills this
+morning, with every picture my hope painted, there came
+a strange misgiving;&mdash;like some scene of laughing noonday
+loveliness, darkening in the shadow of a summer's cloud.
+</p>
+<p>
+Strange that Alaska should abandon my trust! I cannot
+understand it. Why, I should never have trusted
+her with this rascal Indian. There was something in
+his eye, hateful beyond all thought,&mdash;and once or twice
+I caught a strange expression in it, like malignant triumph
+it seemed. It may be&mdash;no, he must have seen
+her&mdash;that glove he showed me was hers, I know. Good
+God!&mdash;what if&mdash;I think my old experience should
+have taught me there was little danger of her risking
+much in my behalf. Well&mdash;even this is better, than that
+Helen Grey should have come to evil through fault of mine.
+</p>
+
+<hr width="33%">
+
+&nbsp;<br>
+&nbsp;<br>
+&nbsp;<br>
+&nbsp;<br>
+&nbsp;<br>
+&nbsp;<br>
+
+<!--NewPage-->
+
+<a name="part6"><!--MARKER--></a>
+<h2>PART SIXTH</h2>
+
+<hr width="33%">
+
+<center>
+RECONCILIATION.
+</center>
+
+<hr width="33%">
+
+<h3>DIALOGUE I.</h3>
+
+<h4>SCENE. <i>The slope of the Hill near Fort Edward. The road-side, shaded with stately pines and hemlocks</i>.</h4>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>Two British Officers, coming slowly down the road</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>1st Off</i>. Yes, here has been wild work upon this hill
+to-day. They were slaughtered to a man.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>2nd Off</i>. I saw a sight above there, just now, that sickened me of warfare.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>1st Off</i>. And what was that, pry'thee?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>2nd Off</i>. Oh nothing,&mdash;'twas nothing but a dead soldier;
+a common sight enough, indeed; but this was a
+mere youth;&mdash;he was lying in a little hollow on the roadside,
+and as I crossed in haste, I had well-nigh set my
+foot on his brow. Such a brow it was, so young, so noble,
+and the dark chesnut curls clustering about it. I think
+I never saw a more classic set of features, or a look of
+loftier courage than that which death seemed to have
+found and marbled in them. Hark&mdash;that's a water-fall we hear.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>1st Off</i>. I saw him, there was another though, lying
+not far thence, the sight of whom moved me more. He
+was younger yet, or seemed so, and of a softer mould;
+and, torn and bloody as they were, I fancied I could see
+in his garb and appointments, and in every line of his
+features, the traces of some mother's tenderness.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>2nd Off</i>. Listen, Andre! This is beautiful! There's
+some cascade not far hence, worth searching for.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Andre</i>. Yes, just in among those trees you'll find a
+perfect drawing-room, carpeted, canopied, and dark as
+twilight; its verdant seats broidered with violets and
+forget-me-nots; and all untenanted it seems, nay, deserted
+rather, for the music wastes on the lonely air, as if the
+fairy that kept state there, in gossip mood had stolen
+down some neighboring aisle, and would be home anon.
+I would have bartered all the glory of this campaign for
+leave to stretch myself on its mossy bank, for a soft hour or so.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mor</i>. Ay, with Chaucer or the "Faery Queen." If
+one could people these lovely shades with the fresh creations
+of the olden time, knight and lady, and dark enchantress
+and Paynim fierce, instead of Yankee rebels&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Andre</i>. 'Twere well your faery-work were of no lasting
+mould, or these same Yankee rebels would scarce
+thank you for your pains,&mdash;they hold that race in little
+reverence. Alas,&mdash;
+</p>
+<p>
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; No grot divine, or wood-nymph haunted glen,
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Or stream, or fount, shall these young shades e'er know.
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; No beautiful divinity, stealing afar
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Through darkling nooks, to poet's eye thence gleam;
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; With mocking mystery the dim ways wind,
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; They reach not to the blessed fairy-land
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; That once all lovely in heaven's stolen light,
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; To yearning thoughts, in the deep green-wood grew.
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Ah! had they come to light when nature
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Was a wonder-loving, story-telling child!&mdash;
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; The misty morn of ages had gone by,
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; The dreamy childhood of the race was past,
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And in its tame and reasoning manhood,
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; In the daylight broad, and noon-day of all time,
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; <i>This</i> world hath sprung. The poetry of <i>truth</i>,
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; None other, shall her shining lakes, and woods,
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And ocean-streams, and hoary mountains wear.
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Perchance that other day of poesy,
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Unsung of prophets, that upon the lands
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Shall dawn yet, thence shall spring. The self-same mind
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; That on the night of ages once, for us
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Those deathless clusters flung, the self-same mind,
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; With all its ancient elements of might,
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Among us now its ancient glory hides;
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; But, from its smothered power, and buried wealth,
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; A golden future sparkles, decked from deeper founts,
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; A new and lovelier firmament,
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; A thousand realms of song undreamed of now,
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; That shall make Romance a forgotten world,
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And the young heaven of Antiquity,
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; With all its starry groups, a gathered scroll.
+<br>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mor</i>. Ay, Andre, you were born a poet, and have mistaken
+your art. Prythee excuse me, who am but a poor
+soldier, for marring so fine a rhapsody with any thing so
+sublunary; but, methinks, for an enemy's quarters, yonder
+fort shows as peaceable a front of stone and mortar
+as one could ask for. What can it mean that they are
+so quiet there?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Andre</i>. That spy did not return a second time.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mor</i>. The rogues have made sure of him ere this, I
+fancy. They may have given us the slip,&mdash;who knows?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Andre</i>. I would like to venture a stroll through that
+shady street if I thought so. A dim impression that I
+have somewhere seen this view before, haunts me unaccountably.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mor</i>. How I hate that sober, afternoon air, that hangs
+like an invisible presence over it all. You can see it in
+the sunshine on those white walls, you can hear it in the
+hum of the bee from the bending thistle here.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Andre</i>. Of the mind it is. This were lovely as the
+morning light, but for the shade it gathers thence, from
+the thought of decline and the vanishing day. 'Tis a
+pretty spot.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mor</i>. Yes, but the quiet goings-on of life are all hushed there now.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Andre</i>. Ay, this is the hour, when the home-bound
+children swing the gate with a merry spring, and the
+mother sits at her work by the open window, with her quiet
+eye, and the daughter, with the beauty of an untamed soul
+in her's, looks forth on the woods and meadows, and
+thinks of her walk at even-tide. I thought it was something
+like a memory that haunted me thus,&mdash;'tis the spot
+that Maitland talked of yesterday.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mor</i>. Captain Maitland? I saw him just now at the works above.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Andre</i>. Here? On this hill?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mor</i>. Yes,&mdash;something struck me in his mien,&mdash;and
+there he stands with Colonel Hill, above, on the other
+side.&mdash;Mark him now. Your friend is handsome, Andre;
+he is handsome, I'll own,&mdash;but I never liked that
+smile of his, and I think I like it less than ever now.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Andre</i>. Why, that's the genuine Apollo-curl,&mdash;a line's
+breadth deeper were too much, I'll own.
+</p>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>Maitland and another Officer enter</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Off</i>. That is all,&mdash;that is all, I believe, Captain Maitland.
+Yonder pretty dwelling among the trees seems
+an old acquaintance of yours. It has had the ill manners
+to rob me of your eye ever since we stood here, and I
+have had little token that the other senses were not in
+its company. Andre, has your friend never a ladye-love
+in these wilds, you could tell us of?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mor</i>. He is sworn to secresy. Did you mark that glance?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mait</i>. Love! I hold it a pretty theme for the ballad-makers,
+Colonel Hill; but for myself, I have scarce time
+for rhyming just now. Captain Andre, here are papers for you.
+</p>
+
+<p align="right">
+[<i>He walks away, descending the road</i>.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Col. Hill</i>. So! So! What ails the boy?
+</p>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>Looking after him for a moment, and then ascending the hill</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Andre</i>. (<i>Reading</i>.) Humph! Here's prose enough!
+Will you walk up the hill with me, Mortimer? I must
+cross the river again.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mait</i>. First let me seek this horse of mine,&mdash;the rogue
+must have strayed down this path, I think.
+</p>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>He enters the wood</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>Andre walks to and fro with an impatient air, then pauses</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Andre</i>. Well, I can wait no longer for this loiterer.
+
+<p align="right">
+[<i>Exit</i>.
+</p>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>Mortimer re-enters, calling from the woods</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mor</i>. Andre! Maitland! Colonel Hill! Good
+Heavens! Where the devil are they all? Maitland!
+</p>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>Maitland appears, slowly ascending the road</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mor</i>. For the love of Heaven,&mdash;come here.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mail</i>. Nay.&mdash;but what is it?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mor</i>. For God's sake, come,
+</p>
+
+<hr width="33%">
+
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+
+<!--NewPage-->
+
+<h3>DIALOGUE II.</h3>
+
+<h4>SCENE. <i>A little glen, darkly shaded with pines. A fountain issuing from one side, and falling with a curious murmur into the basin below</i>.</h4>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>Mortimer and Maitland enter</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mor</i>. This is the place!&mdash;Well, if hallucinations like
+this can visit mortal eyes, I'll ne'er trust mine again.
+'Tis the spot, I'm sure of it,&mdash;the place, too, that Andre
+was raving about just now.&mdash;The fairies' drawing-room,&mdash;palace
+rather,&mdash;look at these graceful shafts, Maitland,&mdash;and
+fairies' work, it must have been in good earnest.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mait</i>. If it's to admire this clump of pine trees you
+have brought me hither, allow me to say you might have
+spared yourself that trouble. I have seen the place already,
+as often as I care to.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mor</i>. Come this way a little,&mdash;yes, it was just above
+there that I stood,&mdash;it must have been.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mait</i>. If you would give me some little inkling of what
+you are talking about, Lieutenant Mortimer, I should be
+more likely to help you, if it's help you need.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mor</i>. I do not ask you to believe me, but,&mdash;as I was
+springing on my horse just now above there, the gurgling
+of this spring caught my ear, and looking down suddenly&mdash;upon
+my word, Captain Maitland, I am ashamed
+to describe what cannot but seem to you such an improbable
+piece of fancy-work; and yet, true it seemed, as
+that I see you now. I was looking down, as I said, when
+suddenly, among those low evergreens, the brilliant hue
+of a silken mantle caught my eye, and then a woman's
+brow gleamed up upon me. Yes, there in that dark
+cradle, calmly sleeping, all flashing with gold and jewels,
+like some bright vision of olden time, methought there
+lay&mdash;a lady,&mdash;a girl, young and lovely as a dream;&mdash;the
+white plume in her bonnet soiled and broken, and the
+long bright hair streaming heavily on her mantle,&mdash;and
+yet with all its loveliness, such a face of utter sorrow saw
+I never. I <i>saw</i> her, I saw her, as I see you now,&mdash;the
+proud young form with such a depth of grace, in its
+strange repose, and&mdash;where are you going?&mdash;what are
+you doing, Maitland?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mait</i>. Helen Grey!&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mor</i>. You are right. I did not mark that break&mdash;yes&mdash;there
+she lies. Said I right, Maitland?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mait</i>. Helen Grey!&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mor</i>. Maitland! Heavens!&mdash;what a world of anguish
+that tone reveals!&mdash;Why do you stand gazing on that lovely
+sleeper thus?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mait</i>. Bring water. There's a cup at yonder spring.
+Here has been treachery! Devils and fiends have been
+working here against me. We must unclasp this mantle.
+The treasure of the earth lies here.&mdash;Now doth
+mine arm enfold it once, at last. 'Tis sweet, Helen,
+mine own <i>true</i> love; 'tis sweet, even thus.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mor</i>. This letter,&mdash;see&mdash;from those loosened folds it
+just now dropped. This might throw some light, perchance&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mait</i>. Let it be. There's light enough. I want no
+more. Water,&mdash;more water,&mdash;do you see?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mor</i>. Maitland,&mdash;this is vain. Mark this dark spot
+upon her girdle&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mait</i>. Hush, hush,&mdash;there, cover it thus&mdash;'tis nothing,
+Loosen this bonnet&mdash;so&mdash;'twas a firm hand that tied
+that knot; so&mdash;she can breathe now.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mor</i>. How like life, those soft curls burst from their
+loosened pressure! But mark you&mdash;there is no other motion,
+I am sorry to distress you,&mdash;but&mdash;Maitland&mdash;this
+lady is dead.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mait. Dead</i>! Lying hell-hound! <i>Dead</i>! Say that again.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mor</i>. God help you!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mait. Dead</i>! Helen Grey, open these eyes. Here's
+one that, never having seen them, talks of death. Oh
+God! is it thus we meet at last? At last these arms
+are round her, and she knows it not. I look upon her,
+but her eye answers me not. Dead!&mdash;for me? Murdered!&mdash;mine
+own hand hath done it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mor</i>. Why do you start thus?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mait</i>. Hush!&mdash;hush! There!&mdash;again&mdash;that slow
+heavy throb&mdash;again! again!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mor</i>. Good God! she breathes! This is life indeed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mait</i>. (<i>Solemnly</i>.) Ay, thank God. This moment's sweetness is enough.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mor</i>. How like one in troubled sleep she murmurs!
+Mark those tones of sweet and wild entreaty. Listen!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mait</i>. I have heard it again!&mdash;from the buried years
+of love and hope that music came. She is here. 'Tis <i>she</i>.
+This is no marble mockery. She is here! Her
+head is on my bosom. Death cannot rob me of this
+sweetness now.
+</p>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>Talking without</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>A Lady</i>. This way&mdash;I hear their voices. Down this
+pathway&mdash;here they are.
+</p>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>Lady Ackland and Andre enter the Glen</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Lady A</i>. I knew it could not be. They told us she
+was murdered, Maitland. (<i>Starting back</i>.) Ah&mdash;ah&mdash;God
+help thee, Maitland!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mait</i>. Listen, listen. She was speaking but now. There&mdash;again!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Lady A</i>. And this is she! Can the wilderness blossom
+thus? And did God unfold such loveliness&mdash;for a
+waste so cruel?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. (<i>In a low murmur</i>.) We are almost there.
+If we could but pass this glen. Oh God! will they stop
+here? Go on,&mdash;go on. Was not that a white tent I
+saw? Go on. They will not. 'Tis nothing,&mdash;do not weep.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mait</i>. Look at me, Helen.&mdash;Open these eyes. One
+more look&mdash;one more.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Andre</i>. She hears your bidding.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mait</i>. Oh God! Do you see those eyes&mdash;those dim,
+bewildered eyes?&mdash;it is quenched&mdash;quenched. Let her
+lean on you.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Lady A</i>. Gently&mdash;gently, she does not see us yet.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. Oh Mother, I am ill and weary. Here's this
+dream again! Blue sky? and pine-tree boughs? Am I
+here indeed? Yes, I remember now,&mdash;we stood upon
+that cliff&mdash;I am dying. Is there no one here? Whose
+tears are these?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Lady A</i>. Dear child, sweet one, nay, lean on me.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. My mother, oh my mother, come to me. Come,
+Annie, come, come! Strangers all!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mor</i>. Her eye is on him. Hush!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Andre</i>. See in an instant how the light comes flashing
+up from those dim depths again. <i>That</i> is the eye that I
+saw yesterday.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Lady A</i>. That slowly settling smile,&mdash;deeper and
+deeper&mdash;saw you ever any thing so gay, so passing lovely?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. Is it&mdash;is it&mdash;Everard Maitland&mdash;is it <i>thee</i>?
+The living real of my thousand dreams, in the light of
+life doth he stand there now? Doth he? <i>'Tis he!</i>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mait</i>. Helen!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. 'Tis he! That tone's spell builds around me
+its all-sheltering music-walls, and death is nothing. Oh
+God, when at thy dark will dimly revealed, I trembled
+yesterday, I did not think in this most rosy bower to
+meet its fearfulness.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mait</i>. Helen,&mdash;dost thou love me <i>yet</i>?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. Doubter, am I dying here?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mait</i>. 'Tis her own most rich and blessed smile,
+even as of old in mirth it shone upon me. Your murderer,
+you count me then?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. Come hither,&mdash;let me lean on <i>you</i>. Star of
+the wilderness!&mdash;of this life that is fading now, the sun!&mdash;<i>doth</i>
+mine eye see thee, then, at last? Oh! this is
+sweet! On its own holy home my head rests now.
+Everard, in this dark world <i>Love leans on Faith</i>. How
+else, even in God's love and loveliness, could I trust now
+for that strange future on whose bloody threshold I am lying
+here; yes, and in spite of prayers and trust, and struggling
+hopes. And yet&mdash;how beautiful it is&mdash;that love invisible,
+invisible no more. Like glorious sunshine it is
+streaming round me,&mdash;lighting all. The infinite of that
+thy smile hath imaged, as real,&mdash;it beams on me now.
+Have faith, in <i>him</i> I mean; for&mdash;if we meet again&mdash;we'll
+need it then no more; and&mdash;how dim it grows&mdash;nay, let
+me lean on you,&mdash;and&mdash;through <i>this</i> life's darkening
+glass I shall see you no more. Nay, hold me!&mdash;quick!&mdash;where
+art thou?&mdash;Everard!&mdash;He is gone&mdash;gone!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Lady A</i>. Dead!&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mor</i>. She is dead!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Andre</i>. This was Love.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Lady A</i>. See how her eyes are fixed on <i>you</i>. The
+light and love of the vanished soul looks through them
+still. Cruelly hath it been sent thence; and no other
+gleam of its changeful beauty will e'er dawn in them.
+Sadly, oh lovely stranger, I close for ever now these
+dark-fringed lids upon their love and beauty. Yes&mdash;<i>this</i>
+was love!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Andre</i>. And so there was a need-be in its doom. I'll
+ne'er believe <i>that</i> genuine, that is blessed. The fate of
+this life would not suffer it. Ah! if it would, if Heaven
+should leave a gem like that outside her walls, we should
+none of us go thither.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mait</i>. Dead? How beautiful! Yes&mdash;let her lie
+there&mdash;under that lovely canopy. Dead!&mdash;it's a curious
+word&mdash;How comes it that we all stand here? Ha,
+Andre?&mdash;is it you?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Andre</i>. I heard the tale as I crossed just now, from
+an Indian, who was one in the ambuscade this noon&mdash;and
+in the woods on the other side, I found this lady,
+with her attendants, abiding the promise she made you
+last night, to welcome this lovely stranger with her savage
+guides.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mait</i>. Hush, hush. Let it pass. See,&mdash;a bride!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mor</i>. (<i>Aside</i>.) Did he trust her with these murderers?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mait</i>. Ay&mdash;say yes.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Andre</i>. Indeed, Maitland, you wrong yourself. It was
+the treachery of this savage Manida that crossed your
+plans, working the mission of some Higher power,&mdash;as for
+Alaska, you might as soon have doubted me.
+</p>
+<p>
+The Chief he sent for her was one he had known
+years&mdash;but, unfortunately, he was one in the ambuscade
+this morning&mdash;nay, the leader of it; for the murdered Indian
+was his son; and meanwhile amid the fight the
+treacherous Manida, who accompanied him to Maitland's
+tent last night, and heard the promised reward,
+found means to steal from its concealment the letter,
+with which he easily won this trusting lady to accompany him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mor</i>. Ah!&mdash;there it lies.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Andre</i>. It was here in this glen that Alaska, discovering
+the treachery, lay in wait for them with a band of
+chosen warriors, and on that cliff above they fought.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Lady A</i>. (<i>Aside</i>.) And she stood there, amid those
+yelling demons alone! Methinks the angels should have
+come from their unseen dwellings at her prayer. Can
+our humanity's darkest extremity wring no love from the
+invisible?&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Andre</i>. Alaska had regained his charge; but the malignant
+eye, and the deadly arrow of the vanquished Indian
+followed her. She fell, even in the place where you
+found her; for at that same instant a party from the fort
+drove them hence, victor and vanquished. Alaska fled;
+but the murderer, with a tale cunning enough to deceive
+the lover, boldly demanded and obtained the prize.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mor</i>. Mark his changed mien. I would rather see
+tears for a grief like this, than that calm smile with
+which he gazes on her now.
+</p>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>Burgoyne and St. Leger are seen talking in the road above,&mdash;they enter the glen</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Bur</i>. At a crisis like this we might better have lost a
+thousand men in battle! Ah! ah!&mdash;a sight for our enemies,
+Lady Ackland! Where is this Indian?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>St. L</i>. We have sent out for him. No one has seen him as yet.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Bur</i>. Let him be found. Look to it. We will give
+them an example for once. I say, at a crisis like this
+we might better have lost a thousand men in battle,
+for it will turn thousands against us, and rouse the
+slumbering spirit of resistance here, at the very crisis
+when, had it slumbered on a little longer, all was ours.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>St. L</i>. But this was a quarrel among the Indians, and no fault of ours.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Bur</i>. No matter. You will see what Schuyler will
+make of it. His wordy proclamation will have its living
+sequel now. A young and innocent girl, seeking the
+protection of our camp, is inhumanly murdered by Indians
+in our pay. A single tale like this is enough to
+undo at a blow all that we have accomplished here.
+With ten thousand wild aggravations, it will be told in
+every cottage of these borders before to-morrow's sunset.
+</p>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>Another Officer enters hastily</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Off</i>. Here is Arnold, with a thousand men, on the
+brow of the next hill. One of the rebel guard escaped,
+and the news of the massacre here has reached their camp below.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Bur</i>. Said I right?
+</p>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>The three Officers go out together</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Andre</i>. This story is spreading fast, there will be
+throngs here presently. Maitland,&mdash;nay, do not let me
+startle you thus, but&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mait</i>. Is it you? What was it we were saying yesterday?&mdash;we
+should have noted it. This were a picture
+worth your pencilling now. Those silken vestments,&mdash;that
+long, golden hair,&mdash;this youthful shape,&mdash;there's that
+same haughty grace about it, that the smile of these
+thought-lit eyes would disown with every glance. Then
+that letter,&mdash;and the Lady Ackland here,&mdash;Weeping?&mdash;This
+is most strange. I know you all,&mdash;but,&mdash;as I live I
+can't remember how this chanced. How comes it that we
+all stand here? Pearls?&mdash;and white silk?&mdash;a bridal?&mdash;Ha
+ha ha! (<i>Laughing wildly</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Lady A</i>. Take me away. This is too terrible! lean
+stay here no longer. Take me away, Andre.
+</p>
+
+<p align="right">
+[<i>Exeunt Andre and Lady A</i>.
+</p>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>An Officer enters</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>The Officer</i>. We are ordered to withdraw our detachment,
+Captain Maitland. The rebels are just below,
+some two thousand strong, and in no mood to be encountered.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mor</i>. He does not hear you. We must leave that
+murdered lady here, and 'tis vain to think of parting them. Come.
+</p>
+
+<p align="right">
+[<i>Exeunt Mortimer and Officer</i>.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mait</i>. They are gone at last. They are all gone. I
+am alone with my dead bride. I must needs smile&mdash;I
+could not weep when those haughty and prying eyes
+were upon me, but now&mdash;I am alone with my dead bride.&mdash;Helen,
+they are all gone,&mdash;we are alone. How still she
+lies,&mdash;smiling too,&mdash;on that same bank. She will speak,
+surely she will. How lightly those soft lashes lie, as if a
+word would lift them.&mdash;Helen!&mdash;I will be calm and patient
+as a child. This lovely smile is deepening, it will
+melt to words again.&mdash;Hark! that spring,&mdash;that same
+curious murmur! We have checked our sweetest
+words to hear it, we have stood here listening to it, till
+we fancied, in its talk-like tones, wild histories, beautiful
+and sad, the secrets of the woods.&mdash;Oh God!&mdash;and have
+such memories no power here now? In mine ear alone
+doth the spring murmur now. Death! what is't?&mdash;Awake!
+awake,&mdash;by the love that is <i>stronger</i> than
+death,&mdash;awake!&mdash;
+</p>
+<p>
+I thought that scene would shift. It had a heavy,
+dream-like mistiness. <i>This</i> is reality again. <i>These</i>
+are the pine trees that I dreamed of. See! how beautiful!
+With the sharp outline and the vivid hue such as
+our childhood's unworn sense yields, they are waving
+now. Look, Andre, there she sits, the young and radiant
+stranger,&mdash;there, in the golden sunset she is sitting still,
+braiding those flowers,&mdash;see, how the rich life flashes in
+her eye, and yet, just now I dreamed that she was dead,
+and&mdash;and&mdash;Oh my God!
+</p>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>A voice without</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Let go, who stays me?&mdash;where's my sister?
+</p>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>Captain Grey enters</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Grey</i>. Ha! Murderer! art satisfied?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mait</i>. Ay.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Grey</i>. What, do you mock me, Sir?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mait</i>. Let her be. She is mine!&mdash;all mine! my
+love, my bride,&mdash;my <i>bride</i>?&mdash;<i>Murderer</i>?&mdash;Stay!&mdash;Don't
+glare at me! I know you, Sir. I can hurl off
+these mountain shadows yet.&mdash;They'll send some stronger
+devil ere they wrench this hold from me! I know
+you well. What make you here?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Grey</i>. Madness!&mdash;there's little wonder!&mdash;It's the only
+good that Heaven has left for him! My lovely playfellow,&mdash;my
+sister, is it so indeed? Alas! all gently
+lies this hand in mine. There is no angry strength here
+now. Helen!&mdash;Ah! would to God our last words had
+not been in bitterness.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mait</i>. He weeps. I never thought to see tears there.
+List!&mdash;she should not lie there thus. Strange it should
+move you so!&mdash;Think it a picture now. 'Tis but a well-wrought
+painting after all, if one but thinks so. See,&mdash;'tis
+but a sleeping girl, with the red summer light upon
+her cheek, and the slight breeze stirring her golden hair.
+Mark you that shoulder's grace?&mdash;They come.
+</p>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>Leslie, Elliston, and others enter</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Leslie</i>. Oh God, was there none other? My lovely
+cousin, and&mdash;were <i>you</i> the victim? In your bridal glory
+chosen,&mdash;nay, with your heart's holiest law lured to the
+bloody altar! Yet this day's history, and something in
+that calm, high mien, tells me, as freely you had moved
+unto it, though God had spoken by a higher voice, and
+with a martyr's garland beckoned you.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Elliston</i>. Our cause is linked unto that ancient one,
+the cause of Love and Truth; in which Heaven moves
+with unrelenting hand, not sparing its own loveliest
+ones, but unto bloody death freely delivering them.
+</p>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>Grey and Leslie converse apart</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Leslie</i>. Yes&mdash;we will bury her here. 'Tis a fitting
+spot; and unto distant days, this lonely grave, with its
+ever-verdant canopy, shall be even as Love's Shrine.
+Thither, in the calm and smiling summers of those bloodless
+times shall many a fair young pilgrim come, to
+wonder at such love; and living eyes shall weep, and
+living hearts shall heave over its cruel fate, when unto
+her the long-told tale, and all the anguish of this far-off
+day, shall be even as the dim passage of some troubled
+dream. A martyr's garland she hath won indeed; true
+Love's young Martyr there she lies.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Elliston</i>. Yet was that love but the wreathed and glittering
+weapon of a higher doom. In that holy cause,
+whose martyrs strew a thousand fields, truth's, freedom's,
+God's, darkly, by <i>Power Invisible</i> hath this young life
+been offered here.
+</p>
+<p>
+A thousand graves like this, over all this lovely land,
+in lanes and fields, on the lonely hill-side, by the laughing
+stream, and in the depths of many a silent wood, to
+distant days shall speak&mdash;of blood-sealed destinies;
+with voices that no tyrant's power can smother, they
+shall speak.&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Leslie</i>. The light of that chamber window, through
+the soft summer evening will shine here; no mournful
+memory of all the lovely past will it waken. The autumn
+blaze will flicker within those distant walls, and
+gather its pleasant circle again; but <i>she</i> will lie calmly
+here. For ever at her feet the river of her childhood
+shall murmur on, and many a lovely spring-time, like the
+spring-times of her childhood, shall come and go, but no
+yearning hope shall it waken here; the winter shall sing
+through the desolate boughs, and rear its fairy temples
+around her, but nought shall break her dreamless rest.&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mait</i>. Graves! Is it graves they are talking of?
+Will they bury this gay young bride! 'Tis but the
+name; there's nothing sad in it. In the lovely summer
+twilight shall her burial be, and thus; in all her bridal
+array, with the glory of the crimson sunset shining
+through the trees;&mdash;see what a fearful glow is kindling
+on her cheek, and that faint breeze&mdash;or, is it life that stirs
+these curls? Stay!&mdash;whose young brow is this?&mdash;Ha!&mdash;<i>whose</i>
+smile is this? Who is this they would hurry
+away into the darkness of death? The grave! Could
+you fold the rosy and all-speading beauty of heaven in
+the narrow grave? Helen, is it thee?&mdash;my heaven, my
+long-lost heaven; and, even now, but for mine own deed&mdash;Oh
+God! was there no hand but mine?&mdash;but for me&mdash;They
+&mdash;shall not utter it,&mdash;there, thus. There's
+but <i>one</i> cry that could unfold this grief, but that would
+circle the round universe and fill eternity. A sad sight
+this! Is't known who killed this lady, Sir?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Leslie</i>. Of all the wrecks of beautiful humanity that
+strew these paths, we have found none so sad as this!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Elliston</i>. Mark you those groups of soldiers loitering
+on the road-side there?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>An Officer</i>. Curiosity. The regiment that was dismissed
+to-day. They'll be here anon.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Leslie</i>. Ay, let them come.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Off</i>. Look,&mdash;who comes up that winding pathway
+through the trees, with such a swift and stately movement?
+A woman! See how the rude soldiers turn
+aside with awe. Ah, she comes hither.
+</p>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>A voice without</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Where is she?&mdash;stand aside!&mdash;What have you here
+in this dark ring?&mdash;Henry&mdash;nay, let me come.
+</p>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>Mrs. Grey enters the glen</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Grey</i>. For God's sake, Madam, let me lead you hence.
+This is no place for you. Look at this group of men,
+officers, soldiers&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mrs. G</i>. Would you cheat me <i>thus</i>? Is it no place
+for <i>me</i>? What kind of place is't then for her, whose&mdash;Oh
+God!&mdash;think you I do not see that slippered foot, nor
+know whose it is,&mdash;and whose plumed bonnet is it that
+lies crushed there at their feet?&mdash;unhand me, Henry.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Leslie</i>. Nay, let her come,&mdash;'tis best.
+</p>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>She passes swiftly through the parting group</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mrs. G</i>. My daughter!&mdash;<i>Blood</i>? My stricken child
+smile you? No pity was there then? Speak to me, speak!
+Your mother's tears are on your brow, and heed you not?
+Nay, tell me all, my smitten one. This day's dark history
+will you never pour into my ear, that hath treasured so
+often your lightest grief? Alone through that wild anguish
+have you passed, and smile you now? I bade her
+trust in God. Did <i>God</i> see this?
+</p>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>Arnold, and a group of Soldiers, enter the glen</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Arnold</i>. Look there. Ay, ay, look there. You were
+right, Leslie;&mdash;this <i>is</i> better than a battle-field. They'll
+find that this day's work will cost them dear.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mrs. G</i>. Did <i>God</i>, who loves as mothers love their
+babes, see this I Had I been there, with my love, in the
+heavens, could <i>I</i> have given up this innocent and tender
+child a prey to the wild Indians? No!&mdash;and legions of
+pitying angels waiting but my word. No,&mdash;no.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Elliston</i>. Had you been there,&mdash;from that far centre
+whence God's eye sees all, you had beheld what lies in
+darkness here. Forth from this fearful hour you might
+have seen Peace, like a river, flowing o'er the years to
+come; and smiles, ten thousand, thousand smiles, down
+the long ages brightening, sown in this day's tears. Had
+you been there with God's <i>all</i>-pitying eye, the pitying
+legions had waited your word in vain, for once, unto a
+sterner doom, for the world's sake he gave his Son.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mrs. G</i>. Words! Look there. That mother warned
+me yesterday. "<i>Words, words! My own child's
+blood</i>,"&mdash;I <i>see</i> it now.
+</p>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>A group of Soldiers enter</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>A. Soldier</i>. (<i>Whispering</i>.) Who would have thought
+to see tears on <i>his</i> face; look you, Jack Richards.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Another Sol</i>. 'Twas his sister, hush!&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Arnold</i>. Ay, ay, come hither. Look you there!
+Lay down your arms. Seek the royal mercy;&mdash;here it
+is. Your wives, your sisters, and your innocent children;&mdash;let
+them seek the royal shelter;&mdash;it is a safe one. See.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>3d Sol</i>. It was just so in Jersey last winter;&mdash;made
+no difference which side you were.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Arnold</i>. Ask no reasons.&mdash;'Twas in sport may be. 'Tis
+but one, in many such. Shameless tyranny we have
+borne long, and now, for resistance, to red butchery we
+are given over. The sport of lawless soldiers, and savages
+more cruel than the fiends in hell, are we, and the
+gentle beings of our homes;&mdash;but, 'tis the Royal power.
+Lay down your arms.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Soldiers</i>. (<i>Shouting</i>.) <i>No</i>.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Arnold</i>. Nay, nay,&mdash;in its caprice some will be safe,&mdash;it
+may not light on you. See, here's the proclamation.
+(<i>Throwing it among them</i>.) Pardon for rebles.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Soldiers</i>. No&mdash;no. (<i>Shouting</i>.) Away with pardon!&mdash;(<i>Tearing
+the proclamation</i>.) To the death! Freedom for ever!
+</p>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Bride of Fort Edward, by Delia Bacon
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The Bride of Fort Edward
+
+Author: Delia Bacon
+
+Posting Date: October 14, 2012 [EBook #7235]
+Release Date: January, 2005
+First Posted: March 30, 2003
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE BRIDE OF FORT EDWARD ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by David Garcia, Eric Eldred, Charles Franks, and
+the Online Distributed Proofreading Team
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE BRIDE OF FORT EDWARD.
+
+FOUNDED ON
+AN INCIDENT OF THE REVOLUTION
+
+BY DELIA BACON
+
+
+
+
+PREFACE.
+
+I am extremely anxious to guard against any misconception of the
+_design_ of this little work. I therefore take the liberty of apprising
+the reader beforehand, that it is _not_ a _Play_. It was not intended
+for the stage, and properly is not capable of representation. I have
+chosen the form of the DIALOGUE as best suited to my purpose in
+presenting anew the passions and events of a day long buried in the
+past, but it is the dialogue in scenes arranged simply with reference to
+the impressions of the _Reader_, and wholly unadapted to the
+requirements of the actual stage. The plan here chosen, involves
+throughout the repose, the thought, and sentiment of Actual life,
+instead of the hurried action, the crowded plot, the theatrical
+elevation which the Stage necessarily demands of the pure Drama. I have
+only to ask that I may not be condemned for failing to fulfil the
+conditions of a species of writing which I have not attempted.
+
+The story involved in these Dialogues is essentially connected with a
+well-known crisis in our National History; nay, it is itself a portion
+of the historic record, and as such, even with many of its most trifling
+minutiae, is imbedded in our earliest recollections; but it is rather in
+its relation to the _abstract truth_ it embodies,--as exhibiting a law
+in the relation of the human mind to its Invisible protector--the
+apparent sacrifice of the _individual_ in the grand movements for the
+_race_,--it is in this light, rather than as an historical exhibition,
+that I venture to claim for it, as here presented, the indulgent
+attention of my readers.
+
+ THE AUTHOR.
+_New-York, July 7th_, 1839.
+
+
+
+
+
+THE
+
+BRIDE OF FORT EDWARD,
+
+A DRAMATIC STORY.
+
+
+SCENE. _Fort Edward and its vicinity, on the Hudson, near Lake George_.
+
+
+PERSONS INTRODUCED.
+
+_British and American officers and soldiers_.
+
+_Indians employed in the British service_.
+
+ELLISTON--_A religious missionary residing in the adjacent woods_.
+
+GEORGE GREY--_A young American_.
+
+LADY ACKLAND--_Wife of an English Officer_.
+
+MARGARET--_Her maid_.
+
+MRS. GREY--_The widow of a Clergyman residing near Fort Edward_.
+
+HELEN, _and_ ANNIE,--_Her daughters_.
+
+JANETTE--_A Canadian servant_.
+
+_Children, &c_.
+
+_Time included--from the afternoon of one day to the close of the
+following_.
+
+
+
+
+
+ PART
+
+ I. THE CRISIS AND ITS VICTIM
+
+ II. LOVE
+
+ III. FATE
+
+ IV. FULFILMENT
+
+ V. FULFILMENT
+
+ VI. RECONCILIATION
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE BRIDE OF FORT EDWARD.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+PART FIRST.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+INDUCTION.
+
+DIALOGUE I.
+
+
+SCENE. _The road-side on the slope of a wooded hill near Fort Edward.
+ The speakers, two young soldiers,--Students in arms_.
+
+
+_1st Student_. These were the evenings last year, when the bell
+From the old college tower, would find us still
+Under the shady elms, with sauntering step
+And book in hand, or on the dark grass stretched,
+Or lounging on the fence, with skyward gaze
+Amid the sunset warble. Ah! that world,--
+That world we lived in then--where is it now?
+Like earth to the departed dead, methinks.
+
+_2nd Stud_. Yet oftenest, of that homeward path I think,
+Amid the deepening twilight slowly trod,
+And I can hear the click of that old gate,
+As once again, amid the chirping yard,
+I see the summer rooms, open and dark,
+And on the shady step the sister stands,
+Her merry welcome, in a mock reproach,
+Of Love's long childhood breathing. Oh this year,
+This year of blood hath made me old, and yet,
+Spite of my manhood now, with all my heart,
+I could lie down upon this grass and weep
+For those old blessed times, the times of peace again.
+
+_1st Stud_. There will be weeping, Frank, from older eyes,
+Or e'er again that blessed time shall come.
+Hearts strong and glad now, must be broke ere then:
+Wild tragedies, that for the days to come
+Shall faery pastime make, must yet ere then
+Be acted here; ay, with the genuine clasp
+Of anguish, and fierce stabs, not buried in silk robes,
+But in hot hearts, and sighs from wrung souls' depths.
+And they shall walk in light that we have made,
+They of the days to come, and sit in shadow
+Of our blood-reared vines, not counting the wild cost.
+Thus 'tis: among glad ages many,--one--
+In garlands lies, bleeding and bound. Times past,
+And times to come, on ours, as on an altar--
+Have laid down their griefs, and unto us
+Is given the burthen of them all.
+
+_2nd Stud_. And yet,
+See now, how pleasantly the sun shines there
+Over the yellow fields, to the brown fence
+Its hour of golden beauty--giving still.
+And but for that faint ringing from the fort,
+That comes just now across the vale to us,
+And this small band of soldiers planted here,
+I could think this was peace, so calmly there,
+The afternoon amid the valley sleeps.
+
+_1st Stud_. Yet in the bosom of this gentle time,
+The crisis of an age-long struggle heaves.
+
+_2nd Stud_. _Age-long?_--Why, this land's history can scarce
+Be told in ages, yet.
+
+_1st Stud_. But this war's can.
+In that small isle beyond the sea, Francis,
+Ages, ages ago, its light first blazed.
+This is the war. Old, foolish, blind prerogative,
+In ermines wrapped, and sitting on king's thrones;
+Against young reason, in a peasant's robe
+His king's brow hiding. For the infant race
+Weaves for itself the chains its manhood scorns,
+(When time hath made them adamant, alas!--)
+The reverence of humanity, that gold
+Which makes power's glittering round, ordained of God
+But for the lovely majesty of right,
+Unto a mad usurper, yielding, all,
+Making the low and lawless will of man
+Vicegerent of that law and will divine,
+Whose image only, reason hath, on earth.
+This is the struggle:--_here_, we'll fight it out.
+'Twas all too narrow and too courtly _there_;
+In sight of that old pageantry of power
+We were, in truth, the children of the past,
+Scarce knowing our own time: but here, we stand
+In nature's palaces, and we are _men_;--
+Here, grandeur hath no younger dome than this;
+And now, the strength which brought us o'er the deep,
+Hath grown to manhood with its nurture here,--
+Now that they heap on us abuses, that
+Had crimsoned the first William's cheek, to name,--
+We're ready now--for our last grapple with blind power.
+
+ [_Exeunt_.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+
+
+DIALOGUE II.
+
+SCENE. _The same. A group of ragged soldiers in conference_.
+
+
+_1st Soldier_. I am flesh and blood myself, as well as the rest of you,
+but there is no use in talking. What the devil would you do?--You may
+talk till dooms-day, but what's to hinder us from serving our time
+out?--and that's three months yet. Ay, there's the point. Show me that.
+
+_2nd Sol_. Three months! Ha, thank Heaven mine is up to-morrow; and,
+I'll tell you what, boys, before the sun goes down to-morrow night, you
+will see one Jack Richards trudging home,--trudging home, Sirs! None of
+your bamboozling, your logic, and your figures. A good piece of bread
+and butter is the figure for me. But you should hear the Colonel,
+though, as the time draws nigh. Lord! you'd think I was the General at
+least. Humph, says I.
+
+_3d Sol_. Ay, ay,--feed you on sugar-candy till they get you to sign,
+and then comes the old shoes and moccasins.----
+
+_2nd Sol_. And that's true enough, Ned. I've eaten myself, no less than
+two very decent pair in the service. I'll have it out of Congress yet
+though, I'll be hanged if I don't. None of your figures for me! I say,
+boys, I am going home.
+
+_1st Sol_. Well, go home, and--can't any body else breathe? Why don't
+you answer me, John?--What would you have us do?--
+
+_4th Sol_. Ask Will Wilson there.
+
+_1st Sol_. Will?--Where is he?
+
+_4th Sol_. There he stands, alongside of the picket there, his hands in
+his pockets, whistling, and looking as wise as the dragon. Mind you,
+there's always something pinching at the bottom of that same whistle,
+though its such a don't-care sort of a whistle too. Ask Will, he'll tell
+you.
+
+_3d Sol_. Ay, Will has been to the new quarters to-day. See, he's coming
+this way.
+
+_5th Sol_. And he saw Striker there, fresh from the Jerseys, come up
+along with that new General there, yesterday.
+
+_3d Sol_. General Arnold?
+
+_5th Sol_. Ay, ay, General Arnold it is.
+
+_6th Sol_. [_Advancing_.] I say, boys----
+
+_4th Sol_. What's the matter, Will?
+
+_6th Sol_. Do you want to know what they say below?
+
+_All_. Ay, ay, what's the news?
+
+_6th Sol_. All up there, Sirs. A gone horse!--and he that turns his coat
+first, is the best fellow.
+
+_4th Sol_. No?
+
+_6th Sol_. And shall I tell you what else they say?
+
+_4th Sol_. Ay.
+
+_6th Sol_. Shall I?
+
+_All_. Ay, ay. What is it?
+
+_6th Sol_. That we are a cowardly, sneaking, good-for-nothing pack of
+poltroons, here in the north. There's for you! There's what you get for
+your pains, Sirs. And for the rest, General Schuyler is to be disgraced,
+and old Gates is to be set over us again, and----no matter for the rest.
+See here, boys. Any body coming? See here.
+
+_3d Sol_. What has he got there?
+
+_2nd Sol_. The Proclamation! The Proclamation! Will you be good enough
+to let me see if there is not a picture there somewhere, with an Indian
+and a tomahawk?
+
+_6th Sol_. Now, Sirs, he that wants a new coat, and a pocket full of
+money--
+
+_3d Sol_. That's me fast enough.
+
+_2nd Sol_. If he had mentioned a shirt-sleeve now, or a rim to an old
+hat--
+
+_4th Sol_. Or a bit of a crown, or so.
+
+_6th Sol_. He that wants a new coat--get off from my toes, you
+scoundrel.
+
+_All_. Let's see. Let's see. Read--read.
+
+_7th Sol_. (_Spouting_.) "And he that don't want his house burned over
+his head, and his wife and children, or his mother and sisters, as the
+case may be, butchered or eaten alive before his eyes--"
+
+_3d Sol_. Heavens and earth! It 'ant so though, Wilson, is it?
+
+_7th Sol_. "Is required to present himself at the said village of
+Skeensborough, on or before the 20th day of August next.
+Boo--boo--boo--Who but I. Given under my hand."--If it is not _it_--it
+is something very like it, I can tell you, Sirs. I say, boys, the old
+rogue wants his neck wrung for insulting honest soldiers in that
+fashion; and I say that you--for shame, Will Willson.
+
+_4th Sol_. Hush!--the Colonel!--Hush!
+
+_2nd Sol_. And who is that proud-looking fellow, by his side?
+
+_4th Sol_. Hush! General Arnold. He's a sharp one--roll it up--roll it up.
+
+_6th Sol_. Get out,--you are rumpling it to death.
+
+ (_Two American officers are seen close at hand, in a bend
+ of the ascending road; the soldiers enter the woods_.)
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+
+
+DIALOGUE III.
+
+SCENE. _The same_.
+
+
+_1st Officer_. I cannot conceal it from you, Sir; there is but one
+feeling about it, as far as I can judge, and I had some chances in my
+brief journey--
+
+_2nd Off_. Were you at head-quarters?
+
+_1st Off_. Yes,--and every step of this retreating army only makes it
+more desperate. I never knew any thing like the mad, unreasonable terror
+this army inspires. Burgoyne and his Indians!--"_Burgoyne and the
+Indians_"--there is not a girl on the banks of the Connecticut that does
+not expect to see them by her father's door ere day-break. Colonel
+Leslie, what were those men concealing so carefully as we approached
+just now?--Did you mark them?
+
+_2nd Off_. Yes. If I am not mistaken, it was the paper we were speaking of.
+
+_1st Off_. Ay, ay,--I thought as much.
+
+_2nd Off_. General Arnold, I am surprised you should do these honest men
+the injustice to suppose that such an impudent, flimsy, bombastic tirade
+as that same proclamation of Burgoyne's, should have a feather's weight
+with any mother's son of them.
+
+_Arnold_. A feather's, ay a feather's, just so; but when the scales are
+turning, a feather counts too, and that is the predicament just now of
+more minds than you think for, Colonel Leslie. A pretty dark horizon
+around us just now, Sir,--another regiment goes off to-morrow, I hear.
+Hey?
+
+_Leslie_. Why, no. At least we hope not. We think we shall be able to
+keep them yet, unless--that paper might work some mischief with them
+perhaps, and it would be rather a fatal affair too, I mean in the way of
+example.--These Green Mountain Boys----
+
+_Arnold_. Colonel Leslie, Colonel Leslie, this army is melting away like
+a snow-wreath. There's no denying it. Your General misses it. The news
+of one brave battle would send the good blood to the fingers' ends from
+ten thousand chilled hearts; no matter how fearful the odds; the better,
+the better,--no matter how large the loss;--for every slain soldier, a
+hundred better would stand on the field;----
+
+_Leslie_. But then----
+
+_Arnold_. By all that's holy, Sir, if I were head here, the red blood
+should smoke on this grass ere to-morrow's sunset. I would have battle
+here, though none but the birds of the air were left to carry the tale
+to the nation. I tell you, Colonel Leslie, a war, whose resources are
+only in the popular feeling, as now, and for months to come, this war's
+must be; a war, at least, which depends wholly upon the _unselfishness_
+of a people, as this war does, can be kept alive by excitement only. It
+was wonderful enough indeed, to behold a whole people, the low and
+comfort-loving too, in whose narrow lives that little world which the
+sense builds round us, takes such space, forsaking the tangible good of
+their merry firesides, for rags and wretchedness,--poverty that the
+thought of the citizen beggar cannot reach,--the supperless night on the
+frozen field; with the news perchance of a home in ashes, or a murdered
+household, and, last of all, on some dismal day, the edge of the sword
+or the sharp bullet ending all;--and all in defence of--what?--an
+idea--an abstraction,--a thought:--I say this was wonderful enough, even
+in the glow of the first excitement. But now that the Jersey winter is
+fresh in men's memories, and Lexington and Bunker Hill are forgotten,
+and all have found leisure and learning to count the cost; it were
+expecting miracles indeed, to believe that this army could hold together
+with a policy like this. Every step of this retreat, I say again, treads
+out some lingering spark of enthusiasm. Own it yourself. Is not this
+army dropping off by hundreds, and desertion too, increasing every hour,
+thinning your own ranks and swelling your foes?--and that, too, at a
+crisis--Colonel Leslie, retreat a little further, some fifty miles
+further; let Burgoyne once set foot in Albany, and the business is
+done,--we may roll up our pretty declaration as fast as we please, and
+go home in peace.
+
+_Leslie_. General Arnold, I have heard you to the end, though you have
+spoken insultingly of councils in which I have had my share. Will you
+look at this little clause in this paper, Sir. The excitement you speak
+of will come ere long, and that at a rate less ruinous than this whole
+army's loss. There's a line--there's a line, Sir, that will make null
+and void, very soon, if not on the instant, all the evil of these golden
+promises. There'll be excitement enough ere long; but better blood than
+that shed in battle fields must flow to waken it.
+
+_Arnold_. I hardly understand you, Sir. Is it this threat you point at?
+
+_Leslie_. Can't you see?--They have let loose these hell-hounds upon us,
+and butchery must be sent into our soft and innocent homes;--beings that
+we have sheltered from the air of heaven, brows that have grown pale at
+the breath of an ungentle word, must meet the red knife of the Indian
+now. Oh God, this is war!
+
+_Arnold_. I understand you, Colonel Leslie. There was a crisis like this
+in New Jersey last winter, I know, when our people were flocking to the
+royal standard, as they are now, and a few fiendish outrages on the part
+of the foe changed the whole current in our favor. It may be so now, but
+meanwhile--
+
+_Leslie_. Meanwhile, this army is the hope of the nation, and must be
+preserved. We are wronged, Sir. Have we not done all that men could do?
+What were twenty pitched battles to such an enemy, with a force like
+ours, compared with the harm we have done them? Have we not kept them
+loitering here among these hills, wasting the strength that was meant to
+tell in the quivering fibres of men, on senseless trees and stones,
+paralyzing them with famine, wearying them with unexciting, inglorious
+toil, until, divided and dispirited, at last we can measure our power
+with theirs, and fight, not in vain? Why, even now the division is
+planning there, which will bring them to our feet. And what to us, Sir,
+were the hazards of one bloody encounter, to the pitiful details of this
+unhonored warfare?--We are wronged--we are wronged, Sir.
+
+_Arnold_. There is some policy in the plan you speak of,--certainly,
+there is excellent policy in it if one had the patience to follow it
+out; but then you can't make Congress see it, or the people either; and
+so, after all, your General is superseded. Well, well, at all events he
+must abandon this policy now,--it's the only chance left for him.
+
+_Leslie_. Why; howso?
+
+_Arnold_. Or else, don't you see?--just at the point where the glory
+appears, this eastern hero steps in, and receives it all; and the
+laurels which he has been rearing so long, blow just in time to drop on
+the brow of his rival.
+
+_Leslie_. General Arnold,--excuse me, Sir--you do not understand the man
+of whom you speak. There is a substance in the glory he aims at, to
+which, all that you call by the name is as the mere shell and outermost
+rind. Good Heavens! Do you think that, for the sake of his own
+individual fame, the man would risk the fate of this great
+enterprize?--What a mere fool's bauble, what an empty shell of honor,
+would that be. If I thought he would--
+
+_Arnold_. It might be well for you to lower your voice a little, Sir;
+the gentleman of whom you are speaking is just at hand.
+
+[_Other officers are seen emerging from the woods_.]
+
+_3d Off_. Yes, if this rumor holds, Lieutenant Van Vechten, your post is
+likely to become one of more honor than safety. Gentlemen--Ha!--General
+Arnold! You are heartily welcome;--I have been seeking you, Sir. If this
+news is any thing, the movement that was planned for Wednesday, we must
+anticipate somewhat.
+
+_Leslie_. News from the enemy, General?
+
+_Gen. Schuyler_. Stay--those scouts must be coming in, Van Vechten. Why,
+we can scarce call it news yet, I suppose; but if this countryman's tale
+is true, Burgoyne himself, with his main corps, is encamping at this
+moment at the Mills, scarce three miles above us.
+
+_Arnold_. Ay, and good news too.
+
+_Leslie_. But that cannot be, Sir--Alaska--
+
+_Gen. Schuyler_. Alaska has broken faith with us if it is, and the army
+have avoided the delay we had planned for them.--That may be.--This man
+overheard their scouts in the woods just below us here.
+
+_Arnold_. And if it is,--do you talk of retreat, General Schuyler? In
+your power now it lies, with one hour's work perchance, to make those
+lying enemies of yours in Congress eat the dust, to clear for ever your
+blackened fame. Why, Heaven itself is interfering to do you right, and
+throwing honor in your way as it were! Do you talk of retreat, Sir, now?
+
+_Gen. Schuyler_. Heaven has other work on hand just now, than righting
+the wrongs of such heroes as you and I, Sir. Colonel Arnold--I beg your
+pardon, Sir, Congress has done you justice at last I see,--General
+Arnold, you are right as to the consequence, yet, for all that, if this
+news is true, I must order the retreat. My reputation I'll trust in
+God's hands. My honor is in my own keeping.
+
+ [_Exeunt Schuyler, Leslie, and Van Vechten_.
+
+_Arnold_. There's a smoke from that chimney; are those houses inhabited,
+my boy?
+
+_Boy_. Part of them, Sir. Some of our people went oft to-day. That white
+house by the orchard--the old parsonage there? Ay, there are ladies
+there Sir, but I heard Colonel Leslie saying this morning 'twas a sin
+and a shame for them to stay another hour.
+
+_Arnold_. Ay, Ay. I fancied the Colonel was not dealing in abstractions
+just now.
+
+ [_Exeunt_.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+
+
+DIALOGUE IV.
+
+SCENE. _A room in the Parsonage,--an old-fashioned summer parlor.---On
+ the side a door and windows opening into an orchard, in front,
+ a yard filled with shade trees. The view beyond bounded by a
+ hill partly wooded. A young girl, in the picturesque costume of
+ the time, lies sleeping on the antique sofa. Annie sits by a
+ table, covered with coarse needlework, humming snatches of songs
+ as she works_.
+
+
+_Annie_, (_singing_.)
+
+ _Soft peace spreads her wings and flies weeping away.
+ Soft peace spreads her wings and flies weeping away.
+ And flies weeping away.
+ The red cloud of war o'er our forest is scowling,
+ Soft peace spreads her wings and flies weeping away.
+ Come blow the shrill bugle, the war dogs are howling,
+ Already they eagerly snuff out their prey--
+ The red cloud of war--the red cloud of war_--
+
+
+Yes, let me see now,--with a little plotting this might make two--two,
+at least,--and then--
+
+ _The red cloud of war o'er our forest is scowling,
+ Soft peace spreads her wings and flies weeping away,
+ The infants affrighted cling close to their mothers,
+ The youths grasp their swords, and for combat prepare;
+ While beauty weeps fathers, and lovers, and brothers,
+ Who are gone to defend_--
+
+
+--Alas! what a golden, delicious afternoon is blowing without there,
+wasting for ever; and never a glimpse of it. Delicate work this! Here's
+a needle might serve for a genuine stiletto! No matter,--it is the
+cause,--it is the cause that makes, as my mother says, each stitch in
+this clumsy fabric a grander thing than the flashing of the bravest
+lance that brave knight ever won.
+
+(_Singing_)
+ _The brooks are talking in the dell,
+ Tul la lul, tul la lul,
+ The brooks are talking low, and sweet,
+ Under the boughs where th' arches meet;
+ Come to the dell, come to the dell,
+ Oh come, come_.
+
+ _The birds are singing in the dell,
+ Wee wee whoo, wee wee whoo;
+ The birds are singing wild and free,
+ In every bough of the forest tree,
+ Come to the dell, come to the dell,
+ Oh come, come_.
+
+ _And there the idle breezes lie,
+ Whispering, whispering,
+ Whispering with the laughing leaves.
+ And nothing says each idle breeze,
+ But come, come, come, O lady come,
+ Come to th' dell_.
+
+[_Mrs. Grey enters from without_.]
+
+_Mrs. G_. Do not sing, Annie.
+
+_Annie_. Crying would better befit the times, I know,--Dear mother, what
+is this?
+
+_Mrs. G_. Hush,--asleep--is she?
+
+_Annie_. This hour, and quiet as an infant. Need enough there was of it
+too. See, what a perfect damask mother!
+
+_Mrs. G_. Draw the curtain on that sunshine there. This sleep has
+flushed her. Ay, a painter might have dropped that golden hair,--yet
+this delicate beauty is but the martyr's wreath now, with its fine nerve
+and shrinking helplessness. No, Annie; put away your hat, my love,--you
+cannot go to the lodge to-night.
+
+_Annie_. Mother?
+
+_Mrs. G_. You cannot go to the glen to-night. This is no time for idle
+pleasure, God knows.
+
+_Annie_. Why, you have been weeping in earnest, and your cheek is
+pale.--And now I know where that sad appointment led you. Is it over?
+That it should be in our humanity to bear, what in our ease we cannot,
+_cannot_ think of!
+
+_Mrs. G_. Harder things for humanity are there than bodily anguish,
+sharp though it be. It was not the boy,--the mother's anguish, I wept
+for, Annie.
+
+_Annie_. Poor Endross! And he will go, to his dying day, a crippled
+thing. But yesterday I saw him springing by so proudly! And the
+mother----
+
+_Mrs. G_. "_Words, words_," she answered sternly when I tried to comfort
+her; "ay, words are easy. _Wait till you see your own child's blood_.
+Wait till you stand by and see his young limbs hewn away, and the groans
+come thicker and thicker that you cannot soothe; and then let them prate
+to you of the good cause." Bitter words! God knows what is in store for
+us;--all day this strange dread has clung to me.
+
+_Annie_. Dear mother, is not this the superstition you were wont to
+chide?
+
+_Mrs. G_. Ay, ay, we should have been in Albany ere this. In these wild
+times, Annie, every chance-blown straw that points at evil, is likely to
+prove a faithful index; and if it serve to nerve the heart for it, we
+may call it heaven-sent indeed. Annie,--hear me calmly, my child,--the
+enemy, so at least goes the rumor, are nearer than we counted on this
+morning, and--hush, not a word.
+
+_Annie_. She is but dreaming. Just so she murmured in her sleep last
+night; twice she waked me with the saddest cry, and after that she sat
+all night by the window in her dressing-gown, I could not persuade her
+to sleep again. Tell me, mother, you say _and_--and what?
+
+_Mrs. G_. I cannot think it true, 'tis rumored though, that these savage
+neighbors of ours have joined the enemy.
+
+_Annie_. No! no! Has Alaska turned against us? Why, it was but yesterday
+I saw him with Leslie in yonder field. 'Tis false; it must be. Surely he
+could not harm us.
+
+_Mrs. G_. And false, I trust it is. At least till it is proved
+otherwise, Helen must not hear of it.
+
+_Annie_. And why?
+
+_Mrs. Grey_. She needs no caution, and it were useless to add to the
+idle fear with which she regards them all, already. Some dark fancy
+possesses her to-day; I have marked it myself.
+
+_Annie_. It is just two years to-morrow, mother, since Helen's wedding
+day, or rather, that sad day that should have seen her bridal; and it
+cannot be that she has quite forgotten Everard Maitland. Alas, he seemed
+so noble!
+
+_Mrs. G_. Hush! Never name him. Your sister is too high-hearted to waste
+a thought on him. Tory! Helen is no love-lorn damsel, child, to pine for
+an unworthy love. See the rose on that round cheek,--it might teach that
+same haughty loyalist, could he see her now, what kind of hearts 'tis
+that we patriots wear, whose strength they think to trample. Where are
+you going, Annie?
+
+_Annie_. Not beyond the orchard-wall. I will only stroll down the path
+here, just to breathe this lovely air a little; indeed, there's no fear
+of my going further now.
+
+ [_Exit_.
+
+_Mrs. G_. Did I say right, Helen? It cannot be feigned. Those quick
+smiles, with their thousand lovely meanings; those eyes, whose beams
+lead straight to the smiling soul. Principle is it? There is no
+principle in this, but joy, or else it strikes so deep, that the joy
+grows up from it, genuine, not feigned; and yet I have found her weeping
+once or twice of late, in unexplained agony. Helen!
+
+_Helen_. Oh mother! is it you? Thank God. I thought----
+
+_Mrs. G_. What did you think? What moves you thus?
+
+_Helen_. I thought--'tis nothing. This _is_ very strange.
+
+_Mrs. G_. Why do you look through that window thus? There's no one
+there! What is it that's so strange?
+
+_Helen_. Is it to-morrow that we go?
+
+_Mrs. G_. To Albany? Why, no; on Thursday. You are bewildered, Helen!
+surely you could not have forgotten that.
+
+_Helen_. I wish it was to-day. I do.
+
+_Mrs. G_. My child, yesterday, when the question was debated here, and
+wishing might have been of some avail, 'tis true you did not say much,
+but I thought, and so we all did, that you chose to stay.
+
+_Helen_. Did you? Mother, does the road to Albany wind over a hill like
+that?
+
+_Mrs. G_. Like what, Helen?
+
+_Helen_. Like yonder wooded hill, where the soldiers are stationed now?
+
+_Mrs. G_. Not that I know of? Why?
+
+_Helen_. Perhaps we may cross that very hill,--no--could we?
+
+_Mrs. G_. Not unless we should turn refugees, my love; an event of which
+there is little danger just now, I think. That road, as indeed you know
+yourself, leads out directly to the British camp.
+
+_Helen_. Yes--yes--it does. I know it does. I will not yield to it. 'Tis
+folly, all.
+
+_Mrs. G_. You talk as though you were dreaming still; my child. Put on
+your hat, and go into the garden for a little, the air is fresh and
+pleasant now; or take a ramble through the orchard if you will, you
+might meet Annie there,--no, yon she comes, and well too. It's quite
+time that I were gone again. I wish that we had nothing worse than
+dreams on hand. Helen, I must talk with you about these fancies; you
+must not thus unnerve yourself for real evil.
+
+ [_Exit_.
+
+_Helen_. It were impossible,--it could not be!--how could it be?--Oh!
+these are wild times. Unseen powers are crossing their meshes here
+around us,--and, what am I--Powers?--there's but one Power, and that--
+
+ ----"He careth for the little bird,
+ Far in the lone wood's depths, and though dark weapons
+ And keen eyes are out, it falleth not
+ But at his will."
+
+ [_Exit_.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+PART SECOND
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LOVE
+
+ * * * * *
+
+DIALOGUE I.
+
+SCENE. _A little glen in the woods near Fort Edward. A young British
+ Officer appears, attended by a soldier in the American uniform;
+ the latter with a small sealed pacquet in his hand_.
+
+
+_Off_. Hist!
+
+_Sol_. Well, so I did; but----
+
+_Off_. Hist, I say!
+
+_Sol_. A squirrel it is, Sir; there he sits.
+
+_Off_. By keeping this path you avoid the picket on the hill. It will
+bring you out where these woods skirt the vale, and scarcely a hundred
+rods from the house itself.
+
+[_Calling without_.]
+
+_Sol_. Captain Andre--Sir.
+
+_Off_. It were well that the pacquet should fall into no other hands.
+With a little caution there is no danger. It will be twilight ere you
+get out of these woods--
+
+_Sol_. I beg your pardon, Sir; but here is that young Indian guide of
+mine, after all, above there, beckoning me.
+
+_Off_. Stay--you will come back to the camp ere midnight?
+
+_Sol_. Unless some of these quick-eyed rebels see through my disguise.
+
+_Off_. Do not forget the lodge as you return. A little hut of logs just
+in the edge of the woods, but Siganaw knows it well.
+
+ [_Exit the Soldier_.
+
+ (_The call in the thicket above is repeated, and another
+ young officer enters the glen_.)
+
+_2nd Off_. Hillo, Maitland! These woods yield fairies,--come this way.
+
+_1st Off_. For God's sake, Andre! (_motioning silence_.) Are you mad?
+
+_Andre_. Well, who are they?
+
+_Mait_. _Who_? Have you forgotten that we are on the enemy's ground?
+Soldiers from the fort, no doubt. They have crossed that opening twice
+since we stood here.
+
+_Andre_. Well, let them cross twice more. I would run the risk of a
+year's captivity, at least, for one such glimpse. Nay, come, she will be
+gone.
+
+_Mait_. Stay,--not yet. There, again!
+
+_Andre_. Such a villainous scratching as I got in that pass just now. It
+must have cost the rogues an infinite deal of pains though. A regular,
+handsome sword-cut is nothing to a dozen of these same ragged scratches,
+that a man can't swear about. After all, Captain Maitland, these cunning
+Yankees understand the game. They will keep out of our way, slyly
+enough, until we are starved, and scratched, and fretted down to their
+proportions, meanwhile they league the very trees against us.
+
+_Mait_. As to that, we have made some leagues ourselves, I think, quite
+as hard to be defended, Sir.
+
+_Andre_. It may be so. Should we not be at the river by this?
+
+_Mait_. Sunset was the time appointed. We are as safe here, till then.
+
+_Andre_. 'Tis a little temple of beauty you have lighted on, in truth.
+These pretty singers overhead, seem to have no guess at our hostile
+errand. Methinks their peaceful warble makes too soft a welcome for such
+warlike comers. Hark! [_Whistling_.] That's American. One might win
+bloodless laurels here. Will you stand a moment just as you are,
+Maitland;--'tis the very thing. There's a little space in my unfinished
+picture, and with that _a la Kemble_ mien, you were a fitting mate for
+this young Dian here, (_taking a pencil sketch from his
+portfolio_,)--the beauty-breathing, ay, beauty-breathing, it's no
+poetry;--for the lonesome little glen smiled to its darkest nook with
+her presence.
+
+_Mait_. What are you talking of, Andre? Fairies and goddesses!--What next?
+
+_Andre_. I am glad you grow a little curious at last. Why I say, and
+your own eyes may make it good if you will, that just down in this glen
+below here, not a hundred rods hence, there sits, or stands, or did some
+fifteen minutes since, some creature of these woods, I suppose it is;
+what else could it be? Well, well, I'll call no names, since they offend
+you, Sir; but this I'll say, a young cheek and smiling lip it had,
+whate'er it was, and round and snowy arm, and dimpled hand, that lay
+ungloved on her sylvan robe, and eyes--I tell you plainly, they lighted
+all the glen.
+
+_Mait_. Ha? A lady?--there? Are you in earnest?
+
+_Andre_. A lady, well you would call her so perchance. Such ladies used
+to spring from the fairy nut-shells, in the old time, when the kings'
+son lacked a bride; and if this were Windsor forest that stretches about
+us here, I might fancy, perchance, some royal one had wandered out, to
+cool the day's glow in her cheek, and nurse her love-dream; but here, in
+this untrodden wilderness, unless your ladies here spring up like
+flowers, or drop down on invisible pinions from above, how, in the name
+of reason, came she here?
+
+_Mait_. On the invisible pinions of thine own lady-loving fancy; none
+otherwise, trust me.
+
+_Andre_. Come, come,--see for yourself. On my word I was a little
+startled though, as my eye first lighted on her, suddenly, in that
+lonesome spot. There she sat, so bright and still, like some creature of
+the leaves and waters, such as the old Greeks fabled, that my first
+thought was to worship her; my next--of you, but I could not leave the
+spot until I had sketched this; I stood unseen, within a yard of her;
+for I could see her soft breath stirring the while. See, the scene
+itself was a picture,--the dark glen, the lonesome little lodge, on the
+very margin of the fairy lake--here she sat, motionless as marble; this
+bunch of roses had dropped from her listless hand, and you would have
+thought some tragedy of ancient sorrow, were passing before her, in the
+invisible element, with such a fixed and lofty sadness she gazed into
+it. But of course, of course, it is nothing to _your_ eye; for me, it
+will serve to bring the whole out at my leisure. Indeed, the air, I
+think, I have caught a little as it is.
+
+_Mait_. A little--you may say it. She is there, is she?--sorrowful;
+well, what is't to me?
+
+_Andre_. What do you say?--There?--Yes, I left her there at least. Come,
+come. I'll show you one will teach you to unlearn this fixed contempt of
+gentle woman. Come.
+
+_Mait_. Let go, if you please, Sir. She who gave me my first lesson in
+that art, is scarcely the one to bid me now unlearn it, and I want no
+new teaching as yet, thank Heaven. Will you come? We have loitered here
+long enough, I think.
+
+_Andre_. What, under the blue scope--what the devil ails you, Maitland?
+
+_Mait_. Nothing, nothing. This much I'll say to you,--_that lady is my
+wife_.
+
+_Andre_. Nonsense!
+
+_Mait_. There lacked--three days, I think it was, three whole days, to
+the time when the law would have given her that name; but for all that,
+was she mine, and is; Heaven and earth cannot undo it.
+
+_Andre_. Are you in earnest? Why, are we not here in the very heart of a
+most savage wilderness, where never foot of man trod before,--unless you
+call these wild red creatures men?
+
+_Mait_. You talk wildly; that path, followed a few rods further, would
+have brought you out within sight of her mother's door.
+
+_Andre_. Ha! you have been in this wilderness then, ere now?
+
+_Mait_. Have you forgotten the fortune I wasted once on a summer's seat,
+some few miles up, on the lake above? These Yankees did me the grace to
+burn it, just as the war broke out.
+
+_Andre_. Ay, ay, that was _here_. I had forgotten the whereabouts. Those
+blackened ruins we passed last evening, perchance;--and the lady--my
+wood-nymph, what of her?
+
+_Mait_. Captain Andre, I beg your pardon, Sir. That sketch of yours
+reminded me, by chance perhaps, of one with whom some painful passages
+of my life are linked; and I said, in my haste, what were better left
+unsaid. Do me the favor not to remind me that I have done so.
+
+_Andre_. So--so! And I am to know nothing more of this smiling
+apparition; nay, not so much as to speak her name? Consider, Maitland, I
+am your friend it is true; but, prithee, consider the human in me. Give
+her a local habitation, or at least a name.
+
+_Mait_. I have told you already that the lady you speak of resides not
+far hence. On the border of these woods you may see her home. I may
+point it out to you securely, some few days hence;--to-night, unless you
+would find yourself in the midst of the American army, this must content
+you.
+
+_Andre_. A wild risk for a creature like that! Have these Americans no
+safer place to bestow their daughters than the fastnesses of this
+wilderness?
+
+_Mait_. It would seem so. Yet it is her home. Wild as it looks here,
+from the top of that hill, where our men came out on the picket just now
+so suddenly, you will see as fair a picture of cultured life as e'er
+your eyes looked on. No English horizon frames a lovelier one.
+
+_Andre_. _Here_? No!
+
+_Mait_. Between that hill and the fort, there stretches a wide and
+beautiful plain, covered with orchards and meadows to the wood's edge;
+and here and there a gentle swell, crowned with trees, some patch of the
+old wilderness. The infant Hudson winds through it, circling in its
+deepest bend one little fairy isle, with woods enough for a single
+bower, and a beauty that fills and characterizes, to its remotest line,
+the varied landscape it centres; and far away in the east, this same
+azure mountain-chain we have traced so long, with its changeful light
+and shade, finishes the scene.
+
+_Andre_. You should have been a painter, Maitland.
+
+_Mait_. The first time I beheld it--one summer evening it was, from the
+woods on the hill's brow;--we were a hunting party, I had lost my way,
+and ere I knew it there I stood;--its waters lay glittering in the
+sunset light, and the window-panes of its quiet dwellings were flashing
+like gold,--the old brown houses looked out through the trees like so
+many lighted palaces; and even the little hut of logs, nestling on the
+wood's edge, borrowed beauty from the hour. I was miles from home; but
+the setting sun could not warn me away from such a paradise, for so it
+seemed, set in that howling wilderness, and----
+
+_Andre_. Prithee, go on. I listen.
+
+_Mait_. I know not how it was, but as I wandered slowly down the shady
+road, for the first time in years of worldliness, the dream that had
+haunted my boyhood revived again. Do you know what I mean, Andre?--that
+dim yearning for lovelier beings and fairer places, whose ideals lie in
+the heaven-fitted mind, but not in the wilderness it wakes in; that
+mystery of our nature, that overlooked as it is, and trampled with
+unmeaning things so soon, hides, after all, the whole secret of this
+life's dark enigma.
+
+_Andre_. But see,--our time is well-nigh gone,--this is philosophy--I
+would have heard a love tale.
+
+_Mait_. It was then, that near me, suddenly I heard the voice that made
+this dull, real world, thenceforth a richer place for me than the
+gorgeous dream-land of childhood was of old.
+
+_Andre_. Ay, ay--go on.
+
+_Mait_. Andre, did you ever meet an eye, in which the intelligence of
+our nature idealized, as it were, the very poetry of human thought
+seemed to look forth?
+
+_Andre_. One such.
+
+_Mait_.--That reflected your whole being; nay, revealed from its
+mysterious depths, new consciousness, that yet seemed like a faint
+memory, the traces of some old and pleasant dream?
+
+_Andre_. Methinks the heavenly revelation itself doth that.
+
+_Mait_. Such an eye I saw then shining on me. A clump of stately pines
+grew on the sloping road-side, and, looking into its dark embrasure, I
+beheld a group of merry children around a spring that gurgled out of the
+hillside there, and among them, there sat a young girl clad in white,
+her hat on the bank beside her, tying a wreath of wild flowers. That was
+all--that was all, Andre.
+
+_Andre_. Well, she was beautiful, I suppose? Nay, if it was the damsel I
+met just now I need not ask.
+
+_Mait_. Beautiful? Ay, they called her so. _Beauty_ I had seen before;
+but from that hour the sun shone with another light, and the very dust
+and stones of this dull earth were precious to me. _Beautiful?_ Nay, it
+was _she_. I knew her in an instant, the spirit of my being; she whose
+existence made the lovely whole, of which mine alone had been the
+worthless and despised fragment. There are a thousand women on the earth
+the artist might call as lovely,--show me another that I can worship.
+
+_Andre_. Worship! This is Captain Everard Maitland. If I should shut my
+eyes now----
+
+_Mait_. Well, go on; but I tell you, ne'ertheless, there have been
+times, even in this very spot,--we often wandered here when the day was
+dying as it is now,--here in her soft, breathing loveliness, she has
+stood beside me, when I have,--_worshipped?_--nay, feared her, in her
+holy beauty, as we two should an angel who should come through that
+glade to us now.
+
+_Andre_. True it is, something of the Divinity there is in beauty, that,
+in its intenser forms, repels with all its winningness, until the
+lowliness of love looks through it. Well--you worshipped her.
+
+_Mait_. Nay, you have told the rest. I would have worshipped; but one
+day there came a look from those beautiful eyes, when I met them
+suddenly, with a gaze that sought the mystery of their beauty,--a single
+look, and in an instant the drooping lash had buried it forever; but I
+knew, ere it fell, that the world of her young being was all mine
+already. Another life had been forever added unto mine; a whole
+creation; yet, like Eden's fairest, it but made another perfect; a new
+and purer _self_; and in it grew the heaven, and the fairy-land of my
+old dreams, lovelier than ever. You have loved yourself, Andre, else I
+should weary you.
+
+_Andre_. Not a bit the more do I understand you though. You talk most
+lover-like; that's very clear, yet I must say I never saw the part worse
+played. Why, here's your ladye-love, this self-same idol of whom you
+rave, at this moment perchance, breathing within these woods,--years
+too--two mortal years it must be, since you have seen her face; and
+yet--you stand here yet, with folded arms;--a goodly lover, on my word!
+
+_Mait_. Softly, Sir! you grace me with a title to which I can lay no
+claim. Lover I _was_, may be. I am no lover now, not I--not I; you are
+right; I would not walk to that knoll's edge to see the lady, Sir.
+
+_Andre_. Well, I must wait your leisure, I see.
+
+_Mait_. And yet, the last time that we stood together here, her arm lay
+on mine, my promised wife. A few days more, and by _my_ name, all that
+loveliness had gone. There needed only that to make that tie holy in all
+eyes, the holiest which the universe held for us; but needed there that,
+or any thing to make it such in ours. Why, love lay in her eye, that
+evening, like religion, solemn and calm.--We should have smiled then at
+the thought of any thing in height or depth, ending, what through each
+instant seemed to breathe eternity from its own essence;--we were one,
+_one,_--that trite word makes no meaning in your ear.--to me, life's
+roses burst from it; music, sunshine, Araby, should image what it means;
+what it meant rather, for it is over.
+
+_Andre_. What was it, Maitland?
+
+_Mail_. Oh,--well,--she did not love me; that was all. So far my story
+has told the seeming only, but ere long the trial came, and then I found
+it _was_ seeming, in good sooth. The Rebellion had then long been
+maturing, as you know; but just then came the crisis. It was the one
+theme everywhere. Of course I took my king's part against these rebels,
+and at once I was outraged, wronged beyond all human bearing. Her mad
+brother, her's, _her's_ what a world of preciousness, Andre, that little
+word once enshrined for me; and still it seems like some broken vase,
+fragrant with what it held.
+
+_Andre_. And ever with that name, a rosy flash Paints, for an instant,
+all my world. Nay, 'tis a little love-poem of my own; go on, Maitland.
+
+_Mait_. This brother I say, quarrelled with me, though I had borne from
+him unresentingly, what from another would have seemed insult. We
+quarrelled at last, and the house was closed against me, or would have
+been had I sought access; for I walked sternly by its pleasant door that
+afternoon, though I remember now how the very roses that o'erhung the
+porch, the benched and shaded porch, that lovely lingering place, seemed
+to beckon me in. It was a breathless summer day, and the vine curled in
+the open window,--even now those lowly rooms make a brighter image of
+heaven to me than the jewelled walls that of old grew in the pageant of
+our sabbath dreams.
+
+_Andre_. And thus you abandoned your love? A quarrel with her brother?
+
+_Mait_. I never wronged her with the shadow of a doubt. Directly, that
+same day, I wrote to her to fix our meeting elsewhere, that we might
+renew our broken plans in some fitter shape for the altered times. She
+sent me a few lines of grave refusal, Sir; and the next letter was
+returned unopened.
+
+_Andre_. 'Twas that brother! Pshaw! 'twas that brother, Maitland. I'll
+lay my life the lady saw no word of it.
+
+_Mait_. I might have thought so too, perchance; but that same day,--the
+morning had brought the news from Boston,--I met her by chance, by the
+spring in the little grove where we first met; and--Good Heavens! she
+talked of brothers! Brothers, mother, sisters!--What was their right to
+mine? All that the round world holds, or the universe, what could it be
+to her?--that is, if she had loved me ever; which, past all doubt, she
+never did.
+
+_Andre_. Maitland! Heavens, how this passion blinds you! And you
+expected a gentle, timid girl like that to abandon all she loved. Nay,
+to make her home in the very camp, where death and ruin unto all she
+loved, was the watchword?
+
+_Mait_. I beg your pardon, Sir. I looked for no such thing. I offered to
+renounce my hopes of honor here for her; a whole life's plans, for her
+sake I counted nothing. I offered her a home in England too, the very
+real of her girlhood's wish; my blighted fortunes since, or a home in
+yonder camp,--never, never. But if I had, ay, if I had,--that is not
+_love_, call it what you will, it is not love, to which such barriers
+were any thing.
+
+_Andre_. Oh well, a word's a word. That's as one likes. Only with your
+definition, give me leave to say, marvellous little love, Captain
+Maitland, marvellous little you will find in this poor world of ours.
+
+_Mait_. I'll grant ye.
+
+_Andre_. If there is any thing like it outside of a poet's skull, ne'er
+credit me.
+
+_Mait_. Strange it should take such shape in the creating thought and in
+the yearning heart, when all reality hath not its archetype.
+
+_Andre_. Hist!
+
+_Mait_. A careful step,--one of our party I fancy.
+
+_Andre_. 'Tis time we were at the rendezvous. If we have to recross the
+river as we came, on the stumps of that old bridge, we had best keep a
+little day-light with us, I think.
+
+ [_Exeunt_.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+DIALOGUE II.
+
+SCENE. _A chamber in the Parsonage. Helen leaning from the open window_.
+
+
+ (_Annie enters_.)
+
+_Annie_. Helen Grey, where on earth have you been? _Wood flowers!_
+
+_Helen_. Come and look at this sunset.
+
+_Annie_. Surely you have not, you cannot have been in those woods,
+Helen: and yet, where else could this periwinkle grow, and these wild
+roses?--Delicious!
+
+_Helen_. Hear that flute. It comes from among those trees by the river side.
+
+_Annie_. It is the shower that has freshened every thing, and made the
+birds so musical. You should stand in the door below, as I did just now,
+to see the fort and the moistened woods stands out from that black sky,
+with all this brightness blazing on them.
+
+_Helen_. 'Tis lovely--all.
+
+_Annie_. There goes the last golden rim over the blackening woods;
+already even a shade of tender mourning steals over all things, the very
+children's voices under this tree,--how soft they grow.
+
+_Helen_. Will the day come when we shall see him sink, for the last
+time, behind those hills?
+
+_Annie_. Nay, Helen, why do you mar this lovely hour with a thought like
+that?
+
+_Helen_. And in another life, shall we see light, when his, for us,
+shines no more?--What sound is that?
+
+_Annie_. That faint cry from the woods?
+
+_Helen_. No,--more distant,--far off as the horizon, like some mighty
+murmur, faintly borne, it came.
+
+_Annie_. I wish that we had gone to-day. I do not like this waiting
+until Thursday;--just one of that elder brother's foolish whims it was.
+I cannot think how your consent was won to it. Did you meet any one in
+your walk just now?
+
+_Helen_. No--Yes, yes, I did. The little people where I went, I met by
+hundreds, Annie. Through the dark aisles, and the high arches, all
+decked in blue, and gold, and crimson, they sung me a most merry
+welcome. And such as these--see--You cannot think how like
+long-forgotten friends they looked, smiling up from their dark homes,
+upon me.
+
+_Annie_. You have had chance enough to forget them, indeed,--it is two
+years, Helen, since you have been in those woods before. What could have
+tempted you there to-day?
+
+_Helen_. Was there _danger_ then?--was there danger indeed?--I was by
+the wood-side ere I knew it, and then,--it was but one last look I
+thought to take--nay, what is it, Annie? George met me as I was coming
+home, and I remember something in his eye startled me at first; but if
+there was danger, I should have known of it before.
+
+_Annie_. How could we dream of your going there this evening, when we
+knew you had never set your foot in those woods since the day Everard
+Maitland left Fort Edward?
+
+_Helen_. Annie!
+
+_Annie_. For me, I would as soon have looked to see Maitland himself
+coming from those woods, as you.
+
+_Helen_. Annie! Annie Grey! You must not, my sister--do not speak that
+name to me, never again, _never_.
+
+_Annie_. Why, Helen, I am sorry to have grieved you thus; but I
+thought--Look! look! There go those officers again,--there, in the lane
+between the orchards, Scarcely half an hour ago they went by to the fort
+in just such haste. There is something going on there, I am sure.
+
+ (_Helen rises from the window, and walks the room_.)
+
+_Annie_. In truth there was a rumor this afternoon,--you are so timid
+and fanciful, our mother chose you should not hear it while it was rumor
+only; but 'tis said that a party of the enemy have been seen in those
+woods to-day, and, among them, the Indians we have counted so friendly.
+Do you hear me, Helen?
+
+_Helen_. That he should _live_ still! Yes, it is all real still! That
+heaven of my thought, that grows so like a pageant to me, is still
+_real_ somewhere. Those eyes--they are darkly shining now; this very
+moment that passes _me_, drinks their beauty;--that voice,--that
+tone,--that very tone--on some careless ear, even now it wastes its
+luxury of blessing. Continents of hail and darkness, the polar seas--all
+earth's distance, could never have parted me from him; but now I live in
+the same world with him, and the everlasting walls blacken between us.
+Those looks may shine on the dull earth and senseless stones, but not on
+me; on uncaring eyes, but not on mine; though for one moment of their
+lavished wealth, I could cheaply give a life without them; never again,
+never, never, never shall their love come to me.
+
+_Annie_. Who would have thought she could cherish in secret a grief like
+this? Dear sister, we all believed you had forgotten that sad affair
+long ago,--we thought that you were happy now.
+
+_Helen_. Happy?--I am, you were right; but I have been to-day down to
+the very glen where we took that last lovely walk together, and all the
+beautiful past came back to me like life.--I _am_ happy; you must count
+me so still.
+
+_Annie_. With what I have just now heard, how can I?
+
+_Helen_. It is this war that has parted us; and so, this is but my part
+in these noble and suffering times, and that great thought reaches
+overall my anguish. But for this war I might have been--hath this world
+such flowers, and do they call it a wilderness?--I might have been, even
+now, you know it, Annie, his wife, his wife, _his_. But our hearts are
+cunningly made, many-stringed; and often much good music is left in them
+when we count them broken. That which makes the bitterness of this lot,
+the inconceivable, unutterable bitterness of it, even that I can bear
+now, calmly, and count it God's kindness too.
+
+_Annie_. I do not understand you, sister.
+
+_Helen_. What if this young royalist, Annie, when he quarrelled with my
+brother, and took arms against my country, what if he had kept faith to
+_me?_
+
+_Annie_. Well.
+
+_Helen. Well?_ Oh no, it would not have been well. Why, my home would
+have been with that pursuing army now, my fate bound up with that hollow
+cause,--these very hands might have fastened the sword of oppression;
+nay, the sword whose edge was turned against you, against you all, and
+against the cause, that with tears, night and morning, you were praying
+for, and with your heart's best blood stood ready to seal every hour.
+No, it is best as it is; or if my wish grows deeper still, if in my
+heart I envy, with murmuring thought, the blessed brides, on whose
+wedding dawns the laughing sun of peace, then with a wish I cast away
+the glory of these suffering times.--It is best as it is. I am content.
+
+_Annie_. I wish I could understand you, Helen. You say, "if he had kept
+faith to you;"--carried you off, you mean! Do you mean, sister Helen,
+that of your own will you would ever have gone with him, with Everard
+Maitland,--that traitor?
+
+_Helen. Gone with him_? Would I not? Would I not? Dear child, we talk of
+what, as yet, you know nothing of. Gone with _him_? Some things are
+holy, Annie, only until the holier come.
+
+_Annie_. (_looking toward the door_.) Stay, stay. What is it, George?
+
+ (_George Grey comes in_.)
+
+_George_. I was seeking our mother. What should it be, but ill news?
+This tide is against us, and if it be not well-nigh full, we may e'en
+fold our arms for the rest. There, read that. (_Throwing her a letter_.)
+
+Every face you see looks as if a thunder-cloud were passing it. I heard
+one man say, just now, as I came in, that the war would be over in a
+fortnight's time. There'll be some blood spilt ere then, I reckon
+though.
+
+_Helen_. What paper is that that reddens her cheek so suddenly?
+
+_Annie_. The McGregor's!--think of it, Helen,--gone over to the British
+side, and St. John of the Glens, and--who brought you this letter,
+George? 'Tis false! I do not believe it, not a word of it. Why, here are
+twenty names, people that we know, the most honorable, too,--forsaking
+us now, at such a crisis!
+
+_George_. Self-defence, self-defence, sister; their lands and their
+houses must be saved from devastation. What sort of barracks think you,
+would that fine country-seat of McGregor's make?--and St. John's--_he_
+is a farmer you know, and his fields are covered with beautiful grain,
+that a week will ripen, and so, he is for turning his sword into a
+sickle;--besides, there are worse things than pillage threatened here.
+Look, (_unfolding a hand-bill_.) Just at this time comes this villainous
+proclamation from Skeensborough, scattered about among our soldiers
+nobody knows how, half of them on the eve of desertion before, and the
+other half--what ails you, Helen?
+
+_Helen_. There he stands!
+
+_Annie_. Is she crazed? Why do you clasp your hands so wildly? for
+Heaven's sake, Helen!--her cheek is white as death.--Helen!
+
+_Helen_. Is he gone, Annie?
+
+_Annie_. As I live, I do not know what you are talking of. Nay, look;
+there is no one here, none that you need fear, most certainly.
+
+_Helen_. I saw him, his eye was on me; there he stood, looking through
+that window, smiling and beckoning me.
+
+_George_. Saw him? Who, in Heaven's name? This is fancy-work.
+
+_Helen_. I saw him as I see you now. He stood on that roof,--an
+Indian,--I saw the crimson bars on his face, and the blanket, and the
+long wild hair on his shoulders; and--and, I saw the gleaming knife in
+his girdle,--Oh God! I did.
+
+_George_. Ay, ay, 'twas that scoundrel that dogged us in our way home,
+I'll lay my life it was.
+
+_Helen_. In our way home? An _Indian_, I said.
+
+_George_. Well, well, and I say an Indian, a rascal Indian, was watching
+and following us all the way home just now.
+
+_Helen_. George!
+
+_George_. Then you did not see him after all. In truth, I did not mean
+you should, for we could not have hurried more, but all the time we sat
+in that shanty, while it rained, about as far off as that chair from me,
+stood this same fellow among the bushes, watching us, or rather you. And
+you saw him here t He might have crept along by that orchard wall. What
+are you laughing at, Annie?--I will go and see what sort of a guard we
+have.
+
+_Annie_. If you knew as much of Helen's Indians as I do, you would
+hardly be in such a hurry, George, I mean about this one that was here
+just now, for there are Indians in yonder forest I suppose; but since we
+were so high, I never walked in the woods with her once, but that we
+encountered one, or heard his steps among the bushes at least; and if it
+chanced to be as late as this, there would be half a dozen of them way
+laying us in the road,--but sometimes they turned out squirrels, and
+sometimes logs of wood, and sometimes mere air, air of about this color.
+We want a little light, that is all. There is no weapon like that for
+these fancy-people. I can slay a dozen of them with a candle's beams.
+
+ (_George goes out_.)
+
+_Helen_. Do not laugh at me to-night, Annie.
+
+_Annie_. But what should the Indians want of you, pry'thee; tell me
+that, Helen?
+
+_Helen_. God knows. Wait till the sun sets to-morrow, and I will laugh
+with you if you are merry then.
+
+_Annie_. Why to-morrow?--because it is our last day
+here? Tuesday--Wednesday--yes; the next day we
+shall be on the road to Albany.
+
+ [_Exit_.
+
+_Helen_. I am awake now. Watched me in the glen?--followed me home?
+Those woods are full of them.--But what has turned their wild eyes on
+me?
+
+It is but one day longer;--we have counted many, in peril and fear, and
+_this_, is the last;--even now how softly the fearful time wastes. _One
+day!_--Oh God, thou only knowest what its shining walls encircle. (_She
+leans on the window, musing silently_.) Two years ago I stood here, and
+prayed to die.-On that same tree my eye rested then. With what visions
+of hope I played under it once, building bowers for fairies I verily
+thought would come, and dreaming, with yearning heart, of glorious and
+beautiful things this world _hath not_. But, that wretched day, through
+blinding tears, I saw the sunlight on its glossy leaves, and I said,
+'let me see that light no more.' Surely the bitterness is deep when that
+which hath colored all our unfolded being, is a weariness. For what more
+hath life for me I thought, its lesson is learned and its power is
+spent,--it can please, and it can trouble me no more; and why should I
+stay here in vain and wearily?
+
+It was sad enough, indeed, to see the laughing spring returning again,
+when the everlasting winter had set in within, to link with each change
+of the varied year, sweet with a life's memories, such mournfulness;
+laying by, one by one, all hope's blessed spells, withered and broken
+forever,--the moonlight, the songs of birds, the blossom showers of
+April, the green and gold of autumn's sunset,--it was sad, but it was
+not in vain.--Not in vain, Oh God, didst thou deny that weeping prayer.
+
+ (_A merry voice is heard without, and a child's face peeps
+ through the window that overlooks the orchard_.)
+
+_Child_. Look! look! sister Helen! see what I have found on the roof of
+the piazza here,--all covered with wampum and scarlet, and here are
+feathers too--two feathers in it, blue and yellow--eagle's feathers they
+are, I guess.
+
+_Helen_ (_approaching the window_.) Let me see, Willy. What, did you
+find it here?
+
+_Willy._ Just under the window here. Frank and I were swinging on the
+gate; and--there is something hard in it, Helen,--feel.
+
+_Helen_. Yes, it is very curious; but--
+
+_Willy_. There comes Netty with the candle; now we can see to untie this
+knot.
+
+_Helen_. Willy, dear Willy, you must give it to me, you must indeed,
+and--I will paint you a bird to-morrow.
+
+_Willy_. A blue-bird, will you? A real one?
+
+_Helen_. Yes, yes;--run down little climber; see how dark it grows, and
+Frank is waiting, see.
+
+_Willy_. Well. But mind you, it must be a blue bird then. A real one.
+With the red on his breast, and all.
+
+ [_Exit_.
+
+ (_She walks to the table, unfastening the envelope_.)
+
+_Helen_. What sent that thrill of forgotten life through me then?--that
+wild, delicious thrill? This is strange, indeed. A sealed pacquet
+within! and here--
+
+ (_She glances at the superscription, and the pacquet
+ drops from her hand_.)
+
+No--no. I have seen that hand-writing in my dreams before, but it
+dissolved always. What's joy better than grief, if it pierce thus? Can
+never a one of all the soul's deep melodies on this poor instrument be
+played out, then--trembling and jarring thus, even at the breath of its
+most lovely passion.--And yet, it is some cruel thing, I know.
+
+ (_The pacquet opened, discovers Helen's miniature, a book,
+ a ring, and other tokens_.)
+
+Cruel indeed! That little rose!--He might have spared me this. A dull
+reader I were, in truth, if this needed comment,--but I knew it before.
+He might have spared me this.
+
+ (_She leans over the recovered relics with a burst
+ of passionate weeping_.)
+
+Yet, who knows--(_lifting her head with a sudden smile_,) some trace,
+some little curl of his pencil I may find among these leaves yet, to
+tell me, as of old,--
+
+ (_A letter drops from the book, she tears it eagerly open_.)
+
+(_Reading_.) These cold words I understand, but--_letters!_--He wrote me
+none! Was there ever a word between us, from the hour when he left me,
+his fancied bride, to that last meeting, when, at a word, and ere I knew
+what I had said, he turned on me that cold and careless eye, and left
+me, haughtily and forever? And now--(_reading_)--misapprehension, has it
+been! Is the sun on high again?--in this black and starless night--the
+noonday sun? He loves me still.--Oh! this joy weighs like grief.
+
+Shall I see him again? Joy! joy! Beautiful sunshine joy! Who knows the
+soul's rich depths till joy hath lighted them?--from the dim and
+sorrowful haunts of memory will he come again into the living present!
+Shall I see those eyes, looking on me? Shall I hear my name in that lost
+music sound once more?--His?--Am I his again? New mantled with that
+shining love, like some glorious and beautiful stranger I seem to
+myself, _Helen_--the bright and joy-wreathed thing his voice makes that
+name mean--My life will be all full of that blest music. I shall be
+Helen, evermore his--his.
+
+No,--it would make liars of old sages,--and all books would read wrong.
+A life of such wild blessedness? It would be fearful like living in some
+magic land, where the honest laws of nature were not. A life?--a moment
+were enough. Ages of common life would shine in it. (_Reading again_.)
+"Elliston's hut?"--"If I choose that the return should be mutual,--and
+the memorials of a despised regard can at best be but an indifferent
+possession;--a pacquet reinclosed directly in this same envelope, and
+left at the hut of the missionary, cannot fail to reach him safely."
+
+"Safely."--Might he not come there safely then? And might I not go
+thither safely too, in to-morrow's light? O God, let not Passion lead me
+now. The centre beaming truth, not passion's narrow ray, must light me
+here!--But am I not his?
+
+Once more, one horizon circles, for a day, our long-parted destinies;
+another, and another wave of these wild times will drift them asunder
+again, forever; and I count myself his wife. His wife?--nay, his bride,
+his two years' bride, to-night, his wife, to-morrow. He must meet me
+there, (_writing_) at noon, I will say.--I did not think that little hut
+of logs should have been my marriage-hall;--he must meet me there, and
+to-morrow is my bridal day.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+PART THIRD.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+FATE.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+DIALOGUE I.
+
+SCENE. _The hill--Night--Large fires burning--Sentinels dimly seen in
+ the back-ground. A young Indian steals carefully from the
+ thicket. He examines the ground and the newly-felled trees._
+
+
+_Indian_. One, two, three. And this is ringed. The dogs have spoiled the
+council-house.
+
+ (_Soldiers rush forward_.)
+
+_1st Sol_. So, Mr. Red-skin! would not you like a scalp or two now, to
+string on your leggings? Maybe we can help you to one or so. Hold fast.
+Take care of that arm, I know him of old.
+
+ (_The Indian, with a violent struggle, disengages himself,
+ and darts into the thicket_.)
+
+No? well,--dead or alive, we must have you on our side again.
+(_Firing_.)
+
+_2nd Sol_. _He's_ fixed, Sir.
+
+_1st Sol_. Hark. Hark,--off again! Let me go. What do you hold me for,
+you scoundrel?
+
+_2nd Sol_. Don't make a fool of yourself, Will Wilson. There will be a
+dozen of them yelling around you there. Besides, he is half way to the
+swamp by this. Look here; what's this, in the grass here?
+
+_1st Sol_. There was something in his hand, but he clenched it through
+it all,--this is a letter. Bring it to the fire.
+
+_2nd Sol_. (_reading_.) "_This by the Indian, as in case I am taken, he
+may reach the camp in safety. Not over three thousand men in all, I
+should think,--very little ammunition, soldiers mostly discouraged.--In
+Albany, they are tearing the lead off the windows of the houses, and
+taking the weights from the shops for ball. Talk of retreating on
+Thursday to the new encampment, five miles below. More when I get to
+you_."
+
+_More!_ Humph! A pretty string of lies he has got here already. This
+must go to the General, Dick.
+
+ [_Exeunt_.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+
+
+DIALOGUE II.
+
+SCENE. _Chamber in the Parsonage. Moonlight. Annie sitting by the window,
+ the door open into an adjoining room_.
+
+
+_Annie_. (_Calling_.) Come, come,--why do you sit there scribbling so
+late, Helen? Come, and enjoy this beautiful night with me. Ay, what a
+world of invisible life amid the dew and darkness utters its glad
+voices; even the little insect we never saw by day, makes us feel for
+once the great brotherhood of being. This day week we shall be in
+Albany,--no more such scenes as this then.
+
+ (_Helen approaches the window, and puts her arm gently
+ around her sister_.)
+
+_Helen_. No more!--It was a sad word you were saying, Annie.
+
+_Annie_. How you startled me. Your hands are cold,--cold as icicles, and
+trembling too. What ails you, Helen?
+
+_Helen_. 'Tis nothing.--How often you and I have stood together thus,
+looking down on that old bridge.--Summer and winter.--Do you remember
+the cold snowy moonlights of old, when the sound of the distant bell had
+hope in it? We shall stand together thus, no more.
+
+_Annie_. Do not speak so sadly, Helen. I cannot think they will destroy
+our home in mere wantonness. Was there not some one coming up the path
+just now? Hark! there is news with that tone.
+
+ [_Exit_.
+
+_Helen_. A little more, an hour perchance, and he will read my letter.
+Why do I tremble thus? Is it because I have done wrong, that these dark
+misgivings haunt me? No,--it is not remorse--'tis very like--yet remorse
+it is not. Danger, there is none. I shall but walk to the wood-side as
+to-day, that little path to the hut is quickly trod, and he will be
+waiting there. I shall be safe then, safe as I care to be.--Why do I
+stand here reasoning thus? Safe? And if I were not, what is it to me
+now? The dark plan is laid. The fearful acting now is all that's left
+for me.
+
+This must go to the lodge to-night, and ere my mother returns;--to tell
+them now, would be to make my scheme impossible.
+
+ (_She begins, with a reluctant air, to fold the dresses,
+ which are lying loosely by her_.)
+
+Oh God! whence do these dark and horrible thoughts grow?--Nay, feeling
+not born of thought. That wedding robe looks like a shroud to me! I
+cannot. Shadows from things unseen are upon me. The future is a night of
+tempest, where I hear nothing but the breaking boughs, and the whirl and
+crash of the mourning blast. Oh God! there is no refuge for the fearful,
+but in thee.--To thee--no. If there is power in prayer of mine, hath it
+not already doomed that wicked cause, my fate is linked with now. I
+cannot pray.--Can I not?--How the pure strength comes welling up from
+its infinite depths.
+
+Hear me--not with lip service, I beseech thee now, but with the
+earnestness that stays the rushing heart's blood in its way.--Hear me.
+Let the high cause of right and freedom, whose sad banner, now, on
+yonder hill, floats in this summer air; whose music on this soft
+night-breeze is borne--let it prevail--though _I_, with all this
+sensitive, warm, shrinking life; with all this new-found wealth of love
+and hope, lie on its iron way.
+
+I am safe now.--This life that I feel now, steel cannot reach.
+
+ (_Annie enters_.)
+
+_Annie_. Dear Helen, dress yourself. It is all true! We must go
+to-night, we must indeed. They are dismantling the fort now.--Come to
+the door, and you can hear them if you will; and here is word from
+Henry, we must be ready before morning--the British are within sight. Do
+you hear me, Helen? Do not stand looking at me in that strange way.
+
+_Helen_. To-night!
+
+_Annie_. I was frightened myself at first, sadly; but there is no
+danger, not the least. We shall be in Albany to-morrow, Henry says.
+Come, Helen, there is no one to see to any thing but ourselves. They are
+running about like mad creatures there below, and the children, are
+crying, and such a time you never saw.
+
+_Helen_. To-night! That those beautiful lips should speak it! Take it
+back. It cannot be. It must not be.
+
+_Annie_. Why do you look so reproachfully at me? Helen, you astonish and
+frighten me!
+
+_Helen_. Yes--yes--I see it all. And why could I not have known this one
+hour sooner?--Even now it may not be too late. Annie--
+
+_Annie_. Thank Heaven,--there is my mother's voice at last.
+
+_Helen_. Annie, stay. Do not mark what I have said in the bewilderment
+of this sudden fear. Is George below?--Who brought this news?
+
+_Annie_. One of the men from the fort.--George has not been home since
+you sent him to Elliston's. She is calling me. Make haste and come down,
+Helen.
+
+ [_Exit_.
+
+_Helen_. They will leave me alone. They will leave me here alone. And
+why could I not have known this one hour sooner?--I could have bid him
+come to-night--If the invisible powers are plotting against me, it is
+well. Could I have thought of this?--and yet, how like something I had
+known before, it all comes upon me.--Can I stay here alone?--Could
+I?--No never, never! He must come for me to-night. Perchance that
+pacquet still lies at yonder hut, and it is not yet too late to recal my
+letter;--if it is--if it is, I must find some other messenger. Thank
+God!--there is one way. Elliston can send to that camp to-night. He
+can--even now,--He can--he will.--
+
+ [_Exit_.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+
+
+DIALOGUE III.
+
+SCENE. _The porch. Helen waiting the return of her messenger from the hut_.
+
+
+_Helen_. How quiet and soft it all lies in this solemn light. Is it
+illusion?--can it be?--that old, familiar look, that from these woods
+and hills, and from this moon-lit meadow, seems to smile on me now with
+such a holy promise of protection and love?--The merry trill in this
+apple-tree is the very sound that, waking from my infant sleep in the
+hush of the summer midnight, of old lulled, nay, wakened my first inward
+thought. Oh that my heart's youngest religion could come again, the
+feeling with which a little child looks up to these mighty stars, as the
+spangles on his home-roof, while he stands smiling beneath the awful
+shelter of the skies, as under a father's dome. But these years show us
+the evil that mocks that trust.
+
+'Tis he,--What a mere thread of time separates me from my fate, and yet
+the darkness of ages could not hide it more surely. Already he has
+reached the lane. Another minute will show me all. Will the pacquet be
+in his hand, or will it not? I will be calm--it shall be like a picture
+to me.
+
+Ah! there is an immeasurable power about us, a foreign and strange
+thing, that answers not to the soul, that seems to know or to heed
+nothing of the living suffering, rejoicing being of the spirit. Why
+should I struggle with it any longer? From my weeping childhood to this
+hour, it hath set its iron bars about me; no--softly yielding, hath it
+not sometimes, the long, undreamed-of vistas opened, bright as
+heaven,--and now, maybe--how slow he moves--even now perchance.--This is
+wrong. The Infinite is One. The Goodness Infinite, whose everlasting
+smile lighteth the inner soul, and the Power Infinite, whose alien touch
+without, in darkness comes, they are of One, and the good know it.
+
+_The Messenger_. (_Coming up the path_.)
+
+Bless you, Miss! The pacquet had been gone this hour!
+
+_Helen_. Gone! Well.--And Elliston--what said he?
+
+_Mess_. I brought this note of yours back, Miss Helen. Father Elliston
+was gone. Here has been an Indian killed on Sandy Hill this evening,
+Alaska's own son as it turns out, and such a hubbub as they are making
+about it you never heard. I met a couple of squaws myself, yelling like
+mad creatures, and the woods are all alive with them. The priest has
+gone down to their village to pacify them if it may be,--so I brought
+the note back, Miss Helen, for there was no one there but a little
+rascal of an Indian, and I would not trust the worth of a feather with
+one of them. Was I right?
+
+_Helen_. Yes. Give it to me. How far is it to the British camp?
+
+_Mess_. Why, they are just above here at Brandon's Mills they say, that
+is, the main body. It can't be over three miles, or so.
+
+_Helen. Three_ miles! only three miles of this lovely moonlight road
+between us.--William McReady, go to that camp for me to-night.
+
+_Mess_. To the British camp?
+
+_Helen_. Ay.
+
+_Mess_. To the British camp! Lord bless you, Miss. I should be shot--I
+should be shot as true as you are a living woman. I should be shot for a
+deserter, or, what's worse, I should be hanged for a spy.
+
+_Helen_. What shall I do!
+
+_Mess_. And besides, there's Madame Grey will be wanting me by this
+time. See how the candles dance about the rooms there.
+
+_Helen_. Yes, you are right. We must go in and help them. Come.
+
+ (_They enter the house_.)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+DIALOGUE IV.
+
+SCENE. _The British camp. Moonlight. A lady in a rich travelling dress,
+ standing in the door of a log-hut_.
+
+
+_Lady Ackland_. (_Talking to her maid within_.) What is the matter,
+Margaret? What do you go stealing about the walls so like a mad woman
+for, with that shoe in your hand?
+
+_Maid_. (_Within_.) There, Sir!--your song is done!--there's one less, I
+am certain of that. _Coming to the door_.) If ever I get home alive, my
+lady--Ha!--(_striking the door with her slipper_.) If ever--you are
+there, are you? I believe I have broken my ear in two. The matter? Will
+your ladyship look here?
+
+_Lady A_. Well.
+
+_Maid_. And if ever I get back to London, I'll say well too. If ever I
+get back to London alive, my lady,--I'll see----
+
+_Lady A_. What will you see, Margaret? Nothing lovelier than this, I am
+sure. Are you not ashamed to stand muttering there? Come here, and look
+at this beautiful night.
+
+_Maid_. La, Lady Harriet!
+
+_Lady A_. Listen! How still the camp is now! You can hear the rush of
+those falls we passed, distinctly. How pretty the tents look there, in
+that deep shade. These tuneful frogs and katy-dids must be our
+nightingales to-night. Indeed, as I stand now, I could almost fancy that
+fine wood there was my father's park; nay, methinks I see the top of the
+old gray turrets peeping out among the shadows there. Look, Margaret, do
+you see?
+
+_Maid_. La! I can see woods enough, my lady, if that is what you
+mean,--nothing else, and I have seen enough of them already to last me
+one life through. Yes, here's a pretty tear I have got amongst
+them!--Two guineas and a half it cost me in London,--I pray I may never
+set my eyes on a wood again,
+
+_Lady A_. This was some happy home once, I know. See that rose-bush, and
+this little bed of flowers.--Here was a pretty yard--there went the
+fence,--and there, where that waggon stands, by that broken pear-tree,
+swung the gate. And pleasant meetings there have been at this door, no
+doubt, and sorrowful partings too,--and hearts within have leaped at the
+sound of that gate, and merry tales have been told by that desolate
+hearth. In this little lonely unthought-of place, the mysterious world
+of the human soul has unfolded,--the drama of life been played, as
+grandly in the eyes of angels as in the proud halls where my life
+dawned. And there are hearts that cling to this desolate spot as mine
+does to that far-off home. We have driven them away in sorrow and fear.
+This is war!
+
+_Maid_. I wonder who is fluting under that tree there, so late. They are
+serenading that Dutch woman, as I live.
+
+_Lady A_. The Baroness, are you talking of, Margaret?
+
+_Maid_. A baroness! Good sooth!--she looks like it, in that yellow silk,
+and those odious beads, fussing about. If your ladyship will believe me,
+I saw her sitting in her tent to-night, ay, in the door, feeding that
+wretched child with her own hands. We can't be thankful enough they did
+not put her in here with us, I'll own.
+
+_Lady A_. Hush, hush, for shame! We might well have spared that empty
+room. Come, we'll go in--It's very late. Strange that Sir George should
+not be here ere this.
+
+_Maid_. Look, my lady! Here's some one at the gate.
+
+ (_An officer enters the little court, with a hasty step_.)
+
+_Officer_. Good evening to your ladyship.--Is Captain Maitland
+here?--Sir George told me that he left him here.
+
+_Lady A_. Ay, but he has been gone this hour. Stay, it is Andre's flute
+you hear below there, and some one has joined him just now--yes, it is
+he.
+
+_Off_. Under that tree;--thank you, my lady.
+
+_Lady A_. Stay, Colonel Hill,--I beg your pardon, but you spoke so
+hastily.--This young Maitland is a friend of ours, I trust there is
+nothing that concerns him painfully.--
+
+_Off_. Oh nothing, nothing, except that he is ordered off to Fort Ann
+to-night. There are none of us that know these wild routes as well as he.
+
+ [_Exit_.
+
+_Lady A_. Good Heavens! What noise is that?
+
+_Maid_. Lord 'a mercy! The battle is coming?
+
+_Lady A_. Hush! (_To a sentinel who goes whistling by_.) Sirrah, what
+noise is that?
+
+_Sentinel_. It's these Indians, my lady; they have found the son of some
+chief of theirs murdered in these woods, and they are bringing him to
+the camp now. That's the mourning they make.
+
+_Lady A_. The Lord protect us!
+
+ (_They enter the house_.)
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+
+
+DIALOGUE V.
+
+SCENE. _The interior of a tent. Maitland, in travelling equipments,
+ pacing the floor_.
+
+
+_Maitland_. William! Ho there!
+
+_Servant_. (_Looking in_.) Your honor?
+
+_Mait_. Is not that horse ready yet?
+
+_Ser't_. Presently, your honor.
+
+ [_Exit_.
+
+_Mait_. So the fellow has been here, it seems, and returned again to
+Fort Edward without seeing me. Of course, my lady deigns no answer.--An
+answer! Well, I thought I expected none. Ten minutes ago I should have
+sworn I expected none. Why, by this time that letter of mine has gone
+the rounds of the garrison, no doubt. William!
+
+ (_The servant enters_.)
+
+Bring that horse round, you rascal,--must I be under your orders too,
+forsooth?
+
+_Ser't_. Certainly, your honor,--but if he could but just,--I am
+a-going, Sir,--but if he could but just take a mouthful or two more.
+There's never a baiting-place till--
+
+_Mait_. Do you hear?
+
+ (_The Servant retreats hastily_.)
+
+_Mait_. The curse of having lived in these wilds cleaves to me in all
+things. Here are Andre and Mortimer, and a hundred more, and none but I
+for this midnight service.
+
+_Ser't_. (_Re-entering_.) The horse is waiting, Sir,--but here's two of
+these painted creturs hanging about the door, waiting to see you.
+(_Handing him a packet_.)
+
+There's no use in swearing at them, Sir, they don't understand it.
+
+_Mait_. (_Breaking the seals hastily, he discovers the miniature_.) Back
+again! Well, we'll try drowning next,--nay, this is as I sent it! That
+rascal dropped it in the woods perhaps! Softly,--what have we here!
+
+ (_He discovers, and reads the letter_.)
+
+Who brought this?
+
+_Ser't_. The Indian that was here yesterday.
+
+_Mait_. Alaska! Here's blood on the envelope, on the letter too, and
+here--This packet has been soaked in blood. (_Re-reading the letter_.)
+
+"To-morrow"--"twelve o'clock" to-morrow--Look if the light be burning in
+the Lady Ackland's window,--she was up as I passed. "Twelve
+o'clock"--There are more horses on this route than these cunning
+settlers choose to reckon. Why, there are ten hours yet--I shall be back
+ere then. Helen--do I dream?--This is love!--How I have wronged
+her.--This _is_ love!
+
+_Ser't_. (_At the door_.) The horse is waiting, Sir,--and this Indian
+here wont stir till he sees you.
+
+_Mait_. Alaska--I must think of it,--_risk?_--I would pledge my life on
+his truth. He has seen her too,--I remember now, he saw her--with me at
+the lake. Let him come in.--No, stop, I will speak with him as I go.
+
+ [_Exeunt_.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+DIALOGUE VI.
+
+SCENE. _Lady Ackland's door_.
+
+
+_Lady Ackland_. Married!--His wife?--Well, I think I'll not try to sleep
+again. There goes Orion with his starry girdle.--Married--is he?
+
+_Maid_. Was not that Captain Maitland that was talking here just now,
+Lady Harriet?
+
+_Lady A_. Go to bed, Margaret,--go to bed,--but look you though.
+To-morrow with the dawn that furnishing gear we left in the tent must be
+unpacked, and this empty room--whose wife, think you, is my guest
+tomorrow, Margaret?
+
+_Maid_. Bless me! If I were to guess till daylight, my lady----
+
+_Lady A_. This young Maitland, you think so handsome, Margaret----
+
+_Maid_. I?--la, it was not I, my lady, I am sure.
+
+_Lady A_.--He will bring us his wife home here tomorrow, a young and
+beautiful wife.
+
+_Maid_. Wife?----
+
+_Lady A_. Poor child,--we must give her a gentle welcome. Do you
+remember those flowers we saw in the glen as we passed?--I will send for
+them in the morning, and we will fill the vacant hearth with these
+blossoming boughs.----
+
+_Maid_. But, here--in these woods, a wife!--where on earth will he bring
+her from, my lady?
+
+_Lady A_. Ay, we shall see, to-morrow we shall see,--go dream the rest.
+
+ [_Exit the maid_.
+
+_Lady A_. Who would have thought it?--so cold and proud he seemed, so
+scornful of our sex.--And yet I knew something there lay beneath it
+all.--Even in that wild, gay mood, when the light of mirth filled and
+o'er-flowed those splendid eyes,--deeper still, I saw always the calm
+sorrow-beam shining within.
+
+That picture he showed me--how pretty it was!--The face haunts me with
+its look of beseeching loveliness.--Was there anything so sorrowful
+about it though?--Nay, the look was a smile, and yet a strange
+mourn-fulness clings to my thought of it now. Well, if the painter hath
+not dissembled in it--the _painter_?--no. The spirit of those eyes was
+of no painter's making. From the _Eidos_ of the Heavenly Mind sprung
+that.
+
+I shall see her to-morrow.--Nay, I must meet her in the outskirts of the
+camp,--so went my promise,--if Maitland be not here ere then.
+
+ [_Exit_.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THOUGHTS.
+
+SCENE. _The Hill. The Student's Night-watch_.
+
+
+ How beautiful the night, through all these hours
+ Of nothingness, with ceaseless music wakes
+ Among the hills, trying the melodies
+ Of myriad chords on the lone, darkened air,
+ With lavish power, self-gladdened, caring nought
+ That there is none to hear. How beautiful!
+ That men should live upon a world like this,
+ Uncovered all, left open every night
+ To the broad universe, with vision free
+ To roam the long bright galleries of creation,
+ Yet, to their strange destiny ne'er wake.
+ Yon mighty hunter in his silver vest,
+ That o'er those azure fields walks nightly now,
+ In his bright girdle wears the self-same gems
+ That on the watchers of old Babylon
+ Shone once, and to the soldier on her walls
+ Marked the swift hour, as they do now to me.
+ Prose is the dream, and poetry the truth.
+ That which we call reality, is but
+ Reality's worn surface, that one thought
+ Into the bright and boundless all might pierce,
+ There's not a fragment of this weary real
+ That hath not in its lines a story hid
+ Stranger than aught wild chivalry could tell.
+ There's not a scene of this dim, daily life,
+ But, in the splendor of one truthful thought
+ As from creation's palette freshly wet,
+ Might make young romance's loveliest picture dim,
+ And e'en the wonder-land of ancient song,----
+ Old Fable's fairest dream, a nursery rhyme.
+ How calm the night moves on, and yet
+ In the dark morrow, that behind those hills
+ Lies sleeping now, who knows what waits?--'Tis well.
+ He that made this life, I'll trust with another.
+ To be,--there was the risk. We might have waked
+ Amid a wrathful scene, but this,--with all
+ Its lovely ordinances of calm days,
+ The golden morns, the rosy evenings,
+ Its sweet sabbath hours and holy homes,----
+ If the same hidden hand from whence these sprung,
+ That dark gate opens, what need we fear there?----
+ Here's wrath, but none that hath not its sure pathway
+ Upward leading,--there are tears, but 'tis
+ A school-time weariness; and many a breeze
+ And lovely warble from our native hills,
+ Through the dim casement comes, over the worn
+ And tear-wet page, unto the listening ear
+ Of our home sighing--to the _listening_ ear.
+ Ah, what know we of life?--of that strange life
+ That this, in many a folded rudiment,
+ With nature's low, unlying voice, doth point to.
+ Is it not very like what the poor grub
+ Knows of the butterfly's gay being?----
+ With its colors strange, fragrance, and song,
+ And robes of floating gold with gorgeous dyes,
+ And loveliest motion o'er wide, blooming worlds.
+ That dark dream had ne'er imaged!----
+ Ay, sing on,
+ Sing on, thou bright one, with the news of life,
+ The everlasting, winging o'er our vale.
+ Oh warble on, thy high, strange song.
+ What sayest thou?--a land o'er these dark cliffs,
+ A land all glory, where the day ne'er setteth----
+ Where bright creatures, mid the deathless shades,
+ Go singing, shouting evermore? And yet
+ 'Twere vain. That wild tale hath no meaning here,
+ Thou warbler from afar. Like music
+ Of a foreign tongue, on our dull sense,
+ The rich thought wastes.--We have been nursed in tears,
+ Thro' all we've known of life, we have known grief,
+ And is there none in life's deep essence mixed?
+ Is sorrow but the young soul's garment then?----
+ A baby mantle, doffed forever here,
+ Within these lowly walls.
+ And we were born
+ Amid a glad creation!---then why hear we ne'er
+ The silver shout, filling the unmeasured heaven?----
+ Why catch we e'er the rich plume's rustle soft,
+ Or sweep of passing lyre! Our tearful home
+ Hung 'mid a gay, rejoicing universe,
+ And ne'er a glimpse adown its golden paths?----
+ Oh are there eyes, soft eyes upon us,
+ In the dark and in the day, shining unseen,
+ And everlasting smiles, brightening unfelt
+ On all our tears: News sweet and strange ye bring.
+ Hither we came from our Creator's hands,
+ Bright earnest ones, looking for joy, and lo,
+ A stranger met us at the gate of life,
+ A stranger dark, and wrapped us in her robe,
+ And bore us on through a dim vale.--Ah, not
+ The world we looked for,--for an image in.
+ Our souls was born, of a high home, that yet
+ We have not seen. And were our childhood's yearnings,
+ Its strange hopes, no dreams then,--dim revealings
+ Of a land that yet we travel to?----
+ But thou, oh foster-mother, mournful nurse,
+ So long upon thy sable vest we're leaned,
+ Thou art grown dear to us, and when at last
+ At yonder blue and burning gate
+ Thou yieldest up thy trust, and joy at last
+ In her own wild embrace enfolds us once, e'en
+ From the jewelled bosom of that dazzling one,
+ From the young roses of that smiling face,
+ Shall we not turn to thee, for one last glimpse
+ Of that wan cheek, and solemn eye of love,
+ And watch thy stately step, far down
+ This dim world's fading paths? Take us, kind sorrow!
+ We will lean our young head meekly on thee;
+ Good and holy is thy ministry,
+ Oh handmaid of the Halls thou ne'er mayst tread.
+ And let the darkness gather round that world,
+ Not for the vision of thy glittering walls
+ We ask, nor glimpse of brilliant troops that roam
+ Thine ancient streets, thou sunless city,--
+ Wrap thy strange pavillions still in clouds,
+ Let the shades slumber round thy many homes,
+ By faith, and not by sight, through lowly paths
+ Of goodness, sorrow-led, to thee we come.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+PART FOURTH.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+FULFILMENT.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+DIALOGUE I.
+
+SCENE. _The ground before the fort. Baggage wagons. Cannon dismounted.
+ Confused sounds within. A soldier is seen leaning on his rifle_.
+
+
+ (_Another soldier enters_.)
+
+_2nd Sol_. It's morning! Look in the east there. What are we waiting
+for?
+
+_1st Sol_. Eh! The devil knows best, I reckon, Sir.
+
+_2nd Sol_. Hillo, John! What's the matter there? Here's day-break upon
+us! What are we waiting for?
+
+ (_Another soldier enters_.)
+
+_3d Sol_. To build a bridge--that is all.
+
+_2nd Sol_. A bridge?
+
+_3d Sol_. We shall be off by to-morrow night, no doubt of it,--if we
+don't chance to get cooked and eaten before that time,--some little risk
+of that.
+
+_2nd Sol_. But what's the matter below there, I say? The bridge? what
+ails it?
+
+_3d Sol_. Just as that last wagon was going over, down comes the bridge,
+Sirs, or a good piece of it at least.--What else could it do?--timbers
+half sawn away!
+
+_2nd Sol_. Some of that young jackanape's work! _Aid-de-camp!_ I'd _aid_
+him. He must be ordering and fidgetting, and fuming.--Could not wait
+till we were over.
+
+_1st Sol_. All of a piece, boys!
+
+_3d Sol_. Humph. I wish it had been,--the bridge, I mean.
+
+_1st Sol_. But, I say, don't you see how every thing, little and great,
+goes one way, and that, against us? Chance has no currents like this!
+It's a bad side that Providence frowns on. I think when Heaven deserts a
+cause, it's time for us poor mortals to begin to think about it.
+
+_3d Sol_. Now, if you are going to do so mean a thing as that, don't
+talk about Heaven--prythee don't.
+
+ [_They pass on_.
+
+ (_Two other soldiers enter_.)
+
+_4th Sol_. (_singing_.)
+
+ _Yankee doodle is the tune
+ Americans delight in,
+ 'Twill do to whistle, sing, or play,
+ And just the thing for fighting.
+ Yankee doodle, boys, huzza_----
+
+(_Breaking off abruptly_.) I do not like the looks of it, Will.
+
+_5th Sol_. Of what?
+
+_4th Sol_. Of the morning that begins to glimmer in the east there.
+
+_5th Sol_. No? Why, I was thinking just now I never saw a handsomer
+summer's dawning. That first faint light on the woods and meadows, there
+is nothing I like better. See, it has reached the river now.
+
+_4th Sol_. But the mornings we saw two years ago looked on us with
+another sort of eye than this,--it is not the glimmer of the long,
+pleasant harvest day that we see there.
+
+_5th Sol_. We have looked on mornings that promised better, I'll own. I
+would rather be letting down the bars in the old meadow just now, or
+hawing with my team down the brake; with the children by my side to pick
+the ripe blackberries for our morning meal, than standing here in these
+rags with a gun on my shoulder. Let well alone.--We could not though.
+
+_4th Sol_. (_Handing him a glass_.) See, they are beginning to form
+again. It looks for all the world like a funeral train.
+
+_5th Sol_. What was the Stamp Act to us, or all the acts beyond the sea
+that ever were acted, so long as they left us our golden fields, our
+Sabbath days, the quiet of the summer evening door, and the merry winter
+hearth. _The Stamp Act?_ It would have been cheaper for us to have
+written our bills on gold-leaf, and for tea, to have drunk melted
+jewels, like the queen I read of once; cheaper and better, a thousand
+times, than the bloody cost we are paying now.
+
+_4th Sol_. It was not the money, Will,--it was not the money, you know.
+The wrong it was. We could not be trampled on in that way,--it was not
+in us--we could not.
+
+_5th Sol_. Ay, ay. A fine thing to get mad about was that when we sat in
+the door of a moonlight evening and the day's toils were done. It was
+easy talking then. _Trampled on!_ I will tell you when I was nearest
+being trampled on, Andros,--when I lay on the ground below there last
+winter,--on the frozen ground, with the blood running out of my side
+like a river, and a great high-heeled German walking over my shoulder as
+if I had been a hickory log. I can tell you, Sir, that other was a
+moon-shiny sort of a trampling to that. I shall bear to be trampled on
+in figures the better for it, as long as I live. Between ourselves
+now----
+
+_4th Sol_. There's no one here.
+
+_5th Sol_. There are voices around that corner, though. Come this way.
+
+ [_They pass on_.
+
+ (_Another group of Soldiers_.)
+
+_1st Sol_. Then if nothing else happens, we are off now. Hillo, Martin!
+Here we go again--skulking away. Hey? What do you say now? Hey, Mr.
+Martin, what do you say now?
+
+_2nd Sol_. (_Advancing_.) What I said before.
+
+_1st Sol_. But where is all this to end, Sir? Tell us that--tell us
+that.
+
+_3d Sol_. Yes, yes,--tell us that. If you don't see Burgoyne safe in
+Albany by Friday night, never trust me, Sirs.
+
+_1st Sol_. A bad business we've made of it.
+
+_4th Sol_. Suppose he gets to Albany;--do you think that would finish
+the war?
+
+_3d Sol_. Well, indeed, I thought that was settled on all hands, Sir. I
+believe the General himself makes no secret of that.
+
+_4th Sol_. And what becomes of us all then? We shall go back to the old
+times again, I suppose;--weren't so very bad though, Sam, were they?
+
+_1st Sol_. We have seen worse, I'll own.
+
+_3d Sol_. And what becomes of our young nation here, with its congress
+and its army, and all these presidents, and generals, and colonels, and
+aide-de-camps?--wont it look like a great baby-house when the hubbub is
+over, and the colonies settle quietly down again?
+
+_2nd Sol_. Faith, you take it very coolly. Before that can happen, do
+you know what must happen to you?
+
+_1st Sol_. Nothing worse than this, I reckon.
+
+_2nd Sol_. (_makes a gesture to denote hanging_.)
+
+_4th Sol_. What would they hang us though? Do you think they would
+really hang us, John?
+
+_2nd Sol_. Wait and see.
+
+_1st Sol_. Nonsense! nonsense! A few of the ringleaders, Schuyler, and
+Hancock, and Washington, and a few such, they will hang of course,--but
+for the rest,--we shall have to take the oath anew, and swallow a few
+duties with our sugar and tea, and----
+
+_2nd Sol_. You talk as if the matter were all settled already.
+
+_1st Sol_. There is no more doubt of it, than that you and I stand here
+this moment. Why, they are flocking to Skeensborough from all quarters
+now, and this poor fragment,--this miserable skeleton of an army, which
+is the only earthly obstacle between Burgoyne and Albany, why, even this
+is crumbling to pieces as fast as one can reckon. Two hundred less than
+we were yesterday at this hour, and to-morrow--how many are off
+to-morrow? Ay, and what are we doing the while? Bowing and retreating,
+cap in hand, from post to post, from Crown Point to Ticonderoga, from
+Ticonderoga to Fort Edward, from Fort Edward onward; just showing them
+down, as it were, into the heart of the land. Let them get to
+Albany--Ah, let them once get to Albany, they'll need no more of our
+help then, they'll take care of themselves then and us too.
+
+_2nd Sol_. They'll never get to Albany.
+
+_1st Sol_. Hey?
+
+_2nd Sol_. They'll never get to Albany.
+
+_1st Sol_. What's to hinder them?
+
+_2nd Sol_. We,--yes we,--and such as we, craven-hearted as we are.
+They'll never get to Albany until we take them there captives.
+
+_3d Sol_. Then they'll wait till next week, I reckon.
+
+_1st Sol_. Ha ha ha! Ha ha ha! How many prisoners shall we have a-piece,
+John? How many regiments, I mean? They'll open the windows when we get
+there, won't they? I hope the sun will shine that day. How grandly we
+shall march down the old hill there, with our train behind us. I shall
+have to borrow a coat of one of them though, they might be ashamed of
+their captor else.
+
+_3d Sol_. When is this great battle to be, John? This don't look much
+like it.
+
+_4th Sol_. I think myself, if the General would only give us a chance to
+fight----
+
+_2nd Sol_. A chance to throw your life away,--he will never give you. A
+chance to fight, you will have ere long,--doubt it not. Our General
+might clear his blackened fame, by opposing this force to that,--this
+day he might;--he will not do it. The time has not yet come. But he will
+spare no pains to strengthen the army, and prepare it for victory, and
+the glory he will leave to his rival. Recruits will be pouring in ere
+long. General Burgoyne's proclamation has weakened us,--General Schuyler
+will issue one himself to-day.
+
+_1st Sol_. Will he? will he? What will he proclaim?--As to the recruits
+he gets, I'll eat them all, skin and bone. What will he proclaim? You
+see what Burgoyne offers us. On the one hand, money and clothing, and
+protection for ourselves and our families; and on the other, the cord,
+and the tomahawk, and the scalping-knife. Now, what will General
+Schuyler set down over against these two columns?--What will he offer
+us?--To lend us a gun, maybe,--leave to follow him from one post to
+another, barefooted and starving, and for our pains to be cursed and
+reviled for cowards from one end of the land to the other. And what will
+he threaten? Ha, we were cowards indeed, if we feared what he could
+threaten. What thing in human nature will he speak to?--say.
+
+_2nd Sol_. I will tell you. To that spirit in human nature which resists
+the wrong, the fiendish wrong threatened there. Ay, in the basest nature
+that power sleeps, and out of the bosom of Omnipotence there is nothing
+stronger. It has wakened here once, and this war is its fruit. It
+slumbers now. Let Burgoyne look to it that he rouse it not himself for
+us. Let him look to it. For every outrage of those fiendish legions,
+thank God.--It lays a finger on the spring of our only strength. _What_
+will he offer us? I will tell you.--A chance to live, or to
+die,--_men_,--ay, to leave a sample of manhood on the earth, that shall
+wring tears from the selfish of unborn ages, as they feel for once the
+depths of the slumbering and godlike nature within them. And
+Burgoyne,--oh! a coat and a pair of shoes, he offers, and--how many
+pounds?--Are you men?
+
+_4th Sol_. What do you say, Sam?--Talks like a minister, don't he?
+
+_1st Sol_. Come, come,--there's the drum, boys. You don't bamboozle me
+again! I've heard all that before.
+
+_3d Sol_. Nor me.--I don't intend to have my wife and children
+tomahawked,--don't think I can stand that, refugee or not.
+
+_2nd Sol_. Here they come.
+
+ (_Other Soldiers enter_.)
+
+_5th Sol_. All's ready, all's ready.
+
+_6th Sol_. (_singing_.)
+
+"_Come blow the shrill bugle, the war dogs are howling_,"--
+
+ [_Exeunt_.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+
+
+DIALOGUE II.
+
+SCENE. _Before the door of the Parsonage. Trunks, boxes, and various
+ articles of furniture, scattered about the yard. Two men coming
+ down the path_.
+
+
+ (_George Grey enters_.)
+
+_George_. Those trunks in the forward team. Make haste. We've no time to
+lose. This box in the wagon where the children are.--Carefully--carefully,
+though.
+
+ (_A Soldier enters_.)
+
+_Sol_. Hurra, hurra, the house there! Are you ready? Ten minutes more.
+
+_George_. Get out. What do you stand yelling there for? We know all
+about it.
+
+_Sol_. But your brother, the Captain, says, I must hurry you, or you'll
+be left behind.
+
+_George_. Tell my brother, the Captain, I'll see to that. We want no
+more hurrying. We have had enough of that already, and much good it has
+done us too. Stop, stop,--not that. We must leave those for the Indians
+to take their tea in.
+
+_Workman_. But the lady said----
+
+_George_. Never mind the lady. Well, Annie, are you ready? Don't stand
+there crying; there's no use. We may come back here again yet, you know.
+Many a pleasant sunrise we may see from these windows yet. Heaven defend
+us, here is this aunt of ours.--What on earth are they bringing now?
+
+ (_A Lady in the door with a couple of portraits, followed
+ by others bringing baskets and boxes, etc_.)
+
+_Lady_. That will do, set them down; now, the Colonel and his lady, on
+the back room wall, just over against the beaufet. Stop a moment. I'll
+go with you myself.
+
+_Betty_. (In, the door.) Lord 'a mercy! Here it is broad day-light. What
+are we waiting for? I am all ready. Why don't we go?
+
+_George_. I tell you, Aunt Rachael, the thing is impossible. This
+trumpery can't go, and there's the end of it. St. George and the
+Dragon----
+
+_Miss Rachael_. Never mind this young malapert--do as I bid you.
+
+_Betty_. Lord 'a mercy, we shall all be murdered and scalped, every soul
+of us. Bless you--there it is in the garret now!--just hold this
+umberell a minute, Mr. George,--think of those murderous Indians wearing
+my straw bonnet. Lord bless you! What are you doing? a heaving my
+umberell over the fence, in that fashion!
+
+_George_. These women will drive me mad I believe. Let that box alone,
+you rascal. Lay a finger on that trumpery there I say, and you'll find
+whose orders you are under; as for the Colonel and his lady, they'll get
+a little drink out of the first puddle we come to, I reckon.
+
+ [_Goes out_.
+
+_Miss R_. (_Coming from the house_.) That will do. That is all,--in the
+green wagon, John----
+
+_Ser't_. But the children----
+
+_Miss R_. Don't stand there, prating to me at a time like this. Make
+haste, make haste!
+
+How perfectly calm I am! I would never have believed it;--just tie this
+string for me, child, my hands twitch so strangely,--they say the
+British are just down in the lane here, with five thousand Indians,
+Annie.
+
+_Annie_. It is no such thing. Aunt Rachael. The British are quietly
+encamped on the other side of the river; three miles off at least.
+
+_Miss R_. I thought as much. A pretty hour for us to be turned out of
+house and home to be sure. Not a wink have I slept this blessed night.
+Hark! What o'clock is that? George, George! where is that boy? Just run
+and tell your mother, Annie, just tell her, my dear, will you, that we
+shall all be murdered. Maybe she will make haste a little. Well, are
+they in?
+
+_Ser't_. The pictures? They are in,--yes'm. But Miss Kitty's a crying,
+and says as how she won't go, and there's the other one too; because,
+Ma'am, their toes--you see there's the trunk in front gives 'em a leetle
+slope inward, and then that chest under the seat--If you would just step
+down and see yourself, Ma'am.
+
+_Miss R_. I desire to be patient.
+
+ [_They go out_.
+
+ (_Annie sits on the bench of the little Porch, weeping.
+ Mrs. Gray enters from within_.)
+
+_Annie_. Shall I never walk down that shady path again? Shall I enter
+those dear rooms no more? There are voices there they cannot hear. From
+the life of buried years, ten thousand scenes, all vacancy toother eyes,
+enrich those walls for us; the furniture that money cannot buy, that
+only the joy and grief of years can purchase. They will spoil our
+pleasant home,--will they not, mother?
+
+_Mrs. G_. Pleasant, ay, pleasant indeed, has it been to us. God's will
+be done. Do not weep, Annie. We have counted the cost;--many a safe and
+happy home there will be in the days to come, whose light shall spring
+from this forgotten sorrow. God's will be done.
+
+_Annie_. Mother, they are all ready now; is Helen in her room still?
+
+_Mrs. G_. Go call her, Annie. Hours ago it was I sent her there. I
+thought she might get some little sleep ere the summons came. Call her,
+my child. How deadly pale she was!
+
+ [_Annie goes in_.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+
+
+DIALOGUE III.
+
+SCENE. _A Chamber partly darkened, the morning air steals faintly
+ through the half-open shutters. Helen before the mirror,
+ leaning upon the toilette, her face buried in her hands,
+ her long hair unbound, and flowing on her shoulders_.
+
+
+ (_Annie enters_.)
+
+_Annie_. Helen! Why, Helen, are you asleep there? Come, we are going
+now. After keeping us on tiptoe for hours, the summons has come at last.
+Indeed, there is hardly time for you to dress. Shall I help you?
+
+_Helen_. (_Rising slowly_.) God help me. Bid my mother come here, Annie.
+
+_Annie_. What ails you, Helen?--there is no time,--you do not understand
+me,--there is not one moment to be lost. Let me wind up this hair for you.
+
+_Helen_. Let go!--Oh God----
+
+_Annie_. Helen Grey!
+
+_Helen_. It was a dream,--it was but a foolish dream. It must not be
+thought of now,--it will never do. Bid my mother come here, I am ready
+now.
+
+_Annie_. Ready, Helen!--ready?--in that dressing-gown, and your
+hair--see here,--are you ready, Helen?
+
+_Helen_. Yes,--bid her come.
+
+_Annie_. Heaven only knows what you mean with this wild talk of yours,
+but if you are not mad indeed, I intreat you, sister, waste no more of
+this precious time.
+
+_Helen_. No, no,--we must not indeed. It was wrong, but I could
+not--go,--make haste, bid her come.
+
+_Annie_. She is crazed, certainly!
+
+ [_Goes out_.
+
+ (_Helen stands with her arms folded, and her eye fixed on the door_.)
+
+ (_Mrs. Grey enters_.)
+
+_Mrs. G_. My child! Helen, Helen! Why do you stand there thus?
+
+_Helen_. Mother----
+
+_Mrs. G_. Nay, do not stay to speak. There--throw this mantle around
+you. Where is your hat?--not here!--Bridal gear!
+
+ (_George enters_.)
+
+_George_. On my word! Well, well, stand there a little longer, to dress
+those pretty curls of yours, and--humph--there's a style in vogue in
+yonder camp for rebels just now; we'll all stand a chance to try, I
+think.
+
+_Helen_. George!--George Grey!--Be still,--be still.--We must not think
+of that. It was a dream.
+
+_George_. Is my sister mad?
+
+_Helen_. Mother--
+
+_Mrs. G_. Speak, my child.
+
+_Helen_. Mother--my blessed mother,--(_aside_.) 'Tis but a brief
+word,--it will be over soon.
+
+_Mrs. G_. Speak, Helen.
+
+_Helen_. I cannot go with you, mother.
+
+_Mrs. G_. Helen?
+
+_George_. Not go with us?
+
+_Mrs. G_. Helen, do you know what you are saying?
+
+_George_. You are in jest, Helen; or else you are mad,--before another
+sunset the British army will be encamping here.
+
+_Helen_. Hear me, mother. A message from the British camp came to me
+last night,--
+
+_Mrs. G_. The British camp?--Ha!--ha! Everard Maitland! God forgive him.
+
+_Helen_. Do not speak thus. It was but a few cold and careless lines he
+sent me,--my purpose is my own.
+
+_Mrs. G_. And--what, and he does not know?--Helen Grey, this passes
+patience.
+
+_Helen_. He does, Here is the answer that has just now come; for I have
+promised to meet him to-day at the hut of the missionary in yonder
+woods.--I can hardly spell these hasty words; but this I know, he will
+surely come for me,--though he bids me wait until I hear his signal,--so
+I cannot go with you, mother.
+
+_Mrs. G_. Where will you go, Helen?
+
+_Helen_. Everard is in yonder camp;--where should the wife's home be?
+
+_Mrs. G_. The wife's?
+
+_Helen_. These two years I have been his bride;--his wedded wife I shall
+be to-day. Yonder dawns my bridal day.
+
+_George_. What does she say? What does Helen say? I do not understand
+one word of it.
+
+_Mrs. G_. She says she will go to the British camp. Desertions thicken
+upon us. Hark!--they are calling us.
+
+_George_. To the British camp?
+
+_Mrs. G_. Go down, George, go down. Your sister talks wildly and
+foolishly, what you should not have heard, what she will be sorry for
+anon; go down, and tell them they must wait for us a little,--we will be
+there presently.
+
+_George_. Hark! (_going to the door_.)--another message. Do you
+hear?--Helen may be ready yet, if she will.
+
+_Mrs. G_. Blessed delay! Go down, George; say nothing of this. There is
+time yet. Tell them we will be there presently.
+
+ (_George goes out_.)
+
+_Mrs. G_. Did you think I should leave you here to accomplish this
+frantic scheme?--Did you dream of it, and you call me mother?--but what
+do you know of that name's meaning? Do not turn away from me thus, my
+child; do not stand with that fixed eye as though some phantom divinity
+were there. I shall not leave you here, Helen, never.
+
+Come, come; sit down with me in this pleasant window, there is time
+yet,--let us look at this moonlight scheme of yours a little. Would you
+stay here in this deserted citadel, alone? My child, our army are
+already on their march. In an hour more you would be the only living
+thing in all this solitude. Would you stay here alone, to meet your
+lover too?--Bethink yourself, Helen.
+
+_Helen_. This Canadian girl will stay with me, and----
+
+_Mrs. G_. A girl!--Helen, yesterday an army's strength, the armies of
+the nation, the love of mother, and brothers, and sisters, all seemed
+nothing for protection to your timid and foreboding thought; and now,
+when the enemy are all around us,--do you talk of a single girl? Why,
+the spirit of some strange destiny is struggling with your nature, and
+speaks within you, but we will not yield to it.
+
+_Helen_. You have spoken truly, mother. There is one tie in these hearts
+of ours, whose strength makes destiny, and where that leads, there lie
+those iron ways that are of old from everlasting. This is Heaven's
+decree, not mine.
+
+_Mrs. G_. Do not charge the madness of this frantic scheme on Heaven, my
+child.
+
+_Helen. Everard!_--no, no, I cannot show to another the lightning flash,
+that with that name reveals my destiny,--yet the falling stone might as
+soon--question of its way. Renounce him?--you know not what you ask! all
+there is of life within me laughs at the wild impossibility.
+
+Mother, hear me. There is no danger in my staying here,--none real. The
+guard still keep their station on yonder hill, and the fort itself will
+not be wholly abandoned to-day. Everard will come for me at noon.--It is
+impossible that the enemy should be here ere then; nay, the news of this
+unlooked-for movement will scarce have reached their camp.--_Real_
+danger there is none, and--Do not urge me. I know what you would say;
+the bitter cost I have counted all, already, all--_all_. That Maitland
+is in yonder camp, that--is it not a strange blessedness which can
+sweeten anguish such as this?--that he loves me still, that he will come
+here to-day to make me his forever,--this is all that I can say, my
+mother.
+
+_Mrs. G_. Will you go over to the British side, Helen? Will you go over
+to the side of wrong and oppression? Would you link yourself with our
+cruel and pursuing enemy? Oh no, no no,--that could not be--never, Amid
+the world of fearful thoughts that name brings, how could we place your
+image? Oh God, I did not count on this. I knew that this war was to
+bring us toil, and want, and fear, and haply bloody death; and I could
+have borne it unmurmuringly; but--God forgive me,--that the child I
+nursed in these arms should forsake me, and join with our deadly foes
+against us--I did not count on this.
+
+_Helen_. Yes--that's the look,--the very look--all night I saw it;--it
+does not move me now, as it did then. It is shadows of these things that
+are so fearful, for with the real comes the unreckoned power of
+suffering. Mother, this dark coil hath Heaven wound, not we. The tie
+which makes his path the way of God to me, was linked ere this war
+was,--and war cannot undo it now. It is a bitter fate, I know,--a bitter
+and a fearful one.
+
+_Mrs. G_. Ay, ay,--thank God! You had forgotten, Helen, that in that
+army's pay, nay, all around us even now are hordes and legions.
+
+_Helen_. I know it,--I know it all. I do indeed.
+
+_Mrs. G_. Helen, will you place yourself defenceless amidst that savage
+race, whose very name from your childhood upwards, has filled you with
+such strange fear? Yesterday I chid you for those fancies,--I was
+wrong,--they were warnings, heaven-sent, to save you from this doom.
+What was that dream you talked of then?
+
+_Helen_. Dreams are nothing. Will you unsay a life's lessons now when
+most I need them?
+
+_Mrs. G_. Yesterday, all day, a shadow as of coming evil lay upon me,
+but now I remember the forgotten vision whence it fell. Yesternight I
+had a dream, Helen, such as yours might be; for in my broken and fevered
+slumbers, wherever I turned, one vision awaited me. There was a savage
+arm, and over it fell a shower of golden hair, and ever and anon, in the
+shadowy light of my dream, a knife glittered and waved before me. We
+were safe, but over one,--some young and innocent and tender one it
+was--there hung a hopeless and inexorable fate. Once methought it seemed
+the young English girl that was wedded here last winter, and once she
+turned her eye upon me--Ha!--I had forgotten that glance of
+agony--surely, Helen, it was _yours_.
+
+_Mrs. G_. Helen! my child--(_Aside_.) There it is, that same curdling
+glance,--'twas but a dream, Helen. Why do you stand there so white and
+motionless--why do you look on me with that fixed and darkening
+eye?--'twas but a dream!
+
+_Helen_. And where were you?--tell me truly. Was it not by a gurgling
+fountain among the pine trees there? and was it not noon-day in your
+dream, a hot, bright, sultry noon, and a few clouds swelling in the
+western sky, and nothing but the trilling locusts astir?
+
+_Mrs. G_. How wildly you talk; how should I remember any thing like
+this?
+
+_Helen_. I will not yield to it; tempt me not. 'Tis folly all, I know it
+is. Danger there is none. Long ere yonder hill is abandoned, Everard
+will be here; and who knows that I am left here alone, and who would
+come here to seek me out but he? Oh no, I cannot break this solemn faith
+for a dream. What would he give to know I held my promise and his love
+lighter than a dream? I must _stay_ here, mother.
+
+_Mrs. G_. No, my child. Hear me. If this must be indeed, if all my holy
+right in you is nothing, if you will indeed go over to our cruel enemy,
+and rejoice in our sorrows and triumph in our overthrow----
+
+_Helen_. Hear her----
+
+_Mrs. G_. Be it so, Helen,--be it so; but for all that, do not stay here
+to-day. Bear but a little longer with our wearisome tenderness, and wait
+for some safer chance of forsaking us. Come.
+
+_Helen_. If I could--Ah, if I could----
+
+_Mrs. G_. You can--you will. Here, let me help you, we shall be ready
+yet. No one knows of this wild scheme but your brother and myself, no
+one else shall ever know it. Come.
+
+_Helen_. If I could. 'Tis true, I did not know when I sent him this
+promise you would leave me alone ere the hour should come. Perhaps--no,
+it would never do. When he comes and finds that, after all, I have
+deserted him, once with a word I angered him, and for years it was the
+last between us;--and what safer chance will there be in these fearful
+times of meeting him? No, no. If we do not meet now, we are parted for
+ever;--if I do not keep my promise now, I shall see him no more.
+
+_Mrs. G_. See him no more then. What is he to us--this stranger, this
+haughty, all-requiring one? Think of the blessed days ere he had crossed
+our threshold. You have counted all, Helen? The anguish that will bring
+tears into your proud brother's eyes, your sister's comfortless
+sorrow?--did you think of her lonely and saddened youth? You counted the
+wild suffering of this bitter moment,--did you think of the weary years,
+the long sleepless nights of grief, the days of tears; did you count the
+anguish of a mother's broken heart, Helen? God only can count that.
+
+You did not--there come the blessed tears at last. Here's my own gentle
+daughter, once again. Come, Helen, see, they are waiting for us. There
+stands the old chaise under the locust tree. You and I will ride
+together. Come, 'tis but a few steps down that shady path, and we are
+safe--a few steps and quickly trod. Hark! the respite is past even now.
+Do you stand there marble still? Helen, if you stay here, we shall see
+you no more. This lover of yours hates us all. He will take you to
+England when the war is over if you outlive its bloody hazards, and we
+are parted for ever. I shall see you no more, Helen, my child; my child,
+I shall see you no more. (_She sinks upon the chair, and weeps aloud_.)
+
+_Helen_. Has it come to this? Will you break my heart? If it were
+continents and oceans that you bade me cross, but those few steps--Ah,
+they would sever me from him for ever, and I cannot, I cannot, I
+can _not_ take them,--there is no motion so impossible. Yes, they are
+calling us. Do not stay.
+
+ (_Annie enters_.)
+
+_Annie_. Mother, will you tell me what this means?
+
+_Mrs. G_. Yes, come in. We will waste no more time about it. She will
+stay here to meet her lover, she will forsake us for a traitor. We have
+nursed an enemy among us. The babe I cherished in this bosom, whose
+sleeping face I watched with a young mother's love, hath become my
+enemy. Oh my God--is it from thee?
+
+_Annie_. Helen! my sister! Helen!
+
+_Mrs. G_. Ay, look at her. Would you think that the spirit which heaves
+in that light frame, and glances in those soft eyes, held such cruel
+power? Yesterday I would have counted it a breath in the way of my
+lightest purpose, and now--come away, Annie--it is vain, you cannot move
+her.
+
+ (_George enters_.)
+
+_George_. Mother, if Helen will not go now, we must leave her to her
+fate or share it with her. Every wagon is on the road but ours. A little
+more, and we shall be too late for the protection of the army. Shall I
+stay with her?
+
+_Mrs. G_. No, never. That were a sure and idle waste of life. Helen,
+perhaps, may be safe with them. Oh. yes, the refugees are safe, else
+desertion would grow out of fashion soon.
+
+_Annie_. Refugees! Refugee! Helen!
+
+_Mrs. G_. It sounds strange for one of us I know. You will grow used to
+it soon. Helen belongs to the British side, she will go over to them
+to-day, but she must go alone, for none of us would be safe in British
+hands, at least I trust so--this morning's experience might make me
+doubtful, but I trust we are all true here yet beside.
+
+_Annie_. Have I heard aright, Helen?--or is this all some fearful dream?
+You and I, who have lived together all the years of our lives, to be
+parted this moment, and for ever,--no, no!
+
+ (_A young American Officer enters hastily_.)
+
+_Capt. Grey_. Softly, softly! What is this? Are you in this conspiracy
+to disgrace me, mother? Oh, very well; if you have all decided to stay
+here, I'll take my leave.
+
+_Annie_. Oh, Henry, stay. You can persuade her it may be.
+
+_Capt. G. Persuade_! What's all this! A goodly time for rhetoric
+forsooth! Who's this that's risking all our lives, waiting to be
+persuaded now?
+
+_Mrs. G_. That Tory, Henry! We should have thought of this. Ah, if we
+had gone yesterday,--that haughty Maitland,--she will stay here to meet
+him! She will marry him, my son.
+
+_Capt. G_. Maitland!--and stay here!
+
+_Helen_. Dear Henry, let us part in kindness. Do not look on me with
+that angry eye. It was I that played with you in the woods and meadows,
+it was I that roamed with you in those autumn twilights,--you loved me
+then, and we are parting for ever it may be..
+
+_Capt. G_. (_To the children at the door_.) Get you down, young ones,
+get you down. Pray, mother, lead the way, will you?--break up this ring.
+Come, Helen, you and I will talk of this as we go on, only in passing
+give me leave to say, of all the mad pranks of your novel ladies, this
+caps the chief. You have outdone them, Helen; I'll give you credit for
+it, you have outdone them all.
+
+Why you'll be chronicled,--there's nothing on record like it, that ever
+I heard of; I am well-read in romances too. We'll have a new love-ballad
+made and set to tune, under the head of "Love and Murder," it will come
+though, if you don't make haste a little. Come, come.
+
+_Helen_. Henry!
+
+_Capt. G_. Are you in earnest, Helen? Did you suppose that we were mad
+enough to leave you here? You'll not go with us? But you will, by
+Heaven!
+
+_Helen_. Henry! Mother!--Nay, Henry, this is vain. I shall stay here, I
+shall--I shall stay here,--so help me Heaven.
+
+_Capt. G_. Helen Grey! Is that young lioness there my sometime
+sister?--my delicate sister?--with her foot planted like iron, and the
+strength of twenty men nerving her arm?
+
+_Helen_. Let go.--I shall stay here.
+
+_Capt. G_. Well, have your way, young lady, have your way; but--Mother,
+if you choose to leave that mad girl here, you can,--but as for this
+same Everard Maitland, look you, my lady, if I don't stab him to his
+heart's core, never trust me.
+
+ (_He goes out--Mrs. Grey follows him to the door_.)
+
+_Mrs. G_. Stay, Henry,--stay. What shall we do?
+
+_Capt. G_. Do!--Indeed, a straight waistcoat is the only remedy I know
+of, Madam, for such freaks as these. If you say so, she shall go with us
+yet.
+
+_Mrs. G_. Hear me. This is no time for passion now Hear me, Henry. This
+Maitland, _Tory_ as he is, is her betrothed husband, and she has chosen
+her fate with him; we cannot keep her with us; nay, with what we have
+now seen, it would be vain to think of it, to wish it even. She must go
+to him,--it but remains to see that she meets him safely. Noon is the
+hour appointed for his coming. Could we not stay till then?
+
+_Capt. G_. Impossible. Noon?--well.--Oh, if its all fixed upon;--if you
+have settled it between yourselves that Helen is to abandon us and our
+protection, for Everard Maitland's and the British, the sooner done, the
+better. She's quite right,--she's like to find no safer chance for it
+than this. Noon,--there is a picket left on yonder hill till after that
+time, certainly, and a hundred men or so in the fort. I might give Van
+Vechten a hint of it--nay, I can return myself this afternoon, and if
+she is not gone then, I will take it upon me she is not left a second
+time. Of course Maitland would be likely to care for her safety. At all
+events there's nothing else for us to do, at least there's but one
+alternative, and that I have named to you.
+
+ [_They go out together_.
+
+_Helen_. (_She has stood silently watching them_.) He has gone, without
+one parting look--he has gone! So break the myriad-tied loves, it hath
+taken a life to weave. This is a weary world.
+
+ (_She turns to her sister, who leans weeping on the window-seat_.)
+
+Come, Annie, you and I will part in kindness, will we not? No cruel
+words shall there be here. Pleasant hath your love been unto me, my
+precious sister. Farewell, Annie.
+
+_Annie_. Shall I never hear your voice again, that hath been the music
+of my whole life? Is your face henceforth to be to me only a remembered
+thing? Helen, you must not stay here. The Indians,--it was no idle fear,
+the half of their bloody outrages you have not heard; they will murder
+you, yes, _you_. The innocence and loveliness that is holy to us, is
+nothing in their eyes, they would as soon sever that beautiful hair from
+your brow----
+
+_Helen_. Hush, hush. There is no danger, Annie. The dark things of
+destiny are God's; the heart, the heart only, is ours.
+
+ (_Mrs. Grey re-enters_.)
+
+_Mrs. G_. (_to Annie_.) Come, come, my child. This is foolish now. All
+is ready. Janette will stay with you, Helen.
+
+ (_Laughing voices are heard without, and the children's faces
+ are seen peeping in the door_.)
+
+_Willy_. Dear mother, are you not ready yet? We have been in the wagon
+and out a hundred times. Oh, Helen, make haste. The sun is above the
+trees, and the grass on the roadside is all full of diamonds. The last
+soldiers are winding down the hollow now. Is not Helen going, Mother?
+
+_Mrs. G_. Your sister Helen is going from us forever. Come in and kiss
+her once, and then make haste--you must not all be lost.
+
+ (_They enter_.)
+
+_Willy_. Ah, why don't you go with us, sister?--Such a beautiful ride we
+shall have. You never heard such a bird-singing in all your life.
+
+_Frank_. We shall go by the Chesnut Hollow, George says we shall. Smell
+of these roses, Helen. Must she stay here? Hark, Willy, there's the
+drum. Good-bye, How sorry I am you will not go with us.
+
+_Willy_. So am I. What makes you stand so still and look at us so? Why
+don't you kiss me? Good-bye, Helen.
+
+_Helen_. (_Embracing them silently_.)
+
+_Annie_. Will you leave her here alone, mother? Will you?
+
+_Mrs. G_. No. There is a guard left on yonder hill, and the fort is not
+yet abandoned wholly. Besides, the army encamp at the creek, and Henry
+himself will return this afternoon. She will be gone ere then, though.
+
+_Helen_. Those merry steps and voices, those little, soft clinging hands
+and rosy lips, have vanished forever. For all my love I shall be to them
+but as the faint trace of some faded dream. This is a weary world.
+
+Come, George, farewell. How I have loved to look on that young brow. Be
+what my dreams have made you. Fare you well.
+
+_George_. Farewell, Helen.
+
+ [_He goes out hastily_.
+
+_Helen_. Will he forget me?
+
+_Mrs. G_. And farewell, Helen. Fare ye well.
+
+_Helen_. Will she leave me thus?
+
+_Mrs. G_. Do not go to the hut--do not leave this door until you are
+sure of the signal you spoke of, Helen.
+
+_Helen_. She will not look at me,--Mother!
+
+_Mrs. G_. Farewell, Helen; may the hour never come when you need the
+love you have cast from you now so freely.
+
+_Helen_. Will you leave me thus? Is not our life together ending here?
+In that great and solemn Hereafter our ways may meet again; but by the
+light of sun, or moon, or candle, or underneath these Heavens, no more.
+Oh! lovely, lovely have you been unto me, a spirit of holiness and
+beauty, building all my way.--Part we thus?
+
+_Mrs. G_. Farewell, Helen.
+
+_Helen_. Part we thus?
+
+_Mrs. G_. Fare ye well, Helen Grey, my own sweet and precious child, my
+own lovely, lovely daughter, fare ye well, and the Lord be with you. The
+Lord keep you, for I can keep you now no more. The Lord watch over you,
+my helpless one, mine, mine, mine, all mine, though I leave you thus; my
+world of untold wealth, unto another. Nay, do not sorrow, my blessed
+child,--you will be happy yet. Fear nothing,--if this must be, I say,
+fear nothing. You think that you are doing right in forsaking us
+thus;--it may be that you are. If in the strength of a pure conscience
+you stay here to-day,--be not afraid. When you lay here of old, a
+lisping babe, I told you of One whose love was better than a mother's.
+Now farewell, and trust in Him. Farewell, mine eye shall see thee yet
+again. Farewell.
+
+_Helen_. No, no; leave me not.
+
+_Mrs. G_. Unclasp these hands, I cannot stay.
+
+_Helen_. Never--never.
+
+_Mrs. G_. Untwine this wild embrace, or, even now,--even now----
+
+_Helen_. Farewell, mother. Annie Grey, farewell.
+
+ [_They go_.
+
+_Helen_. This is a weary world. Take me home. To the land where there is
+no crying or bitterness, take me home.
+
+ (_The noise of retreating steps is heard, and the sound
+ of the outer door closing heavily_.)
+
+_Helen_. They are gone,--not to church,--not for the summer's ride. I
+shall see them no more.--In heaven it may be; but by the twilight
+hearth, or merry table, at morn, or noon, or evening, in mirth or
+earthly tenderness, no more.
+
+Hark! There it is!--that voice,--I hear it now, I do. A dark eternity
+had rolled between us, and I hear it yet again. They are going now.
+Those rolling wheels, oh that that sound would last. There is no music
+half so sweet. Fainter--fainter--it is gone--no--that was but the
+hollow.--Hark----
+
+Now they are gone, indeed. So breaks the sense's last link between me
+and that world.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+PART FIFTH.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+FULFILLMENT
+
+ * * * * *
+
+DIALOGUE I.
+
+SCENE. _The hill. A young Soldier enters_.
+
+
+How gloriously, with what a lonely majesty the morning wastes in that
+silent valley there; with its moving shadows, and breeze and sunshine,
+and its thousand delicious sounds mocking those desolate homes----
+
+ (_He stops suddenly, and looks earnestly into the thicket_.)
+
+This is strange, indeed. This feeling that I cannot analyze, still grows
+upon me. _Presentiment?_ Some dark, swift-flying thought, leaves its
+trace, and the cause-seeking mind, in the range of its own vision
+finding none, looks to the shadowy future for it.
+
+ [_He passes on_.
+
+ (_Two Indian Chiefs, in their war-dress, emerge from the thicket,
+ talking in suppressed tones_.)
+
+_1st Chief_. Hoogh! Hoogh! Alaska fights to revenge his son,--we spill
+our blood to revenge his son, and he thinks to win gifts besides. Hugh!
+A brave chief he is!
+
+_2nd Chief_. Your talk is not good, Manida. They are our enemies,--we
+shall conquer them, we shall see their chestnut locks waving aloft, we
+shall dance and shout all night around them, and the eyes of the maidens
+shall meet ours in the merry ring, sparkling with joy, as we shout
+"Victory! victory! our enemies are slain,--our foot is on their necks,
+we have slain our enemies!" What more, Manida? Is it not enough?
+
+_1st Chief_. No. I went last night with Alaska to the camp above, to the
+tent of the young sachem of the lake, and he promised him presents, rich
+and many, for an errand that a boy might do. I asked Alaska to send me
+for him, and he would not.
+
+_2nd Chief_. The young white sachem was Alaska's friend, many moons ago,
+when Alaska was wounded and sick.--He must revenge young Siganaw, but he
+must keep his faith to his white friend, too.
+
+_1st Chief_. Ah, but I know where the horse is hidden and the paper.
+When the tomahawks flash here, and the war-cry is loudest, we will steal
+away. Come, and I will share the prize with you.
+
+_2nd Chief_. No, I will tell my brother chief that Manida is a
+treacherous friend.
+
+_1st Chief_. You cannot. It is too late. Hist! Quick, lower--lower--
+
+ [_They crouch among the trees_.
+
+ (_Another Soldier emerges from the wood-path, singing_.)
+
+ "_Then march to the roll of the drum,
+ It summons the brave to the plain,
+ Where heroes contend for the home
+ Which perchance they may ne'er see again_."
+
+
+(_Pausing abruptly_.) Well, we are finely manned here!
+
+ (_1st Soldier re-enters_.)
+
+_2nd Sol_. How many men do you think we have in all, upon this hill,
+Edward?
+
+_1st Sol_. Hist!--more than you count on, perhaps.
+
+_2nd Sol_. Why? What is the matter? Why do you look among those bushes
+so earnestly?
+
+_1st Student_. It is singular, indeed. I can hardly tell you what it is,
+but twice before in my round, precisely in this same spot, the same
+impression has flashed upon me, though the sense that gives it, if sense
+it is, will not bide an instant's questioning. There! Hist! Did nothing
+move there then?
+
+_2nd Sol_. I see nothing. This comes of star-gazing, when you should
+have slept. Though as to that, I have nothing to complain of, certainly.
+I had to thank your taste that way, last night, for an hour of the most
+delicious slumber. It was like that we used to snatch of old, between
+the first stroke of the prayer-bell and its dying peal.
+
+_1st Sol_. I am glad you could sleep. For myself, such a world of
+troubled thoughts haunted me, I found more repose in waking.
+
+_2nd Sol_. Then I wish you could have shared my dream with me, as indeed
+you seemed to, for you were with me through it all. A blessed dream it
+was, and yet--
+
+_1st Sol_. Well, let me share it with you now.
+
+_2nd Sol_. I cannot tell you how it was, that in honor and good
+conscience we had effected it, but somehow, methought our part in this
+sickening warfare was accomplished, and we were home again. Oh the joy
+of it! oh the joy of it! Even amid my dream, methought we questioned its
+reality, so unearthly in its perfectness, it seemed. We stood upon the
+college-green, and the sun was going down with a strange, darkling
+splendor; and from afar, ever and anon came the thunder roll of battle;
+but we had nought to do with it; our part was done; our time was out; we
+were to fight no more. And there we stood, watching the students' games;
+and there too was poor _Hale_, merry and full of life as e'er he was,
+for never a thought of his cruel fate crossed my dream. Suddenly we saw
+two ladies, arm in arm, come swiftly down the shady street, most
+strangely beautiful and strangely clad, with long white robes, and
+garlands in their hair, and such a clear and silvery laugh, and
+something fearful in their loveliness withal; and one of them, as she
+came smiling toward us--do you remember that bright, fair-haired girl we
+met in yonder lane one noon?--Just such a smile as hers wore the lady
+in my dream. Then, into the old chapel we were crowding all; that
+long-deferred commencement had come on at last; we stood upon a stage,
+and a strange light filled all the house, and suddenly the ceiling
+swelled unto the skiey dome, and nations filled the galleries; and I
+woke, to find myself upon a soldier's couch, and the reveille beating.
+
+_1st Sol_. Well, if it cheered you, 'twas a good dream most certainly,
+though, yet--the dream-books might not tell you so. Will you take this
+glass a moment?
+
+_2nd Sol_. What is it?
+
+_1st Sol_. That white house by the orchard, in the door--do you see
+nothing?
+
+_2nd Sol_. Yes, a figure, certainly;--yes, now it moves. I had thought
+those houses were deserted,--it is time they were I think, for all the
+protection we can give them. How long shall we maintain this post, think
+you, with such a handful?
+
+_1st Sol_. Till the preparations below are complete, I trust so at
+least, for we have watchers in these woods, no doubt, who would speedily
+report our absence.
+
+_2nd Sol_. Well, if we all see yonder sun go down, 'tis more than I
+count on.
+
+_1st Sol_. A chance if we do--a chance if we do. Will the hour come when
+this infant nation shall forget her bloody baptism?--the holy name of
+truth and freedom, that with our hearts' blood we seal upon her in these
+days of fear?
+
+_2nd Sol_. Ay, that hour may come.
+
+_1st Sol_. Then, with tears, and _blood_ if need be, shall she learn it
+anew; and not in vain shall the bones of the martyrs moulder in her
+peopled vales. For human nature, in her loftiest mood, was this
+beautiful land of old built, and for ages hid. Here--her cradle-dreams
+behind her flung; here, on the height of ages past, her solemn eye down
+their long vistas turned, in a new and nobler life she shall arise here.
+Ah, who knows but that the book of History may show us at last on its
+long-marred page--_Man_ himself,--no longer the partial and deformed
+developments of his nature, which each successive age hath left as if in
+mockery of its ideal,--but, man himself, the creature of thought,--the
+high, calm, majestic being, that of old stood unshrinking beneath his
+Maker's gaze. Even, as first he woke amid the gardens of the East, in
+this far western clime at last he shall smile again,--a perfect thing.
+
+_2nd Sol_. In your earnestness, you do not mark these strange sounds,
+Edward. Listen. (_He grasps his sword_.)
+
+ (_A Soldier rushes down the path_.)
+
+_3d Sol_. We are surrounded! Fly. The Indians are upon us. Fly.
+
+ [_Rushes on_.
+
+ (_Another Soldier bursts from the woods_.)
+
+_4th Sol_. God! They are butchering them above there, do not stand here!
+
+ [_Rushes down the hill_.
+
+_2nd Sol_. Resistance is vain. Hear those shrieks! There is death in
+them. Resistance is vain.
+
+_1st Sol_. Flight is vain. Look yonder! Francis,--the dark hour hath
+come!
+
+_2nd Sol_. Is it so? Mother and sister I shall see no more.
+
+ (_A number of Indians, disfigured with paint and blood, and
+ brandishing their knives, come rushing down the road, uttering short,
+ fierce yells. Others from below, bringing back the fugitives_.)
+
+_1st Sol_. We shall die together. God of Truth and Freedom, unto thee
+our youthful spirits trust we.
+
+ (_The Indians surround them. Fighting to the last, they fall_.)
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+
+
+DIALOGUE II.
+
+SCENE. _The deserted house--the chamber--Helen by the table--her head
+ bowed and motionless. She rises slowly from her drooping posture_.
+
+
+_Helen_. It is my bridal day. I had forgotten that. (_Looking from the
+window_.) Is this real? Am I here alone? My mother gone? The army gone?
+brothers and sisters gone, and those woods full of armed Indians? I am
+awake. This is not the light of dreams,--'tis the sun that's shining
+there. Not the fresh arid tender morning sun, that looked in on that
+parting. Hours he has climbed since then, to turn those shadows
+thus,--hours that to me were nothing.--Alone?--deserted--defenceless? Of
+my own will too? There was a _law_ in that will, though, was there not?
+(_Turning suddenly from the window_.) Shall I see him again? The living
+real of my thousand dreams, in the light of life, will he stand here
+to-day?--to-day? No, no. Is this swift flow of being leading on to
+_that_? Oh day of anguish, if in thine awful bosom, still, that dazzling
+instant sleeps, I can forgive the rest.
+
+ (_She stands by the toilette, and begins to gather once more
+ the long hair from her shoulders. Suddenly a low voice at the
+ door breaks the stillness. The Canadian servant looks in_.)
+
+_Jan_. I ask your pardon--Shall I come in, Ma'amselle?
+
+_Helen_. Ay, ay, come in. How strangely any voice sounds amid this
+loneliness. I am glad you are here.
+
+_Jan_. (_Entering_.) Beautiful! Santa Maria! How beautiful! May I look
+at these things, Ma'amselle? (_Stopping by the couch strewn with bridal
+gear_.) Real Brussels! And the plume in this bonnet, was there ever such
+a lovely droop?
+
+_Helen_. Come, fasten this clasp for me, Netty. I thought to have had
+another bridesmaid once, but--that is past--Yes, I am a bride to-day,
+and I must not wait here unadorned. (_Aside_.) He shall have no hint
+from me this day of "_altered fortunes_." As though these weary years
+had been but last night's dream, and my wedding-day had come as it was
+fixed, so will I meet him.--Yet I thought to have worn my shroud sooner
+than this robe.
+
+_Jan_. This silk would stand alone, Ma'amselle,--and what a lovely white
+it is! Just such a bodice as this I saw my Lady Mary wear, two years ago
+this summer, in Quebec; only, this is a thought deeper. But, Santa
+Maria! how it becomes a shape like yours!
+
+_Helen_. What a world of buried feeling lives again as I feel the clasp
+of this robe once more! Will he say these years have changed me?
+
+_Jan_. (_Aside_) I do not like that altered mien. How the beauty flashes
+from her? Is it silk and lace that can change one so? Here are bracelets
+too, Ma'amselle; will you wear them?
+
+_Helen_. Yes. Go, look from the window, Janette, down the lane to the
+woods. I am well-high ready now. He will come,--yes, he will come.
+
+ (_Janette retreats to the window,--her eye still following the lady_.)
+
+_Jan_. I have seen brides before, but never so gay a one as this. It is
+strange and fearful to see her stand here alone, in this lonesome house,
+all in glistening white, smiling, and the light flashing from her eyes
+thus. She looks too much like some radiant creature from another world,
+to be long for this.
+
+_Helen_. He will come, why should he not? Netty, fix your eye on that
+opening in the woods, and if you see but a shadow crossing it, tell me
+quickly.
+
+_Jan_. I can see nothing--nothing at all. Marie sanctissima!--how quiet
+it is! The shadows are straight here now, Miss Helen.
+
+_Helen_. Noon--the very hour has come! Another minute it may be.--Noon,
+you said, Netty?
+
+ (_Joining Janette at the window_.)
+
+_Jan_. Yes, quite--you can see; and hark, there's the clock. Oh, isn't
+it lonesome though? See how like the Sunday those houses look, with the
+doors all closed and the yards and gardens still as midnight. If we
+could but hear a human voice!--whose, I would not care.
+
+_Helen_. How like any other noon-day it comes! The faint breeze plays in
+those graceful boughs as it did yesterday; that little, yellow butterfly
+glides on its noiseless way above the grass, as then it did;--just so,
+the shadows sleep on the grassy road-side there;--yes, Netty, yes,
+_'tis_ very lonely.--Hear those merry birds!
+
+_Jan_. But I would rather hear that signal, Miss Helen, a thousand
+times, than the best music that ever was played.
+
+_Helen_. I shall see him again. That wild hope is wild no longer. To
+doubt were wilder now. Ay, Fate must cross my way with a bold hand, to
+snatch that good from me now. And yet,--alas, in the shadowy future it
+lieth still, and a dark and treacherous realm is that! The joys that
+blossom on its threshold are not ours--It may be, even now, darkness and
+silence everlasting lie between us.
+
+_Jan_. Hark--Hark!
+
+_Helen_. What is it?
+
+_Jan_. Hark!--There!--Do you hear nothing?
+
+_Helen_. Distant voices?
+
+_Jan_. Yes--
+
+_Helen_. I do--
+
+_Jan_. Once before,--'twas when I stood in the door below, I heard
+something like this; but the breeze just then brought the sound of the
+fall nearer, and drowned it. There it is!--Nearer. The other window,
+Miss Helen.
+
+_Helen_. From that hill it comes, does it not?
+
+_Jan_. Yes--yes, I should think it did. Oh yes. There is a guard left
+there--I had forgotten that. Mon Dieu! How white your lips are! Are you
+afraid, Ma'amselle?
+
+ (_Helen stands gazing silently from the window_.)
+
+_Jan_. There is no danger. It must have been those soldiers that we
+heard,--or the cry of some wild animal roaming through yonder woods--it
+might have been,--how many strange sounds we hear from them. At another
+time we should never have thought of it. I think we should have heard
+that signal though, ere this,--I do, indeed.
+
+_Helen_. What is it to die? Nor wood nor meadow, nor winding stream, nor
+the blue sky, do _they_ see; nor the voice of bird or insect do they
+hear; nor breeze, nor sunshine, nor fragrance visits them. Will there be
+nothing left that makes this being then? The high, Godlike purpose--the
+life whose breath it is,--can _that_ die?--the meek trust in Goodness
+Infinite,--can _that_ perish? No.--This is that building of the soul
+which nothing can dissolve, that house eternal, that eternity's wide
+tempests cannot move. No--no--I am not afraid. No--Netty, I am not
+afraid.
+
+_Jan_. Will you come here, Miss Helen?
+
+_Helen_. Well.
+
+_Jan_. Look among those trees by the road-side--those pine trees, on the
+side of the hill, where my finger points.--
+
+_Helen_. Well--what is it?
+
+_Jan_. Do you see--what a blinding sunshine this is--do you see
+something moving there?--wait a moment--they are hid among the trees
+now--you will see them again presently--There!--there they come, a troop
+of them, see.
+
+_Helen_. Yes--_Indians_--are they not?
+
+_Jan_. Ay--it must have been their yelling that we heard.--We need not
+be alarmed.--They are from the camp--they have come to that spring for
+water. The wonder is, your soldiers should have let them pass.--You will
+see them turning back directly now.
+
+_Helen_. (_Turning from the window_.) Shelter us--all power is thine.
+
+_Jan_. Holy Virgin!--they are coming this way. Those creatures are
+coming down that hill, as I live. Yes, there they come.
+
+This strip of wood hides them now. What keeps them there so long? Ay,
+ay,--I see now--I am sorry I should have alarmed you so, Ma'amselle, for
+nothing too--They have struck into those woods again, no doubt; they are
+going back to their camp by the lower route.
+
+_Helen_. No.
+
+_Jan_. It must be so. There is no doubt of it. Indeed, we might be sure
+they would never dare come here.--They cannot know yet that your army
+are gone. Besides, we should have heard from them ere this. They could
+never have kept their horrid tongues to themselves so long, I
+know.--Well, if it were to save me, I cannot screw myself into this
+shape any longer. (_Rising from the window_.)
+
+_Helen_. Listen.
+
+_Jan_. 'Tis nothing but the sound of the river. You can make nothing
+else of it, Ma'amselle,--unless it is these locusts that you hear. I
+wish they would cease their everlasting din a moment.
+
+How that breeze has died away! Every leaf is still now! There's not a
+cloud or a speck in all the sky.
+
+_Helen_. Look in the west--have you looked there?
+
+_Jan_. Yes, there are a few little clouds beginning to gather there
+indeed. We shall have a shower yet ere night.
+
+ (_The war-whoop is heard, loud and near_.)
+
+_Jan_. Mon Dieu! Here they are! It is all over with us! We shall be
+murdered!
+
+ (_She clasps her hands, and shrieks wildly_.)
+
+_Helen_. Hush! hush! Put down that window, and come away. We must be
+calm now.
+
+_Jan_. It is all over with us,--what use is there? Do you hear that
+trampling?--in the street!--they are coming!
+
+_Helen_. Janette--Hear me. Will you throw away your life and mine? For
+shame! Be calm. These Indians cannot know that we are here. They will
+see these houses _all_ deserted. Why should they stop to search _this?_
+Hush! hush! they are passing now.
+
+_Jan_. They have stopped!--the trampling has stopped!--I hear the
+gate,--they have come into the yard.
+
+ (_A long wild yell is heard under the window. They stand,
+ looking silently at each other. Again it trembles through
+ the room, louder than before_.)
+
+_Helen_. I am sorry you stayed here with me. Perhaps--Hark! What was
+that? What was that? Was it not _Maitland_ they said then? It was--it
+is--Don't grasp me so.
+
+_Jan_. Nay--what would you do?
+
+_Helen_. I must speak with them. Let go my arm! Do you not hear? 'Tis
+Maitland they are talking of. How strangely that blessed name sounds in
+those tones!
+
+_Jan_. You must not--we have tempted Heaven already--this is madness.
+
+_Helen_. Let go, Janette. It is not you they seek. You can conceal
+yourself. You shall be safe.
+
+_Jan_. She is wild! Nay, I was mad myself, or I should never have stayed
+here. It were better to have lived always with them, than to be murdered
+thus.
+
+ (_Helen opens the window, and stands for a moment, looking
+ silently down into the court. She turns away, shuddering_.)
+
+_Helen_. Can I meet those eyes again?
+
+ (_Again the name of Maitland mingles with the wild
+ and unintelligible sounds that rise from without_.)
+
+_Helen_. Can I? (_She turns to the window_.) What can it mean? His own
+beautiful steed! How fiercely he prances beneath that unskilful rein.
+Where's your master, Selma, that he leaves me to be murdered here? A
+letter! He bids me unfasten the door, Janette.
+
+_Jan_. And will you?
+
+_Helen_. They are treacherous I know. This will do.--(_Taking a basket
+from the toilette_.) Give me that cord. (_She lets down the basket from
+the window, and draws it up, with a letter in it_.)
+
+_Helen_. (_Looking at the superscription_.) 'Tis his! I thought so. Is
+it ink and paper that I want now? (_Breaking it open_.) Ah, there's no
+forgery in this, 'Tis his! 'tis his!
+
+_Jan_. How can she stand to look at that little lock of hair
+now?--smiling as if she had found a bag of diamonds. But there's bad
+news there. How the color fades out, and the light in her eye dies away.
+What can it be?
+
+_Helen_. (_Throwing the letter down, and walking the floor hastily_.)
+This is too much! I cannot, I cannot, _I cannot go with them_! How could
+he ask it of me? _This is_ cruel.
+
+He knew, perfectly well, how I have always feared them--I cannot go with
+them.
+
+ (_She takes up the letter_.)
+
+(_Reading_.) "Possible"--"If it were possible"--he does not read that
+word as I did when I kept this promise--_Possible_? He does not know the
+meaning that love gives that word--"If I had known an hour sooner,"
+--Ay, ay, an hour sooner!--"Trust me, dear Helen, they will not harm
+you." _Trust me_, trust me. Won't I?
+
+_Jan_. She is beckoning them, as I live!
+
+_Helen_. Bring me that hat and mantle, Netty. I must go with these
+savages.
+
+_Jan_. _Go_ with them!
+
+_Helen_. There is no help for it.
+
+_Jan_. With these wild creatures,--with these painted devils?--No--Like
+nothing human they look, I am sure. Ah see, see them in their feathers
+and blankets, and that long wild hair. See the knives and the tomahawks
+in their girdles! Holy Mary! Here's one within the court!
+
+_Helen_. Yes, there he stands--there's life in it now.--There they
+stand--the chesnut boughs wave over them--this is the filling up of
+life. They _are_ waiting for me. 'Tis no dream.
+
+_Jan_. Dare you go with them? They will murder you.
+
+_Helen_. If they were but human, I could move them--and yet it is the
+human in them that is so dreadful. To die were sad enough--to die by
+violence, by the power of the innocent elements, were dreadful, or to be
+torn of beasts; to meet the wild, fierce eye, with its fixed and deadly
+purpose, more dreadful; but ah, to see the human soul, from the
+murderers eye glaring on you, to encounter the human will in its
+wickedness, amid that wild struggle--Oh God! spare me.
+
+_Jan_. If you fear them so, surely you will not go with them.
+
+_Helen_. This letter says they are kind and innocent. One I _should_
+believe tells me there is no cause for fear. In his haste he could not
+find no other way to send for me.--The army will be here soon,--I _must_
+go with them.
+
+_Jan_. But Captain Grey will come back here again this afternoon.
+Stay,--stay, and we will go with him.
+
+_Helen_. You can--yes, you will be safe. For myself, I will abide my
+choice. Surely I need not dread to go where my betrothed husband trusts
+me so fearlessly. I count my life worth little more than the price at
+which he values it. Clasp this mantle, Netty.--And is it thus I go forth
+from these blessed walls at last?--Through all those safe and quiet
+hours of peace and trust, did this dark end to them lie waiting
+here?--Are they calling me?
+
+_Jan_. Yes.
+
+_Helen_. Well,--I am ready. (_Lingering in the door_.) I shall sit by
+that window no more. Never again shall I turn those blinds to catch the
+breeze or the sunshine. Yes--(_returning_), let me look down on that
+orchard once again. Never more--never more.
+
+ (_She walks to the door, again pausing on the threshold_.)
+
+_Helen_. (_solemnly_.) Oh God, here, from childhood to this hour,
+morning and evening I have called on thee--forget me not. Farewell,
+Netty, you will see my mother--you will see them all--that is
+past.--Tell her I had seen the Indians, and was not afraid.
+
+ [_She goes out_.
+
+_Jan_. It won't take much to make an angel of her, there's that in it.
+
+ (_Looking cautiously through the shutters_.)
+
+There she comes! How every eye in that wild group flashes on her! And
+yet with what a calm and stately bearing she meets them. Holy Mary! she
+suffers that savage creature to lift her to her horse, as though he were
+her brother, and the long knife by his side too, glancing in the
+sunshine! The horse, one would think, he knew the touch of that white
+hand on his neck. How gently he rears his beautiful head. There they go.
+Adieu! Was there ever so sad a smile?
+
+Another glimpse I shall have of them yet beyond those trees.--Yes, there
+they go--there they go. I can see that lovely plume waving among the
+trees still.--Was there ever so wild a bridal train?
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+
+
+DIALOGUE III.
+
+SCENE. _British Camp. The interior of a Tent richly furnished. An
+ Officer seated at a table covered with papers and maps.
+ A Servant in waiting_.
+
+
+_The Officer_. (_Sipping his wine, and carefully examining a plan of the
+adjacent country_.) About here, we must be--let me see.--I heard the
+drum from their fort this morning, distinctly. Turn that curtain; we
+might get a faint breeze there now.
+
+_Ser't_. But the sun will be coming that side, Sir. It's past two
+o'clock.
+
+_Off_. Past two--a good position--very. Well, well,--we'll take our
+breakfast in Albany on Friday morning, and if our soldiers fast a day or
+two ere then, why they'll relish it the better;--once in the rich
+country beyond--Ay, it will take more troops than this General will have
+at his bidding by that time, to drain the Hudson's borders for us.
+
+ (_A Servant enters with a note_.)
+
+_Off_. (_Reading_.) "_The Baroness Reidesel's compliments--do her the
+honor---Voisin has succeeded_."--Ay, ay,--Voisin has succeeded,--I'll
+warrant that. That caterer of hers must be in league with the powers of
+the air, I am certain. General Burgoyne will be but too happy, my
+Lady--(_writing the answer_.)
+
+ [_The Servant goes out_.
+
+_Off_. Past two! The cannon should be in sight ere this. This to Sir
+George Ackland.
+
+ [_Exit the Attendant_.
+
+_Off_. Tuesday--Wednesday.--If the batteaux should get here to-morrow.
+One hundred teams----
+
+ (_Another Officer enters the tent_.)
+
+_1st Off_. How goes it abroad, Colonel St. Leger?
+
+_2nd Off_. Indeed, Sir, the camp is as quiet as midnight. It's a
+breathless heat. But there are a few dark heads swelling in the west. We
+may have a shower yet ere night.
+
+_Bur_. Good news that. But here is better, (_giving the other an open
+letter_.)
+
+_St. Leger_. Ay, ay, that reads well, Sir.
+
+_Bur_. And here is another as good. Yes Sir, yes Sir,--they are flocking
+in from all quarters--the insurgents are laying down their arms by
+hundreds. It must be a miserable fragment that Schuyler has with him by
+this.
+
+_St. L_. General Burgoyne, is not it a singular circumstance, that the
+enemy should allow us to take possession of a point like that without
+opposition,--so trifling a detachment, too? Why, that hill commands the
+fort,--certainly it does.
+
+_Bur_. Well--well. They are pretty much reduced, I fancy, Sir. We shall
+hardly hear much more from them. Let me see,--this is the hill.
+
+_St. L_. A pity we could not provoke them into an engagement, though!
+They depend so entirely upon the popular feeling for supplies and
+troops, and the whole machinery of their warfare, that it is rather
+hazardous reckoning upon them, after all. If we could draw them into an
+engagement _now_, the result would be certain.
+
+_Bur_. Yes, yes; we must contrive to do that ere long. Rather
+troublesome travelling companions they make, that's certain. Like those
+insects that swarm about us here,--no great honor in fighting them, but
+a good deal of discomfort in letting them alone. We must sweep them out
+of our way, I think, or at all events give them a brush, that will quiet
+them a little.
+
+_St. L_. Or they might prove, after all, like the gadfly in the fable. I
+do not think this outbreak will be any disadvantage in the end, General.
+
+_Bur_. Not a whit--not a whit--they have needed this. It will do them
+good, Sir.
+
+_St. L_. The fact is, these colonies were founded in the spirit of
+insubordination, and all the circumstances of their position have
+hitherto tended to develope only these disorganizing elements.
+
+_Bur_. It will do them good, Sir. Depend upon it, they'll remember this
+lesson. Pretty well sickened of war are they all. They'll count the cost
+ere they try it again.
+
+_St. L_. We can hardly expect the news from General Reidesel before
+sunset, I suppose.
+
+_Bur_. If my messenger returns by to-morrow's sunrise, it is better
+fortune than I look for.
+
+ (_Col. St. Leger goes out_.)
+
+ (_Burgoyne resumes his plan_.)
+
+_A Ser't_. (_At the door_.) Capt. Maitland, Sir.
+
+_Bur_. Capt. Maitland!
+
+_Ser't_. From Fort Ann, Sir.
+
+ (_Maitland enters_.)
+
+_Bur_. Captain Maitland! Good heavens, I thought you were at
+Skeensborough by this,--what has happened? or am I to congratulate
+myself that the necessity of your embassy is obviated. You met them,
+perhaps?--
+
+_Maitland_. There's but little cause of congratulation, Sir, as these
+dispatches will prove to you. I returned only because my embassy was
+accomplished.
+
+_Bur_. Do you mean to say, Captain Maitland, that you have seen the
+waters of Lake Champlain, since you left here this morning?
+
+_Mait_. I do, Sir.
+
+_Bur_. On my word, these roads must have improved since we travelled
+them some two days agone. I am sorry for your horses, Sir. You saw
+General Reidesel?
+
+_Mait_. I left him only at nine o'clock this morning.
+
+ (_Burgoyne examines the dispatches_.)
+
+_Bur_. "Twelve oxen to one batteaux!"--"and but fifty teams!" This news
+was scarcely worth so much haste, I think,--but fifty teams?--Captain
+Maitland, had those draught horses from Canada not arrived yet?
+
+_Mait_. They were just landing this morning as I left, but only
+one-fourth of the number contracted for.
+
+_Bur_. Humph! I would like to know what time, at this rate----sit down,
+Captain Maitland, sit down--we are like to spend the summer here, for
+aught I see, after all. (_A long pause, in which Burgoyne resumes his
+reading_.)
+
+_Mait_. General Burgoyne, I am entrusted with a message from General
+Reidsel to the Baroness. If this is all----
+
+_Bur_. What were you saying?--The Baroness--ay, ay--that's all well
+enough,--but Captain Maitland is aware, no doubt, there are more
+important subjects on the tapis just now than a lady's behests.
+
+_Mait_. Sir?----
+
+_Bur_. (_Pushing the papers impatiently from him_.) This will never do.
+St. George! We'll give these rebels other work ere many days, than
+driving away cattle and breaking down bridges for our convenience.
+Meanwhile we must open some new source of supplies, or we may starve to
+death among these hills yet. Captain Maitland, I have a proposal to make
+to you. You are impatient, Sir.
+
+_Mait_. General Burgoyne!----
+
+_Bur_. Nay, nay,--there's no haste about it. It were cruel to detain you
+now, after the toil of this wild journey. You'll find your quarters
+changed, Captain Maitland. We sent a small detachment across the river
+just now. Some of our copper-colored allies had got into a fray with the
+enemy there.
+
+_Mait_. Ha! (_returning_.)
+
+_Bur_. Nothing of consequence, as it turns out. We hoped it would have
+ended in something. A few of the enemy, who were stationed as a guard on
+a hill not far from Fort Edward, were surprised by a party of Indians,
+and killed, to a man, I believe. Afterwards, the victors got into a
+deadly fray among themselves as usual. A quarrel between a couple of
+these chiefs, at some famous watering place of theirs, and in the midst
+of it, a party from the fort drove them from the ground;--this is
+Alaska's own story at least.
+
+_Mait_. _Alaska's!_
+
+_Bur_. Alaska?--Alaska?--yes, I think it was,--one of these new allies
+we have picked up here.
+
+_Mait_. (_In a whisper_.) Good God!
+
+_Bur_. By the time our detachment arrived there, however, the ground was
+cleared, and they took quiet possession. Are you ill, Captain Maitland?
+
+_Mait_. A little,--it is nothing. I am to cross the river.
+
+_Bur_, Yes. You will take these papers to Captain Andre. You have
+over-fatigued yourself. You should have taken more time for this wild
+journey.
+
+ (_Maitland goes out_.)
+
+_Bur_. I do not like the idea of division, but it cannot be helped now.
+This gallant young soldier were a fitting leader for such an enterprize.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+
+
+DIALOGUE IV.
+
+SCENE. _The ground before Maitland's Tent_.
+
+
+ (_Maitland and the Indian Chief, Manida, enter_.)
+
+_Mait_. This is well. (_He writes on a slip of paper, and gives it to
+the Indian_.) Take that, they will give you the reward you ask for it.
+Let me see your face no more, that is all.
+
+_Manida_. Ha, _Monsieur_?
+
+_Mait_. Let me see your face no more, I say. Do you understand me?
+
+_Manida_. (_Smiling_.) Oui.
+
+ (_Maitland turns from him. The Indian goes off in the
+ opposite direction. He stops a moment, and steals a look
+ at Maitland,--throws his head back with a long silent laugh,
+ and then goes on toward the woods_.)
+
+_Mait_. (_Musing_.) I like this. _This_ is womanly! Nay, perhaps there
+is no caprice about it. I may have misinterpreted that letter in my
+haste last night. Very likely. Well,--better this, than that Helen Grey
+should come to evil through fault of mine,--better this, than the
+anguish of the horrible misgivings that haunted me amid my journey.
+
+And so pass these faery visions! Nay, not thus. It will take longer than
+this to unlink this one day's hope from its thousand fastnesses. I
+thought, ere this, to have met the spirit of those beaming eyes, to have
+taken to my heart for ever this soft, pure being of another life. And
+yet, even as I rode through those lonely hills this morning, with every
+picture my hope painted, there came a strange misgiving;--like some
+scene of laughing noonday loveliness, darkening in the shadow of a
+summer's cloud.
+
+Strange that Alaska should abandon my trust! I cannot understand it.
+Why, I should never have trusted her with this rascal Indian. There was
+something in his eye, hateful beyond all thought,--and once or twice I
+caught a strange expression in it, like malignant triumph it seemed. It
+may be--no, he must have seen her--that glove he showed me was hers, I
+know. Good God!--what if----I think my old experience should have taught
+me there was little danger of her risking much in my behalf. Well--even
+this is better, than that Helen Grey should have come to evil through
+fault of mine.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+PART SIXTH
+
+ * * * * *
+
+RECONCILIATION.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+DIALOGUE I.
+
+SCENE. _The slope of the Hill near Fort Edward. The road-side, shaded
+ with stately pines and hemlocks_.
+
+
+ (_Two British Officers, coming slowly down the road_.)
+
+_1st Off_. Yes, here has been wild work upon this hill to-day. They were
+slaughtered to a man.
+
+_2nd Off_. I saw a sight above there, just now, that sickened me of
+warfare.
+
+_1st Off_. And what was that, pry'thee?
+
+_2nd Off_. Oh nothing,--'twas nothing but a dead soldier; a common sight
+enough, indeed; but this was a mere youth;--he was lying in a little
+hollow on the roadside, and as I crossed in haste, I had well-nigh set
+my foot on his brow. Such a brow it was, so young, so noble, and the
+dark chesnut curls clustering about it. I think I never saw a more
+classic set of features, or a look of loftier courage than that which
+death seemed to have found and marbled in them. Hark--that's a
+water-fall we hear.
+
+_1st Off_. I saw him, there was another though, lying not far thence,
+the sight of whom moved me more. He was younger yet, or seemed so, and
+of a softer mould; and, torn and bloody as they were, I fancied I could
+see in his garb and appointments, and in every line of his features, the
+traces of some mother's tenderness.
+
+_2nd Off_. Listen, Andre! This is beautiful! There's some cascade not
+far hence, worth searching for.
+
+_Andre_. Yes, just in among those trees you'll find a perfect
+drawing-room, carpeted, canopied, and dark as twilight; its verdant
+seats broidered with violets and forget-me-nots; and all untenanted it
+seems, nay, deserted rather, for the music wastes on the lonely air, as
+if the fairy that kept state there, in gossip mood had stolen down some
+neighboring aisle, and would be home anon. I would have bartered all the
+glory of this campaign for leave to stretch myself on its mossy bank,
+for a soft hour or so.
+
+_Mor_. Ay, with Chaucer or the "Faery Queen." If one could people these
+lovely shades with the fresh creations of the olden time, knight and
+lady, and dark enchantress and Paynim fierce, instead of Yankee rebels--
+
+_Andre_. 'Twere well your faery-work were of no lasting mould, or these
+same Yankee rebels would scarce thank you for your pains,--they hold
+that race in little reverence. Alas,--
+
+ No grot divine, or wood-nymph haunted glen,
+ Or stream, or fount, shall these young shades e'er know.
+ No beautiful divinity, stealing afar
+ Through darkling nooks, to poet's eye thence gleam;
+ With mocking mystery the dim ways wind,
+ They reach not to the blessed fairy-land
+ That once all lovely in heaven's stolen light,
+ To yearning thoughts, in the deep green-wood grew.
+ Ah! had they come to light when nature
+ Was a wonder-loving, story-telling child!--
+ The misty morn of ages had gone by,
+ The dreamy childhood of the race was past,
+ And in its tame and reasoning manhood,
+ In the daylight broad, and noon-day of all time,
+ _This_ world hath sprung. The poetry of _truth_,
+ None other, shall her shining lakes, and woods,
+ And ocean-streams, and hoary mountains wear.
+ Perchance that other day of poesy,
+ Unsung of prophets, that upon the lands
+ Shall dawn yet, thence shall spring. The self-same mind
+ That on the night of ages once, for us
+ Those deathless clusters flung, the self-same mind,
+ With all its ancient elements of might,
+ Among us now its ancient glory hides;
+ But, from its smothered power, and buried wealth,
+ A golden future sparkles, decked from deeper founts,
+ A new and lovelier firmament,
+ A thousand realms of song undreamed of now,
+ That shall make Romance a forgotten world,
+ And the young heaven of Antiquity,
+ With all its starry groups, a gathered scroll.
+
+
+_Mor_. Ay, Andre, you were born a poet, and have mistaken your art.
+Prythee excuse me, who am but a poor soldier, for marring so fine a
+rhapsody with any thing so sublunary; but, methinks, for an enemy's
+quarters, yonder fort shows as peaceable a front of stone and mortar as
+one could ask for. What can it mean that they are so quiet there?
+
+_Andre_. That spy did not return a second time.
+
+_Mor_. The rogues have made sure of him ere this, I fancy. They may have
+given us the slip,--who knows?
+
+_Andre_. I would like to venture a stroll through that shady street if I
+thought so. A dim impression that I have somewhere seen this view
+before, haunts me unaccountably.
+
+_Mor_. How I hate that sober, afternoon air, that hangs like an
+invisible presence over it all. You can see it in the sunshine on those
+white walls, you can hear it in the hum of the bee from the bending
+thistle here.
+
+_Andre_. Of the mind it is. This were lovely as the morning light, but
+for the shade it gathers thence, from the thought of decline and the
+vanishing day. 'Tis a pretty spot.
+
+_Mor_. Yes, but the quiet goings-on of life are all hushed there now.
+
+_Andre_. Ay, this is the hour, when the home-bound children swing the
+gate with a merry spring, and the mother sits at her work by the open
+window, with her quiet eye, and the daughter, with the beauty of an
+untamed soul in her's, looks forth on the woods and meadows, and thinks
+of her walk at even-tide. I thought it was something like a memory that
+haunted me thus,--'tis the spot that Maitland talked of yesterday.
+
+_Mor_. Captain Maitland? I saw him just now at the works above.
+
+_Andre_. Here? On this hill?
+
+_Mor_. Yes,--something struck me in his mien,--and there he stands with
+Colonel Hill, above, on the other side.--Mark him now. Your friend is
+handsome, Andre; he is handsome, I'll own,--but I never liked that smile
+of his, and I think I like it less than ever now.
+
+_Andre_. Why, that's the genuine Apollo-curl,--a line's breadth deeper
+were too much, I'll own.
+
+ (_Maitland and another Officer enter_.)
+
+_Off_. That is all,--that is all, I believe, Captain Maitland. Yonder
+pretty dwelling among the trees seems an old acquaintance of yours. It
+has had the ill manners to rob me of your eye ever since we stood here,
+and I have had little token that the other senses were not in its
+company. Andre, has your friend never a ladye-love in these wilds, you
+could tell us of?
+
+_Mor_. He is sworn to secresy. Did you mark that glance?
+
+_Mait_. Love! I hold it a pretty theme for the ballad-makers, Colonel
+Hill; but for myself, I have scarce time for rhyming just now. Captain
+Andre, here are papers for you.
+
+ [_He walks away, descending the road_.
+
+_Col. Hill_. So! So! What ails the boy?
+
+ (_Looking after him for a moment, and then ascending the hill_.)
+
+_Andre_. (_Reading_.) Humph! Here's prose enough! Will you walk up the
+hill with me, Mortimer? I must cross the river again.
+
+_Mait_. First let me seek this horse of mine,--the rogue must have
+strayed down this path, I think.
+
+ (_He enters the wood_.)
+
+ (_Andre walks to and fro with an impatient air, then pauses_.)
+
+_Andre_. Well, I can wait no longer for this loiterer.
+
+ [_Exit_.
+
+ (_Mortimer re-enters, calling from the woods_.)
+
+_Mor_. Andre! Maitland! Colonel Hill! Good Heavens! Where the devil are
+they all? Maitland!
+
+ (_Maitland appears, slowly ascending the road_.)
+
+_Mor_. For the love of Heaven,--come here.
+
+_Mail_. Nay.--but what is it?
+
+_Mor_. For God's sake, come,
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+
+
+DIALOGUE II.
+
+SCENE. _A little glen, darkly shaded with pines. A fountain issuing from
+ one side, and falling with a curious murmur into the basin below_.
+
+
+ (_Mortimer and Maitland enter_.)
+
+_Mor_. This is the place!--Well, if hallucinations like this can visit
+mortal eyes, I'll ne'er trust mine again. 'Tis the spot, I'm sure of
+it,--the place, too, that Andre was raving about just now.--The fairies'
+drawing-room,--palace rather,--look at these graceful shafts,
+Maitland,--and fairies' work, it must have been in good earnest.
+
+_Mait_. If it's to admire this clump of pine trees you have brought me
+hither, allow me to say you might have spared yourself that trouble. I
+have seen the place already, as often as I care to.
+
+_Mor_. Come this way a little,--yes, it was just above there that I
+stood,--it must have been.
+
+_Mait_. If you would give me some little inkling of what you are talking
+about, Lieutenant Mortimer, I should be more likely to help you, if it's
+help you need.
+
+_Mor_. I do not ask you to believe me, but,--as I was springing on my
+horse just now above there, the gurgling of this spring caught my ear,
+and looking down suddenly--upon my word, Captain Maitland, I am ashamed
+to describe what cannot but seem to you such an improbable piece of
+fancy-work; and yet, true it seemed, as that I see you now. I was
+looking down, as I said, when suddenly, among those low evergreens, the
+brilliant hue of a silken mantle caught my eye, and then a woman's brow
+gleamed up upon me. Yes, there in that dark cradle, calmly sleeping, all
+flashing with gold and jewels, like some bright vision of olden time,
+methought there lay--a lady,--a girl, young and lovely as a dream;--the
+white plume in her bonnet soiled and broken, and the long bright hair
+streaming heavily on her mantle,--and yet with all its loveliness, such
+a face of utter sorrow saw I never. I _saw_ her, I saw her, as I see you
+now,--the proud young form with such a depth of grace, in its strange
+repose, and--where are you going?--what are you doing, Maitland?
+
+_Mait_. Helen Grey!--
+
+_Mor_. You are right. I did not mark that break--yes--there she lies.
+Said I right, Maitland?
+
+_Mait_. Helen Grey!--
+
+_Mor_. Maitland! Heavens!--what a world of anguish that tone
+reveals!--Why do you stand gazing on that lovely sleeper thus?
+
+_Mait_. Bring water. There's a cup at yonder spring. Here has been
+treachery! Devils and fiends have been working here against me. We must
+unclasp this mantle. The treasure of the earth lies here.--Now doth mine
+arm enfold it once, at last. 'Tis sweet, Helen, mine own _true_ love;
+'tis sweet, even thus.
+
+_Mor_. This letter,--see--from those loosened folds it just now dropped.
+This might throw some light, perchance--
+
+_Mait_. Let it be. There's light enough. I want no more. Water,--more
+water,--do you see?
+
+_Mor_. Maitland,--this is vain. Mark this dark spot upon her girdle--
+
+_Mait_. Hush, hush,--there, cover it thus--'tis nothing, Loosen this
+bonnet--so--'twas a firm hand that tied that knot; so--she can breathe
+now.
+
+_Mor_. How like life, those soft curls burst from their loosened
+pressure! But mark you--there is no other motion, I am sorry to distress
+you,--but--Maitland--this lady is dead.
+
+_Mait. Dead_! Lying hell-hound! _Dead_! Say that again.
+
+_Mor_. God help you!
+
+_Mait. Dead_! Helen Grey, open these eyes. Here's one that, never having
+seen them, talks of death. Oh God! is it thus we meet at last? At last
+these arms are round her, and she knows it not. I look upon her, but her
+eye answers me not. Dead!--for me? Murdered!--mine own hand hath done
+it.
+
+_Mor_. Why do you start thus?
+
+_Mait_. Hush!--hush! There!--again--that slow heavy throb--again! again!
+
+_Mor_. Good God! she breathes! This is life indeed.
+
+_Mait_. (_Solemnly_.) Ay, thank God. This moment's sweetness is enough.
+
+_Mor_. How like one in troubled sleep she murmurs! Mark those tones of
+sweet and wild entreaty. Listen!
+
+_Mait_. I have heard it again!--from the buried years of love and hope
+that music came. She is here. 'Tis _she_. This is no marble mockery. She
+is here! Her head is on my bosom. Death cannot rob me of this sweetness
+now.
+
+ (_Talking without_.)
+
+_A Lady_. This way--I hear their voices. Down this pathway--here they are.
+
+ (_Lady Ackland and Andre enter the Glen_.)
+
+_Lady A_. I knew it could not be. They told us she was murdered,
+Maitland. (_Starting back_.) Ah--ah--God help thee, Maitland!
+
+_Mait_. Listen, listen. She was speaking but now. There--again!
+
+_Lady A_. And this is she! Can the wilderness blossom thus? And did God
+unfold such loveliness--for a waste so cruel?
+
+_Helen_. (_In a low murmur_.) We are almost there. If we could but pass
+this glen. Oh God! will they stop here? Go on,--go on. Was not that a
+white tent I saw? Go on. They will not. 'Tis nothing,--do not weep.
+
+_Mait_. Look at me, Helen.--Open these eyes. One more look--one more.
+
+_Andre_. She hears your bidding.
+
+_Mait_. Oh God! Do you see those eyes--those dim, bewildered eyes?--it
+is quenched--quenched. Let her lean on you.
+
+_Lady A_. Gently--gently, she does not see us yet.
+
+_Helen_. Oh Mother, I am ill and weary. Here's this dream again! Blue
+sky? and pine-tree boughs? Am I here indeed? Yes, I remember now,--we
+stood upon that cliff--I am dying. Is there no one here? Whose tears are
+these?
+
+_Lady A_. Dear child, sweet one, nay, lean on me.
+
+_Helen_. My mother, oh my mother, come to me. Come, Annie, come, come!
+Strangers all!
+
+_Mor_. Her eye is on him. Hush!
+
+_Andre_. See in an instant how the light comes flashing up from those
+dim depths again. _That_ is the eye that I saw yesterday.
+
+_Lady A_. That slowly settling smile,--deeper and deeper--saw you ever
+any thing so gay, so passing lovely?
+
+_Helen_. Is it--is it--Everard Maitland--is it _thee_? The living real
+of my thousand dreams, in the light of life doth he stand there now?
+Doth he? _'Tis he!_
+
+_Mait_. Helen!
+
+_Helen_. 'Tis he! That tone's spell builds around me its all-sheltering
+music-walls, and death is nothing. Oh God, when at thy dark will dimly
+revealed, I trembled yesterday, I did not think in this most rosy bower
+to meet its fearfulness.
+
+_Mait_. Helen,--dost thou love me _yet_?
+
+_Helen_. Doubter, am I dying here?
+
+_Mait_. 'Tis her own most rich and blessed smile, even as of old in
+mirth it shone upon me. Your murderer, you count me then?
+
+_Helen_. Come hither,--let me lean on _you_. Star of the wilderness!--of
+this life that is fading now, the sun!--_doth_ mine eye see thee, then,
+at last? Oh! this is sweet! On its own holy home my head rests now.
+Everard, in this dark world _Love leans on Faith_. How else, even in
+God's love and loveliness, could I trust now for that strange future on
+whose bloody threshold I am lying here; yes, and in spite of prayers and
+trust, and struggling hopes. And yet--how beautiful it is--that love
+invisible, invisible no more. Like glorious sunshine it is streaming
+round me,--lighting all. The infinite of that thy smile hath imaged, as
+real,--it beams on me now. Have faith, in _him_ I mean; for--if we meet
+again--we'll need it then no more; and--how dim it grows--nay, let me
+lean on you,--and--through _this_ life's darkening glass I shall see you
+no more. Nay, hold me!--quick!--where art thou?--Everard!--He is
+gone--gone!
+
+_Lady A_. Dead!--
+
+_Mor_. She is dead!
+
+_Andre_. This was Love.
+
+_Lady A_. See how her eyes are fixed on _you_. The light and love of the
+vanished soul looks through them still. Cruelly hath it been sent
+thence; and no other gleam of its changeful beauty will e'er dawn in
+them. Sadly, oh lovely stranger, I close for ever now these dark-fringed
+lids upon their love and beauty. Yes--_this_ was love!
+
+_Andre_. And so there was a need-be in its doom. I'll ne'er believe
+_that_ genuine, that is blessed. The fate of this life would not suffer
+it. Ah! if it would, if Heaven should leave a gem like that outside her
+walls, we should none of us go thither.
+
+_Mait_. Dead? How beautiful! Yes--let her lie there--under that lovely
+canopy. Dead!--it's a curious word--How comes it that we all stand here?
+Ha, Andre?--is it you?
+
+_Andre_. I heard the tale as I crossed just now, from an Indian, who was
+one in the ambuscade this noon--and in the woods on the other side, I
+found this lady, with her attendants, abiding the promise she made you
+last night, to welcome this lovely stranger with her savage guides.
+
+_Mait_. Hush, hush. Let it pass. See,--a bride!
+
+_Mor_. (_Aside_.) Did he trust her with these murderers?
+
+_Mait_. Ay--say yes.
+
+_Andre_. Indeed, Maitland, you wrong yourself. It was the treachery of
+this savage Manida that crossed your plans, working the mission of some
+Higher power,--as for Alaska, you might as soon have doubted me.
+
+The Chief he sent for her was one he had known years--but,
+unfortunately, he was one in the ambuscade this morning--nay, the leader
+of it; for the murdered Indian was his son; and meanwhile amid the fight
+the treacherous Manida, who accompanied him to Maitland's tent last
+night, and heard the promised reward, found means to steal from its
+concealment the letter, with which he easily won this trusting lady to
+accompany him.
+
+_Mor_. Ah!--there it lies.
+
+_Andre_. It was here in this glen that Alaska, discovering the
+treachery, lay in wait for them with a band of chosen warriors, and on
+that cliff above they fought.
+
+_Lady A_. (_Aside_.) And she stood there, amid those yelling demons
+alone! Methinks the angels should have come from their unseen dwellings
+at her prayer. Can our humanity's darkest extremity wring no love from
+the invisible?--
+
+_Andre_. Alaska had regained his charge; but the malignant eye, and the
+deadly arrow of the vanquished Indian followed her. She fell, even in
+the place where you found her; for at that same instant a party from the
+fort drove them hence, victor and vanquished. Alaska fled; but the
+murderer, with a tale cunning enough to deceive the lover, boldly
+demanded and obtained the prize.
+
+_Mor_. Mark his changed mien. I would rather see tears for a grief like
+this, than that calm smile with which he gazes on her now.
+
+ (_Burgoyne and St. Leger are seen talking in the road
+ above,--they enter the glen_.)
+
+_Bur_. At a crisis like this we might better have lost a thousand men in
+battle! Ah! ah!--a sight for our enemies, Lady Ackland! Where is this
+Indian?
+
+_St. L_. We have sent out for him. No one has seen him as yet.
+
+_Bur_. Let him be found. Look to it. We will give them an example for
+once. I say, at a crisis like this we might better have lost a thousand
+men in battle, for it will turn thousands against us, and rouse the
+slumbering spirit of resistance here, at the very crisis when, had it
+slumbered on a little longer, all was ours.
+
+_St. L_. But this was a quarrel among the Indians, and no fault of ours.
+
+_Bur_. No matter. You will see what Schuyler will make of it. His wordy
+proclamation will have its living sequel now. A young and innocent girl,
+seeking the protection of our camp, is inhumanly murdered by Indians in
+our pay. A single tale like this is enough to undo at a blow all that we
+have accomplished here. With ten thousand wild aggravations, it will be
+told in every cottage of these borders before to-morrow's sunset.
+
+ (_Another Officer enters hastily_.)
+
+_Off_. Here is Arnold, with a thousand men, on the brow of the next
+hill. One of the rebel guard escaped, and the news of the massacre here
+has reached their camp below.
+
+_Bur_. Said I right?
+
+ (_The three Officers go out together_.)
+
+_Andre_. This story is spreading fast, there will be throngs here
+presently. Maitland,--nay, do not let me startle you thus, but--
+
+_Mait_. Is it you? What was it we were saying yesterday?--we should have
+noted it. This were a picture worth your pencilling now. Those silken
+vestments,--that long, golden hair,--this youthful shape,--there's that
+same haughty grace about it, that the smile of these thought-lit eyes
+would disown with every glance. Then that letter,--and the Lady Ackland
+here,--Weeping?--This is most strange. I know you all,--but,--as I live
+I can't remember how this chanced. How comes it that we all stand here?
+Pearls?--and white silk?--a bridal?--Ha ha ha! (_Laughing wildly_.)
+
+_Lady A_. Take me away. This is too terrible! lean stay here no longer.
+Take me away, Andre.
+
+ [_Exeunt Andre and Lady A_.
+
+ (_An Officer enters_.)
+
+_The Officer_. We are ordered to withdraw our detachment, Captain
+Maitland. The rebels are just below, some two thousand strong, and in no
+mood to be encountered.
+
+_Mor_. He does not hear you. We must leave that murdered lady here, and
+'tis vain to think of parting them. Come.
+
+ [_Exeunt Mortimer and Officer_.
+
+_Mait_. They are gone at last. They are all gone. I am alone with my
+dead bride. I must needs smile--I could not weep when those haughty and
+prying eyes were upon me, but now--I am alone with my dead
+bride.--Helen, they are all gone,--we are alone. How still she
+lies,--smiling too,--on that same bank. She will speak, surely she will.
+How lightly those soft lashes lie, as if a word would lift
+them.--Helen!--I will be calm and patient as a child. This lovely smile
+is deepening, it will melt to words again.--Hark! that spring,--that
+same curious murmur! We have checked our sweetest words to hear it, we
+have stood here listening to it, till we fancied, in its talk-like
+tones, wild histories, beautiful and sad, the secrets of the woods.--Oh
+God!--and have such memories no power here now? In mine ear alone doth
+the spring murmur now. Death! what is't?--Awake! awake,--by the love
+that is _stronger_ than death,--awake!--
+
+I thought that scene would shift. It had a heavy, dream-like mistiness.
+_This_ is reality again. _These_ are the pine trees that I dreamed of.
+See! how beautiful! With the sharp outline and the vivid hue such as our
+childhood's unworn sense yields, they are waving now. Look, Andre, there
+she sits, the young and radiant stranger,--there, in the golden sunset
+she is sitting still, braiding those flowers,--see, how the rich life
+flashes in her eye, and yet, just now I dreamed that she was dead,
+and--and--Oh my God!
+
+ (_A voice without_.)
+
+Let go, who stays me?--where's my sister?
+
+ (_Captain Grey enters_.)
+
+_Grey_. Ha! Murderer! art satisfied?
+
+_Mait_. Ay.
+
+_Grey_. What, do you mock me, Sir?
+
+_Mait_. Let her be. She is mine!--all mine! my love, my bride,--my
+_bride_?--_Murderer_?--Stay!--Don't glare at me! I know you, Sir. I can
+hurl off these mountain shadows yet.--They'll send some stronger devil
+ere they wrench this hold from me! I know you well. What make you here?
+
+_Grey_. Madness!--there's little wonder!--It's the only good that Heaven
+has left for him! My lovely playfellow,--my sister, is it so indeed?
+Alas! all gently lies this hand in mine. There is no angry strength here
+now. Helen!--Ah! would to God our last words had not been in bitterness.
+
+_Mait_. He weeps. I never thought to see tears there. List!--she should
+not lie there thus. Strange it should move you so!--Think it a picture
+now. 'Tis but a well-wrought painting after all, if one but thinks so.
+See,--'tis but a sleeping girl, with the red summer light upon her
+cheek, and the slight breeze stirring her golden hair. Mark you that
+shoulder's grace?--They come.
+
+ (_Leslie, Elliston, and others enter_.)
+
+_Leslie_. Oh God, was there none other? My lovely cousin, and--were
+_you_ the victim? In your bridal glory chosen,--nay, with your heart's
+holiest law lured to the bloody altar! Yet this day's history, and
+something in that calm, high mien, tells me, as freely you had moved
+unto it, though God had spoken by a higher voice, and with a martyr's
+garland beckoned you.
+
+_Elliston_. Our cause is linked unto that ancient one, the cause of Love
+and Truth; in which Heaven moves with unrelenting hand, not sparing its
+own loveliest ones, but unto bloody death freely delivering them.
+
+ (_Grey and Leslie converse apart_.)
+
+_Leslie_. Yes--we will bury her here. 'Tis a fitting spot; and unto
+distant days, this lonely grave, with its ever-verdant canopy, shall be
+even as Love's Shrine. Thither, in the calm and smiling summers of those
+bloodless times shall many a fair young pilgrim come, to wonder at such
+love; and living eyes shall weep, and living hearts shall heave over its
+cruel fate, when unto her the long-told tale, and all the anguish of
+this far-off day, shall be even as the dim passage of some troubled
+dream. A martyr's garland she hath won indeed; true Love's young Martyr
+there she lies.
+
+_Elliston_. Yet was that love but the wreathed and glittering weapon of
+a higher doom. In that holy cause, whose martyrs strew a thousand
+fields, truth's, freedom's, God's, darkly, by _Power Invisible_ hath
+this young life been offered here.
+
+A thousand graves like this, over all this lovely land, in lanes and
+fields, on the lonely hill-side, by the laughing stream, and in the
+depths of many a silent wood, to distant days shall speak--of
+blood-sealed destinies; with voices that no tyrant's power can smother,
+they shall speak.--
+
+_Leslie_. The light of that chamber window, through the soft summer
+evening will shine here; no mournful memory of all the lovely past will
+it waken. The autumn blaze will flicker within those distant walls, and
+gather its pleasant circle again; but _she_ will lie calmly here. For
+ever at her feet the river of her childhood shall murmur on, and many a
+lovely spring-time, like the spring-times of her childhood, shall come
+and go, but no yearning hope shall it waken here; the winter shall sing
+through the desolate boughs, and rear its fairy temples around her, but
+nought shall break her dreamless rest.--
+
+_Mait_. Graves! Is it graves they are talking of? Will they bury this
+gay young bride! 'Tis but the name; there's nothing sad in it. In the
+lovely summer twilight shall her burial be, and thus; in all her bridal
+array, with the glory of the crimson sunset shining through the
+trees;--see what a fearful glow is kindling on her cheek, and that faint
+breeze--or, is it life that stirs these curls? Stay!--whose young brow
+is this?--Ha!--_whose_ smile is this? Who is this they would hurry away
+into the darkness of death? The grave! Could you fold the rosy and
+all-speading beauty of heaven in the narrow grave? Helen, is it
+thee?--my heaven, my long-lost heaven; and, even now, but for mine own
+deed--Oh God! was there no hand but mine?--but for me--They shall not
+utter it,--there, thus. There's but _one_ cry that could unfold this
+grief, but that would circle the round universe and fill eternity. A sad
+sight this! Is't known who killed this lady, Sir?
+
+_Leslie_. Of all the wrecks of beautiful humanity that strew these
+paths, we have found none so sad as this!
+
+_Elliston_. Mark you those groups of soldiers loitering on the road-side
+there?
+
+_An Officer_. Curiosity. The regiment that was dismissed to-day. They'll
+be here anon.
+
+_Leslie_. Ay, let them come.
+
+_Off_. Look,--who comes up that winding pathway through the trees, with
+such a swift and stately movement? A woman! See how the rude soldiers
+turn aside with awe. Ah, she comes hither.
+
+ (_A voice without_.)
+
+Where is she?--stand aside!--What have you here in this dark
+ring?--Henry--nay, let me come.
+
+ (_Mrs. Grey enters the glen_.)
+
+_Grey_. For God's sake, Madam, let me lead you hence. This is no place
+for you. Look at this group of men, officers, soldiers--
+
+_Mrs. G_. Would you cheat me _thus_? Is it no place for _me_? What kind
+of place is't then for her, whose--Oh God!--think you I do not see that
+slippered foot, nor know whose it is,--and whose plumed bonnet is it
+that lies crushed there at their feet?--unhand me, Henry.
+
+_Leslie_. Nay, let her come,--'tis best.
+
+ (_She passes swiftly through the parting group_.)
+
+_Mrs. G_. My daughter!--_Blood_? My stricken child smile you? No pity
+was there then? Speak to me, speak! Your mother's tears are on your
+brow, and heed you not? Nay, tell me all, my smitten one. This day's
+dark history will you never pour into my ear, that hath treasured so
+often your lightest grief? Alone through that wild anguish have you
+passed, and smile you now? I bade her trust in God. Did _God_ see this?
+
+ (_Arnold, and a group of Soldiers, enter the glen_.)
+
+_Arnold_. Look there. Ay, ay, look there. You were right, Leslie;--this
+_is_ better than a battle-field. They'll find that this day's work will
+cost them dear.
+
+_Mrs. G_. Did _God_, who loves as mothers love their babes, see this I
+Had I been there, with my love, in the heavens, could _I_ have given up
+this innocent and tender child a prey to the wild Indians? No!--and
+legions of pitying angels waiting but my word. No,--no.
+
+_Elliston_. Had you been there,--from that far centre whence God's eye
+sees all, you had beheld what lies in darkness here. Forth from this
+fearful hour you might have seen Peace, like a river, flowing o'er the
+years to come; and smiles, ten thousand, thousand smiles, down the long
+ages brightening, sown in this day's tears. Had you been there with
+God's _all_-pitying eye, the pitying legions had waited your word in
+vain, for once, unto a sterner doom, for the world's sake he gave his
+Son.
+
+_Mrs. G_. Words! Look there. That mother warned me yesterday. "_Words,
+words! My own child's blood_,"--I _see_ it now.
+
+ (_A group of Soldiers enter_.)
+
+_A. Soldier_. (_Whispering_.) Who would have thought to see tears on
+_his_ face; look you, Jack Richards.
+
+_Another Sol_. 'Twas his sister, hush!--
+
+_Arnold_. Ay, ay, come hither. Look you there! Lay down your arms. Seek
+the royal mercy;--here it is. Your wives, your sisters, and your
+innocent children;--let them seek the royal shelter;--it is a safe one.
+See.
+
+_3d Sol_. It was just so in Jersey last winter;--made no difference
+which side you were.
+
+_Arnold_. Ask no reasons.--'Twas in sport may be. 'Tis but one, in many
+such. Shameless tyranny we have borne long, and now, for resistance, to
+red butchery we are given over. The sport of lawless soldiers, and
+savages more cruel than the fiends in hell, are we, and the gentle
+beings of our homes;--but, 'tis the Royal power. Lay down your arms.
+
+_Soldiers_. (_Shouting_.) _No_.
+
+_Arnold_. Nay, nay,--in its caprice some will be safe,--it may not light
+on you. See, here's the proclamation. (_Throwing it among them_.) Pardon
+for rebles.
+
+_Soldiers_. No--no. (_Shouting_.) Away with pardon!--(_Tearing the
+proclamation_.) To the death! Freedom for ever!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Bride of Fort Edward, by Delia Bacon
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Bride of Fort Edward, by Delia Bacon
+
+Copyright laws are changing all over the world. Be sure to check the
+copyright laws for your country before downloading or redistributing
+this or any other Project Gutenberg eBook.
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+
+
+Title: The Bride of Fort Edward
+
+Author: Delia Bacon
+
+Release Date: January, 2005 [EBook #7235]
+[Yes, we are more than one year ahead of schedule]
+[This file was first posted on March 30, 2003]
+
+Edition: 10
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE BRIDE OF FORT EDWARD ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by David Garcia, Eric Eldred, Charles Franks,
+and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team
+
+
+
+
+
+THE BRIDE OF FORT EDWARD.
+
+FOUNDED ON
+AN INCIDENT OF THE REVOLUTION
+
+BY DELIA BACON
+
+
+
+
+PREFACE.
+
+I am extremely anxious to guard against any misconception of the
+_design_ of this little work. I therefore take the liberty of apprising
+the reader beforehand, that it is _not_ a _Play_. It was not intended
+for the stage, and properly is not capable of representation. I have
+chosen the form of the DIALOGUE as best suited to my purpose in
+presenting anew the passions and events of a day long buried in the
+past, but it is the dialogue in scenes arranged simply with reference to
+the impressions of the _Reader_, and wholly unadapted to the
+requirements of the actual stage. The plan here chosen, involves
+throughout the repose, the thought, and sentiment of Actual life,
+instead of the hurried action, the crowded plot, the theatrical
+elevation which the Stage necessarily demands of the pure Drama. I have
+only to ask that I may not be condemned for failing to fulfil the
+conditions of a species of writing which I have not attempted.
+
+The story involved in these Dialogues is essentially connected with a
+well-known crisis in our National History; nay, it is itself a portion
+of the historic record, and as such, even with many of its most trifling
+minutiae, is imbedded in our earliest recollections; but it is rather in
+its relation to the _abstract truth_ it embodies,--as exhibiting a law
+in the relation of the human mind to its Invisible protector--the
+apparent sacrifice of the _individual_ in the grand movements for the
+_race_,--it is in this light, rather than as an historical exhibition,
+that I venture to claim for it, as here presented, the indulgent
+attention of my readers.
+
+ THE AUTHOR.
+_New-York, July 7th_, 1839.
+
+
+
+
+
+THE
+
+BRIDE OF FORT EDWARD,
+
+A DRAMATIC STORY.
+
+
+SCENE. _Fort Edward and its vicinity, on the Hudson, near Lake George_.
+
+
+PERSONS INTRODUCED.
+
+_British and American officers and soldiers_.
+
+_Indians employed in the British service_.
+
+ELLISTON--_A religious missionary residing in the adjacent woods_.
+
+GEORGE GREY--_A young American_.
+
+LADY ACKLAND--_Wife of an English Officer_.
+
+MARGARET--_Her maid_.
+
+MRS. GREY--_The widow of a Clergyman residing near Fort Edward_.
+
+HELEN, _and_ ANNIE,--_Her daughters_.
+
+JANETTE--_A Canadian servant_.
+
+_Children, &c_.
+
+_Time included--from the afternoon of one day to the close of the
+following_.
+
+
+
+
+
+ PART
+
+ I. THE CRISIS AND ITS VICTIM
+
+ II. LOVE
+
+ III. FATE
+
+ IV. FULFILMENT
+
+ V. FULFILMENT
+
+ VI. RECONCILIATION
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE BRIDE OF FORT EDWARD.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+PART FIRST.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+INDUCTION.
+
+DIALOGUE I.
+
+
+SCENE. _The road-side on the slope of a wooded hill near Fort Edward.
+ The speakers, two young soldiers,--Students in arms_.
+
+
+_1st Student_. These were the evenings last year, when the bell
+From the old college tower, would find us still
+Under the shady elms, with sauntering step
+And book in hand, or on the dark grass stretched,
+Or lounging on the fence, with skyward gaze
+Amid the sunset warble. Ah! that world,--
+That world we lived in then--where is it now?
+Like earth to the departed dead, methinks.
+
+_2nd Stud_. Yet oftenest, of that homeward path I think,
+Amid the deepening twilight slowly trod,
+And I can hear the click of that old gate,
+As once again, amid the chirping yard,
+I see the summer rooms, open and dark,
+And on the shady step the sister stands,
+Her merry welcome, in a mock reproach,
+Of Love's long childhood breathing. Oh this year,
+This year of blood hath made me old, and yet,
+Spite of my manhood now, with all my heart,
+I could lie down upon this grass and weep
+For those old blessed times, the times of peace again.
+
+_1st Stud_. There will be weeping, Frank, from older eyes,
+Or e'er again that blessed time shall come.
+Hearts strong and glad now, must be broke ere then:
+Wild tragedies, that for the days to come
+Shall faery pastime make, must yet ere then
+Be acted here; ay, with the genuine clasp
+Of anguish, and fierce stabs, not buried in silk robes,
+But in hot hearts, and sighs from wrung souls' depths.
+And they shall walk in light that we have made,
+They of the days to come, and sit in shadow
+Of our blood-reared vines, not counting the wild cost.
+Thus 'tis: among glad ages many,--one--
+In garlands lies, bleeding and bound. Times past,
+And times to come, on ours, as on an altar--
+Have laid down their griefs, and unto us
+Is given the burthen of them all.
+
+_2nd Stud_. And yet,
+See now, how pleasantly the sun shines there
+Over the yellow fields, to the brown fence
+Its hour of golden beauty--giving still.
+And but for that faint ringing from the fort,
+That comes just now across the vale to us,
+And this small band of soldiers planted here,
+I could think this was peace, so calmly there,
+The afternoon amid the valley sleeps.
+
+_1st Stud_. Yet in the bosom of this gentle time,
+The crisis of an age-long struggle heaves.
+
+_2nd Stud_. _Age-long?_--Why, this land's history can scarce
+Be told in ages, yet.
+
+_1st Stud_. But this war's can.
+In that small isle beyond the sea, Francis,
+Ages, ages ago, its light first blazed.
+This is the war. Old, foolish, blind prerogative,
+In ermines wrapped, and sitting on king's thrones;
+Against young reason, in a peasant's robe
+His king's brow hiding. For the infant race
+Weaves for itself the chains its manhood scorns,
+(When time hath made them adamant, alas!--)
+The reverence of humanity, that gold
+Which makes power's glittering round, ordained of God
+But for the lovely majesty of right,
+Unto a mad usurper, yielding, all,
+Making the low and lawless will of man
+Vicegerent of that law and will divine,
+Whose image only, reason hath, on earth.
+This is the struggle:--_here_, we'll fight it out.
+'Twas all too narrow and too courtly _there_;
+In sight of that old pageantry of power
+We were, in truth, the children of the past,
+Scarce knowing our own time: but here, we stand
+In nature's palaces, and we are _men_;--
+Here, grandeur hath no younger dome than this;
+And now, the strength which brought us o'er the deep,
+Hath grown to manhood with its nurture here,--
+Now that they heap on us abuses, that
+Had crimsoned the first William's cheek, to name,--
+We're ready now--for our last grapple with blind power.
+
+ [_Exeunt_.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+
+
+DIALOGUE II.
+
+SCENE. _The same. A group of ragged soldiers in conference_.
+
+
+_1st Soldier_. I am flesh and blood myself, as well as the rest of you,
+but there is no use in talking. What the devil would you do?--You may
+talk till dooms-day, but what's to hinder us from serving our time
+out?--and that's three months yet. Ay, there's the point. Show me that.
+
+_2nd Sol_. Three months! Ha, thank Heaven mine is up to-morrow; and,
+I'll tell you what, boys, before the sun goes down to-morrow night, you
+will see one Jack Richards trudging home,--trudging home, Sirs! None of
+your bamboozling, your logic, and your figures. A good piece of bread
+and butter is the figure for me. But you should hear the Colonel,
+though, as the time draws nigh. Lord! you'd think I was the General at
+least. Humph, says I.
+
+_3d Sol_. Ay, ay,--feed you on sugar-candy till they get you to sign,
+and then comes the old shoes and moccasins.----
+
+_2nd Sol_. And that's true enough, Ned. I've eaten myself, no less than
+two very decent pair in the service. I'll have it out of Congress yet
+though, I'll be hanged if I don't. None of your figures for me! I say,
+boys, I am going home.
+
+_1st Sol_. Well, go home, and--can't any body else breathe? Why don't
+you answer me, John?--What would you have us do?--
+
+_4th Sol_. Ask Will Wilson there.
+
+_1st Sol_. Will?--Where is he?
+
+_4th Sol_. There he stands, alongside of the picket there, his hands in
+his pockets, whistling, and looking as wise as the dragon. Mind you,
+there's always something pinching at the bottom of that same whistle,
+though its such a don't-care sort of a whistle too. Ask Will, he'll tell
+you.
+
+_3d Sol_. Ay, Will has been to the new quarters to-day. See, he's coming
+this way.
+
+_5th Sol_. And he saw Striker there, fresh from the Jerseys, come up
+along with that new General there, yesterday.
+
+_3d Sol_. General Arnold?
+
+_5th Sol_. Ay, ay, General Arnold it is.
+
+_6th Sol_. [_Advancing_.] I say, boys----
+
+_4th Sol_. What's the matter, Will?
+
+_6th Sol_. Do you want to know what they say below?
+
+_All_. Ay, ay, what's the news?
+
+_6th Sol_. All up there, Sirs. A gone horse!--and he that turns his coat
+first, is the best fellow.
+
+_4th Sol_. No?
+
+_6th Sol_. And shall I tell you what else they say?
+
+_4th Sol_. Ay.
+
+_6th Sol_. Shall I?
+
+_All_. Ay, ay. What is it?
+
+_6th Sol_. That we are a cowardly, sneaking, good-for-nothing pack of
+poltroons, here in the north. There's for you! There's what you get for
+your pains, Sirs. And for the rest, General Schuyler is to be disgraced,
+and old Gates is to be set over us again, and----no matter for the rest.
+See here, boys. Any body coming? See here.
+
+_3d Sol_. What has he got there?
+
+_2nd Sol_. The Proclamation! The Proclamation! Will you be good enough
+to let me see if there is not a picture there somewhere, with an Indian
+and a tomahawk?
+
+_6th Sol_. Now, Sirs, he that wants a new coat, and a pocket full of
+money--
+
+_3d Sol_. That's me fast enough.
+
+_2nd Sol_. If he had mentioned a shirt-sleeve now, or a rim to an old
+hat--
+
+_4th Sol_. Or a bit of a crown, or so.
+
+_6th Sol_. He that wants a new coat--get off from my toes, you
+scoundrel.
+
+_All_. Let's see. Let's see. Read--read.
+
+_7th Sol_. (_Spouting_.) "And he that don't want his house burned over
+his head, and his wife and children, or his mother and sisters, as the
+case may be, butchered or eaten alive before his eyes--"
+
+_3d Sol_. Heavens and earth! It 'ant so though, Wilson, is it?
+
+_7th Sol_. "Is required to present himself at the said village of
+Skeensborough, on or before the 20th day of August next.
+Boo--boo--boo--Who but I. Given under my hand."--If it is not _it_--it
+is something very like it, I can tell you, Sirs. I say, boys, the old
+rogue wants his neck wrung for insulting honest soldiers in that
+fashion; and I say that you--for shame, Will Willson.
+
+_4th Sol_. Hush!--the Colonel!--Hush!
+
+_2nd Sol_. And who is that proud-looking fellow, by his side?
+
+_4th Sol_. Hush! General Arnold. He's a sharp one--roll it up--roll it up.
+
+_6th Sol_. Get out,--you are rumpling it to death.
+
+ (_Two American officers are seen close at hand, in a bend
+ of the ascending road; the soldiers enter the woods_.)
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+
+
+DIALOGUE III.
+
+SCENE. _The same_.
+
+
+_1st Officer_. I cannot conceal it from you, Sir; there is but one
+feeling about it, as far as I can judge, and I had some chances in my
+brief journey--
+
+_2nd Off_. Were you at head-quarters?
+
+_1st Off_. Yes,--and every step of this retreating army only makes it
+more desperate. I never knew any thing like the mad, unreasonable terror
+this army inspires. Burgoyne and his Indians!--"_Burgoyne and the
+Indians_"--there is not a girl on the banks of the Connecticut that does
+not expect to see them by her father's door ere day-break. Colonel
+Leslie, what were those men concealing so carefully as we approached
+just now?--Did you mark them?
+
+_2nd Off_. Yes. If I am not mistaken, it was the paper we were speaking of.
+
+_1st Off_. Ay, ay,--I thought as much.
+
+_2nd Off_. General Arnold, I am surprised you should do these honest men
+the injustice to suppose that such an impudent, flimsy, bombastic tirade
+as that same proclamation of Burgoyne's, should have a feather's weight
+with any mother's son of them.
+
+_Arnold_. A feather's, ay a feather's, just so; but when the scales are
+turning, a feather counts too, and that is the predicament just now of
+more minds than you think for, Colonel Leslie. A pretty dark horizon
+around us just now, Sir,--another regiment goes off to-morrow, I hear.
+Hey?
+
+_Leslie_. Why, no. At least we hope not. We think we shall be able to
+keep them yet, unless--that paper might work some mischief with them
+perhaps, and it would be rather a fatal affair too, I mean in the way of
+example.--These Green Mountain Boys----
+
+_Arnold_. Colonel Leslie, Colonel Leslie, this army is melting away like
+a snow-wreath. There's no denying it. Your General misses it. The news
+of one brave battle would send the good blood to the fingers' ends from
+ten thousand chilled hearts; no matter how fearful the odds; the better,
+the better,--no matter how large the loss;--for every slain soldier, a
+hundred better would stand on the field;----
+
+_Leslie_. But then----
+
+_Arnold_. By all that's holy, Sir, if I were head here, the red blood
+should smoke on this grass ere to-morrow's sunset. I would have battle
+here, though none but the birds of the air were left to carry the tale
+to the nation. I tell you, Colonel Leslie, a war, whose resources are
+only in the popular feeling, as now, and for months to come, this war's
+must be; a war, at least, which depends wholly upon the _unselfishness_
+of a people, as this war does, can be kept alive by excitement only. It
+was wonderful enough indeed, to behold a whole people, the low and
+comfort-loving too, in whose narrow lives that little world which the
+sense builds round us, takes such space, forsaking the tangible good of
+their merry firesides, for rags and wretchedness,--poverty that the
+thought of the citizen beggar cannot reach,--the supperless night on the
+frozen field; with the news perchance of a home in ashes, or a murdered
+household, and, last of all, on some dismal day, the edge of the sword
+or the sharp bullet ending all;--and all in defence of--what?--an
+idea--an abstraction,--a thought:--I say this was wonderful enough, even
+in the glow of the first excitement. But now that the Jersey winter is
+fresh in men's memories, and Lexington and Bunker Hill are forgotten,
+and all have found leisure and learning to count the cost; it were
+expecting miracles indeed, to believe that this army could hold together
+with a policy like this. Every step of this retreat, I say again, treads
+out some lingering spark of enthusiasm. Own it yourself. Is not this
+army dropping off by hundreds, and desertion too, increasing every hour,
+thinning your own ranks and swelling your foes?--and that, too, at a
+crisis--Colonel Leslie, retreat a little further, some fifty miles
+further; let Burgoyne once set foot in Albany, and the business is
+done,--we may roll up our pretty declaration as fast as we please, and
+go home in peace.
+
+_Leslie_. General Arnold, I have heard you to the end, though you have
+spoken insultingly of councils in which I have had my share. Will you
+look at this little clause in this paper, Sir. The excitement you speak
+of will come ere long, and that at a rate less ruinous than this whole
+army's loss. There's a line--there's a line, Sir, that will make null
+and void, very soon, if not on the instant, all the evil of these golden
+promises. There'll be excitement enough ere long; but better blood than
+that shed in battle fields must flow to waken it.
+
+_Arnold_. I hardly understand you, Sir. Is it this threat you point at?
+
+_Leslie_. Can't you see?--They have let loose these hell-hounds upon us,
+and butchery must be sent into our soft and innocent homes;--beings that
+we have sheltered from the air of heaven, brows that have grown pale at
+the breath of an ungentle word, must meet the red knife of the Indian
+now. Oh God, this is war!
+
+_Arnold_. I understand you, Colonel Leslie. There was a crisis like this
+in New Jersey last winter, I know, when our people were flocking to the
+royal standard, as they are now, and a few fiendish outrages on the part
+of the foe changed the whole current in our favor. It may be so now, but
+meanwhile--
+
+_Leslie_. Meanwhile, this army is the hope of the nation, and must be
+preserved. We are wronged, Sir. Have we not done all that men could do?
+What were twenty pitched battles to such an enemy, with a force like
+ours, compared with the harm we have done them? Have we not kept them
+loitering here among these hills, wasting the strength that was meant to
+tell in the quivering fibres of men, on senseless trees and stones,
+paralyzing them with famine, wearying them with unexciting, inglorious
+toil, until, divided and dispirited, at last we can measure our power
+with theirs, and fight, not in vain? Why, even now the division is
+planning there, which will bring them to our feet. And what to us, Sir,
+were the hazards of one bloody encounter, to the pitiful details of this
+unhonored warfare?--We are wronged--we are wronged, Sir.
+
+_Arnold_. There is some policy in the plan you speak of,--certainly,
+there is excellent policy in it if one had the patience to follow it
+out; but then you can't make Congress see it, or the people either; and
+so, after all, your General is superseded. Well, well, at all events he
+must abandon this policy now,--it's the only chance left for him.
+
+_Leslie_. Why; howso?
+
+_Arnold_. Or else, don't you see?--just at the point where the glory
+appears, this eastern hero steps in, and receives it all; and the
+laurels which he has been rearing so long, blow just in time to drop on
+the brow of his rival.
+
+_Leslie_. General Arnold,--excuse me, Sir--you do not understand the man
+of whom you speak. There is a substance in the glory he aims at, to
+which, all that you call by the name is as the mere shell and outermost
+rind. Good Heavens! Do you think that, for the sake of his own
+individual fame, the man would risk the fate of this great
+enterprize?--What a mere fool's bauble, what an empty shell of honor,
+would that be. If I thought he would--
+
+_Arnold_. It might be well for you to lower your voice a little, Sir;
+the gentleman of whom you are speaking is just at hand.
+
+[_Other officers are seen emerging from the woods_.]
+
+_3d Off_. Yes, if this rumor holds, Lieutenant Van Vechten, your post is
+likely to become one of more honor than safety. Gentlemen--Ha!--General
+Arnold! You are heartily welcome;--I have been seeking you, Sir. If this
+news is any thing, the movement that was planned for Wednesday, we must
+anticipate somewhat.
+
+_Leslie_. News from the enemy, General?
+
+_Gen. Schuyler_. Stay--those scouts must be coming in, Van Vechten. Why,
+we can scarce call it news yet, I suppose; but if this countryman's tale
+is true, Burgoyne himself, with his main corps, is encamping at this
+moment at the Mills, scarce three miles above us.
+
+_Arnold_. Ay, and good news too.
+
+_Leslie_. But that cannot be, Sir--Alaska--
+
+_Gen. Schuyler_. Alaska has broken faith with us if it is, and the army
+have avoided the delay we had planned for them.--That may be.--This man
+overheard their scouts in the woods just below us here.
+
+_Arnold_. And if it is,--do you talk of retreat, General Schuyler? In
+your power now it lies, with one hour's work perchance, to make those
+lying enemies of yours in Congress eat the dust, to clear for ever your
+blackened fame. Why, Heaven itself is interfering to do you right, and
+throwing honor in your way as it were! Do you talk of retreat, Sir, now?
+
+_Gen. Schuyler_. Heaven has other work on hand just now, than righting
+the wrongs of such heroes as you and I, Sir. Colonel Arnold--I beg your
+pardon, Sir, Congress has done you justice at last I see,--General
+Arnold, you are right as to the consequence, yet, for all that, if this
+news is true, I must order the retreat. My reputation I'll trust in
+God's hands. My honor is in my own keeping.
+
+ [_Exeunt Schuyler, Leslie, and Van Vechten_.
+
+_Arnold_. There's a smoke from that chimney; are those houses inhabited,
+my boy?
+
+_Boy_. Part of them, Sir. Some of our people went oft to-day. That white
+house by the orchard--the old parsonage there? Ay, there are ladies
+there Sir, but I heard Colonel Leslie saying this morning 'twas a sin
+and a shame for them to stay another hour.
+
+_Arnold_. Ay, Ay. I fancied the Colonel was not dealing in abstractions
+just now.
+
+ [_Exeunt_.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+
+
+DIALOGUE IV.
+
+SCENE. _A room in the Parsonage,--an old-fashioned summer parlor.---On
+ the side a door and windows opening into an orchard, in front,
+ a yard filled with shade trees. The view beyond bounded by a
+ hill partly wooded. A young girl, in the picturesque costume of
+ the time, lies sleeping on the antique sofa. Annie sits by a
+ table, covered with coarse needlework, humming snatches of songs
+ as she works_.
+
+
+_Annie_, (_singing_.)
+
+ _Soft peace spreads her wings and flies weeping away.
+ Soft peace spreads her wings and flies weeping away.
+ And flies weeping away.
+ The red cloud of war o'er our forest is scowling,
+ Soft peace spreads her wings and flies weeping away.
+ Come blow the shrill bugle, the war dogs are howling,
+ Already they eagerly snuff out their prey--
+ The red cloud of war--the red cloud of war_--
+
+
+Yes, let me see now,--with a little plotting this might make two--two,
+at least,--and then--
+
+ _The red cloud of war o'er our forest is scowling,
+ Soft peace spreads her wings and flies weeping away,
+ The infants affrighted cling close to their mothers,
+ The youths grasp their swords, and for combat prepare;
+ While beauty weeps fathers, and lovers, and brothers,
+ Who are gone to defend_--
+
+
+--Alas! what a golden, delicious afternoon is blowing without there,
+wasting for ever; and never a glimpse of it. Delicate work this! Here's
+a needle might serve for a genuine stiletto! No matter,--it is the
+cause,--it is the cause that makes, as my mother says, each stitch in
+this clumsy fabric a grander thing than the flashing of the bravest
+lance that brave knight ever won.
+
+(_Singing_)
+ _The brooks are talking in the dell,
+ Tul la lul, tul la lul,
+ The brooks are talking low, and sweet,
+ Under the boughs where th' arches meet;
+ Come to the dell, come to the dell,
+ Oh come, come_.
+
+ _The birds are singing in the dell,
+ Wee wee whoo, wee wee whoo;
+ The birds are singing wild and free,
+ In every bough of the forest tree,
+ Come to the dell, come to the dell,
+ Oh come, come_.
+
+ _And there the idle breezes lie,
+ Whispering, whispering,
+ Whispering with the laughing leaves.
+ And nothing says each idle breeze,
+ But come, come, come, O lady come,
+ Come to th' dell_.
+
+[_Mrs. Grey enters from without_.]
+
+_Mrs. G_. Do not sing, Annie.
+
+_Annie_. Crying would better befit the times, I know,--Dear mother, what
+is this?
+
+_Mrs. G_. Hush,--asleep--is she?
+
+_Annie_. This hour, and quiet as an infant. Need enough there was of it
+too. See, what a perfect damask mother!
+
+_Mrs. G_. Draw the curtain on that sunshine there. This sleep has
+flushed her. Ay, a painter might have dropped that golden hair,--yet
+this delicate beauty is but the martyr's wreath now, with its fine nerve
+and shrinking helplessness. No, Annie; put away your hat, my love,--you
+cannot go to the lodge to-night.
+
+_Annie_. Mother?
+
+_Mrs. G_. You cannot go to the glen to-night. This is no time for idle
+pleasure, God knows.
+
+_Annie_. Why, you have been weeping in earnest, and your cheek is
+pale.--And now I know where that sad appointment led you. Is it over?
+That it should be in our humanity to bear, what in our ease we cannot,
+_cannot_ think of!
+
+_Mrs. G_. Harder things for humanity are there than bodily anguish,
+sharp though it be. It was not the boy,--the mother's anguish, I wept
+for, Annie.
+
+_Annie_. Poor Endross! And he will go, to his dying day, a crippled
+thing. But yesterday I saw him springing by so proudly! And the
+mother----
+
+_Mrs. G_. "_Words, words_," she answered sternly when I tried to comfort
+her; "ay, words are easy. _Wait till you see your own child's blood_.
+Wait till you stand by and see his young limbs hewn away, and the groans
+come thicker and thicker that you cannot soothe; and then let them prate
+to you of the good cause." Bitter words! God knows what is in store for
+us;--all day this strange dread has clung to me.
+
+_Annie_. Dear mother, is not this the superstition you were wont to
+chide?
+
+_Mrs. G_. Ay, ay, we should have been in Albany ere this. In these wild
+times, Annie, every chance-blown straw that points at evil, is likely to
+prove a faithful index; and if it serve to nerve the heart for it, we
+may call it heaven-sent indeed. Annie,--hear me calmly, my child,--the
+enemy, so at least goes the rumor, are nearer than we counted on this
+morning, and--hush, not a word.
+
+_Annie_. She is but dreaming. Just so she murmured in her sleep last
+night; twice she waked me with the saddest cry, and after that she sat
+all night by the window in her dressing-gown, I could not persuade her
+to sleep again. Tell me, mother, you say _and_--and what?
+
+_Mrs. G_. I cannot think it true, 'tis rumored though, that these savage
+neighbors of ours have joined the enemy.
+
+_Annie_. No! no! Has Alaska turned against us? Why, it was but yesterday
+I saw him with Leslie in yonder field. 'Tis false; it must be. Surely he
+could not harm us.
+
+_Mrs. G_. And false, I trust it is. At least till it is proved
+otherwise, Helen must not hear of it.
+
+_Annie_. And why?
+
+_Mrs. Grey_. She needs no caution, and it were useless to add to the
+idle fear with which she regards them all, already. Some dark fancy
+possesses her to-day; I have marked it myself.
+
+_Annie_. It is just two years to-morrow, mother, since Helen's wedding
+day, or rather, that sad day that should have seen her bridal; and it
+cannot be that she has quite forgotten Everard Maitland. Alas, he seemed
+so noble!
+
+_Mrs. G_. Hush! Never name him. Your sister is too high-hearted to waste
+a thought on him. Tory! Helen is no love-lorn damsel, child, to pine for
+an unworthy love. See the rose on that round cheek,--it might teach that
+same haughty loyalist, could he see her now, what kind of hearts 'tis
+that we patriots wear, whose strength they think to trample. Where are
+you going, Annie?
+
+_Annie_. Not beyond the orchard-wall. I will only stroll down the path
+here, just to breathe this lovely air a little; indeed, there's no fear
+of my going further now.
+
+ [_Exit_.
+
+_Mrs. G_. Did I say right, Helen? It cannot be feigned. Those quick
+smiles, with their thousand lovely meanings; those eyes, whose beams
+lead straight to the smiling soul. Principle is it? There is no
+principle in this, but joy, or else it strikes so deep, that the joy
+grows up from it, genuine, not feigned; and yet I have found her weeping
+once or twice of late, in unexplained agony. Helen!
+
+_Helen_. Oh mother! is it you? Thank God. I thought----
+
+_Mrs. G_. What did you think? What moves you thus?
+
+_Helen_. I thought--'tis nothing. This _is_ very strange.
+
+_Mrs. G_. Why do you look through that window thus? There's no one
+there! What is it that's so strange?
+
+_Helen_. Is it to-morrow that we go?
+
+_Mrs. G_. To Albany? Why, no; on Thursday. You are bewildered, Helen!
+surely you could not have forgotten that.
+
+_Helen_. I wish it was to-day. I do.
+
+_Mrs. G_. My child, yesterday, when the question was debated here, and
+wishing might have been of some avail, 'tis true you did not say much,
+but I thought, and so we all did, that you chose to stay.
+
+_Helen_. Did you? Mother, does the road to Albany wind over a hill like
+that?
+
+_Mrs. G_. Like what, Helen?
+
+_Helen_. Like yonder wooded hill, where the soldiers are stationed now?
+
+_Mrs. G_. Not that I know of? Why?
+
+_Helen_. Perhaps we may cross that very hill,--no--could we?
+
+_Mrs. G_. Not unless we should turn refugees, my love; an event of which
+there is little danger just now, I think. That road, as indeed you know
+yourself, leads out directly to the British camp.
+
+_Helen_. Yes--yes--it does. I know it does. I will not yield to it. 'Tis
+folly, all.
+
+_Mrs. G_. You talk as though you were dreaming still; my child. Put on
+your hat, and go into the garden for a little, the air is fresh and
+pleasant now; or take a ramble through the orchard if you will, you
+might meet Annie there,--no, yon she comes, and well too. It's quite
+time that I were gone again. I wish that we had nothing worse than
+dreams on hand. Helen, I must talk with you about these fancies; you
+must not thus unnerve yourself for real evil.
+
+ [_Exit_.
+
+_Helen_. It were impossible,--it could not be!--how could it be?--Oh!
+these are wild times. Unseen powers are crossing their meshes here
+around us,--and, what am I--Powers?--there's but one Power, and that--
+
+ ----"He careth for the little bird,
+ Far in the lone wood's depths, and though dark weapons
+ And keen eyes are out, it falleth not
+ But at his will."
+
+ [_Exit_.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+PART SECOND
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LOVE
+
+ * * * * *
+
+DIALOGUE I.
+
+SCENE. _A little glen in the woods near Fort Edward. A young British
+ Officer appears, attended by a soldier in the American uniform;
+ the latter with a small sealed pacquet in his hand_.
+
+
+_Off_. Hist!
+
+_Sol_. Well, so I did; but----
+
+_Off_. Hist, I say!
+
+_Sol_. A squirrel it is, Sir; there he sits.
+
+_Off_. By keeping this path you avoid the picket on the hill. It will
+bring you out where these woods skirt the vale, and scarcely a hundred
+rods from the house itself.
+
+[_Calling without_.]
+
+_Sol_. Captain Andre--Sir.
+
+_Off_. It were well that the pacquet should fall into no other hands.
+With a little caution there is no danger. It will be twilight ere you
+get out of these woods--
+
+_Sol_. I beg your pardon, Sir; but here is that young Indian guide of
+mine, after all, above there, beckoning me.
+
+_Off_. Stay--you will come back to the camp ere midnight?
+
+_Sol_. Unless some of these quick-eyed rebels see through my disguise.
+
+_Off_. Do not forget the lodge as you return. A little hut of logs just
+in the edge of the woods, but Siganaw knows it well.
+
+ [_Exit the Soldier_.
+
+ (_The call in the thicket above is repeated, and another
+ young officer enters the glen_.)
+
+_2nd Off_. Hillo, Maitland! These woods yield fairies,--come this way.
+
+_1st Off_. For God's sake, Andre! (_motioning silence_.) Are you mad?
+
+_Andre_. Well, who are they?
+
+_Mait_. _Who_? Have you forgotten that we are on the enemy's ground?
+Soldiers from the fort, no doubt. They have crossed that opening twice
+since we stood here.
+
+_Andre_. Well, let them cross twice more. I would run the risk of a
+year's captivity, at least, for one such glimpse. Nay, come, she will be
+gone.
+
+_Mait_. Stay,--not yet. There, again!
+
+_Andre_. Such a villainous scratching as I got in that pass just now. It
+must have cost the rogues an infinite deal of pains though. A regular,
+handsome sword-cut is nothing to a dozen of these same ragged scratches,
+that a man can't swear about. After all, Captain Maitland, these cunning
+Yankees understand the game. They will keep out of our way, slyly
+enough, until we are starved, and scratched, and fretted down to their
+proportions, meanwhile they league the very trees against us.
+
+_Mait_. As to that, we have made some leagues ourselves, I think, quite
+as hard to be defended, Sir.
+
+_Andre_. It may be so. Should we not be at the river by this?
+
+_Mait_. Sunset was the time appointed. We are as safe here, till then.
+
+_Andre_. 'Tis a little temple of beauty you have lighted on, in truth.
+These pretty singers overhead, seem to have no guess at our hostile
+errand. Methinks their peaceful warble makes too soft a welcome for such
+warlike comers. Hark! [_Whistling_.] That's American. One might win
+bloodless laurels here. Will you stand a moment just as you are,
+Maitland;--'tis the very thing. There's a little space in my unfinished
+picture, and with that _a la Kemble_ mien, you were a fitting mate for
+this young Dian here, (_taking a pencil sketch from his
+portfolio_,)--the beauty-breathing, ay, beauty-breathing, it's no
+poetry;--for the lonesome little glen smiled to its darkest nook with
+her presence.
+
+_Mait_. What are you talking of, Andre? Fairies and goddesses!--What next?
+
+_Andre_. I am glad you grow a little curious at last. Why I say, and
+your own eyes may make it good if you will, that just down in this glen
+below here, not a hundred rods hence, there sits, or stands, or did some
+fifteen minutes since, some creature of these woods, I suppose it is;
+what else could it be? Well, well, I'll call no names, since they offend
+you, Sir; but this I'll say, a young cheek and smiling lip it had,
+whate'er it was, and round and snowy arm, and dimpled hand, that lay
+ungloved on her sylvan robe, and eyes--I tell you plainly, they lighted
+all the glen.
+
+_Mait_. Ha? A lady?--there? Are you in earnest?
+
+_Andre_. A lady, well you would call her so perchance. Such ladies used
+to spring from the fairy nut-shells, in the old time, when the kings'
+son lacked a bride; and if this were Windsor forest that stretches about
+us here, I might fancy, perchance, some royal one had wandered out, to
+cool the day's glow in her cheek, and nurse her love-dream; but here, in
+this untrodden wilderness, unless your ladies here spring up like
+flowers, or drop down on invisible pinions from above, how, in the name
+of reason, came she here?
+
+_Mait_. On the invisible pinions of thine own lady-loving fancy; none
+otherwise, trust me.
+
+_Andre_. Come, come,--see for yourself. On my word I was a little
+startled though, as my eye first lighted on her, suddenly, in that
+lonesome spot. There she sat, so bright and still, like some creature of
+the leaves and waters, such as the old Greeks fabled, that my first
+thought was to worship her; my next--of you, but I could not leave the
+spot until I had sketched this; I stood unseen, within a yard of her;
+for I could see her soft breath stirring the while. See, the scene
+itself was a picture,--the dark glen, the lonesome little lodge, on the
+very margin of the fairy lake--here she sat, motionless as marble; this
+bunch of roses had dropped from her listless hand, and you would have
+thought some tragedy of ancient sorrow, were passing before her, in the
+invisible element, with such a fixed and lofty sadness she gazed into
+it. But of course, of course, it is nothing to _your_ eye; for me, it
+will serve to bring the whole out at my leisure. Indeed, the air, I
+think, I have caught a little as it is.
+
+_Mait_. A little--you may say it. She is there, is she?--sorrowful;
+well, what is't to me?
+
+_Andre_. What do you say?--There?--Yes, I left her there at least. Come,
+come. I'll show you one will teach you to unlearn this fixed contempt of
+gentle woman. Come.
+
+_Mait_. Let go, if you please, Sir. She who gave me my first lesson in
+that art, is scarcely the one to bid me now unlearn it, and I want no
+new teaching as yet, thank Heaven. Will you come? We have loitered here
+long enough, I think.
+
+_Andre_. What, under the blue scope--what the devil ails you, Maitland?
+
+_Mait_. Nothing, nothing. This much I'll say to you,--_that lady is my
+wife_.
+
+_Andre_. Nonsense!
+
+_Mait_. There lacked--three days, I think it was, three whole days, to
+the time when the law would have given her that name; but for all that,
+was she mine, and is; Heaven and earth cannot undo it.
+
+_Andre_. Are you in earnest? Why, are we not here in the very heart of a
+most savage wilderness, where never foot of man trod before,--unless you
+call these wild red creatures men?
+
+_Mait_. You talk wildly; that path, followed a few rods further, would
+have brought you out within sight of her mother's door.
+
+_Andre_. Ha! you have been in this wilderness then, ere now?
+
+_Mait_. Have you forgotten the fortune I wasted once on a summer's seat,
+some few miles up, on the lake above? These Yankees did me the grace to
+burn it, just as the war broke out.
+
+_Andre_. Ay, ay, that was _here_. I had forgotten the whereabouts. Those
+blackened ruins we passed last evening, perchance;--and the lady--my
+wood-nymph, what of her?
+
+_Mait_. Captain Andre, I beg your pardon, Sir. That sketch of yours
+reminded me, by chance perhaps, of one with whom some painful passages
+of my life are linked; and I said, in my haste, what were better left
+unsaid. Do me the favor not to remind me that I have done so.
+
+_Andre_. So--so! And I am to know nothing more of this smiling
+apparition; nay, not so much as to speak her name? Consider, Maitland, I
+am your friend it is true; but, prithee, consider the human in me. Give
+her a local habitation, or at least a name.
+
+_Mait_. I have told you already that the lady you speak of resides not
+far hence. On the border of these woods you may see her home. I may
+point it out to you securely, some few days hence;--to-night, unless you
+would find yourself in the midst of the American army, this must content
+you.
+
+_Andre_. A wild risk for a creature like that! Have these Americans no
+safer place to bestow their daughters than the fastnesses of this
+wilderness?
+
+_Mait_. It would seem so. Yet it is her home. Wild as it looks here,
+from the top of that hill, where our men came out on the picket just now
+so suddenly, you will see as fair a picture of cultured life as e'er
+your eyes looked on. No English horizon frames a lovelier one.
+
+_Andre_. _Here_? No!
+
+_Mait_. Between that hill and the fort, there stretches a wide and
+beautiful plain, covered with orchards and meadows to the wood's edge;
+and here and there a gentle swell, crowned with trees, some patch of the
+old wilderness. The infant Hudson winds through it, circling in its
+deepest bend one little fairy isle, with woods enough for a single
+bower, and a beauty that fills and characterizes, to its remotest line,
+the varied landscape it centres; and far away in the east, this same
+azure mountain-chain we have traced so long, with its changeful light
+and shade, finishes the scene.
+
+_Andre_. You should have been a painter, Maitland.
+
+_Mait_. The first time I beheld it--one summer evening it was, from the
+woods on the hill's brow;--we were a hunting party, I had lost my way,
+and ere I knew it there I stood;--its waters lay glittering in the
+sunset light, and the window-panes of its quiet dwellings were flashing
+like gold,--the old brown houses looked out through the trees like so
+many lighted palaces; and even the little hut of logs, nestling on the
+wood's edge, borrowed beauty from the hour. I was miles from home; but
+the setting sun could not warn me away from such a paradise, for so it
+seemed, set in that howling wilderness, and----
+
+_Andre_. Prithee, go on. I listen.
+
+_Mait_. I know not how it was, but as I wandered slowly down the shady
+road, for the first time in years of worldliness, the dream that had
+haunted my boyhood revived again. Do you know what I mean, Andre?--that
+dim yearning for lovelier beings and fairer places, whose ideals lie in
+the heaven-fitted mind, but not in the wilderness it wakes in; that
+mystery of our nature, that overlooked as it is, and trampled with
+unmeaning things so soon, hides, after all, the whole secret of this
+life's dark enigma.
+
+_Andre_. But see,--our time is well-nigh gone,--this is philosophy--I
+would have heard a love tale.
+
+_Mait_. It was then, that near me, suddenly I heard the voice that made
+this dull, real world, thenceforth a richer place for me than the
+gorgeous dream-land of childhood was of old.
+
+_Andre_. Ay, ay--go on.
+
+_Mait_. Andre, did you ever meet an eye, in which the intelligence of
+our nature idealized, as it were, the very poetry of human thought
+seemed to look forth?
+
+_Andre_. One such.
+
+_Mait_.--That reflected your whole being; nay, revealed from its
+mysterious depths, new consciousness, that yet seemed like a faint
+memory, the traces of some old and pleasant dream?
+
+_Andre_. Methinks the heavenly revelation itself doth that.
+
+_Mait_. Such an eye I saw then shining on me. A clump of stately pines
+grew on the sloping road-side, and, looking into its dark embrasure, I
+beheld a group of merry children around a spring that gurgled out of the
+hillside there, and among them, there sat a young girl clad in white,
+her hat on the bank beside her, tying a wreath of wild flowers. That was
+all--that was all, Andre.
+
+_Andre_. Well, she was beautiful, I suppose? Nay, if it was the damsel I
+met just now I need not ask.
+
+_Mait_. Beautiful? Ay, they called her so. _Beauty_ I had seen before;
+but from that hour the sun shone with another light, and the very dust
+and stones of this dull earth were precious to me. _Beautiful?_ Nay, it
+was _she_. I knew her in an instant, the spirit of my being; she whose
+existence made the lovely whole, of which mine alone had been the
+worthless and despised fragment. There are a thousand women on the earth
+the artist might call as lovely,--show me another that I can worship.
+
+_Andre_. Worship! This is Captain Everard Maitland. If I should shut my
+eyes now----
+
+_Mait_. Well, go on; but I tell you, ne'ertheless, there have been
+times, even in this very spot,--we often wandered here when the day was
+dying as it is now,--here in her soft, breathing loveliness, she has
+stood beside me, when I have,--_worshipped?_--nay, feared her, in her
+holy beauty, as we two should an angel who should come through that
+glade to us now.
+
+_Andre_. True it is, something of the Divinity there is in beauty, that,
+in its intenser forms, repels with all its winningness, until the
+lowliness of love looks through it. Well--you worshipped her.
+
+_Mait_. Nay, you have told the rest. I would have worshipped; but one
+day there came a look from those beautiful eyes, when I met them
+suddenly, with a gaze that sought the mystery of their beauty,--a single
+look, and in an instant the drooping lash had buried it forever; but I
+knew, ere it fell, that the world of her young being was all mine
+already. Another life had been forever added unto mine; a whole
+creation; yet, like Eden's fairest, it but made another perfect; a new
+and purer _self_; and in it grew the heaven, and the fairy-land of my
+old dreams, lovelier than ever. You have loved yourself, Andre, else I
+should weary you.
+
+_Andre_. Not a bit the more do I understand you though. You talk most
+lover-like; that's very clear, yet I must say I never saw the part worse
+played. Why, here's your ladye-love, this self-same idol of whom you
+rave, at this moment perchance, breathing within these woods,--years
+too--two mortal years it must be, since you have seen her face; and
+yet--you stand here yet, with folded arms;--a goodly lover, on my word!
+
+_Mait_. Softly, Sir! you grace me with a title to which I can lay no
+claim. Lover I _was_, may be. I am no lover now, not I--not I; you are
+right; I would not walk to that knoll's edge to see the lady, Sir.
+
+_Andre_. Well, I must wait your leisure, I see.
+
+_Mait_. And yet, the last time that we stood together here, her arm lay
+on mine, my promised wife. A few days more, and by _my_ name, all that
+loveliness had gone. There needed only that to make that tie holy in all
+eyes, the holiest which the universe held for us; but needed there that,
+or any thing to make it such in ours. Why, love lay in her eye, that
+evening, like religion, solemn and calm.--We should have smiled then at
+the thought of any thing in height or depth, ending, what through each
+instant seemed to breathe eternity from its own essence;--we were one,
+_one,_--that trite word makes no meaning in your ear.--to me, life's
+roses burst from it; music, sunshine, Araby, should image what it means;
+what it meant rather, for it is over.
+
+_Andre_. What was it, Maitland?
+
+_Mail_. Oh,--well,--she did not love me; that was all. So far my story
+has told the seeming only, but ere long the trial came, and then I found
+it _was_ seeming, in good sooth. The Rebellion had then long been
+maturing, as you know; but just then came the crisis. It was the one
+theme everywhere. Of course I took my king's part against these rebels,
+and at once I was outraged, wronged beyond all human bearing. Her mad
+brother, her's, _her's_ what a world of preciousness, Andre, that little
+word once enshrined for me; and still it seems like some broken vase,
+fragrant with what it held.
+
+_Andre_. And ever with that name, a rosy flash Paints, for an instant,
+all my world. Nay, 'tis a little love-poem of my own; go on, Maitland.
+
+_Mait_. This brother I say, quarrelled with me, though I had borne from
+him unresentingly, what from another would have seemed insult. We
+quarrelled at last, and the house was closed against me, or would have
+been had I sought access; for I walked sternly by its pleasant door that
+afternoon, though I remember now how the very roses that o'erhung the
+porch, the benched and shaded porch, that lovely lingering place, seemed
+to beckon me in. It was a breathless summer day, and the vine curled in
+the open window,--even now those lowly rooms make a brighter image of
+heaven to me than the jewelled walls that of old grew in the pageant of
+our sabbath dreams.
+
+_Andre_. And thus you abandoned your love? A quarrel with her brother?
+
+_Mait_. I never wronged her with the shadow of a doubt. Directly, that
+same day, I wrote to her to fix our meeting elsewhere, that we might
+renew our broken plans in some fitter shape for the altered times. She
+sent me a few lines of grave refusal, Sir; and the next letter was
+returned unopened.
+
+_Andre_. 'Twas that brother! Pshaw! 'twas that brother, Maitland. I'll
+lay my life the lady saw no word of it.
+
+_Mait_. I might have thought so too, perchance; but that same day,--the
+morning had brought the news from Boston,--I met her by chance, by the
+spring in the little grove where we first met; and--Good Heavens! she
+talked of brothers! Brothers, mother, sisters!--What was their right to
+mine? All that the round world holds, or the universe, what could it be
+to her?--that is, if she had loved me ever; which, past all doubt, she
+never did.
+
+_Andre_. Maitland! Heavens, how this passion blinds you! And you
+expected a gentle, timid girl like that to abandon all she loved. Nay,
+to make her home in the very camp, where death and ruin unto all she
+loved, was the watchword?
+
+_Mait_. I beg your pardon, Sir. I looked for no such thing. I offered to
+renounce my hopes of honor here for her; a whole life's plans, for her
+sake I counted nothing. I offered her a home in England too, the very
+real of her girlhood's wish; my blighted fortunes since, or a home in
+yonder camp,--never, never. But if I had, ay, if I had,--that is not
+_love_, call it what you will, it is not love, to which such barriers
+were any thing.
+
+_Andre_. Oh well, a word's a word. That's as one likes. Only with your
+definition, give me leave to say, marvellous little love, Captain
+Maitland, marvellous little you will find in this poor world of ours.
+
+_Mait_. I'll grant ye.
+
+_Andre_. If there is any thing like it outside of a poet's skull, ne'er
+credit me.
+
+_Mait_. Strange it should take such shape in the creating thought and in
+the yearning heart, when all reality hath not its archetype.
+
+_Andre_. Hist!
+
+_Mait_. A careful step,--one of our party I fancy.
+
+_Andre_. 'Tis time we were at the rendezvous. If we have to recross the
+river as we came, on the stumps of that old bridge, we had best keep a
+little day-light with us, I think.
+
+ [_Exeunt_.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+DIALOGUE II.
+
+SCENE. _A chamber in the Parsonage. Helen leaning from the open window_.
+
+
+ (_Annie enters_.)
+
+_Annie_. Helen Grey, where on earth have you been? _Wood flowers!_
+
+_Helen_. Come and look at this sunset.
+
+_Annie_. Surely you have not, you cannot have been in those woods,
+Helen: and yet, where else could this periwinkle grow, and these wild
+roses?--Delicious!
+
+_Helen_. Hear that flute. It comes from among those trees by the river side.
+
+_Annie_. It is the shower that has freshened every thing, and made the
+birds so musical. You should stand in the door below, as I did just now,
+to see the fort and the moistened woods stands out from that black sky,
+with all this brightness blazing on them.
+
+_Helen_. 'Tis lovely--all.
+
+_Annie_. There goes the last golden rim over the blackening woods;
+already even a shade of tender mourning steals over all things, the very
+children's voices under this tree,--how soft they grow.
+
+_Helen_. Will the day come when we shall see him sink, for the last
+time, behind those hills?
+
+_Annie_. Nay, Helen, why do you mar this lovely hour with a thought like
+that?
+
+_Helen_. And in another life, shall we see light, when his, for us,
+shines no more?--What sound is that?
+
+_Annie_. That faint cry from the woods?
+
+_Helen_. No,--more distant,--far off as the horizon, like some mighty
+murmur, faintly borne, it came.
+
+_Annie_. I wish that we had gone to-day. I do not like this waiting
+until Thursday;--just one of that elder brother's foolish whims it was.
+I cannot think how your consent was won to it. Did you meet any one in
+your walk just now?
+
+_Helen_. No--Yes, yes, I did. The little people where I went, I met by
+hundreds, Annie. Through the dark aisles, and the high arches, all
+decked in blue, and gold, and crimson, they sung me a most merry
+welcome. And such as these--see--You cannot think how like
+long-forgotten friends they looked, smiling up from their dark homes,
+upon me.
+
+_Annie_. You have had chance enough to forget them, indeed,--it is two
+years, Helen, since you have been in those woods before. What could have
+tempted you there to-day?
+
+_Helen_. Was there _danger_ then?--was there danger indeed?--I was by
+the wood-side ere I knew it, and then,--it was but one last look I
+thought to take--nay, what is it, Annie? George met me as I was coming
+home, and I remember something in his eye startled me at first; but if
+there was danger, I should have known of it before.
+
+_Annie_. How could we dream of your going there this evening, when we
+knew you had never set your foot in those woods since the day Everard
+Maitland left Fort Edward?
+
+_Helen_. Annie!
+
+_Annie_. For me, I would as soon have looked to see Maitland himself
+coming from those woods, as you.
+
+_Helen_. Annie! Annie Grey! You must not, my sister--do not speak that
+name to me, never again, _never_.
+
+_Annie_. Why, Helen, I am sorry to have grieved you thus; but I
+thought--Look! look! There go those officers again,--there, in the lane
+between the orchards, Scarcely half an hour ago they went by to the fort
+in just such haste. There is something going on there, I am sure.
+
+ (_Helen rises from the window, and walks the room_.)
+
+_Annie_. In truth there was a rumor this afternoon,--you are so timid
+and fanciful, our mother chose you should not hear it while it was rumor
+only; but 'tis said that a party of the enemy have been seen in those
+woods to-day, and, among them, the Indians we have counted so friendly.
+Do you hear me, Helen?
+
+_Helen_. That he should _live_ still! Yes, it is all real still! That
+heaven of my thought, that grows so like a pageant to me, is still
+_real_ somewhere. Those eyes--they are darkly shining now; this very
+moment that passes _me_, drinks their beauty;--that voice,--that
+tone,--that very tone--on some careless ear, even now it wastes its
+luxury of blessing. Continents of hail and darkness, the polar seas--all
+earth's distance, could never have parted me from him; but now I live in
+the same world with him, and the everlasting walls blacken between us.
+Those looks may shine on the dull earth and senseless stones, but not on
+me; on uncaring eyes, but not on mine; though for one moment of their
+lavished wealth, I could cheaply give a life without them; never again,
+never, never, never shall their love come to me.
+
+_Annie_. Who would have thought she could cherish in secret a grief like
+this? Dear sister, we all believed you had forgotten that sad affair
+long ago,--we thought that you were happy now.
+
+_Helen_. Happy?--I am, you were right; but I have been to-day down to
+the very glen where we took that last lovely walk together, and all the
+beautiful past came back to me like life.--I _am_ happy; you must count
+me so still.
+
+_Annie_. With what I have just now heard, how can I?
+
+_Helen_. It is this war that has parted us; and so, this is but my part
+in these noble and suffering times, and that great thought reaches
+overall my anguish. But for this war I might have been--hath this world
+such flowers, and do they call it a wilderness?--I might have been, even
+now, you know it, Annie, his wife, his wife, _his_. But our hearts are
+cunningly made, many-stringed; and often much good music is left in them
+when we count them broken. That which makes the bitterness of this lot,
+the inconceivable, unutterable bitterness of it, even that I can bear
+now, calmly, and count it God's kindness too.
+
+_Annie_. I do not understand you, sister.
+
+_Helen_. What if this young royalist, Annie, when he quarrelled with my
+brother, and took arms against my country, what if he had kept faith to
+_me?_
+
+_Annie_. Well.
+
+_Helen. Well?_ Oh no, it would not have been well. Why, my home would
+have been with that pursuing army now, my fate bound up with that hollow
+cause,--these very hands might have fastened the sword of oppression;
+nay, the sword whose edge was turned against you, against you all, and
+against the cause, that with tears, night and morning, you were praying
+for, and with your heart's best blood stood ready to seal every hour.
+No, it is best as it is; or if my wish grows deeper still, if in my
+heart I envy, with murmuring thought, the blessed brides, on whose
+wedding dawns the laughing sun of peace, then with a wish I cast away
+the glory of these suffering times.--It is best as it is. I am content.
+
+_Annie_. I wish I could understand you, Helen. You say, "if he had kept
+faith to you;"--carried you off, you mean! Do you mean, sister Helen,
+that of your own will you would ever have gone with him, with Everard
+Maitland,--that traitor?
+
+_Helen. Gone with him_? Would I not? Would I not? Dear child, we talk of
+what, as yet, you know nothing of. Gone with _him_? Some things are
+holy, Annie, only until the holier come.
+
+_Annie_. (_looking toward the door_.) Stay, stay. What is it, George?
+
+ (_George Grey comes in_.)
+
+_George_. I was seeking our mother. What should it be, but ill news?
+This tide is against us, and if it be not well-nigh full, we may e'en
+fold our arms for the rest. There, read that. (_Throwing her a letter_.)
+
+Every face you see looks as if a thunder-cloud were passing it. I heard
+one man say, just now, as I came in, that the war would be over in a
+fortnight's time. There'll be some blood spilt ere then, I reckon
+though.
+
+_Helen_. What paper is that that reddens her cheek so suddenly?
+
+_Annie_. The McGregor's!--think of it, Helen,--gone over to the British
+side, and St. John of the Glens, and--who brought you this letter,
+George? 'Tis false! I do not believe it, not a word of it. Why, here are
+twenty names, people that we know, the most honorable, too,--forsaking
+us now, at such a crisis!
+
+_George_. Self-defence, self-defence, sister; their lands and their
+houses must be saved from devastation. What sort of barracks think you,
+would that fine country-seat of McGregor's make?--and St. John's--_he_
+is a farmer you know, and his fields are covered with beautiful grain,
+that a week will ripen, and so, he is for turning his sword into a
+sickle;--besides, there are worse things than pillage threatened here.
+Look, (_unfolding a hand-bill_.) Just at this time comes this villainous
+proclamation from Skeensborough, scattered about among our soldiers
+nobody knows how, half of them on the eve of desertion before, and the
+other half--what ails you, Helen?
+
+_Helen_. There he stands!
+
+_Annie_. Is she crazed? Why do you clasp your hands so wildly? for
+Heaven's sake, Helen!--her cheek is white as death.--Helen!
+
+_Helen_. Is he gone, Annie?
+
+_Annie_. As I live, I do not know what you are talking of. Nay, look;
+there is no one here, none that you need fear, most certainly.
+
+_Helen_. I saw him, his eye was on me; there he stood, looking through
+that window, smiling and beckoning me.
+
+_George_. Saw him? Who, in Heaven's name? This is fancy-work.
+
+_Helen_. I saw him as I see you now. He stood on that roof,--an
+Indian,--I saw the crimson bars on his face, and the blanket, and the
+long wild hair on his shoulders; and--and, I saw the gleaming knife in
+his girdle,--Oh God! I did.
+
+_George_. Ay, ay, 'twas that scoundrel that dogged us in our way home,
+I'll lay my life it was.
+
+_Helen_. In our way home? An _Indian_, I said.
+
+_George_. Well, well, and I say an Indian, a rascal Indian, was watching
+and following us all the way home just now.
+
+_Helen_. George!
+
+_George_. Then you did not see him after all. In truth, I did not mean
+you should, for we could not have hurried more, but all the time we sat
+in that shanty, while it rained, about as far off as that chair from me,
+stood this same fellow among the bushes, watching us, or rather you. And
+you saw him here t He might have crept along by that orchard wall. What
+are you laughing at, Annie?--I will go and see what sort of a guard we
+have.
+
+_Annie_. If you knew as much of Helen's Indians as I do, you would
+hardly be in such a hurry, George, I mean about this one that was here
+just now, for there are Indians in yonder forest I suppose; but since we
+were so high, I never walked in the woods with her once, but that we
+encountered one, or heard his steps among the bushes at least; and if it
+chanced to be as late as this, there would be half a dozen of them way
+laying us in the road,--but sometimes they turned out squirrels, and
+sometimes logs of wood, and sometimes mere air, air of about this color.
+We want a little light, that is all. There is no weapon like that for
+these fancy-people. I can slay a dozen of them with a candle's beams.
+
+ (_George goes out_.)
+
+_Helen_. Do not laugh at me to-night, Annie.
+
+_Annie_. But what should the Indians want of you, pry'thee; tell me
+that, Helen?
+
+_Helen_. God knows. Wait till the sun sets to-morrow, and I will laugh
+with you if you are merry then.
+
+_Annie_. Why to-morrow?--because it is our last day
+here? Tuesday--Wednesday--yes; the next day we
+shall be on the road to Albany.
+
+ [_Exit_.
+
+_Helen_. I am awake now. Watched me in the glen?--followed me home?
+Those woods are full of them.--But what has turned their wild eyes on
+me?
+
+It is but one day longer;--we have counted many, in peril and fear, and
+_this_, is the last;--even now how softly the fearful time wastes. _One
+day!_--Oh God, thou only knowest what its shining walls encircle. (_She
+leans on the window, musing silently_.) Two years ago I stood here, and
+prayed to die.-On that same tree my eye rested then. With what visions
+of hope I played under it once, building bowers for fairies I verily
+thought would come, and dreaming, with yearning heart, of glorious and
+beautiful things this world _hath not_. But, that wretched day, through
+blinding tears, I saw the sunlight on its glossy leaves, and I said,
+'let me see that light no more.' Surely the bitterness is deep when that
+which hath colored all our unfolded being, is a weariness. For what more
+hath life for me I thought, its lesson is learned and its power is
+spent,--it can please, and it can trouble me no more; and why should I
+stay here in vain and wearily?
+
+It was sad enough, indeed, to see the laughing spring returning again,
+when the everlasting winter had set in within, to link with each change
+of the varied year, sweet with a life's memories, such mournfulness;
+laying by, one by one, all hope's blessed spells, withered and broken
+forever,--the moonlight, the songs of birds, the blossom showers of
+April, the green and gold of autumn's sunset,--it was sad, but it was
+not in vain.--Not in vain, Oh God, didst thou deny that weeping prayer.
+
+ (_A merry voice is heard without, and a child's face peeps
+ through the window that overlooks the orchard_.)
+
+_Child_. Look! look! sister Helen! see what I have found on the roof of
+the piazza here,--all covered with wampum and scarlet, and here are
+feathers too--two feathers in it, blue and yellow--eagle's feathers they
+are, I guess.
+
+_Helen_ (_approaching the window_.) Let me see, Willy. What, did you
+find it here?
+
+_Willy._ Just under the window here. Frank and I were swinging on the
+gate; and--there is something hard in it, Helen,--feel.
+
+_Helen_. Yes, it is very curious; but--
+
+_Willy_. There comes Netty with the candle; now we can see to untie this
+knot.
+
+_Helen_. Willy, dear Willy, you must give it to me, you must indeed,
+and--I will paint you a bird to-morrow.
+
+_Willy_. A blue-bird, will you? A real one?
+
+_Helen_. Yes, yes;--run down little climber; see how dark it grows, and
+Frank is waiting, see.
+
+_Willy_. Well. But mind you, it must be a blue bird then. A real one.
+With the red on his breast, and all.
+
+ [_Exit_.
+
+ (_She walks to the table, unfastening the envelope_.)
+
+_Helen_. What sent that thrill of forgotten life through me then?--that
+wild, delicious thrill? This is strange, indeed. A sealed pacquet
+within! and here--
+
+ (_She glances at the superscription, and the pacquet
+ drops from her hand_.)
+
+No--no. I have seen that hand-writing in my dreams before, but it
+dissolved always. What's joy better than grief, if it pierce thus? Can
+never a one of all the soul's deep melodies on this poor instrument be
+played out, then--trembling and jarring thus, even at the breath of its
+most lovely passion.--And yet, it is some cruel thing, I know.
+
+ (_The pacquet opened, discovers Helen's miniature, a book,
+ a ring, and other tokens_.)
+
+Cruel indeed! That little rose!--He might have spared me this. A dull
+reader I were, in truth, if this needed comment,--but I knew it before.
+He might have spared me this.
+
+ (_She leans over the recovered relics with a burst
+ of passionate weeping_.)
+
+Yet, who knows--(_lifting her head with a sudden smile_,) some trace,
+some little curl of his pencil I may find among these leaves yet, to
+tell me, as of old,--
+
+ (_A letter drops from the book, she tears it eagerly open_.)
+
+(_Reading_.) These cold words I understand, but--_letters!_--He wrote me
+none! Was there ever a word between us, from the hour when he left me,
+his fancied bride, to that last meeting, when, at a word, and ere I knew
+what I had said, he turned on me that cold and careless eye, and left
+me, haughtily and forever? And now--(_reading_)--misapprehension, has it
+been! Is the sun on high again?--in this black and starless night--the
+noonday sun? He loves me still.--Oh! this joy weighs like grief.
+
+Shall I see him again? Joy! joy! Beautiful sunshine joy! Who knows the
+soul's rich depths till joy hath lighted them?--from the dim and
+sorrowful haunts of memory will he come again into the living present!
+Shall I see those eyes, looking on me? Shall I hear my name in that lost
+music sound once more?--His?--Am I his again? New mantled with that
+shining love, like some glorious and beautiful stranger I seem to
+myself, _Helen_--the bright and joy-wreathed thing his voice makes that
+name mean--My life will be all full of that blest music. I shall be
+Helen, evermore his--his.
+
+No,--it would make liars of old sages,--and all books would read wrong.
+A life of such wild blessedness? It would be fearful like living in some
+magic land, where the honest laws of nature were not. A life?--a moment
+were enough. Ages of common life would shine in it. (_Reading again_.)
+"Elliston's hut?"--"If I choose that the return should be mutual,--and
+the memorials of a despised regard can at best be but an indifferent
+possession;--a pacquet reinclosed directly in this same envelope, and
+left at the hut of the missionary, cannot fail to reach him safely."
+
+"Safely."--Might he not come there safely then? And might I not go
+thither safely too, in to-morrow's light? O God, let not Passion lead me
+now. The centre beaming truth, not passion's narrow ray, must light me
+here!--But am I not his?
+
+Once more, one horizon circles, for a day, our long-parted destinies;
+another, and another wave of these wild times will drift them asunder
+again, forever; and I count myself his wife. His wife?--nay, his bride,
+his two years' bride, to-night, his wife, to-morrow. He must meet me
+there, (_writing_) at noon, I will say.--I did not think that little hut
+of logs should have been my marriage-hall;--he must meet me there, and
+to-morrow is my bridal day.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+PART THIRD.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+FATE.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+DIALOGUE I.
+
+SCENE. _The hill--Night--Large fires burning--Sentinels dimly seen in
+ the back-ground. A young Indian steals carefully from the
+ thicket. He examines the ground and the newly-felled trees._
+
+
+_Indian_. One, two, three. And this is ringed. The dogs have spoiled the
+council-house.
+
+ (_Soldiers rush forward_.)
+
+_1st Sol_. So, Mr. Red-skin! would not you like a scalp or two now, to
+string on your leggings? Maybe we can help you to one or so. Hold fast.
+Take care of that arm, I know him of old.
+
+ (_The Indian, with a violent struggle, disengages himself,
+ and darts into the thicket_.)
+
+No? well,--dead or alive, we must have you on our side again.
+(_Firing_.)
+
+_2nd Sol_. _He's_ fixed, Sir.
+
+_1st Sol_. Hark. Hark,--off again! Let me go. What do you hold me for,
+you scoundrel?
+
+_2nd Sol_. Don't make a fool of yourself, Will Wilson. There will be a
+dozen of them yelling around you there. Besides, he is half way to the
+swamp by this. Look here; what's this, in the grass here?
+
+_1st Sol_. There was something in his hand, but he clenched it through
+it all,--this is a letter. Bring it to the fire.
+
+_2nd Sol_. (_reading_.) "_This by the Indian, as in case I am taken, he
+may reach the camp in safety. Not over three thousand men in all, I
+should think,--very little ammunition, soldiers mostly discouraged.--In
+Albany, they are tearing the lead off the windows of the houses, and
+taking the weights from the shops for ball. Talk of retreating on
+Thursday to the new encampment, five miles below. More when I get to
+you_."
+
+_More!_ Humph! A pretty string of lies he has got here already. This
+must go to the General, Dick.
+
+ [_Exeunt_.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+
+
+DIALOGUE II.
+
+SCENE. _Chamber in the Parsonage. Moonlight. Annie sitting by the window,
+ the door open into an adjoining room_.
+
+
+_Annie_. (_Calling_.) Come, come,--why do you sit there scribbling so
+late, Helen? Come, and enjoy this beautiful night with me. Ay, what a
+world of invisible life amid the dew and darkness utters its glad
+voices; even the little insect we never saw by day, makes us feel for
+once the great brotherhood of being. This day week we shall be in
+Albany,--no more such scenes as this then.
+
+ (_Helen approaches the window, and puts her arm gently
+ around her sister_.)
+
+_Helen_. No more!--It was a sad word you were saying, Annie.
+
+_Annie_. How you startled me. Your hands are cold,--cold as icicles, and
+trembling too. What ails you, Helen?
+
+_Helen_. 'Tis nothing.--How often you and I have stood together thus,
+looking down on that old bridge.--Summer and winter.--Do you remember
+the cold snowy moonlights of old, when the sound of the distant bell had
+hope in it? We shall stand together thus, no more.
+
+_Annie_. Do not speak so sadly, Helen. I cannot think they will destroy
+our home in mere wantonness. Was there not some one coming up the path
+just now? Hark! there is news with that tone.
+
+ [_Exit_.
+
+_Helen_. A little more, an hour perchance, and he will read my letter.
+Why do I tremble thus? Is it because I have done wrong, that these dark
+misgivings haunt me? No,--it is not remorse--'tis very like--yet remorse
+it is not. Danger, there is none. I shall but walk to the wood-side as
+to-day, that little path to the hut is quickly trod, and he will be
+waiting there. I shall be safe then, safe as I care to be.--Why do I
+stand here reasoning thus? Safe? And if I were not, what is it to me
+now? The dark plan is laid. The fearful acting now is all that's left
+for me.
+
+This must go to the lodge to-night, and ere my mother returns;--to tell
+them now, would be to make my scheme impossible.
+
+ (_She begins, with a reluctant air, to fold the dresses,
+ which are lying loosely by her_.)
+
+Oh God! whence do these dark and horrible thoughts grow?--Nay, feeling
+not born of thought. That wedding robe looks like a shroud to me! I
+cannot. Shadows from things unseen are upon me. The future is a night of
+tempest, where I hear nothing but the breaking boughs, and the whirl and
+crash of the mourning blast. Oh God! there is no refuge for the fearful,
+but in thee.--To thee--no. If there is power in prayer of mine, hath it
+not already doomed that wicked cause, my fate is linked with now. I
+cannot pray.--Can I not?--How the pure strength comes welling up from
+its infinite depths.
+
+Hear me--not with lip service, I beseech thee now, but with the
+earnestness that stays the rushing heart's blood in its way.--Hear me.
+Let the high cause of right and freedom, whose sad banner, now, on
+yonder hill, floats in this summer air; whose music on this soft
+night-breeze is borne--let it prevail--though _I_, with all this
+sensitive, warm, shrinking life; with all this new-found wealth of love
+and hope, lie on its iron way.
+
+I am safe now.--This life that I feel now, steel cannot reach.
+
+ (_Annie enters_.)
+
+_Annie_. Dear Helen, dress yourself. It is all true! We must go
+to-night, we must indeed. They are dismantling the fort now.--Come to
+the door, and you can hear them if you will; and here is word from
+Henry, we must be ready before morning--the British are within sight. Do
+you hear me, Helen? Do not stand looking at me in that strange way.
+
+_Helen_. To-night!
+
+_Annie_. I was frightened myself at first, sadly; but there is no
+danger, not the least. We shall be in Albany to-morrow, Henry says.
+Come, Helen, there is no one to see to any thing but ourselves. They are
+running about like mad creatures there below, and the children, are
+crying, and such a time you never saw.
+
+_Helen_. To-night! That those beautiful lips should speak it! Take it
+back. It cannot be. It must not be.
+
+_Annie_. Why do you look so reproachfully at me? Helen, you astonish and
+frighten me!
+
+_Helen_. Yes--yes--I see it all. And why could I not have known this one
+hour sooner?--Even now it may not be too late. Annie--
+
+_Annie_. Thank Heaven,--there is my mother's voice at last.
+
+_Helen_. Annie, stay. Do not mark what I have said in the bewilderment
+of this sudden fear. Is George below?--Who brought this news?
+
+_Annie_. One of the men from the fort.--George has not been home since
+you sent him to Elliston's. She is calling me. Make haste and come down,
+Helen.
+
+ [_Exit_.
+
+_Helen_. They will leave me alone. They will leave me here alone. And
+why could I not have known this one hour sooner?--I could have bid him
+come to-night--If the invisible powers are plotting against me, it is
+well. Could I have thought of this?--and yet, how like something I had
+known before, it all comes upon me.--Can I stay here alone?--Could
+I?--No never, never! He must come for me to-night. Perchance that
+pacquet still lies at yonder hut, and it is not yet too late to recal my
+letter;--if it is--if it is, I must find some other messenger. Thank
+God!--there is one way. Elliston can send to that camp to-night. He
+can--even now,--He can--he will.--
+
+ [_Exit_.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+
+
+DIALOGUE III.
+
+SCENE. _The porch. Helen waiting the return of her messenger from the hut_.
+
+
+_Helen_. How quiet and soft it all lies in this solemn light. Is it
+illusion?--can it be?--that old, familiar look, that from these woods
+and hills, and from this moon-lit meadow, seems to smile on me now with
+such a holy promise of protection and love?--The merry trill in this
+apple-tree is the very sound that, waking from my infant sleep in the
+hush of the summer midnight, of old lulled, nay, wakened my first inward
+thought. Oh that my heart's youngest religion could come again, the
+feeling with which a little child looks up to these mighty stars, as the
+spangles on his home-roof, while he stands smiling beneath the awful
+shelter of the skies, as under a father's dome. But these years show us
+the evil that mocks that trust.
+
+'Tis he,--What a mere thread of time separates me from my fate, and yet
+the darkness of ages could not hide it more surely. Already he has
+reached the lane. Another minute will show me all. Will the pacquet be
+in his hand, or will it not? I will be calm--it shall be like a picture
+to me.
+
+Ah! there is an immeasurable power about us, a foreign and strange
+thing, that answers not to the soul, that seems to know or to heed
+nothing of the living suffering, rejoicing being of the spirit. Why
+should I struggle with it any longer? From my weeping childhood to this
+hour, it hath set its iron bars about me; no--softly yielding, hath it
+not sometimes, the long, undreamed-of vistas opened, bright as
+heaven,--and now, maybe--how slow he moves--even now perchance.--This is
+wrong. The Infinite is One. The Goodness Infinite, whose everlasting
+smile lighteth the inner soul, and the Power Infinite, whose alien touch
+without, in darkness comes, they are of One, and the good know it.
+
+_The Messenger_. (_Coming up the path_.)
+
+Bless you, Miss! The pacquet had been gone this hour!
+
+_Helen_. Gone! Well.--And Elliston--what said he?
+
+_Mess_. I brought this note of yours back, Miss Helen. Father Elliston
+was gone. Here has been an Indian killed on Sandy Hill this evening,
+Alaska's own son as it turns out, and such a hubbub as they are making
+about it you never heard. I met a couple of squaws myself, yelling like
+mad creatures, and the woods are all alive with them. The priest has
+gone down to their village to pacify them if it may be,--so I brought
+the note back, Miss Helen, for there was no one there but a little
+rascal of an Indian, and I would not trust the worth of a feather with
+one of them. Was I right?
+
+_Helen_. Yes. Give it to me. How far is it to the British camp?
+
+_Mess_. Why, they are just above here at Brandon's Mills they say, that
+is, the main body. It can't be over three miles, or so.
+
+_Helen. Three_ miles! only three miles of this lovely moonlight road
+between us.--William McReady, go to that camp for me to-night.
+
+_Mess_. To the British camp?
+
+_Helen_. Ay.
+
+_Mess_. To the British camp! Lord bless you, Miss. I should be shot--I
+should be shot as true as you are a living woman. I should be shot for a
+deserter, or, what's worse, I should be hanged for a spy.
+
+_Helen_. What shall I do!
+
+_Mess_. And besides, there's Madame Grey will be wanting me by this
+time. See how the candles dance about the rooms there.
+
+_Helen_. Yes, you are right. We must go in and help them. Come.
+
+ (_They enter the house_.)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+DIALOGUE IV.
+
+SCENE. _The British camp. Moonlight. A lady in a rich travelling dress,
+ standing in the door of a log-hut_.
+
+
+_Lady Ackland_. (_Talking to her maid within_.) What is the matter,
+Margaret? What do you go stealing about the walls so like a mad woman
+for, with that shoe in your hand?
+
+_Maid_. (_Within_.) There, Sir!--your song is done!--there's one less, I
+am certain of that. _Coming to the door_.) If ever I get home alive, my
+lady--Ha!--(_striking the door with her slipper_.) If ever--you are
+there, are you? I believe I have broken my ear in two. The matter? Will
+your ladyship look here?
+
+_Lady A_. Well.
+
+_Maid_. And if ever I get back to London, I'll say well too. If ever I
+get back to London alive, my lady,--I'll see----
+
+_Lady A_. What will you see, Margaret? Nothing lovelier than this, I am
+sure. Are you not ashamed to stand muttering there? Come here, and look
+at this beautiful night.
+
+_Maid_. La, Lady Harriet!
+
+_Lady A_. Listen! How still the camp is now! You can hear the rush of
+those falls we passed, distinctly. How pretty the tents look there, in
+that deep shade. These tuneful frogs and katy-dids must be our
+nightingales to-night. Indeed, as I stand now, I could almost fancy that
+fine wood there was my father's park; nay, methinks I see the top of the
+old gray turrets peeping out among the shadows there. Look, Margaret, do
+you see?
+
+_Maid_. La! I can see woods enough, my lady, if that is what you
+mean,--nothing else, and I have seen enough of them already to last me
+one life through. Yes, here's a pretty tear I have got amongst
+them!--Two guineas and a half it cost me in London,--I pray I may never
+set my eyes on a wood again,
+
+_Lady A_. This was some happy home once, I know. See that rose-bush, and
+this little bed of flowers.--Here was a pretty yard--there went the
+fence,--and there, where that waggon stands, by that broken pear-tree,
+swung the gate. And pleasant meetings there have been at this door, no
+doubt, and sorrowful partings too,--and hearts within have leaped at the
+sound of that gate, and merry tales have been told by that desolate
+hearth. In this little lonely unthought-of place, the mysterious world
+of the human soul has unfolded,--the drama of life been played, as
+grandly in the eyes of angels as in the proud halls where my life
+dawned. And there are hearts that cling to this desolate spot as mine
+does to that far-off home. We have driven them away in sorrow and fear.
+This is war!
+
+_Maid_. I wonder who is fluting under that tree there, so late. They are
+serenading that Dutch woman, as I live.
+
+_Lady A_. The Baroness, are you talking of, Margaret?
+
+_Maid_. A baroness! Good sooth!--she looks like it, in that yellow silk,
+and those odious beads, fussing about. If your ladyship will believe me,
+I saw her sitting in her tent to-night, ay, in the door, feeding that
+wretched child with her own hands. We can't be thankful enough they did
+not put her in here with us, I'll own.
+
+_Lady A_. Hush, hush, for shame! We might well have spared that empty
+room. Come, we'll go in--It's very late. Strange that Sir George should
+not be here ere this.
+
+_Maid_. Look, my lady! Here's some one at the gate.
+
+ (_An officer enters the little court, with a hasty step_.)
+
+_Officer_. Good evening to your ladyship.--Is Captain Maitland
+here?--Sir George told me that he left him here.
+
+_Lady A_. Ay, but he has been gone this hour. Stay, it is Andre's flute
+you hear below there, and some one has joined him just now--yes, it is
+he.
+
+_Off_. Under that tree;--thank you, my lady.
+
+_Lady A_. Stay, Colonel Hill,--I beg your pardon, but you spoke so
+hastily.--This young Maitland is a friend of ours, I trust there is
+nothing that concerns him painfully.--
+
+_Off_. Oh nothing, nothing, except that he is ordered off to Fort Ann
+to-night. There are none of us that know these wild routes as well as he.
+
+ [_Exit_.
+
+_Lady A_. Good Heavens! What noise is that?
+
+_Maid_. Lord 'a mercy! The battle is coming?
+
+_Lady A_. Hush! (_To a sentinel who goes whistling by_.) Sirrah, what
+noise is that?
+
+_Sentinel_. It's these Indians, my lady; they have found the son of some
+chief of theirs murdered in these woods, and they are bringing him to
+the camp now. That's the mourning they make.
+
+_Lady A_. The Lord protect us!
+
+ (_They enter the house_.)
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+
+
+DIALOGUE V.
+
+SCENE. _The interior of a tent. Maitland, in travelling equipments,
+ pacing the floor_.
+
+
+_Maitland_. William! Ho there!
+
+_Servant_. (_Looking in_.) Your honor?
+
+_Mait_. Is not that horse ready yet?
+
+_Ser't_. Presently, your honor.
+
+ [_Exit_.
+
+_Mait_. So the fellow has been here, it seems, and returned again to
+Fort Edward without seeing me. Of course, my lady deigns no answer.--An
+answer! Well, I thought I expected none. Ten minutes ago I should have
+sworn I expected none. Why, by this time that letter of mine has gone
+the rounds of the garrison, no doubt. William!
+
+ (_The servant enters_.)
+
+Bring that horse round, you rascal,--must I be under your orders too,
+forsooth?
+
+_Ser't_. Certainly, your honor,--but if he could but just,--I am
+a-going, Sir,--but if he could but just take a mouthful or two more.
+There's never a baiting-place till--
+
+_Mait_. Do you hear?
+
+ (_The Servant retreats hastily_.)
+
+_Mait_. The curse of having lived in these wilds cleaves to me in all
+things. Here are Andre and Mortimer, and a hundred more, and none but I
+for this midnight service.
+
+_Ser't_. (_Re-entering_.) The horse is waiting, Sir,--but here's two of
+these painted creturs hanging about the door, waiting to see you.
+(_Handing him a packet_.)
+
+There's no use in swearing at them, Sir, they don't understand it.
+
+_Mait_. (_Breaking the seals hastily, he discovers the miniature_.) Back
+again! Well, we'll try drowning next,--nay, this is as I sent it! That
+rascal dropped it in the woods perhaps! Softly,--what have we here!
+
+ (_He discovers, and reads the letter_.)
+
+Who brought this?
+
+_Ser't_. The Indian that was here yesterday.
+
+_Mait_. Alaska! Here's blood on the envelope, on the letter too, and
+here--This packet has been soaked in blood. (_Re-reading the letter_.)
+
+"To-morrow"--"twelve o'clock" to-morrow--Look if the light be burning in
+the Lady Ackland's window,--she was up as I passed. "Twelve
+o'clock"--There are more horses on this route than these cunning
+settlers choose to reckon. Why, there are ten hours yet--I shall be back
+ere then. Helen--do I dream?--This is love!--How I have wronged
+her.--This _is_ love!
+
+_Ser't_. (_At the door_.) The horse is waiting, Sir,--and this Indian
+here wont stir till he sees you.
+
+_Mait_. Alaska--I must think of it,--_risk?_--I would pledge my life on
+his truth. He has seen her too,--I remember now, he saw her--with me at
+the lake. Let him come in.--No, stop, I will speak with him as I go.
+
+ [_Exeunt_.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+DIALOGUE VI.
+
+SCENE. _Lady Ackland's door_.
+
+
+_Lady Ackland_. Married!--His wife?--Well, I think I'll not try to sleep
+again. There goes Orion with his starry girdle.--Married--is he?
+
+_Maid_. Was not that Captain Maitland that was talking here just now,
+Lady Harriet?
+
+_Lady A_. Go to bed, Margaret,--go to bed,--but look you though.
+To-morrow with the dawn that furnishing gear we left in the tent must be
+unpacked, and this empty room--whose wife, think you, is my guest
+tomorrow, Margaret?
+
+_Maid_. Bless me! If I were to guess till daylight, my lady----
+
+_Lady A_. This young Maitland, you think so handsome, Margaret----
+
+_Maid_. I?--la, it was not I, my lady, I am sure.
+
+_Lady A_.--He will bring us his wife home here tomorrow, a young and
+beautiful wife.
+
+_Maid_. Wife?----
+
+_Lady A_. Poor child,--we must give her a gentle welcome. Do you
+remember those flowers we saw in the glen as we passed?--I will send for
+them in the morning, and we will fill the vacant hearth with these
+blossoming boughs.----
+
+_Maid_. But, here--in these woods, a wife!--where on earth will he bring
+her from, my lady?
+
+_Lady A_. Ay, we shall see, to-morrow we shall see,--go dream the rest.
+
+ [_Exit the maid_.
+
+_Lady A_. Who would have thought it?--so cold and proud he seemed, so
+scornful of our sex.--And yet I knew something there lay beneath it
+all.--Even in that wild, gay mood, when the light of mirth filled and
+o'er-flowed those splendid eyes,--deeper still, I saw always the calm
+sorrow-beam shining within.
+
+That picture he showed me--how pretty it was!--The face haunts me with
+its look of beseeching loveliness.--Was there anything so sorrowful
+about it though?--Nay, the look was a smile, and yet a strange
+mourn-fulness clings to my thought of it now. Well, if the painter hath
+not dissembled in it--the _painter_?--no. The spirit of those eyes was
+of no painter's making. From the _Eidos_ of the Heavenly Mind sprung
+that.
+
+I shall see her to-morrow.--Nay, I must meet her in the outskirts of the
+camp,--so went my promise,--if Maitland be not here ere then.
+
+ [_Exit_.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THOUGHTS.
+
+SCENE. _The Hill. The Student's Night-watch_.
+
+
+ How beautiful the night, through all these hours
+ Of nothingness, with ceaseless music wakes
+ Among the hills, trying the melodies
+ Of myriad chords on the lone, darkened air,
+ With lavish power, self-gladdened, caring nought
+ That there is none to hear. How beautiful!
+ That men should live upon a world like this,
+ Uncovered all, left open every night
+ To the broad universe, with vision free
+ To roam the long bright galleries of creation,
+ Yet, to their strange destiny ne'er wake.
+ Yon mighty hunter in his silver vest,
+ That o'er those azure fields walks nightly now,
+ In his bright girdle wears the self-same gems
+ That on the watchers of old Babylon
+ Shone once, and to the soldier on her walls
+ Marked the swift hour, as they do now to me.
+ Prose is the dream, and poetry the truth.
+ That which we call reality, is but
+ Reality's worn surface, that one thought
+ Into the bright and boundless all might pierce,
+ There's not a fragment of this weary real
+ That hath not in its lines a story hid
+ Stranger than aught wild chivalry could tell.
+ There's not a scene of this dim, daily life,
+ But, in the splendor of one truthful thought
+ As from creation's palette freshly wet,
+ Might make young romance's loveliest picture dim,
+ And e'en the wonder-land of ancient song,----
+ Old Fable's fairest dream, a nursery rhyme.
+ How calm the night moves on, and yet
+ In the dark morrow, that behind those hills
+ Lies sleeping now, who knows what waits?--'Tis well.
+ He that made this life, I'll trust with another.
+ To be,--there was the risk. We might have waked
+ Amid a wrathful scene, but this,--with all
+ Its lovely ordinances of calm days,
+ The golden morns, the rosy evenings,
+ Its sweet sabbath hours and holy homes,----
+ If the same hidden hand from whence these sprung,
+ That dark gate opens, what need we fear there?----
+ Here's wrath, but none that hath not its sure pathway
+ Upward leading,--there are tears, but 'tis
+ A school-time weariness; and many a breeze
+ And lovely warble from our native hills,
+ Through the dim casement comes, over the worn
+ And tear-wet page, unto the listening ear
+ Of our home sighing--to the _listening_ ear.
+ Ah, what know we of life?--of that strange life
+ That this, in many a folded rudiment,
+ With nature's low, unlying voice, doth point to.
+ Is it not very like what the poor grub
+ Knows of the butterfly's gay being?----
+ With its colors strange, fragrance, and song,
+ And robes of floating gold with gorgeous dyes,
+ And loveliest motion o'er wide, blooming worlds.
+ That dark dream had ne'er imaged!----
+ Ay, sing on,
+ Sing on, thou bright one, with the news of life,
+ The everlasting, winging o'er our vale.
+ Oh warble on, thy high, strange song.
+ What sayest thou?--a land o'er these dark cliffs,
+ A land all glory, where the day ne'er setteth----
+ Where bright creatures, mid the deathless shades,
+ Go singing, shouting evermore? And yet
+ 'Twere vain. That wild tale hath no meaning here,
+ Thou warbler from afar. Like music
+ Of a foreign tongue, on our dull sense,
+ The rich thought wastes.--We have been nursed in tears,
+ Thro' all we've known of life, we have known grief,
+ And is there none in life's deep essence mixed?
+ Is sorrow but the young soul's garment then?----
+ A baby mantle, doffed forever here,
+ Within these lowly walls.
+ And we were born
+ Amid a glad creation!---then why hear we ne'er
+ The silver shout, filling the unmeasured heaven?----
+ Why catch we e'er the rich plume's rustle soft,
+ Or sweep of passing lyre! Our tearful home
+ Hung 'mid a gay, rejoicing universe,
+ And ne'er a glimpse adown its golden paths?----
+ Oh are there eyes, soft eyes upon us,
+ In the dark and in the day, shining unseen,
+ And everlasting smiles, brightening unfelt
+ On all our tears: News sweet and strange ye bring.
+ Hither we came from our Creator's hands,
+ Bright earnest ones, looking for joy, and lo,
+ A stranger met us at the gate of life,
+ A stranger dark, and wrapped us in her robe,
+ And bore us on through a dim vale.--Ah, not
+ The world we looked for,--for an image in.
+ Our souls was born, of a high home, that yet
+ We have not seen. And were our childhood's yearnings,
+ Its strange hopes, no dreams then,--dim revealings
+ Of a land that yet we travel to?----
+ But thou, oh foster-mother, mournful nurse,
+ So long upon thy sable vest we're leaned,
+ Thou art grown dear to us, and when at last
+ At yonder blue and burning gate
+ Thou yieldest up thy trust, and joy at last
+ In her own wild embrace enfolds us once, e'en
+ From the jewelled bosom of that dazzling one,
+ From the young roses of that smiling face,
+ Shall we not turn to thee, for one last glimpse
+ Of that wan cheek, and solemn eye of love,
+ And watch thy stately step, far down
+ This dim world's fading paths? Take us, kind sorrow!
+ We will lean our young head meekly on thee;
+ Good and holy is thy ministry,
+ Oh handmaid of the Halls thou ne'er mayst tread.
+ And let the darkness gather round that world,
+ Not for the vision of thy glittering walls
+ We ask, nor glimpse of brilliant troops that roam
+ Thine ancient streets, thou sunless city,--
+ Wrap thy strange pavillions still in clouds,
+ Let the shades slumber round thy many homes,
+ By faith, and not by sight, through lowly paths
+ Of goodness, sorrow-led, to thee we come.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+PART FOURTH.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+FULFILMENT.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+DIALOGUE I.
+
+SCENE. _The ground before the fort. Baggage wagons. Cannon dismounted.
+ Confused sounds within. A soldier is seen leaning on his rifle_.
+
+
+ (_Another soldier enters_.)
+
+_2nd Sol_. It's morning! Look in the east there. What are we waiting
+for?
+
+_1st Sol_. Eh! The devil knows best, I reckon, Sir.
+
+_2nd Sol_. Hillo, John! What's the matter there? Here's day-break upon
+us! What are we waiting for?
+
+ (_Another soldier enters_.)
+
+_3d Sol_. To build a bridge--that is all.
+
+_2nd Sol_. A bridge?
+
+_3d Sol_. We shall be off by to-morrow night, no doubt of it,--if we
+don't chance to get cooked and eaten before that time,--some little risk
+of that.
+
+_2nd Sol_. But what's the matter below there, I say? The bridge? what
+ails it?
+
+_3d Sol_. Just as that last wagon was going over, down comes the bridge,
+Sirs, or a good piece of it at least.--What else could it do?--timbers
+half sawn away!
+
+_2nd Sol_. Some of that young jackanape's work! _Aid-de-camp!_ I'd _aid_
+him. He must be ordering and fidgetting, and fuming.--Could not wait
+till we were over.
+
+_1st Sol_. All of a piece, boys!
+
+_3d Sol_. Humph. I wish it had been,--the bridge, I mean.
+
+_1st Sol_. But, I say, don't you see how every thing, little and great,
+goes one way, and that, against us? Chance has no currents like this!
+It's a bad side that Providence frowns on. I think when Heaven deserts a
+cause, it's time for us poor mortals to begin to think about it.
+
+_3d Sol_. Now, if you are going to do so mean a thing as that, don't
+talk about Heaven--prythee don't.
+
+ [_They pass on_.
+
+ (_Two other soldiers enter_.)
+
+_4th Sol_. (_singing_.)
+
+ _Yankee doodle is the tune
+ Americans delight in,
+ 'Twill do to whistle, sing, or play,
+ And just the thing for fighting.
+ Yankee doodle, boys, huzza_----
+
+(_Breaking off abruptly_.) I do not like the looks of it, Will.
+
+_5th Sol_. Of what?
+
+_4th Sol_. Of the morning that begins to glimmer in the east there.
+
+_5th Sol_. No? Why, I was thinking just now I never saw a handsomer
+summer's dawning. That first faint light on the woods and meadows, there
+is nothing I like better. See, it has reached the river now.
+
+_4th Sol_. But the mornings we saw two years ago looked on us with
+another sort of eye than this,--it is not the glimmer of the long,
+pleasant harvest day that we see there.
+
+_5th Sol_. We have looked on mornings that promised better, I'll own. I
+would rather be letting down the bars in the old meadow just now, or
+hawing with my team down the brake; with the children by my side to pick
+the ripe blackberries for our morning meal, than standing here in these
+rags with a gun on my shoulder. Let well alone.--We could not though.
+
+_4th Sol_. (_Handing him a glass_.) See, they are beginning to form
+again. It looks for all the world like a funeral train.
+
+_5th Sol_. What was the Stamp Act to us, or all the acts beyond the sea
+that ever were acted, so long as they left us our golden fields, our
+Sabbath days, the quiet of the summer evening door, and the merry winter
+hearth. _The Stamp Act?_ It would have been cheaper for us to have
+written our bills on gold-leaf, and for tea, to have drunk melted
+jewels, like the queen I read of once; cheaper and better, a thousand
+times, than the bloody cost we are paying now.
+
+_4th Sol_. It was not the money, Will,--it was not the money, you know.
+The wrong it was. We could not be trampled on in that way,--it was not
+in us--we could not.
+
+_5th Sol_. Ay, ay. A fine thing to get mad about was that when we sat in
+the door of a moonlight evening and the day's toils were done. It was
+easy talking then. _Trampled on!_ I will tell you when I was nearest
+being trampled on, Andros,--when I lay on the ground below there last
+winter,--on the frozen ground, with the blood running out of my side
+like a river, and a great high-heeled German walking over my shoulder as
+if I had been a hickory log. I can tell you, Sir, that other was a
+moon-shiny sort of a trampling to that. I shall bear to be trampled on
+in figures the better for it, as long as I live. Between ourselves
+now----
+
+_4th Sol_. There's no one here.
+
+_5th Sol_. There are voices around that corner, though. Come this way.
+
+ [_They pass on_.
+
+ (_Another group of Soldiers_.)
+
+_1st Sol_. Then if nothing else happens, we are off now. Hillo, Martin!
+Here we go again--skulking away. Hey? What do you say now? Hey, Mr.
+Martin, what do you say now?
+
+_2nd Sol_. (_Advancing_.) What I said before.
+
+_1st Sol_. But where is all this to end, Sir? Tell us that--tell us
+that.
+
+_3d Sol_. Yes, yes,--tell us that. If you don't see Burgoyne safe in
+Albany by Friday night, never trust me, Sirs.
+
+_1st Sol_. A bad business we've made of it.
+
+_4th Sol_. Suppose he gets to Albany;--do you think that would finish
+the war?
+
+_3d Sol_. Well, indeed, I thought that was settled on all hands, Sir. I
+believe the General himself makes no secret of that.
+
+_4th Sol_. And what becomes of us all then? We shall go back to the old
+times again, I suppose;--weren't so very bad though, Sam, were they?
+
+_1st Sol_. We have seen worse, I'll own.
+
+_3d Sol_. And what becomes of our young nation here, with its congress
+and its army, and all these presidents, and generals, and colonels, and
+aide-de-camps?--wont it look like a great baby-house when the hubbub is
+over, and the colonies settle quietly down again?
+
+_2nd Sol_. Faith, you take it very coolly. Before that can happen, do
+you know what must happen to you?
+
+_1st Sol_. Nothing worse than this, I reckon.
+
+_2nd Sol_. (_makes a gesture to denote hanging_.)
+
+_4th Sol_. What would they hang us though? Do you think they would
+really hang us, John?
+
+_2nd Sol_. Wait and see.
+
+_1st Sol_. Nonsense! nonsense! A few of the ringleaders, Schuyler, and
+Hancock, and Washington, and a few such, they will hang of course,--but
+for the rest,--we shall have to take the oath anew, and swallow a few
+duties with our sugar and tea, and----
+
+_2nd Sol_. You talk as if the matter were all settled already.
+
+_1st Sol_. There is no more doubt of it, than that you and I stand here
+this moment. Why, they are flocking to Skeensborough from all quarters
+now, and this poor fragment,--this miserable skeleton of an army, which
+is the only earthly obstacle between Burgoyne and Albany, why, even this
+is crumbling to pieces as fast as one can reckon. Two hundred less than
+we were yesterday at this hour, and to-morrow--how many are off
+to-morrow? Ay, and what are we doing the while? Bowing and retreating,
+cap in hand, from post to post, from Crown Point to Ticonderoga, from
+Ticonderoga to Fort Edward, from Fort Edward onward; just showing them
+down, as it were, into the heart of the land. Let them get to
+Albany--Ah, let them once get to Albany, they'll need no more of our
+help then, they'll take care of themselves then and us too.
+
+_2nd Sol_. They'll never get to Albany.
+
+_1st Sol_. Hey?
+
+_2nd Sol_. They'll never get to Albany.
+
+_1st Sol_. What's to hinder them?
+
+_2nd Sol_. We,--yes we,--and such as we, craven-hearted as we are.
+They'll never get to Albany until we take them there captives.
+
+_3d Sol_. Then they'll wait till next week, I reckon.
+
+_1st Sol_. Ha ha ha! Ha ha ha! How many prisoners shall we have a-piece,
+John? How many regiments, I mean? They'll open the windows when we get
+there, won't they? I hope the sun will shine that day. How grandly we
+shall march down the old hill there, with our train behind us. I shall
+have to borrow a coat of one of them though, they might be ashamed of
+their captor else.
+
+_3d Sol_. When is this great battle to be, John? This don't look much
+like it.
+
+_4th Sol_. I think myself, if the General would only give us a chance to
+fight----
+
+_2nd Sol_. A chance to throw your life away,--he will never give you. A
+chance to fight, you will have ere long,--doubt it not. Our General
+might clear his blackened fame, by opposing this force to that,--this
+day he might;--he will not do it. The time has not yet come. But he will
+spare no pains to strengthen the army, and prepare it for victory, and
+the glory he will leave to his rival. Recruits will be pouring in ere
+long. General Burgoyne's proclamation has weakened us,--General Schuyler
+will issue one himself to-day.
+
+_1st Sol_. Will he? will he? What will he proclaim?--As to the recruits
+he gets, I'll eat them all, skin and bone. What will he proclaim? You
+see what Burgoyne offers us. On the one hand, money and clothing, and
+protection for ourselves and our families; and on the other, the cord,
+and the tomahawk, and the scalping-knife. Now, what will General
+Schuyler set down over against these two columns?--What will he offer
+us?--To lend us a gun, maybe,--leave to follow him from one post to
+another, barefooted and starving, and for our pains to be cursed and
+reviled for cowards from one end of the land to the other. And what will
+he threaten? Ha, we were cowards indeed, if we feared what he could
+threaten. What thing in human nature will he speak to?--say.
+
+_2nd Sol_. I will tell you. To that spirit in human nature which resists
+the wrong, the fiendish wrong threatened there. Ay, in the basest nature
+that power sleeps, and out of the bosom of Omnipotence there is nothing
+stronger. It has wakened here once, and this war is its fruit. It
+slumbers now. Let Burgoyne look to it that he rouse it not himself for
+us. Let him look to it. For every outrage of those fiendish legions,
+thank God.--It lays a finger on the spring of our only strength. _What_
+will he offer us? I will tell you.--A chance to live, or to
+die,--_men_,--ay, to leave a sample of manhood on the earth, that shall
+wring tears from the selfish of unborn ages, as they feel for once the
+depths of the slumbering and godlike nature within them. And
+Burgoyne,--oh! a coat and a pair of shoes, he offers, and--how many
+pounds?--Are you men?
+
+_4th Sol_. What do you say, Sam?--Talks like a minister, don't he?
+
+_1st Sol_. Come, come,--there's the drum, boys. You don't bamboozle me
+again! I've heard all that before.
+
+_3d Sol_. Nor me.--I don't intend to have my wife and children
+tomahawked,--don't think I can stand that, refugee or not.
+
+_2nd Sol_. Here they come.
+
+ (_Other Soldiers enter_.)
+
+_5th Sol_. All's ready, all's ready.
+
+_6th Sol_. (_singing_.)
+
+"_Come blow the shrill bugle, the war dogs are howling_,"--
+
+ [_Exeunt_.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+
+
+DIALOGUE II.
+
+SCENE. _Before the door of the Parsonage. Trunks, boxes, and various
+ articles of furniture, scattered about the yard. Two men coming
+ down the path_.
+
+
+ (_George Grey enters_.)
+
+_George_. Those trunks in the forward team. Make haste. We've no time to
+lose. This box in the wagon where the children are.--Carefully--carefully,
+though.
+
+ (_A Soldier enters_.)
+
+_Sol_. Hurra, hurra, the house there! Are you ready? Ten minutes more.
+
+_George_. Get out. What do you stand yelling there for? We know all
+about it.
+
+_Sol_. But your brother, the Captain, says, I must hurry you, or you'll
+be left behind.
+
+_George_. Tell my brother, the Captain, I'll see to that. We want no
+more hurrying. We have had enough of that already, and much good it has
+done us too. Stop, stop,--not that. We must leave those for the Indians
+to take their tea in.
+
+_Workman_. But the lady said----
+
+_George_. Never mind the lady. Well, Annie, are you ready? Don't stand
+there crying; there's no use. We may come back here again yet, you know.
+Many a pleasant sunrise we may see from these windows yet. Heaven defend
+us, here is this aunt of ours.--What on earth are they bringing now?
+
+ (_A Lady in the door with a couple of portraits, followed
+ by others bringing baskets and boxes, etc_.)
+
+_Lady_. That will do, set them down; now, the Colonel and his lady, on
+the back room wall, just over against the beaufet. Stop a moment. I'll
+go with you myself.
+
+_Betty_. (In, the door.) Lord 'a mercy! Here it is broad day-light. What
+are we waiting for? I am all ready. Why don't we go?
+
+_George_. I tell you, Aunt Rachael, the thing is impossible. This
+trumpery can't go, and there's the end of it. St. George and the
+Dragon----
+
+_Miss Rachael_. Never mind this young malapert--do as I bid you.
+
+_Betty_. Lord 'a mercy, we shall all be murdered and scalped, every soul
+of us. Bless you--there it is in the garret now!--just hold this
+umberell a minute, Mr. George,--think of those murderous Indians wearing
+my straw bonnet. Lord bless you! What are you doing? a heaving my
+umberell over the fence, in that fashion!
+
+_George_. These women will drive me mad I believe. Let that box alone,
+you rascal. Lay a finger on that trumpery there I say, and you'll find
+whose orders you are under; as for the Colonel and his lady, they'll get
+a little drink out of the first puddle we come to, I reckon.
+
+ [_Goes out_.
+
+_Miss R_. (_Coming from the house_.) That will do. That is all,--in the
+green wagon, John----
+
+_Ser't_. But the children----
+
+_Miss R_. Don't stand there, prating to me at a time like this. Make
+haste, make haste!
+
+How perfectly calm I am! I would never have believed it;--just tie this
+string for me, child, my hands twitch so strangely,--they say the
+British are just down in the lane here, with five thousand Indians,
+Annie.
+
+_Annie_. It is no such thing. Aunt Rachael. The British are quietly
+encamped on the other side of the river; three miles off at least.
+
+_Miss R_. I thought as much. A pretty hour for us to be turned out of
+house and home to be sure. Not a wink have I slept this blessed night.
+Hark! What o'clock is that? George, George! where is that boy? Just run
+and tell your mother, Annie, just tell her, my dear, will you, that we
+shall all be murdered. Maybe she will make haste a little. Well, are
+they in?
+
+_Ser't_. The pictures? They are in,--yes'm. But Miss Kitty's a crying,
+and says as how she won't go, and there's the other one too; because,
+Ma'am, their toes--you see there's the trunk in front gives 'em a leetle
+slope inward, and then that chest under the seat--If you would just step
+down and see yourself, Ma'am.
+
+_Miss R_. I desire to be patient.
+
+ [_They go out_.
+
+ (_Annie sits on the bench of the little Porch, weeping.
+ Mrs. Gray enters from within_.)
+
+_Annie_. Shall I never walk down that shady path again? Shall I enter
+those dear rooms no more? There are voices there they cannot hear. From
+the life of buried years, ten thousand scenes, all vacancy toother eyes,
+enrich those walls for us; the furniture that money cannot buy, that
+only the joy and grief of years can purchase. They will spoil our
+pleasant home,--will they not, mother?
+
+_Mrs. G_. Pleasant, ay, pleasant indeed, has it been to us. God's will
+be done. Do not weep, Annie. We have counted the cost;--many a safe and
+happy home there will be in the days to come, whose light shall spring
+from this forgotten sorrow. God's will be done.
+
+_Annie_. Mother, they are all ready now; is Helen in her room still?
+
+_Mrs. G_. Go call her, Annie. Hours ago it was I sent her there. I
+thought she might get some little sleep ere the summons came. Call her,
+my child. How deadly pale she was!
+
+ [_Annie goes in_.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+
+
+DIALOGUE III.
+
+SCENE. _A Chamber partly darkened, the morning air steals faintly
+ through the half-open shutters. Helen before the mirror,
+ leaning upon the toilette, her face buried in her hands,
+ her long hair unbound, and flowing on her shoulders_.
+
+
+ (_Annie enters_.)
+
+_Annie_. Helen! Why, Helen, are you asleep there? Come, we are going
+now. After keeping us on tiptoe for hours, the summons has come at last.
+Indeed, there is hardly time for you to dress. Shall I help you?
+
+_Helen_. (_Rising slowly_.) God help me. Bid my mother come here, Annie.
+
+_Annie_. What ails you, Helen?--there is no time,--you do not understand
+me,--there is not one moment to be lost. Let me wind up this hair for you.
+
+_Helen_. Let go!--Oh God----
+
+_Annie_. Helen Grey!
+
+_Helen_. It was a dream,--it was but a foolish dream. It must not be
+thought of now,--it will never do. Bid my mother come here, I am ready
+now.
+
+_Annie_. Ready, Helen!--ready?--in that dressing-gown, and your
+hair--see here,--are you ready, Helen?
+
+_Helen_. Yes,--bid her come.
+
+_Annie_. Heaven only knows what you mean with this wild talk of yours,
+but if you are not mad indeed, I intreat you, sister, waste no more of
+this precious time.
+
+_Helen_. No, no,--we must not indeed. It was wrong, but I could
+not--go,--make haste, bid her come.
+
+_Annie_. She is crazed, certainly!
+
+ [_Goes out_.
+
+ (_Helen stands with her arms folded, and her eye fixed on the door_.)
+
+ (_Mrs. Grey enters_.)
+
+_Mrs. G_. My child! Helen, Helen! Why do you stand there thus?
+
+_Helen_. Mother----
+
+_Mrs. G_. Nay, do not stay to speak. There--throw this mantle around
+you. Where is your hat?--not here!--Bridal gear!
+
+ (_George enters_.)
+
+_George_. On my word! Well, well, stand there a little longer, to dress
+those pretty curls of yours, and--humph--there's a style in vogue in
+yonder camp for rebels just now; we'll all stand a chance to try, I
+think.
+
+_Helen_. George!--George Grey!--Be still,--be still.--We must not think
+of that. It was a dream.
+
+_George_. Is my sister mad?
+
+_Helen_. Mother--
+
+_Mrs. G_. Speak, my child.
+
+_Helen_. Mother--my blessed mother,--(_aside_.) 'Tis but a brief
+word,--it will be over soon.
+
+_Mrs. G_. Speak, Helen.
+
+_Helen_. I cannot go with you, mother.
+
+_Mrs. G_. Helen?
+
+_George_. Not go with us?
+
+_Mrs. G_. Helen, do you know what you are saying?
+
+_George_. You are in jest, Helen; or else you are mad,--before another
+sunset the British army will be encamping here.
+
+_Helen_. Hear me, mother. A message from the British camp came to me
+last night,--
+
+_Mrs. G_. The British camp?--Ha!--ha! Everard Maitland! God forgive him.
+
+_Helen_. Do not speak thus. It was but a few cold and careless lines he
+sent me,--my purpose is my own.
+
+_Mrs. G_. And--what, and he does not know?--Helen Grey, this passes
+patience.
+
+_Helen_. He does, Here is the answer that has just now come; for I have
+promised to meet him to-day at the hut of the missionary in yonder
+woods.--I can hardly spell these hasty words; but this I know, he will
+surely come for me,--though he bids me wait until I hear his signal,--so
+I cannot go with you, mother.
+
+_Mrs. G_. Where will you go, Helen?
+
+_Helen_. Everard is in yonder camp;--where should the wife's home be?
+
+_Mrs. G_. The wife's?
+
+_Helen_. These two years I have been his bride;--his wedded wife I shall
+be to-day. Yonder dawns my bridal day.
+
+_George_. What does she say? What does Helen say? I do not understand
+one word of it.
+
+_Mrs. G_. She says she will go to the British camp. Desertions thicken
+upon us. Hark!--they are calling us.
+
+_George_. To the British camp?
+
+_Mrs. G_. Go down, George, go down. Your sister talks wildly and
+foolishly, what you should not have heard, what she will be sorry for
+anon; go down, and tell them they must wait for us a little,--we will be
+there presently.
+
+_George_. Hark! (_going to the door_.)--another message. Do you
+hear?--Helen may be ready yet, if she will.
+
+_Mrs. G_. Blessed delay! Go down, George; say nothing of this. There is
+time yet. Tell them we will be there presently.
+
+ (_George goes out_.)
+
+_Mrs. G_. Did you think I should leave you here to accomplish this
+frantic scheme?--Did you dream of it, and you call me mother?--but what
+do you know of that name's meaning? Do not turn away from me thus, my
+child; do not stand with that fixed eye as though some phantom divinity
+were there. I shall not leave you here, Helen, never.
+
+Come, come; sit down with me in this pleasant window, there is time
+yet,--let us look at this moonlight scheme of yours a little. Would you
+stay here in this deserted citadel, alone? My child, our army are
+already on their march. In an hour more you would be the only living
+thing in all this solitude. Would you stay here alone, to meet your
+lover too?--Bethink yourself, Helen.
+
+_Helen_. This Canadian girl will stay with me, and----
+
+_Mrs. G_. A girl!--Helen, yesterday an army's strength, the armies of
+the nation, the love of mother, and brothers, and sisters, all seemed
+nothing for protection to your timid and foreboding thought; and now,
+when the enemy are all around us,--do you talk of a single girl? Why,
+the spirit of some strange destiny is struggling with your nature, and
+speaks within you, but we will not yield to it.
+
+_Helen_. You have spoken truly, mother. There is one tie in these hearts
+of ours, whose strength makes destiny, and where that leads, there lie
+those iron ways that are of old from everlasting. This is Heaven's
+decree, not mine.
+
+_Mrs. G_. Do not charge the madness of this frantic scheme on Heaven, my
+child.
+
+_Helen. Everard!_--no, no, I cannot show to another the lightning flash,
+that with that name reveals my destiny,--yet the falling stone might as
+soon--question of its way. Renounce him?--you know not what you ask! all
+there is of life within me laughs at the wild impossibility.
+
+Mother, hear me. There is no danger in my staying here,--none real. The
+guard still keep their station on yonder hill, and the fort itself will
+not be wholly abandoned to-day. Everard will come for me at noon.--It is
+impossible that the enemy should be here ere then; nay, the news of this
+unlooked-for movement will scarce have reached their camp.--_Real_
+danger there is none, and--Do not urge me. I know what you would say;
+the bitter cost I have counted all, already, all--_all_. That Maitland
+is in yonder camp, that--is it not a strange blessedness which can
+sweeten anguish such as this?--that he loves me still, that he will come
+here to-day to make me his forever,--this is all that I can say, my
+mother.
+
+_Mrs. G_. Will you go over to the British side, Helen? Will you go over
+to the side of wrong and oppression? Would you link yourself with our
+cruel and pursuing enemy? Oh no, no no,--that could not be--never, Amid
+the world of fearful thoughts that name brings, how could we place your
+image? Oh God, I did not count on this. I knew that this war was to
+bring us toil, and want, and fear, and haply bloody death; and I could
+have borne it unmurmuringly; but--God forgive me,--that the child I
+nursed in these arms should forsake me, and join with our deadly foes
+against us--I did not count on this.
+
+_Helen_. Yes--that's the look,--the very look--all night I saw it;--it
+does not move me now, as it did then. It is shadows of these things that
+are so fearful, for with the real comes the unreckoned power of
+suffering. Mother, this dark coil hath Heaven wound, not we. The tie
+which makes his path the way of God to me, was linked ere this war
+was,--and war cannot undo it now. It is a bitter fate, I know,--a bitter
+and a fearful one.
+
+_Mrs. G_. Ay, ay,--thank God! You had forgotten, Helen, that in that
+army's pay, nay, all around us even now are hordes and legions.
+
+_Helen_. I know it,--I know it all. I do indeed.
+
+_Mrs. G_. Helen, will you place yourself defenceless amidst that savage
+race, whose very name from your childhood upwards, has filled you with
+such strange fear? Yesterday I chid you for those fancies,--I was
+wrong,--they were warnings, heaven-sent, to save you from this doom.
+What was that dream you talked of then?
+
+_Helen_. Dreams are nothing. Will you unsay a life's lessons now when
+most I need them?
+
+_Mrs. G_. Yesterday, all day, a shadow as of coming evil lay upon me,
+but now I remember the forgotten vision whence it fell. Yesternight I
+had a dream, Helen, such as yours might be; for in my broken and fevered
+slumbers, wherever I turned, one vision awaited me. There was a savage
+arm, and over it fell a shower of golden hair, and ever and anon, in the
+shadowy light of my dream, a knife glittered and waved before me. We
+were safe, but over one,--some young and innocent and tender one it
+was--there hung a hopeless and inexorable fate. Once methought it seemed
+the young English girl that was wedded here last winter, and once she
+turned her eye upon me--Ha!--I had forgotten that glance of
+agony--surely, Helen, it was _yours_.
+
+_Mrs. G_. Helen! my child--(_Aside_.) There it is, that same curdling
+glance,--'twas but a dream, Helen. Why do you stand there so white and
+motionless--why do you look on me with that fixed and darkening
+eye?--'twas but a dream!
+
+_Helen_. And where were you?--tell me truly. Was it not by a gurgling
+fountain among the pine trees there? and was it not noon-day in your
+dream, a hot, bright, sultry noon, and a few clouds swelling in the
+western sky, and nothing but the trilling locusts astir?
+
+_Mrs. G_. How wildly you talk; how should I remember any thing like
+this?
+
+_Helen_. I will not yield to it; tempt me not. 'Tis folly all, I know it
+is. Danger there is none. Long ere yonder hill is abandoned, Everard
+will be here; and who knows that I am left here alone, and who would
+come here to seek me out but he? Oh no, I cannot break this solemn faith
+for a dream. What would he give to know I held my promise and his love
+lighter than a dream? I must _stay_ here, mother.
+
+_Mrs. G_. No, my child. Hear me. If this must be indeed, if all my holy
+right in you is nothing, if you will indeed go over to our cruel enemy,
+and rejoice in our sorrows and triumph in our overthrow----
+
+_Helen_. Hear her----
+
+_Mrs. G_. Be it so, Helen,--be it so; but for all that, do not stay here
+to-day. Bear but a little longer with our wearisome tenderness, and wait
+for some safer chance of forsaking us. Come.
+
+_Helen_. If I could--Ah, if I could----
+
+_Mrs. G_. You can--you will. Here, let me help you, we shall be ready
+yet. No one knows of this wild scheme but your brother and myself, no
+one else shall ever know it. Come.
+
+_Helen_. If I could. 'Tis true, I did not know when I sent him this
+promise you would leave me alone ere the hour should come. Perhaps--no,
+it would never do. When he comes and finds that, after all, I have
+deserted him, once with a word I angered him, and for years it was the
+last between us;--and what safer chance will there be in these fearful
+times of meeting him? No, no. If we do not meet now, we are parted for
+ever;--if I do not keep my promise now, I shall see him no more.
+
+_Mrs. G_. See him no more then. What is he to us--this stranger, this
+haughty, all-requiring one? Think of the blessed days ere he had crossed
+our threshold. You have counted all, Helen? The anguish that will bring
+tears into your proud brother's eyes, your sister's comfortless
+sorrow?--did you think of her lonely and saddened youth? You counted the
+wild suffering of this bitter moment,--did you think of the weary years,
+the long sleepless nights of grief, the days of tears; did you count the
+anguish of a mother's broken heart, Helen? God only can count that.
+
+You did not--there come the blessed tears at last. Here's my own gentle
+daughter, once again. Come, Helen, see, they are waiting for us. There
+stands the old chaise under the locust tree. You and I will ride
+together. Come, 'tis but a few steps down that shady path, and we are
+safe--a few steps and quickly trod. Hark! the respite is past even now.
+Do you stand there marble still? Helen, if you stay here, we shall see
+you no more. This lover of yours hates us all. He will take you to
+England when the war is over if you outlive its bloody hazards, and we
+are parted for ever. I shall see you no more, Helen, my child; my child,
+I shall see you no more. (_She sinks upon the chair, and weeps aloud_.)
+
+_Helen_. Has it come to this? Will you break my heart? If it were
+continents and oceans that you bade me cross, but those few steps--Ah,
+they would sever me from him for ever, and I cannot, I cannot, I
+can _not_ take them,--there is no motion so impossible. Yes, they are
+calling us. Do not stay.
+
+ (_Annie enters_.)
+
+_Annie_. Mother, will you tell me what this means?
+
+_Mrs. G_. Yes, come in. We will waste no more time about it. She will
+stay here to meet her lover, she will forsake us for a traitor. We have
+nursed an enemy among us. The babe I cherished in this bosom, whose
+sleeping face I watched with a young mother's love, hath become my
+enemy. Oh my God--is it from thee?
+
+_Annie_. Helen! my sister! Helen!
+
+_Mrs. G_. Ay, look at her. Would you think that the spirit which heaves
+in that light frame, and glances in those soft eyes, held such cruel
+power? Yesterday I would have counted it a breath in the way of my
+lightest purpose, and now--come away, Annie--it is vain, you cannot move
+her.
+
+ (_George enters_.)
+
+_George_. Mother, if Helen will not go now, we must leave her to her
+fate or share it with her. Every wagon is on the road but ours. A little
+more, and we shall be too late for the protection of the army. Shall I
+stay with her?
+
+_Mrs. G_. No, never. That were a sure and idle waste of life. Helen,
+perhaps, may be safe with them. Oh. yes, the refugees are safe, else
+desertion would grow out of fashion soon.
+
+_Annie_. Refugees! Refugee! Helen!
+
+_Mrs. G_. It sounds strange for one of us I know. You will grow used to
+it soon. Helen belongs to the British side, she will go over to them
+to-day, but she must go alone, for none of us would be safe in British
+hands, at least I trust so--this morning's experience might make me
+doubtful, but I trust we are all true here yet beside.
+
+_Annie_. Have I heard aright, Helen?--or is this all some fearful dream?
+You and I, who have lived together all the years of our lives, to be
+parted this moment, and for ever,--no, no!
+
+ (_A young American Officer enters hastily_.)
+
+_Capt. Grey_. Softly, softly! What is this? Are you in this conspiracy
+to disgrace me, mother? Oh, very well; if you have all decided to stay
+here, I'll take my leave.
+
+_Annie_. Oh, Henry, stay. You can persuade her it may be.
+
+_Capt. G. Persuade_! What's all this! A goodly time for rhetoric
+forsooth! Who's this that's risking all our lives, waiting to be
+persuaded now?
+
+_Mrs. G_. That Tory, Henry! We should have thought of this. Ah, if we
+had gone yesterday,--that haughty Maitland,--she will stay here to meet
+him! She will marry him, my son.
+
+_Capt. G_. Maitland!--and stay here!
+
+_Helen_. Dear Henry, let us part in kindness. Do not look on me with
+that angry eye. It was I that played with you in the woods and meadows,
+it was I that roamed with you in those autumn twilights,--you loved me
+then, and we are parting for ever it may be..
+
+_Capt. G_. (_To the children at the door_.) Get you down, young ones,
+get you down. Pray, mother, lead the way, will you?--break up this ring.
+Come, Helen, you and I will talk of this as we go on, only in passing
+give me leave to say, of all the mad pranks of your novel ladies, this
+caps the chief. You have outdone them, Helen; I'll give you credit for
+it, you have outdone them all.
+
+Why you'll be chronicled,--there's nothing on record like it, that ever
+I heard of; I am well-read in romances too. We'll have a new love-ballad
+made and set to tune, under the head of "Love and Murder," it will come
+though, if you don't make haste a little. Come, come.
+
+_Helen_. Henry!
+
+_Capt. G_. Are you in earnest, Helen? Did you suppose that we were mad
+enough to leave you here? You'll not go with us? But you will, by
+Heaven!
+
+_Helen_. Henry! Mother!--Nay, Henry, this is vain. I shall stay here, I
+shall--I shall stay here,--so help me Heaven.
+
+_Capt. G_. Helen Grey! Is that young lioness there my sometime
+sister?--my delicate sister?--with her foot planted like iron, and the
+strength of twenty men nerving her arm?
+
+_Helen_. Let go.--I shall stay here.
+
+_Capt. G_. Well, have your way, young lady, have your way; but--Mother,
+if you choose to leave that mad girl here, you can,--but as for this
+same Everard Maitland, look you, my lady, if I don't stab him to his
+heart's core, never trust me.
+
+ (_He goes out--Mrs. Grey follows him to the door_.)
+
+_Mrs. G_. Stay, Henry,--stay. What shall we do?
+
+_Capt. G_. Do!--Indeed, a straight waistcoat is the only remedy I know
+of, Madam, for such freaks as these. If you say so, she shall go with us
+yet.
+
+_Mrs. G_. Hear me. This is no time for passion now Hear me, Henry. This
+Maitland, _Tory_ as he is, is her betrothed husband, and she has chosen
+her fate with him; we cannot keep her with us; nay, with what we have
+now seen, it would be vain to think of it, to wish it even. She must go
+to him,--it but remains to see that she meets him safely. Noon is the
+hour appointed for his coming. Could we not stay till then?
+
+_Capt. G_. Impossible. Noon?--well.--Oh, if its all fixed upon;--if you
+have settled it between yourselves that Helen is to abandon us and our
+protection, for Everard Maitland's and the British, the sooner done, the
+better. She's quite right,--she's like to find no safer chance for it
+than this. Noon,--there is a picket left on yonder hill till after that
+time, certainly, and a hundred men or so in the fort. I might give Van
+Vechten a hint of it--nay, I can return myself this afternoon, and if
+she is not gone then, I will take it upon me she is not left a second
+time. Of course Maitland would be likely to care for her safety. At all
+events there's nothing else for us to do, at least there's but one
+alternative, and that I have named to you.
+
+ [_They go out together_.
+
+_Helen_. (_She has stood silently watching them_.) He has gone, without
+one parting look--he has gone! So break the myriad-tied loves, it hath
+taken a life to weave. This is a weary world.
+
+ (_She turns to her sister, who leans weeping on the window-seat_.)
+
+Come, Annie, you and I will part in kindness, will we not? No cruel
+words shall there be here. Pleasant hath your love been unto me, my
+precious sister. Farewell, Annie.
+
+_Annie_. Shall I never hear your voice again, that hath been the music
+of my whole life? Is your face henceforth to be to me only a remembered
+thing? Helen, you must not stay here. The Indians,--it was no idle fear,
+the half of their bloody outrages you have not heard; they will murder
+you, yes, _you_. The innocence and loveliness that is holy to us, is
+nothing in their eyes, they would as soon sever that beautiful hair from
+your brow----
+
+_Helen_. Hush, hush. There is no danger, Annie. The dark things of
+destiny are God's; the heart, the heart only, is ours.
+
+ (_Mrs. Grey re-enters_.)
+
+_Mrs. G_. (_to Annie_.) Come, come, my child. This is foolish now. All
+is ready. Janette will stay with you, Helen.
+
+ (_Laughing voices are heard without, and the children's faces
+ are seen peeping in the door_.)
+
+_Willy_. Dear mother, are you not ready yet? We have been in the wagon
+and out a hundred times. Oh, Helen, make haste. The sun is above the
+trees, and the grass on the roadside is all full of diamonds. The last
+soldiers are winding down the hollow now. Is not Helen going, Mother?
+
+_Mrs. G_. Your sister Helen is going from us forever. Come in and kiss
+her once, and then make haste--you must not all be lost.
+
+ (_They enter_.)
+
+_Willy_. Ah, why don't you go with us, sister?--Such a beautiful ride we
+shall have. You never heard such a bird-singing in all your life.
+
+_Frank_. We shall go by the Chesnut Hollow, George says we shall. Smell
+of these roses, Helen. Must she stay here? Hark, Willy, there's the
+drum. Good-bye, How sorry I am you will not go with us.
+
+_Willy_. So am I. What makes you stand so still and look at us so? Why
+don't you kiss me? Good-bye, Helen.
+
+_Helen_. (_Embracing them silently_.)
+
+_Annie_. Will you leave her here alone, mother? Will you?
+
+_Mrs. G_. No. There is a guard left on yonder hill, and the fort is not
+yet abandoned wholly. Besides, the army encamp at the creek, and Henry
+himself will return this afternoon. She will be gone ere then, though.
+
+_Helen_. Those merry steps and voices, those little, soft clinging hands
+and rosy lips, have vanished forever. For all my love I shall be to them
+but as the faint trace of some faded dream. This is a weary world.
+
+Come, George, farewell. How I have loved to look on that young brow. Be
+what my dreams have made you. Fare you well.
+
+_George_. Farewell, Helen.
+
+ [_He goes out hastily_.
+
+_Helen_. Will he forget me?
+
+_Mrs. G_. And farewell, Helen. Fare ye well.
+
+_Helen_. Will she leave me thus?
+
+_Mrs. G_. Do not go to the hut--do not leave this door until you are
+sure of the signal you spoke of, Helen.
+
+_Helen_. She will not look at me,--Mother!
+
+_Mrs. G_. Farewell, Helen; may the hour never come when you need the
+love you have cast from you now so freely.
+
+_Helen_. Will you leave me thus? Is not our life together ending here?
+In that great and solemn Hereafter our ways may meet again; but by the
+light of sun, or moon, or candle, or underneath these Heavens, no more.
+Oh! lovely, lovely have you been unto me, a spirit of holiness and
+beauty, building all my way.--Part we thus?
+
+_Mrs. G_. Farewell, Helen.
+
+_Helen_. Part we thus?
+
+_Mrs. G_. Fare ye well, Helen Grey, my own sweet and precious child, my
+own lovely, lovely daughter, fare ye well, and the Lord be with you. The
+Lord keep you, for I can keep you now no more. The Lord watch over you,
+my helpless one, mine, mine, mine, all mine, though I leave you thus; my
+world of untold wealth, unto another. Nay, do not sorrow, my blessed
+child,--you will be happy yet. Fear nothing,--if this must be, I say,
+fear nothing. You think that you are doing right in forsaking us
+thus;--it may be that you are. If in the strength of a pure conscience
+you stay here to-day,--be not afraid. When you lay here of old, a
+lisping babe, I told you of One whose love was better than a mother's.
+Now farewell, and trust in Him. Farewell, mine eye shall see thee yet
+again. Farewell.
+
+_Helen_. No, no; leave me not.
+
+_Mrs. G_. Unclasp these hands, I cannot stay.
+
+_Helen_. Never--never.
+
+_Mrs. G_. Untwine this wild embrace, or, even now,--even now----
+
+_Helen_. Farewell, mother. Annie Grey, farewell.
+
+ [_They go_.
+
+_Helen_. This is a weary world. Take me home. To the land where there is
+no crying or bitterness, take me home.
+
+ (_The noise of retreating steps is heard, and the sound
+ of the outer door closing heavily_.)
+
+_Helen_. They are gone,--not to church,--not for the summer's ride. I
+shall see them no more.--In heaven it may be; but by the twilight
+hearth, or merry table, at morn, or noon, or evening, in mirth or
+earthly tenderness, no more.
+
+Hark! There it is!--that voice,--I hear it now, I do. A dark eternity
+had rolled between us, and I hear it yet again. They are going now.
+Those rolling wheels, oh that that sound would last. There is no music
+half so sweet. Fainter--fainter--it is gone--no--that was but the
+hollow.--Hark----
+
+Now they are gone, indeed. So breaks the sense's last link between me
+and that world.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+PART FIFTH.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+FULFILLMENT
+
+ * * * * *
+
+DIALOGUE I.
+
+SCENE. _The hill. A young Soldier enters_.
+
+
+How gloriously, with what a lonely majesty the morning wastes in that
+silent valley there; with its moving shadows, and breeze and sunshine,
+and its thousand delicious sounds mocking those desolate homes----
+
+ (_He stops suddenly, and looks earnestly into the thicket_.)
+
+This is strange, indeed. This feeling that I cannot analyze, still grows
+upon me. _Presentiment?_ Some dark, swift-flying thought, leaves its
+trace, and the cause-seeking mind, in the range of its own vision
+finding none, looks to the shadowy future for it.
+
+ [_He passes on_.
+
+ (_Two Indian Chiefs, in their war-dress, emerge from the thicket,
+ talking in suppressed tones_.)
+
+_1st Chief_. Hoogh! Hoogh! Alaska fights to revenge his son,--we spill
+our blood to revenge his son, and he thinks to win gifts besides. Hugh!
+A brave chief he is!
+
+_2nd Chief_. Your talk is not good, Manida. They are our enemies,--we
+shall conquer them, we shall see their chestnut locks waving aloft, we
+shall dance and shout all night around them, and the eyes of the maidens
+shall meet ours in the merry ring, sparkling with joy, as we shout
+"Victory! victory! our enemies are slain,--our foot is on their necks,
+we have slain our enemies!" What more, Manida? Is it not enough?
+
+_1st Chief_. No. I went last night with Alaska to the camp above, to the
+tent of the young sachem of the lake, and he promised him presents, rich
+and many, for an errand that a boy might do. I asked Alaska to send me
+for him, and he would not.
+
+_2nd Chief_. The young white sachem was Alaska's friend, many moons ago,
+when Alaska was wounded and sick.--He must revenge young Siganaw, but he
+must keep his faith to his white friend, too.
+
+_1st Chief_. Ah, but I know where the horse is hidden and the paper.
+When the tomahawks flash here, and the war-cry is loudest, we will steal
+away. Come, and I will share the prize with you.
+
+_2nd Chief_. No, I will tell my brother chief that Manida is a
+treacherous friend.
+
+_1st Chief_. You cannot. It is too late. Hist! Quick, lower--lower--
+
+ [_They crouch among the trees_.
+
+ (_Another Soldier emerges from the wood-path, singing_.)
+
+ "_Then march to the roll of the drum,
+ It summons the brave to the plain,
+ Where heroes contend for the home
+ Which perchance they may ne'er see again_."
+
+
+(_Pausing abruptly_.) Well, we are finely manned here!
+
+ (_1st Soldier re-enters_.)
+
+_2nd Sol_. How many men do you think we have in all, upon this hill,
+Edward?
+
+_1st Sol_. Hist!--more than you count on, perhaps.
+
+_2nd Sol_. Why? What is the matter? Why do you look among those bushes
+so earnestly?
+
+_1st Student_. It is singular, indeed. I can hardly tell you what it is,
+but twice before in my round, precisely in this same spot, the same
+impression has flashed upon me, though the sense that gives it, if sense
+it is, will not bide an instant's questioning. There! Hist! Did nothing
+move there then?
+
+_2nd Sol_. I see nothing. This comes of star-gazing, when you should
+have slept. Though as to that, I have nothing to complain of, certainly.
+I had to thank your taste that way, last night, for an hour of the most
+delicious slumber. It was like that we used to snatch of old, between
+the first stroke of the prayer-bell and its dying peal.
+
+_1st Sol_. I am glad you could sleep. For myself, such a world of
+troubled thoughts haunted me, I found more repose in waking.
+
+_2nd Sol_. Then I wish you could have shared my dream with me, as indeed
+you seemed to, for you were with me through it all. A blessed dream it
+was, and yet--
+
+_1st Sol_. Well, let me share it with you now.
+
+_2nd Sol_. I cannot tell you how it was, that in honor and good
+conscience we had effected it, but somehow, methought our part in this
+sickening warfare was accomplished, and we were home again. Oh the joy
+of it! oh the joy of it! Even amid my dream, methought we questioned its
+reality, so unearthly in its perfectness, it seemed. We stood upon the
+college-green, and the sun was going down with a strange, darkling
+splendor; and from afar, ever and anon came the thunder roll of battle;
+but we had nought to do with it; our part was done; our time was out; we
+were to fight no more. And there we stood, watching the students' games;
+and there too was poor _Hale_, merry and full of life as e'er he was,
+for never a thought of his cruel fate crossed my dream. Suddenly we saw
+two ladies, arm in arm, come swiftly down the shady street, most
+strangely beautiful and strangely clad, with long white robes, and
+garlands in their hair, and such a clear and silvery laugh, and
+something fearful in their loveliness withal; and one of them, as she
+came smiling toward us--do you remember that bright, fair-haired girl we
+met in yonder lane one noon?--Just such a smile as hers wore the lady
+in my dream. Then, into the old chapel we were crowding all; that
+long-deferred commencement had come on at last; we stood upon a stage,
+and a strange light filled all the house, and suddenly the ceiling
+swelled unto the skiey dome, and nations filled the galleries; and I
+woke, to find myself upon a soldier's couch, and the reveille beating.
+
+_1st Sol_. Well, if it cheered you, 'twas a good dream most certainly,
+though, yet--the dream-books might not tell you so. Will you take this
+glass a moment?
+
+_2nd Sol_. What is it?
+
+_1st Sol_. That white house by the orchard, in the door--do you see
+nothing?
+
+_2nd Sol_. Yes, a figure, certainly;--yes, now it moves. I had thought
+those houses were deserted,--it is time they were I think, for all the
+protection we can give them. How long shall we maintain this post, think
+you, with such a handful?
+
+_1st Sol_. Till the preparations below are complete, I trust so at
+least, for we have watchers in these woods, no doubt, who would speedily
+report our absence.
+
+_2nd Sol_. Well, if we all see yonder sun go down, 'tis more than I
+count on.
+
+_1st Sol_. A chance if we do--a chance if we do. Will the hour come when
+this infant nation shall forget her bloody baptism?--the holy name of
+truth and freedom, that with our hearts' blood we seal upon her in these
+days of fear?
+
+_2nd Sol_. Ay, that hour may come.
+
+_1st Sol_. Then, with tears, and _blood_ if need be, shall she learn it
+anew; and not in vain shall the bones of the martyrs moulder in her
+peopled vales. For human nature, in her loftiest mood, was this
+beautiful land of old built, and for ages hid. Here--her cradle-dreams
+behind her flung; here, on the height of ages past, her solemn eye down
+their long vistas turned, in a new and nobler life she shall arise here.
+Ah, who knows but that the book of History may show us at last on its
+long-marred page--_Man_ himself,--no longer the partial and deformed
+developments of his nature, which each successive age hath left as if in
+mockery of its ideal,--but, man himself, the creature of thought,--the
+high, calm, majestic being, that of old stood unshrinking beneath his
+Maker's gaze. Even, as first he woke amid the gardens of the East, in
+this far western clime at last he shall smile again,--a perfect thing.
+
+_2nd Sol_. In your earnestness, you do not mark these strange sounds,
+Edward. Listen. (_He grasps his sword_.)
+
+ (_A Soldier rushes down the path_.)
+
+_3d Sol_. We are surrounded! Fly. The Indians are upon us. Fly.
+
+ [_Rushes on_.
+
+ (_Another Soldier bursts from the woods_.)
+
+_4th Sol_. God! They are butchering them above there, do not stand here!
+
+ [_Rushes down the hill_.
+
+_2nd Sol_. Resistance is vain. Hear those shrieks! There is death in
+them. Resistance is vain.
+
+_1st Sol_. Flight is vain. Look yonder! Francis,--the dark hour hath
+come!
+
+_2nd Sol_. Is it so? Mother and sister I shall see no more.
+
+ (_A number of Indians, disfigured with paint and blood, and
+ brandishing their knives, come rushing down the road, uttering short,
+ fierce yells. Others from below, bringing back the fugitives_.)
+
+_1st Sol_. We shall die together. God of Truth and Freedom, unto thee
+our youthful spirits trust we.
+
+ (_The Indians surround them. Fighting to the last, they fall_.)
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+
+
+DIALOGUE II.
+
+SCENE. _The deserted house--the chamber--Helen by the table--her head
+ bowed and motionless. She rises slowly from her drooping posture_.
+
+
+_Helen_. It is my bridal day. I had forgotten that. (_Looking from the
+window_.) Is this real? Am I here alone? My mother gone? The army gone?
+brothers and sisters gone, and those woods full of armed Indians? I am
+awake. This is not the light of dreams,--'tis the sun that's shining
+there. Not the fresh arid tender morning sun, that looked in on that
+parting. Hours he has climbed since then, to turn those shadows
+thus,--hours that to me were nothing.--Alone?--deserted--defenceless? Of
+my own will too? There was a _law_ in that will, though, was there not?
+(_Turning suddenly from the window_.) Shall I see him again? The living
+real of my thousand dreams, in the light of life, will he stand here
+to-day?--to-day? No, no. Is this swift flow of being leading on to
+_that_? Oh day of anguish, if in thine awful bosom, still, that dazzling
+instant sleeps, I can forgive the rest.
+
+ (_She stands by the toilette, and begins to gather once more
+ the long hair from her shoulders. Suddenly a low voice at the
+ door breaks the stillness. The Canadian servant looks in_.)
+
+_Jan_. I ask your pardon--Shall I come in, Ma'amselle?
+
+_Helen_. Ay, ay, come in. How strangely any voice sounds amid this
+loneliness. I am glad you are here.
+
+_Jan_. (_Entering_.) Beautiful! Santa Maria! How beautiful! May I look
+at these things, Ma'amselle? (_Stopping by the couch strewn with bridal
+gear_.) Real Brussels! And the plume in this bonnet, was there ever such
+a lovely droop?
+
+_Helen_. Come, fasten this clasp for me, Netty. I thought to have had
+another bridesmaid once, but--that is past--Yes, I am a bride to-day,
+and I must not wait here unadorned. (_Aside_.) He shall have no hint
+from me this day of "_altered fortunes_." As though these weary years
+had been but last night's dream, and my wedding-day had come as it was
+fixed, so will I meet him.--Yet I thought to have worn my shroud sooner
+than this robe.
+
+_Jan_. This silk would stand alone, Ma'amselle,--and what a lovely white
+it is! Just such a bodice as this I saw my Lady Mary wear, two years ago
+this summer, in Quebec; only, this is a thought deeper. But, Santa
+Maria! how it becomes a shape like yours!
+
+_Helen_. What a world of buried feeling lives again as I feel the clasp
+of this robe once more! Will he say these years have changed me?
+
+_Jan_. (_Aside_) I do not like that altered mien. How the beauty flashes
+from her? Is it silk and lace that can change one so? Here are bracelets
+too, Ma'amselle; will you wear them?
+
+_Helen_. Yes. Go, look from the window, Janette, down the lane to the
+woods. I am well-high ready now. He will come,--yes, he will come.
+
+ (_Janette retreats to the window,--her eye still following the lady_.)
+
+_Jan_. I have seen brides before, but never so gay a one as this. It is
+strange and fearful to see her stand here alone, in this lonesome house,
+all in glistening white, smiling, and the light flashing from her eyes
+thus. She looks too much like some radiant creature from another world,
+to be long for this.
+
+_Helen_. He will come, why should he not? Netty, fix your eye on that
+opening in the woods, and if you see but a shadow crossing it, tell me
+quickly.
+
+_Jan_. I can see nothing--nothing at all. Marie sanctissima!--how quiet
+it is! The shadows are straight here now, Miss Helen.
+
+_Helen_. Noon--the very hour has come! Another minute it may be.--Noon,
+you said, Netty?
+
+ (_Joining Janette at the window_.)
+
+_Jan_. Yes, quite--you can see; and hark, there's the clock. Oh, isn't
+it lonesome though? See how like the Sunday those houses look, with the
+doors all closed and the yards and gardens still as midnight. If we
+could but hear a human voice!--whose, I would not care.
+
+_Helen_. How like any other noon-day it comes! The faint breeze plays in
+those graceful boughs as it did yesterday; that little, yellow butterfly
+glides on its noiseless way above the grass, as then it did;--just so,
+the shadows sleep on the grassy road-side there;--yes, Netty, yes,
+_'tis_ very lonely.--Hear those merry birds!
+
+_Jan_. But I would rather hear that signal, Miss Helen, a thousand
+times, than the best music that ever was played.
+
+_Helen_. I shall see him again. That wild hope is wild no longer. To
+doubt were wilder now. Ay, Fate must cross my way with a bold hand, to
+snatch that good from me now. And yet,--alas, in the shadowy future it
+lieth still, and a dark and treacherous realm is that! The joys that
+blossom on its threshold are not ours--It may be, even now, darkness and
+silence everlasting lie between us.
+
+_Jan_. Hark--Hark!
+
+_Helen_. What is it?
+
+_Jan_. Hark!--There!--Do you hear nothing?
+
+_Helen_. Distant voices?
+
+_Jan_. Yes--
+
+_Helen_. I do--
+
+_Jan_. Once before,--'twas when I stood in the door below, I heard
+something like this; but the breeze just then brought the sound of the
+fall nearer, and drowned it. There it is!--Nearer. The other window,
+Miss Helen.
+
+_Helen_. From that hill it comes, does it not?
+
+_Jan_. Yes--yes, I should think it did. Oh yes. There is a guard left
+there--I had forgotten that. Mon Dieu! How white your lips are! Are you
+afraid, Ma'amselle?
+
+ (_Helen stands gazing silently from the window_.)
+
+_Jan_. There is no danger. It must have been those soldiers that we
+heard,--or the cry of some wild animal roaming through yonder woods--it
+might have been,--how many strange sounds we hear from them. At another
+time we should never have thought of it. I think we should have heard
+that signal though, ere this,--I do, indeed.
+
+_Helen_. What is it to die? Nor wood nor meadow, nor winding stream, nor
+the blue sky, do _they_ see; nor the voice of bird or insect do they
+hear; nor breeze, nor sunshine, nor fragrance visits them. Will there be
+nothing left that makes this being then? The high, Godlike purpose--the
+life whose breath it is,--can _that_ die?--the meek trust in Goodness
+Infinite,--can _that_ perish? No.--This is that building of the soul
+which nothing can dissolve, that house eternal, that eternity's wide
+tempests cannot move. No--no--I am not afraid. No--Netty, I am not
+afraid.
+
+_Jan_. Will you come here, Miss Helen?
+
+_Helen_. Well.
+
+_Jan_. Look among those trees by the road-side--those pine trees, on the
+side of the hill, where my finger points.--
+
+_Helen_. Well--what is it?
+
+_Jan_. Do you see--what a blinding sunshine this is--do you see
+something moving there?--wait a moment--they are hid among the trees
+now--you will see them again presently--There!--there they come, a troop
+of them, see.
+
+_Helen_. Yes--_Indians_--are they not?
+
+_Jan_. Ay--it must have been their yelling that we heard.--We need not
+be alarmed.--They are from the camp--they have come to that spring for
+water. The wonder is, your soldiers should have let them pass.--You will
+see them turning back directly now.
+
+_Helen_. (_Turning from the window_.) Shelter us--all power is thine.
+
+_Jan_. Holy Virgin!--they are coming this way. Those creatures are
+coming down that hill, as I live. Yes, there they come.
+
+This strip of wood hides them now. What keeps them there so long? Ay,
+ay,--I see now--I am sorry I should have alarmed you so, Ma'amselle, for
+nothing too--They have struck into those woods again, no doubt; they are
+going back to their camp by the lower route.
+
+_Helen_. No.
+
+_Jan_. It must be so. There is no doubt of it. Indeed, we might be sure
+they would never dare come here.--They cannot know yet that your army
+are gone. Besides, we should have heard from them ere this. They could
+never have kept their horrid tongues to themselves so long, I
+know.--Well, if it were to save me, I cannot screw myself into this
+shape any longer. (_Rising from the window_.)
+
+_Helen_. Listen.
+
+_Jan_. 'Tis nothing but the sound of the river. You can make nothing
+else of it, Ma'amselle,--unless it is these locusts that you hear. I
+wish they would cease their everlasting din a moment.
+
+How that breeze has died away! Every leaf is still now! There's not a
+cloud or a speck in all the sky.
+
+_Helen_. Look in the west--have you looked there?
+
+_Jan_. Yes, there are a few little clouds beginning to gather there
+indeed. We shall have a shower yet ere night.
+
+ (_The war-whoop is heard, loud and near_.)
+
+_Jan_. Mon Dieu! Here they are! It is all over with us! We shall be
+murdered!
+
+ (_She clasps her hands, and shrieks wildly_.)
+
+_Helen_. Hush! hush! Put down that window, and come away. We must be
+calm now.
+
+_Jan_. It is all over with us,--what use is there? Do you hear that
+trampling?--in the street!--they are coming!
+
+_Helen_. Janette--Hear me. Will you throw away your life and mine? For
+shame! Be calm. These Indians cannot know that we are here. They will
+see these houses _all_ deserted. Why should they stop to search _this?_
+Hush! hush! they are passing now.
+
+_Jan_. They have stopped!--the trampling has stopped!--I hear the
+gate,--they have come into the yard.
+
+ (_A long wild yell is heard under the window. They stand,
+ looking silently at each other. Again it trembles through
+ the room, louder than before_.)
+
+_Helen_. I am sorry you stayed here with me. Perhaps--Hark! What was
+that? What was that? Was it not _Maitland_ they said then? It was--it
+is--Don't grasp me so.
+
+_Jan_. Nay--what would you do?
+
+_Helen_. I must speak with them. Let go my arm! Do you not hear? 'Tis
+Maitland they are talking of. How strangely that blessed name sounds in
+those tones!
+
+_Jan_. You must not--we have tempted Heaven already--this is madness.
+
+_Helen_. Let go, Janette. It is not you they seek. You can conceal
+yourself. You shall be safe.
+
+_Jan_. She is wild! Nay, I was mad myself, or I should never have stayed
+here. It were better to have lived always with them, than to be murdered
+thus.
+
+ (_Helen opens the window, and stands for a moment, looking
+ silently down into the court. She turns away, shuddering_.)
+
+_Helen_. Can I meet those eyes again?
+
+ (_Again the name of Maitland mingles with the wild
+ and unintelligible sounds that rise from without_.)
+
+_Helen_. Can I? (_She turns to the window_.) What can it mean? His own
+beautiful steed! How fiercely he prances beneath that unskilful rein.
+Where's your master, Selma, that he leaves me to be murdered here? A
+letter! He bids me unfasten the door, Janette.
+
+_Jan_. And will you?
+
+_Helen_. They are treacherous I know. This will do.--(_Taking a basket
+from the toilette_.) Give me that cord. (_She lets down the basket from
+the window, and draws it up, with a letter in it_.)
+
+_Helen_. (_Looking at the superscription_.) 'Tis his! I thought so. Is
+it ink and paper that I want now? (_Breaking it open_.) Ah, there's no
+forgery in this, 'Tis his! 'tis his!
+
+_Jan_. How can she stand to look at that little lock of hair
+now?--smiling as if she had found a bag of diamonds. But there's bad
+news there. How the color fades out, and the light in her eye dies away.
+What can it be?
+
+_Helen_. (_Throwing the letter down, and walking the floor hastily_.)
+This is too much! I cannot, I cannot, _I cannot go with them_! How could
+he ask it of me? _This is_ cruel.
+
+He knew, perfectly well, how I have always feared them--I cannot go with
+them.
+
+ (_She takes up the letter_.)
+
+(_Reading_.) "Possible"--"If it were possible"--he does not read that
+word as I did when I kept this promise--_Possible_? He does not know the
+meaning that love gives that word--"If I had known an hour sooner,"
+--Ay, ay, an hour sooner!--"Trust me, dear Helen, they will not harm
+you." _Trust me_, trust me. Won't I?
+
+_Jan_. She is beckoning them, as I live!
+
+_Helen_. Bring me that hat and mantle, Netty. I must go with these
+savages.
+
+_Jan_. _Go_ with them!
+
+_Helen_. There is no help for it.
+
+_Jan_. With these wild creatures,--with these painted devils?--No--Like
+nothing human they look, I am sure. Ah see, see them in their feathers
+and blankets, and that long wild hair. See the knives and the tomahawks
+in their girdles! Holy Mary! Here's one within the court!
+
+_Helen_. Yes, there he stands--there's life in it now.--There they
+stand--the chesnut boughs wave over them--this is the filling up of
+life. They _are_ waiting for me. 'Tis no dream.
+
+_Jan_. Dare you go with them? They will murder you.
+
+_Helen_. If they were but human, I could move them--and yet it is the
+human in them that is so dreadful. To die were sad enough--to die by
+violence, by the power of the innocent elements, were dreadful, or to be
+torn of beasts; to meet the wild, fierce eye, with its fixed and deadly
+purpose, more dreadful; but ah, to see the human soul, from the
+murderers eye glaring on you, to encounter the human will in its
+wickedness, amid that wild struggle--Oh God! spare me.
+
+_Jan_. If you fear them so, surely you will not go with them.
+
+_Helen_. This letter says they are kind and innocent. One I _should_
+believe tells me there is no cause for fear. In his haste he could not
+find no other way to send for me.--The army will be here soon,--I _must_
+go with them.
+
+_Jan_. But Captain Grey will come back here again this afternoon.
+Stay,--stay, and we will go with him.
+
+_Helen_. You can--yes, you will be safe. For myself, I will abide my
+choice. Surely I need not dread to go where my betrothed husband trusts
+me so fearlessly. I count my life worth little more than the price at
+which he values it. Clasp this mantle, Netty.--And is it thus I go forth
+from these blessed walls at last?--Through all those safe and quiet
+hours of peace and trust, did this dark end to them lie waiting
+here?--Are they calling me?
+
+_Jan_. Yes.
+
+_Helen_. Well,--I am ready. (_Lingering in the door_.) I shall sit by
+that window no more. Never again shall I turn those blinds to catch the
+breeze or the sunshine. Yes--(_returning_), let me look down on that
+orchard once again. Never more--never more.
+
+ (_She walks to the door, again pausing on the threshold_.)
+
+_Helen_. (_solemnly_.) Oh God, here, from childhood to this hour,
+morning and evening I have called on thee--forget me not. Farewell,
+Netty, you will see my mother--you will see them all--that is
+past.--Tell her I had seen the Indians, and was not afraid.
+
+ [_She goes out_.
+
+_Jan_. It won't take much to make an angel of her, there's that in it.
+
+ (_Looking cautiously through the shutters_.)
+
+There she comes! How every eye in that wild group flashes on her! And
+yet with what a calm and stately bearing she meets them. Holy Mary! she
+suffers that savage creature to lift her to her horse, as though he were
+her brother, and the long knife by his side too, glancing in the
+sunshine! The horse, one would think, he knew the touch of that white
+hand on his neck. How gently he rears his beautiful head. There they go.
+Adieu! Was there ever so sad a smile?
+
+Another glimpse I shall have of them yet beyond those trees.--Yes, there
+they go--there they go. I can see that lovely plume waving among the
+trees still.--Was there ever so wild a bridal train?
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+
+
+DIALOGUE III.
+
+SCENE. _British Camp. The interior of a Tent richly furnished. An
+ Officer seated at a table covered with papers and maps.
+ A Servant in waiting_.
+
+
+_The Officer_. (_Sipping his wine, and carefully examining a plan of the
+adjacent country_.) About here, we must be--let me see.--I heard the
+drum from their fort this morning, distinctly. Turn that curtain; we
+might get a faint breeze there now.
+
+_Ser't_. But the sun will be coming that side, Sir. It's past two
+o'clock.
+
+_Off_. Past two--a good position--very. Well, well,--we'll take our
+breakfast in Albany on Friday morning, and if our soldiers fast a day or
+two ere then, why they'll relish it the better;--once in the rich
+country beyond--Ay, it will take more troops than this General will have
+at his bidding by that time, to drain the Hudson's borders for us.
+
+ (_A Servant enters with a note_.)
+
+_Off_. (_Reading_.) "_The Baroness Reidesel's compliments--do her the
+honor---Voisin has succeeded_."--Ay, ay,--Voisin has succeeded,--I'll
+warrant that. That caterer of hers must be in league with the powers of
+the air, I am certain. General Burgoyne will be but too happy, my
+Lady--(_writing the answer_.)
+
+ [_The Servant goes out_.
+
+_Off_. Past two! The cannon should be in sight ere this. This to Sir
+George Ackland.
+
+ [_Exit the Attendant_.
+
+_Off_. Tuesday--Wednesday.--If the batteaux should get here to-morrow.
+One hundred teams----
+
+ (_Another Officer enters the tent_.)
+
+_1st Off_. How goes it abroad, Colonel St. Leger?
+
+_2nd Off_. Indeed, Sir, the camp is as quiet as midnight. It's a
+breathless heat. But there are a few dark heads swelling in the west. We
+may have a shower yet ere night.
+
+_Bur_. Good news that. But here is better, (_giving the other an open
+letter_.)
+
+_St. Leger_. Ay, ay, that reads well, Sir.
+
+_Bur_. And here is another as good. Yes Sir, yes Sir,--they are flocking
+in from all quarters--the insurgents are laying down their arms by
+hundreds. It must be a miserable fragment that Schuyler has with him by
+this.
+
+_St. L_. General Burgoyne, is not it a singular circumstance, that the
+enemy should allow us to take possession of a point like that without
+opposition,--so trifling a detachment, too? Why, that hill commands the
+fort,--certainly it does.
+
+_Bur_. Well--well. They are pretty much reduced, I fancy, Sir. We shall
+hardly hear much more from them. Let me see,--this is the hill.
+
+_St. L_. A pity we could not provoke them into an engagement, though!
+They depend so entirely upon the popular feeling for supplies and
+troops, and the whole machinery of their warfare, that it is rather
+hazardous reckoning upon them, after all. If we could draw them into an
+engagement _now_, the result would be certain.
+
+_Bur_. Yes, yes; we must contrive to do that ere long. Rather
+troublesome travelling companions they make, that's certain. Like those
+insects that swarm about us here,--no great honor in fighting them, but
+a good deal of discomfort in letting them alone. We must sweep them out
+of our way, I think, or at all events give them a brush, that will quiet
+them a little.
+
+_St. L_. Or they might prove, after all, like the gadfly in the fable. I
+do not think this outbreak will be any disadvantage in the end, General.
+
+_Bur_. Not a whit--not a whit--they have needed this. It will do them
+good, Sir.
+
+_St. L_. The fact is, these colonies were founded in the spirit of
+insubordination, and all the circumstances of their position have
+hitherto tended to develope only these disorganizing elements.
+
+_Bur_. It will do them good, Sir. Depend upon it, they'll remember this
+lesson. Pretty well sickened of war are they all. They'll count the cost
+ere they try it again.
+
+_St. L_. We can hardly expect the news from General Reidesel before
+sunset, I suppose.
+
+_Bur_. If my messenger returns by to-morrow's sunrise, it is better
+fortune than I look for.
+
+ (_Col. St. Leger goes out_.)
+
+ (_Burgoyne resumes his plan_.)
+
+_A Ser't_. (_At the door_.) Capt. Maitland, Sir.
+
+_Bur_. Capt. Maitland!
+
+_Ser't_. From Fort Ann, Sir.
+
+ (_Maitland enters_.)
+
+_Bur_. Captain Maitland! Good heavens, I thought you were at
+Skeensborough by this,--what has happened? or am I to congratulate
+myself that the necessity of your embassy is obviated. You met them,
+perhaps?--
+
+_Maitland_. There's but little cause of congratulation, Sir, as these
+dispatches will prove to you. I returned only because my embassy was
+accomplished.
+
+_Bur_. Do you mean to say, Captain Maitland, that you have seen the
+waters of Lake Champlain, since you left here this morning?
+
+_Mait_. I do, Sir.
+
+_Bur_. On my word, these roads must have improved since we travelled
+them some two days agone. I am sorry for your horses, Sir. You saw
+General Reidesel?
+
+_Mait_. I left him only at nine o'clock this morning.
+
+ (_Burgoyne examines the dispatches_.)
+
+_Bur_. "Twelve oxen to one batteaux!"--"and but fifty teams!" This news
+was scarcely worth so much haste, I think,--but fifty teams?--Captain
+Maitland, had those draught horses from Canada not arrived yet?
+
+_Mait_. They were just landing this morning as I left, but only
+one-fourth of the number contracted for.
+
+_Bur_. Humph! I would like to know what time, at this rate----sit down,
+Captain Maitland, sit down--we are like to spend the summer here, for
+aught I see, after all. (_A long pause, in which Burgoyne resumes his
+reading_.)
+
+_Mait_. General Burgoyne, I am entrusted with a message from General
+Reidsel to the Baroness. If this is all----
+
+_Bur_. What were you saying?--The Baroness--ay, ay--that's all well
+enough,--but Captain Maitland is aware, no doubt, there are more
+important subjects on the tapis just now than a lady's behests.
+
+_Mait_. Sir?----
+
+_Bur_. (_Pushing the papers impatiently from him_.) This will never do.
+St. George! We'll give these rebels other work ere many days, than
+driving away cattle and breaking down bridges for our convenience.
+Meanwhile we must open some new source of supplies, or we may starve to
+death among these hills yet. Captain Maitland, I have a proposal to make
+to you. You are impatient, Sir.
+
+_Mait_. General Burgoyne!----
+
+_Bur_. Nay, nay,--there's no haste about it. It were cruel to detain you
+now, after the toil of this wild journey. You'll find your quarters
+changed, Captain Maitland. We sent a small detachment across the river
+just now. Some of our copper-colored allies had got into a fray with the
+enemy there.
+
+_Mait_. Ha! (_returning_.)
+
+_Bur_. Nothing of consequence, as it turns out. We hoped it would have
+ended in something. A few of the enemy, who were stationed as a guard on
+a hill not far from Fort Edward, were surprised by a party of Indians,
+and killed, to a man, I believe. Afterwards, the victors got into a
+deadly fray among themselves as usual. A quarrel between a couple of
+these chiefs, at some famous watering place of theirs, and in the midst
+of it, a party from the fort drove them from the ground;--this is
+Alaska's own story at least.
+
+_Mait_. _Alaska's!_
+
+_Bur_. Alaska?--Alaska?--yes, I think it was,--one of these new allies
+we have picked up here.
+
+_Mait_. (_In a whisper_.) Good God!
+
+_Bur_. By the time our detachment arrived there, however, the ground was
+cleared, and they took quiet possession. Are you ill, Captain Maitland?
+
+_Mait_. A little,--it is nothing. I am to cross the river.
+
+_Bur_, Yes. You will take these papers to Captain Andre. You have
+over-fatigued yourself. You should have taken more time for this wild
+journey.
+
+ (_Maitland goes out_.)
+
+_Bur_. I do not like the idea of division, but it cannot be helped now.
+This gallant young soldier were a fitting leader for such an enterprize.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+
+
+DIALOGUE IV.
+
+SCENE. _The ground before Maitland's Tent_.
+
+
+ (_Maitland and the Indian Chief, Manida, enter_.)
+
+_Mait_. This is well. (_He writes on a slip of paper, and gives it to
+the Indian_.) Take that, they will give you the reward you ask for it.
+Let me see your face no more, that is all.
+
+_Manida_. Ha, _Monsieur_?
+
+_Mait_. Let me see your face no more, I say. Do you understand me?
+
+_Manida_. (_Smiling_.) Oui.
+
+ (_Maitland turns from him. The Indian goes off in the
+ opposite direction. He stops a moment, and steals a look
+ at Maitland,--throws his head back with a long silent laugh,
+ and then goes on toward the woods_.)
+
+_Mait_. (_Musing_.) I like this. _This_ is womanly! Nay, perhaps there
+is no caprice about it. I may have misinterpreted that letter in my
+haste last night. Very likely. Well,--better this, than that Helen Grey
+should come to evil through fault of mine,--better this, than the
+anguish of the horrible misgivings that haunted me amid my journey.
+
+And so pass these faery visions! Nay, not thus. It will take longer than
+this to unlink this one day's hope from its thousand fastnesses. I
+thought, ere this, to have met the spirit of those beaming eyes, to have
+taken to my heart for ever this soft, pure being of another life. And
+yet, even as I rode through those lonely hills this morning, with every
+picture my hope painted, there came a strange misgiving;--like some
+scene of laughing noonday loveliness, darkening in the shadow of a
+summer's cloud.
+
+Strange that Alaska should abandon my trust! I cannot understand it.
+Why, I should never have trusted her with this rascal Indian. There was
+something in his eye, hateful beyond all thought,--and once or twice I
+caught a strange expression in it, like malignant triumph it seemed. It
+may be--no, he must have seen her--that glove he showed me was hers, I
+know. Good God!--what if----I think my old experience should have taught
+me there was little danger of her risking much in my behalf. Well--even
+this is better, than that Helen Grey should have come to evil through
+fault of mine.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+PART SIXTH
+
+ * * * * *
+
+RECONCILIATION.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+DIALOGUE I.
+
+SCENE. _The slope of the Hill near Fort Edward. The road-side, shaded
+ with stately pines and hemlocks_.
+
+
+ (_Two British Officers, coming slowly down the road_.)
+
+_1st Off_. Yes, here has been wild work upon this hill to-day. They were
+slaughtered to a man.
+
+_2nd Off_. I saw a sight above there, just now, that sickened me of
+warfare.
+
+_1st Off_. And what was that, pry'thee?
+
+_2nd Off_. Oh nothing,--'twas nothing but a dead soldier; a common sight
+enough, indeed; but this was a mere youth;--he was lying in a little
+hollow on the roadside, and as I crossed in haste, I had well-nigh set
+my foot on his brow. Such a brow it was, so young, so noble, and the
+dark chesnut curls clustering about it. I think I never saw a more
+classic set of features, or a look of loftier courage than that which
+death seemed to have found and marbled in them. Hark--that's a
+water-fall we hear.
+
+_1st Off_. I saw him, there was another though, lying not far thence,
+the sight of whom moved me more. He was younger yet, or seemed so, and
+of a softer mould; and, torn and bloody as they were, I fancied I could
+see in his garb and appointments, and in every line of his features, the
+traces of some mother's tenderness.
+
+_2nd Off_. Listen, Andre! This is beautiful! There's some cascade not
+far hence, worth searching for.
+
+_Andre_. Yes, just in among those trees you'll find a perfect
+drawing-room, carpeted, canopied, and dark as twilight; its verdant
+seats broidered with violets and forget-me-nots; and all untenanted it
+seems, nay, deserted rather, for the music wastes on the lonely air, as
+if the fairy that kept state there, in gossip mood had stolen down some
+neighboring aisle, and would be home anon. I would have bartered all the
+glory of this campaign for leave to stretch myself on its mossy bank,
+for a soft hour or so.
+
+_Mor_. Ay, with Chaucer or the "Faery Queen." If one could people these
+lovely shades with the fresh creations of the olden time, knight and
+lady, and dark enchantress and Paynim fierce, instead of Yankee rebels--
+
+_Andre_. 'Twere well your faery-work were of no lasting mould, or these
+same Yankee rebels would scarce thank you for your pains,--they hold
+that race in little reverence. Alas,--
+
+ No grot divine, or wood-nymph haunted glen,
+ Or stream, or fount, shall these young shades e'er know.
+ No beautiful divinity, stealing afar
+ Through darkling nooks, to poet's eye thence gleam;
+ With mocking mystery the dim ways wind,
+ They reach not to the blessed fairy-land
+ That once all lovely in heaven's stolen light,
+ To yearning thoughts, in the deep green-wood grew.
+ Ah! had they come to light when nature
+ Was a wonder-loving, story-telling child!--
+ The misty morn of ages had gone by,
+ The dreamy childhood of the race was past,
+ And in its tame and reasoning manhood,
+ In the daylight broad, and noon-day of all time,
+ _This_ world hath sprung. The poetry of _truth_,
+ None other, shall her shining lakes, and woods,
+ And ocean-streams, and hoary mountains wear.
+ Perchance that other day of poesy,
+ Unsung of prophets, that upon the lands
+ Shall dawn yet, thence shall spring. The self-same mind
+ That on the night of ages once, for us
+ Those deathless clusters flung, the self-same mind,
+ With all its ancient elements of might,
+ Among us now its ancient glory hides;
+ But, from its smothered power, and buried wealth,
+ A golden future sparkles, decked from deeper founts,
+ A new and lovelier firmament,
+ A thousand realms of song undreamed of now,
+ That shall make Romance a forgotten world,
+ And the young heaven of Antiquity,
+ With all its starry groups, a gathered scroll.
+
+
+_Mor_. Ay, Andre, you were born a poet, and have mistaken your art.
+Prythee excuse me, who am but a poor soldier, for marring so fine a
+rhapsody with any thing so sublunary; but, methinks, for an enemy's
+quarters, yonder fort shows as peaceable a front of stone and mortar as
+one could ask for. What can it mean that they are so quiet there?
+
+_Andre_. That spy did not return a second time.
+
+_Mor_. The rogues have made sure of him ere this, I fancy. They may have
+given us the slip,--who knows?
+
+_Andre_. I would like to venture a stroll through that shady street if I
+thought so. A dim impression that I have somewhere seen this view
+before, haunts me unaccountably.
+
+_Mor_. How I hate that sober, afternoon air, that hangs like an
+invisible presence over it all. You can see it in the sunshine on those
+white walls, you can hear it in the hum of the bee from the bending
+thistle here.
+
+_Andre_. Of the mind it is. This were lovely as the morning light, but
+for the shade it gathers thence, from the thought of decline and the
+vanishing day. 'Tis a pretty spot.
+
+_Mor_. Yes, but the quiet goings-on of life are all hushed there now.
+
+_Andre_. Ay, this is the hour, when the home-bound children swing the
+gate with a merry spring, and the mother sits at her work by the open
+window, with her quiet eye, and the daughter, with the beauty of an
+untamed soul in her's, looks forth on the woods and meadows, and thinks
+of her walk at even-tide. I thought it was something like a memory that
+haunted me thus,--'tis the spot that Maitland talked of yesterday.
+
+_Mor_. Captain Maitland? I saw him just now at the works above.
+
+_Andre_. Here? On this hill?
+
+_Mor_. Yes,--something struck me in his mien,--and there he stands with
+Colonel Hill, above, on the other side.--Mark him now. Your friend is
+handsome, Andre; he is handsome, I'll own,--but I never liked that smile
+of his, and I think I like it less than ever now.
+
+_Andre_. Why, that's the genuine Apollo-curl,--a line's breadth deeper
+were too much, I'll own.
+
+ (_Maitland and another Officer enter_.)
+
+_Off_. That is all,--that is all, I believe, Captain Maitland. Yonder
+pretty dwelling among the trees seems an old acquaintance of yours. It
+has had the ill manners to rob me of your eye ever since we stood here,
+and I have had little token that the other senses were not in its
+company. Andre, has your friend never a ladye-love in these wilds, you
+could tell us of?
+
+_Mor_. He is sworn to secresy. Did you mark that glance?
+
+_Mait_. Love! I hold it a pretty theme for the ballad-makers, Colonel
+Hill; but for myself, I have scarce time for rhyming just now. Captain
+Andre, here are papers for you.
+
+ [_He walks away, descending the road_.
+
+_Col. Hill_. So! So! What ails the boy?
+
+ (_Looking after him for a moment, and then ascending the hill_.)
+
+_Andre_. (_Reading_.) Humph! Here's prose enough! Will you walk up the
+hill with me, Mortimer? I must cross the river again.
+
+_Mait_. First let me seek this horse of mine,--the rogue must have
+strayed down this path, I think.
+
+ (_He enters the wood_.)
+
+ (_Andre walks to and fro with an impatient air, then pauses_.)
+
+_Andre_. Well, I can wait no longer for this loiterer.
+
+ [_Exit_.
+
+ (_Mortimer re-enters, calling from the woods_.)
+
+_Mor_. Andre! Maitland! Colonel Hill! Good Heavens! Where the devil are
+they all? Maitland!
+
+ (_Maitland appears, slowly ascending the road_.)
+
+_Mor_. For the love of Heaven,--come here.
+
+_Mail_. Nay.--but what is it?
+
+_Mor_. For God's sake, come,
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+
+
+DIALOGUE II.
+
+SCENE. _A little glen, darkly shaded with pines. A fountain issuing from
+ one side, and falling with a curious murmur into the basin below_.
+
+
+ (_Mortimer and Maitland enter_.)
+
+_Mor_. This is the place!--Well, if hallucinations like this can visit
+mortal eyes, I'll ne'er trust mine again. 'Tis the spot, I'm sure of
+it,--the place, too, that Andre was raving about just now.--The fairies'
+drawing-room,--palace rather,--look at these graceful shafts,
+Maitland,--and fairies' work, it must have been in good earnest.
+
+_Mait_. If it's to admire this clump of pine trees you have brought me
+hither, allow me to say you might have spared yourself that trouble. I
+have seen the place already, as often as I care to.
+
+_Mor_. Come this way a little,--yes, it was just above there that I
+stood,--it must have been.
+
+_Mait_. If you would give me some little inkling of what you are talking
+about, Lieutenant Mortimer, I should be more likely to help you, if it's
+help you need.
+
+_Mor_. I do not ask you to believe me, but,--as I was springing on my
+horse just now above there, the gurgling of this spring caught my ear,
+and looking down suddenly--upon my word, Captain Maitland, I am ashamed
+to describe what cannot but seem to you such an improbable piece of
+fancy-work; and yet, true it seemed, as that I see you now. I was
+looking down, as I said, when suddenly, among those low evergreens, the
+brilliant hue of a silken mantle caught my eye, and then a woman's brow
+gleamed up upon me. Yes, there in that dark cradle, calmly sleeping, all
+flashing with gold and jewels, like some bright vision of olden time,
+methought there lay--a lady,--a girl, young and lovely as a dream;--the
+white plume in her bonnet soiled and broken, and the long bright hair
+streaming heavily on her mantle,--and yet with all its loveliness, such
+a face of utter sorrow saw I never. I _saw_ her, I saw her, as I see you
+now,--the proud young form with such a depth of grace, in its strange
+repose, and--where are you going?--what are you doing, Maitland?
+
+_Mait_. Helen Grey!--
+
+_Mor_. You are right. I did not mark that break--yes--there she lies.
+Said I right, Maitland?
+
+_Mait_. Helen Grey!--
+
+_Mor_. Maitland! Heavens!--what a world of anguish that tone
+reveals!--Why do you stand gazing on that lovely sleeper thus?
+
+_Mait_. Bring water. There's a cup at yonder spring. Here has been
+treachery! Devils and fiends have been working here against me. We must
+unclasp this mantle. The treasure of the earth lies here.--Now doth mine
+arm enfold it once, at last. 'Tis sweet, Helen, mine own _true_ love;
+'tis sweet, even thus.
+
+_Mor_. This letter,--see--from those loosened folds it just now dropped.
+This might throw some light, perchance--
+
+_Mait_. Let it be. There's light enough. I want no more. Water,--more
+water,--do you see?
+
+_Mor_. Maitland,--this is vain. Mark this dark spot upon her girdle--
+
+_Mait_. Hush, hush,--there, cover it thus--'tis nothing, Loosen this
+bonnet--so--'twas a firm hand that tied that knot; so--she can breathe
+now.
+
+_Mor_. How like life, those soft curls burst from their loosened
+pressure! But mark you--there is no other motion, I am sorry to distress
+you,--but--Maitland--this lady is dead.
+
+_Mait. Dead_! Lying hell-hound! _Dead_! Say that again.
+
+_Mor_. God help you!
+
+_Mait. Dead_! Helen Grey, open these eyes. Here's one that, never having
+seen them, talks of death. Oh God! is it thus we meet at last? At last
+these arms are round her, and she knows it not. I look upon her, but her
+eye answers me not. Dead!--for me? Murdered!--mine own hand hath done
+it.
+
+_Mor_. Why do you start thus?
+
+_Mait_. Hush!--hush! There!--again--that slow heavy throb--again! again!
+
+_Mor_. Good God! she breathes! This is life indeed.
+
+_Mait_. (_Solemnly_.) Ay, thank God. This moment's sweetness is enough.
+
+_Mor_. How like one in troubled sleep she murmurs! Mark those tones of
+sweet and wild entreaty. Listen!
+
+_Mait_. I have heard it again!--from the buried years of love and hope
+that music came. She is here. 'Tis _she_. This is no marble mockery. She
+is here! Her head is on my bosom. Death cannot rob me of this sweetness
+now.
+
+ (_Talking without_.)
+
+_A Lady_. This way--I hear their voices. Down this pathway--here they are.
+
+ (_Lady Ackland and Andre enter the Glen_.)
+
+_Lady A_. I knew it could not be. They told us she was murdered,
+Maitland. (_Starting back_.) Ah--ah--God help thee, Maitland!
+
+_Mait_. Listen, listen. She was speaking but now. There--again!
+
+_Lady A_. And this is she! Can the wilderness blossom thus? And did God
+unfold such loveliness--for a waste so cruel?
+
+_Helen_. (_In a low murmur_.) We are almost there. If we could but pass
+this glen. Oh God! will they stop here? Go on,--go on. Was not that a
+white tent I saw? Go on. They will not. 'Tis nothing,--do not weep.
+
+_Mait_. Look at me, Helen.--Open these eyes. One more look--one more.
+
+_Andre_. She hears your bidding.
+
+_Mait_. Oh God! Do you see those eyes--those dim, bewildered eyes?--it
+is quenched--quenched. Let her lean on you.
+
+_Lady A_. Gently--gently, she does not see us yet.
+
+_Helen_. Oh Mother, I am ill and weary. Here's this dream again! Blue
+sky? and pine-tree boughs? Am I here indeed? Yes, I remember now,--we
+stood upon that cliff--I am dying. Is there no one here? Whose tears are
+these?
+
+_Lady A_. Dear child, sweet one, nay, lean on me.
+
+_Helen_. My mother, oh my mother, come to me. Come, Annie, come, come!
+Strangers all!
+
+_Mor_. Her eye is on him. Hush!
+
+_Andre_. See in an instant how the light comes flashing up from those
+dim depths again. _That_ is the eye that I saw yesterday.
+
+_Lady A_. That slowly settling smile,--deeper and deeper--saw you ever
+any thing so gay, so passing lovely?
+
+_Helen_. Is it--is it--Everard Maitland--is it _thee_? The living real
+of my thousand dreams, in the light of life doth he stand there now?
+Doth he? _'Tis he!_
+
+_Mait_. Helen!
+
+_Helen_. 'Tis he! That tone's spell builds around me its all-sheltering
+music-walls, and death is nothing. Oh God, when at thy dark will dimly
+revealed, I trembled yesterday, I did not think in this most rosy bower
+to meet its fearfulness.
+
+_Mait_. Helen,--dost thou love me _yet_?
+
+_Helen_. Doubter, am I dying here?
+
+_Mait_. 'Tis her own most rich and blessed smile, even as of old in
+mirth it shone upon me. Your murderer, you count me then?
+
+_Helen_. Come hither,--let me lean on _you_. Star of the wilderness!--of
+this life that is fading now, the sun!--_doth_ mine eye see thee, then,
+at last? Oh! this is sweet! On its own holy home my head rests now.
+Everard, in this dark world _Love leans on Faith_. How else, even in
+God's love and loveliness, could I trust now for that strange future on
+whose bloody threshold I am lying here; yes, and in spite of prayers and
+trust, and struggling hopes. And yet--how beautiful it is--that love
+invisible, invisible no more. Like glorious sunshine it is streaming
+round me,--lighting all. The infinite of that thy smile hath imaged, as
+real,--it beams on me now. Have faith, in _him_ I mean; for--if we meet
+again--we'll need it then no more; and--how dim it grows--nay, let me
+lean on you,--and--through _this_ life's darkening glass I shall see you
+no more. Nay, hold me!--quick!--where art thou?--Everard!--He is
+gone--gone!
+
+_Lady A_. Dead!--
+
+_Mor_. She is dead!
+
+_Andre_. This was Love.
+
+_Lady A_. See how her eyes are fixed on _you_. The light and love of the
+vanished soul looks through them still. Cruelly hath it been sent
+thence; and no other gleam of its changeful beauty will e'er dawn in
+them. Sadly, oh lovely stranger, I close for ever now these dark-fringed
+lids upon their love and beauty. Yes--_this_ was love!
+
+_Andre_. And so there was a need-be in its doom. I'll ne'er believe
+_that_ genuine, that is blessed. The fate of this life would not suffer
+it. Ah! if it would, if Heaven should leave a gem like that outside her
+walls, we should none of us go thither.
+
+_Mait_. Dead? How beautiful! Yes--let her lie there--under that lovely
+canopy. Dead!--it's a curious word--How comes it that we all stand here?
+Ha, Andre?--is it you?
+
+_Andre_. I heard the tale as I crossed just now, from an Indian, who was
+one in the ambuscade this noon--and in the woods on the other side, I
+found this lady, with her attendants, abiding the promise she made you
+last night, to welcome this lovely stranger with her savage guides.
+
+_Mait_. Hush, hush. Let it pass. See,--a bride!
+
+_Mor_. (_Aside_.) Did he trust her with these murderers?
+
+_Mait_. Ay--say yes.
+
+_Andre_. Indeed, Maitland, you wrong yourself. It was the treachery of
+this savage Manida that crossed your plans, working the mission of some
+Higher power,--as for Alaska, you might as soon have doubted me.
+
+The Chief he sent for her was one he had known years--but,
+unfortunately, he was one in the ambuscade this morning--nay, the leader
+of it; for the murdered Indian was his son; and meanwhile amid the fight
+the treacherous Manida, who accompanied him to Maitland's tent last
+night, and heard the promised reward, found means to steal from its
+concealment the letter, with which he easily won this trusting lady to
+accompany him.
+
+_Mor_. Ah!--there it lies.
+
+_Andre_. It was here in this glen that Alaska, discovering the
+treachery, lay in wait for them with a band of chosen warriors, and on
+that cliff above they fought.
+
+_Lady A_. (_Aside_.) And she stood there, amid those yelling demons
+alone! Methinks the angels should have come from their unseen dwellings
+at her prayer. Can our humanity's darkest extremity wring no love from
+the invisible?--
+
+_Andre_. Alaska had regained his charge; but the malignant eye, and the
+deadly arrow of the vanquished Indian followed her. She fell, even in
+the place where you found her; for at that same instant a party from the
+fort drove them hence, victor and vanquished. Alaska fled; but the
+murderer, with a tale cunning enough to deceive the lover, boldly
+demanded and obtained the prize.
+
+_Mor_. Mark his changed mien. I would rather see tears for a grief like
+this, than that calm smile with which he gazes on her now.
+
+ (_Burgoyne and St. Leger are seen talking in the road
+ above,--they enter the glen_.)
+
+_Bur_. At a crisis like this we might better have lost a thousand men in
+battle! Ah! ah!--a sight for our enemies, Lady Ackland! Where is this
+Indian?
+
+_St. L_. We have sent out for him. No one has seen him as yet.
+
+_Bur_. Let him be found. Look to it. We will give them an example for
+once. I say, at a crisis like this we might better have lost a thousand
+men in battle, for it will turn thousands against us, and rouse the
+slumbering spirit of resistance here, at the very crisis when, had it
+slumbered on a little longer, all was ours.
+
+_St. L_. But this was a quarrel among the Indians, and no fault of ours.
+
+_Bur_. No matter. You will see what Schuyler will make of it. His wordy
+proclamation will have its living sequel now. A young and innocent girl,
+seeking the protection of our camp, is inhumanly murdered by Indians in
+our pay. A single tale like this is enough to undo at a blow all that we
+have accomplished here. With ten thousand wild aggravations, it will be
+told in every cottage of these borders before to-morrow's sunset.
+
+ (_Another Officer enters hastily_.)
+
+_Off_. Here is Arnold, with a thousand men, on the brow of the next
+hill. One of the rebel guard escaped, and the news of the massacre here
+has reached their camp below.
+
+_Bur_. Said I right?
+
+ (_The three Officers go out together_.)
+
+_Andre_. This story is spreading fast, there will be throngs here
+presently. Maitland,--nay, do not let me startle you thus, but--
+
+_Mait_. Is it you? What was it we were saying yesterday?--we should have
+noted it. This were a picture worth your pencilling now. Those silken
+vestments,--that long, golden hair,--this youthful shape,--there's that
+same haughty grace about it, that the smile of these thought-lit eyes
+would disown with every glance. Then that letter,--and the Lady Ackland
+here,--Weeping?--This is most strange. I know you all,--but,--as I live
+I can't remember how this chanced. How comes it that we all stand here?
+Pearls?--and white silk?--a bridal?--Ha ha ha! (_Laughing wildly_.)
+
+_Lady A_. Take me away. This is too terrible! lean stay here no longer.
+Take me away, Andre.
+
+ [_Exeunt Andre and Lady A_.
+
+ (_An Officer enters_.)
+
+_The Officer_. We are ordered to withdraw our detachment, Captain
+Maitland. The rebels are just below, some two thousand strong, and in no
+mood to be encountered.
+
+_Mor_. He does not hear you. We must leave that murdered lady here, and
+'tis vain to think of parting them. Come.
+
+ [_Exeunt Mortimer and Officer_.
+
+_Mait_. They are gone at last. They are all gone. I am alone with my
+dead bride. I must needs smile--I could not weep when those haughty and
+prying eyes were upon me, but now--I am alone with my dead
+bride.--Helen, they are all gone,--we are alone. How still she
+lies,--smiling too,--on that same bank. She will speak, surely she will.
+How lightly those soft lashes lie, as if a word would lift
+them.--Helen!--I will be calm and patient as a child. This lovely smile
+is deepening, it will melt to words again.--Hark! that spring,--that
+same curious murmur! We have checked our sweetest words to hear it, we
+have stood here listening to it, till we fancied, in its talk-like
+tones, wild histories, beautiful and sad, the secrets of the woods.--Oh
+God!--and have such memories no power here now? In mine ear alone doth
+the spring murmur now. Death! what is't?--Awake! awake,--by the love
+that is _stronger_ than death,--awake!--
+
+I thought that scene would shift. It had a heavy, dream-like mistiness.
+_This_ is reality again. _These_ are the pine trees that I dreamed of.
+See! how beautiful! With the sharp outline and the vivid hue such as our
+childhood's unworn sense yields, they are waving now. Look, Andre, there
+she sits, the young and radiant stranger,--there, in the golden sunset
+she is sitting still, braiding those flowers,--see, how the rich life
+flashes in her eye, and yet, just now I dreamed that she was dead,
+and--and--Oh my God!
+
+ (_A voice without_.)
+
+Let go, who stays me?--where's my sister?
+
+ (_Captain Grey enters_.)
+
+_Grey_. Ha! Murderer! art satisfied?
+
+_Mait_. Ay.
+
+_Grey_. What, do you mock me, Sir?
+
+_Mait_. Let her be. She is mine!--all mine! my love, my bride,--my
+_bride_?--_Murderer_?--Stay!--Don't glare at me! I know you, Sir. I can
+hurl off these mountain shadows yet.--They'll send some stronger devil
+ere they wrench this hold from me! I know you well. What make you here?
+
+_Grey_. Madness!--there's little wonder!--It's the only good that Heaven
+has left for him! My lovely playfellow,--my sister, is it so indeed?
+Alas! all gently lies this hand in mine. There is no angry strength here
+now. Helen!--Ah! would to God our last words had not been in bitterness.
+
+_Mait_. He weeps. I never thought to see tears there. List!--she should
+not lie there thus. Strange it should move you so!--Think it a picture
+now. 'Tis but a well-wrought painting after all, if one but thinks so.
+See,--'tis but a sleeping girl, with the red summer light upon her
+cheek, and the slight breeze stirring her golden hair. Mark you that
+shoulder's grace?--They come.
+
+ (_Leslie, Elliston, and others enter_.)
+
+_Leslie_. Oh God, was there none other? My lovely cousin, and--were
+_you_ the victim? In your bridal glory chosen,--nay, with your heart's
+holiest law lured to the bloody altar! Yet this day's history, and
+something in that calm, high mien, tells me, as freely you had moved
+unto it, though God had spoken by a higher voice, and with a martyr's
+garland beckoned you.
+
+_Elliston_. Our cause is linked unto that ancient one, the cause of Love
+and Truth; in which Heaven moves with unrelenting hand, not sparing its
+own loveliest ones, but unto bloody death freely delivering them.
+
+ (_Grey and Leslie converse apart_.)
+
+_Leslie_. Yes--we will bury her here. 'Tis a fitting spot; and unto
+distant days, this lonely grave, with its ever-verdant canopy, shall be
+even as Love's Shrine. Thither, in the calm and smiling summers of those
+bloodless times shall many a fair young pilgrim come, to wonder at such
+love; and living eyes shall weep, and living hearts shall heave over its
+cruel fate, when unto her the long-told tale, and all the anguish of
+this far-off day, shall be even as the dim passage of some troubled
+dream. A martyr's garland she hath won indeed; true Love's young Martyr
+there she lies.
+
+_Elliston_. Yet was that love but the wreathed and glittering weapon of
+a higher doom. In that holy cause, whose martyrs strew a thousand
+fields, truth's, freedom's, God's, darkly, by _Power Invisible_ hath
+this young life been offered here.
+
+A thousand graves like this, over all this lovely land, in lanes and
+fields, on the lonely hill-side, by the laughing stream, and in the
+depths of many a silent wood, to distant days shall speak--of
+blood-sealed destinies; with voices that no tyrant's power can smother,
+they shall speak.--
+
+_Leslie_. The light of that chamber window, through the soft summer
+evening will shine here; no mournful memory of all the lovely past will
+it waken. The autumn blaze will flicker within those distant walls, and
+gather its pleasant circle again; but _she_ will lie calmly here. For
+ever at her feet the river of her childhood shall murmur on, and many a
+lovely spring-time, like the spring-times of her childhood, shall come
+and go, but no yearning hope shall it waken here; the winter shall sing
+through the desolate boughs, and rear its fairy temples around her, but
+nought shall break her dreamless rest.--
+
+_Mait_. Graves! Is it graves they are talking of? Will they bury this
+gay young bride! 'Tis but the name; there's nothing sad in it. In the
+lovely summer twilight shall her burial be, and thus; in all her bridal
+array, with the glory of the crimson sunset shining through the
+trees;--see what a fearful glow is kindling on her cheek, and that faint
+breeze--or, is it life that stirs these curls? Stay!--whose young brow
+is this?--Ha!--_whose_ smile is this? Who is this they would hurry away
+into the darkness of death? The grave! Could you fold the rosy and
+all-speading beauty of heaven in the narrow grave? Helen, is it
+thee?--my heaven, my long-lost heaven; and, even now, but for mine own
+deed--Oh God! was there no hand but mine?--but for me--They shall not
+utter it,--there, thus. There's but _one_ cry that could unfold this
+grief, but that would circle the round universe and fill eternity. A sad
+sight this! Is't known who killed this lady, Sir?
+
+_Leslie_. Of all the wrecks of beautiful humanity that strew these
+paths, we have found none so sad as this!
+
+_Elliston_. Mark you those groups of soldiers loitering on the road-side
+there?
+
+_An Officer_. Curiosity. The regiment that was dismissed to-day. They'll
+be here anon.
+
+_Leslie_. Ay, let them come.
+
+_Off_. Look,--who comes up that winding pathway through the trees, with
+such a swift and stately movement? A woman! See how the rude soldiers
+turn aside with awe. Ah, she comes hither.
+
+ (_A voice without_.)
+
+Where is she?--stand aside!--What have you here in this dark
+ring?--Henry--nay, let me come.
+
+ (_Mrs. Grey enters the glen_.)
+
+_Grey_. For God's sake, Madam, let me lead you hence. This is no place
+for you. Look at this group of men, officers, soldiers--
+
+_Mrs. G_. Would you cheat me _thus_? Is it no place for _me_? What kind
+of place is't then for her, whose--Oh God!--think you I do not see that
+slippered foot, nor know whose it is,--and whose plumed bonnet is it
+that lies crushed there at their feet?--unhand me, Henry.
+
+_Leslie_. Nay, let her come,--'tis best.
+
+ (_She passes swiftly through the parting group_.)
+
+_Mrs. G_. My daughter!--_Blood_? My stricken child smile you? No pity
+was there then? Speak to me, speak! Your mother's tears are on your
+brow, and heed you not? Nay, tell me all, my smitten one. This day's
+dark history will you never pour into my ear, that hath treasured so
+often your lightest grief? Alone through that wild anguish have you
+passed, and smile you now? I bade her trust in God. Did _God_ see this?
+
+ (_Arnold, and a group of Soldiers, enter the glen_.)
+
+_Arnold_. Look there. Ay, ay, look there. You were right, Leslie;--this
+_is_ better than a battle-field. They'll find that this day's work will
+cost them dear.
+
+_Mrs. G_. Did _God_, who loves as mothers love their babes, see this I
+Had I been there, with my love, in the heavens, could _I_ have given up
+this innocent and tender child a prey to the wild Indians? No!--and
+legions of pitying angels waiting but my word. No,--no.
+
+_Elliston_. Had you been there,--from that far centre whence God's eye
+sees all, you had beheld what lies in darkness here. Forth from this
+fearful hour you might have seen Peace, like a river, flowing o'er the
+years to come; and smiles, ten thousand, thousand smiles, down the long
+ages brightening, sown in this day's tears. Had you been there with
+God's _all_-pitying eye, the pitying legions had waited your word in
+vain, for once, unto a sterner doom, for the world's sake he gave his
+Son.
+
+_Mrs. G_. Words! Look there. That mother warned me yesterday. "_Words,
+words! My own child's blood_,"--I _see_ it now.
+
+ (_A group of Soldiers enter_.)
+
+_A. Soldier_. (_Whispering_.) Who would have thought to see tears on
+_his_ face; look you, Jack Richards.
+
+_Another Sol_. 'Twas his sister, hush!--
+
+_Arnold_. Ay, ay, come hither. Look you there! Lay down your arms. Seek
+the royal mercy;--here it is. Your wives, your sisters, and your
+innocent children;--let them seek the royal shelter;--it is a safe one.
+See.
+
+_3d Sol_. It was just so in Jersey last winter;--made no difference
+which side you were.
+
+_Arnold_. Ask no reasons.--'Twas in sport may be. 'Tis but one, in many
+such. Shameless tyranny we have borne long, and now, for resistance, to
+red butchery we are given over. The sport of lawless soldiers, and
+savages more cruel than the fiends in hell, are we, and the gentle
+beings of our homes;--but, 'tis the Royal power. Lay down your arms.
+
+_Soldiers_. (_Shouting_.) _No_.
+
+_Arnold_. Nay, nay,--in its caprice some will be safe,--it may not light
+on you. See, here's the proclamation. (_Throwing it among them_.) Pardon
+for rebles.
+
+_Soldiers_. No--no. (_Shouting_.) Away with pardon!--(_Tearing the
+proclamation_.) To the death! Freedom for ever!
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Bride of Fort Edward, by Delia Bacon
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Bride of Fort Edward, by Delia Bacon
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+Title: The Bride of Fort Edward
+
+Author: Delia Bacon
+
+Release Date: January, 2005 [EBook #7235]
+[Yes, we are more than one year ahead of schedule]
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+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE BRIDE OF FORT EDWARD ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by David Garcia, Eric Eldred, Charles Franks, and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team
+</pre>
+
+
+&nbsp;<br>
+&nbsp;<br>
+&nbsp;<br>
+&nbsp;<br>
+&nbsp;<br>
+
+<h1>THE BRIDE OF FORT EDWARD.</h1>
+
+<p align="center">
+FOUNDED ON
+<br>
+AN INCIDENT OF THE REVOLUTION
+</p>
+
+<p align="center">
+BY
+<br>
+DELIA BACON
+</p>
+
+&nbsp;<br>
+&nbsp;<br>
+&nbsp;<br>
+&nbsp;<br>
+&nbsp;<br>
+<!--Published 1839-->
+
+<!--NewPage-->
+
+<h2>PREFACE.</h2>
+
+<p>
+I am extremely anxious to guard against any misconception
+of the <i>design</i> of this little work. I therefore
+take the liberty of apprising the reader beforehand,
+that it is <i>not</i> a <i>Play</i>. It was not intended for the
+stage, and properly is not capable of representation.
+I have chosen the form of the DIALOGUE as best
+suited to my purpose in presenting anew the passions
+and events of a day long buried in the past, but
+it is the dialogue in scenes arranged simply with
+reference to the impressions of the <i>Reader</i>, and
+wholly unadapted to the requirements of the actual
+stage. The plan here chosen, involves throughout
+the repose, the thought, and sentiment of Actual life,
+instead of the hurried action, the crowded plot, the
+theatrical elevation which the Stage necessarily demands
+of the pure Drama. I have only to ask that
+I may not be condemned for failing to fulfil the conditions
+of a species of writing which I have not attempted.
+</p>
+<p>
+The story involved in these Dialogues is essentially
+connected with a well-known crisis in our National
+History; nay, it is itself a portion of the historic record,
+and as such, even with many of its most trifling
+minutiae, is imbedded in our earliest recollections;
+but it is rather in its relation to the <i>abstract truth</i> it
+embodies,&mdash;as exhibiting a law in the relation of the
+human mind to its Invisible protector&mdash;the apparent
+sacrifice of the <i>individual</i> in the grand movements for
+the <i>race</i>,&mdash;it is in this light, rather than as an historical
+exhibition, that I venture to claim for it, as here
+presented, the indulgent attention of my readers.
+</p>
+
+<p align="right">THE AUTHOR.</p>
+<p><i>New-York, July 7th</i>, 1839.</p>
+
+<!--NewPage-->
+
+&nbsp;<br>
+&nbsp;<br>
+
+<h2>THE BRIDE OF FORT EDWARD,
+<br>
+A DRAMATIC STORY.
+</h2>
+
+<center><b>
+SCENE. <i>Fort Edward and its vicinity, on the Hudson, near Lake George</i>.
+</b></center>
+&nbsp;<br>
+<center>
+PERSONS INTRODUCED.
+</center>
+
+<p>
+<i>British and American officers and soldiers</i>.
+</p>
+<p>
+<i>Indians employed in the British service</i>.
+</p>
+<p>
+ELLISTON&mdash;<i>A religious missionary residing in the adjacent woods</i>.
+</p>
+<p>
+GEORGE GREY&mdash;<i>A young American</i>.
+</p>
+<p>
+LADY ACKLAND&mdash;<i>Wife of an English Officer</i>.
+</p>
+<p>
+MARGARET&mdash;<i>Her maid</i>.
+</p>
+<p>
+MRS. GREY&mdash;<i>The widow of a Clergyman residing near Fort Edward</i>.
+</p>
+<p>
+HELEN, <i>and</i> ANNIE,&mdash;<i>Her daughters</i>.
+</p>
+<p>
+JANETTE&mdash;<i>A Canadian servant</i>.
+</p>
+<p>
+<i>Children, &amp;c</i>.
+</p>
+<center>
+<i>Time included&mdash;from the afternoon of one day to the close of the
+following</i>.
+</center>
+
+<!--NewPage-->
+
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+
+<p>
+<a href="#part1">
+PART I. THE CRISIS AND ITS VICTIM
+</a>
+</p>
+<p>
+<a href="#part2">
+PART II. LOVE
+</a>
+</p>
+<p>
+<a href="#part3">
+PART III. FATE
+</a>
+</p>
+<p>
+<a href="#part4">
+PART IV. FULFILMENT
+</a>
+</p>
+<p>
+<a href="#part5">
+PART V. FULFILMENT
+</a>
+</p>
+<p>
+<a href="#part6">
+PART VI. RECONCILIATION
+</a>
+</p>
+
+&nbsp;<br>
+&nbsp;<br>
+&nbsp;<br>
+&nbsp;<br>
+&nbsp;<br>
+
+<!--NewPage-->
+<h1>
+THE BRIDE OF FORT EDWARD.
+</h1>
+
+<hr width="33%">
+
+<a name="part1"><!--MARKER--></a>
+<h2>PART FIRST.</h2>
+
+<hr width="33%">
+
+<center>
+INDUCTION.
+</center>
+
+<h3>DIALOGUE I.</h3>
+
+<h4>SCENE. <i>The road-side on the slope of a wooded hill near Fort Edward. The speakers, two young soldiers,&mdash;Students in arms</i>.</h4>
+
+<p>
+<i>1st Student</i>. These were the evenings last year, when the bell<br>
+From the old college tower, would find us still<br>
+Under the shady elms, with sauntering step<br>
+And book in hand, or on the dark grass stretched,<br>
+Or lounging on the fence, with skyward gaze<br>
+Amid the sunset warble. Ah! that world,&mdash;<br>
+That world we lived in then&mdash;where is it now?<br>
+Like earth to the departed dead, methinks.<br>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>2nd Stud</i>. Yet oftenest, of that homeward path I think,<br>
+Amid the deepening twilight slowly trod,<br>
+And I can hear the click of that old gate,<br>
+As once again, amid the chirping yard,<br>
+I see the summer rooms, open and dark,<br>
+And on the shady step the sister stands,<br>
+Her merry welcome, in a mock reproach,<br>
+Of Love's long childhood breathing. Oh this year,<br>
+This year of blood hath made me old, and yet,<br>
+Spite of my manhood now, with all my heart,<br>
+I could lie down upon this grass and weep<br>
+For those old blessed times, the times of peace again.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>1st Stud</i>. There will be weeping, Frank, from older eyes,<br>
+Or e'er again that blessed time shall come.<br>
+Hearts strong and glad now, must be broke ere then:<br>
+Wild tragedies, that for the days to come<br>
+Shall faery pastime make, must yet ere then<br>
+Be acted here; ay, with the genuine clasp<br>
+Of anguish, and fierce stabs, not buried in silk robes,<br>
+But in hot hearts, and sighs from wrung souls' depths.<br>
+And they shall walk in light that we have made,<br>
+They of the days to come, and sit in shadow<br>
+Of our blood-reared vines, not counting the wild cost.<br>
+Thus 'tis: among glad ages many,&mdash;one&mdash;<br>
+In garlands lies, bleeding and bound. Times past,<br>
+And times to come, on ours, as on an altar&mdash;<br>
+Have laid down their griefs, and unto us<br>
+Is given the burthen of them all.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>2nd Stud</i>.
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+ And yet,<br>
+See now, how pleasantly the sun shines there<br>
+Over the yellow fields, to the brown fence<br>
+Its hour of golden beauty&mdash;giving still.<br>
+And but for that faint ringing from the fort,<br>
+That comes just now across the vale to us,<br>
+And this small band of soldiers planted here,<br>
+I could think this was peace, so calmly there,<br>
+The afternoon amid the valley sleeps.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>1st Stud</i>. Yet in the bosom of this gentle time,<br>
+The crisis of an age-long struggle heaves.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>2nd Stud</i>. <i>Age-long?</i>&mdash;Why, this land's history can scarce<br>
+Be told in ages, yet.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>1st Stud</i>.
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+ But this war's can.<br>
+In that small isle beyond the sea, Francis,<br>
+Ages, ages ago, its light first blazed.<br>
+This is the war. Old, foolish, blind prerogative,<br>
+In ermines wrapped, and sitting on king's thrones;<br>
+Against young reason, in a peasant's robe<br>
+His king's brow hiding. For the infant race<br>
+Weaves for itself the chains its manhood scorns,<br>
+(When time hath made them adamant, alas!&mdash;)<br>
+The reverence of humanity, that gold<br>
+Which makes power's glittering round, ordained of God<br>
+But for the lovely majesty of right,<br>
+Unto a mad usurper, yielding, all,<br>
+Making the low and lawless will of man<br>
+Vicegerent of that law and will divine,<br>
+Whose image only, reason hath, on earth.<br>
+This is the struggle:&mdash;<i>here</i>, we'll fight it out.<br>
+'Twas all too narrow and too courtly <i>there</i>;<br>
+In sight of that old pageantry of power<br>
+We were, in truth, the children of the past,<br>
+Scarce knowing our own time: but here, we stand<br>
+In nature's palaces, and we are <i>men</i>;&mdash;<br>
+Here, grandeur hath no younger dome than this;<br>
+And now, the strength which brought us o'er the deep,<br>
+Hath grown to manhood with its nurture here,&mdash;<br>
+Now that they heap on us abuses, that<br>
+Had crimsoned the first William's cheek, to name,&mdash;<br>
+We're ready now&mdash;for our last grapple with blind power.
+</p>
+<p align="right">
+[<i>Exeunt</i>.
+</p>
+
+<hr width="33%">
+
+<!--NewPage-->
+
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+
+<h3>DIALOGUE II.</h3>
+
+<h4>SCENE. <i>The same. A group of ragged soldiers in conference</i>.</h4>
+
+<p>
+<i>1st Soldier</i>. I am flesh and blood myself, as well as
+the rest of you, but there is no use in talking. What
+the devil would you do?&mdash;You may talk till dooms-day,
+but what's to hinder us from serving our time out?&mdash;
+and that's three months yet. Ay, there's the point.
+Show me that.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>2nd Sol</i>. Three months! Ha, thank Heaven mine is
+up to-morrow; and, I'll tell you what, boys, before the
+sun goes down to-morrow night, you will see one Jack
+Richards trudging home,&mdash;trudging home, Sirs! None of
+your bamboozling, your logic, and your figures. A good
+piece of bread and butter is the figure for me. But you
+should hear the Colonel, though, as the time draws
+nigh. Lord! you'd think I was the General at least.
+Humph, says I.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>3d Sol</i>. Ay, ay,&mdash;feed you on sugar-candy till they get
+you to sign, and then comes the old shoes and moccasins.&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>2nd Sol</i>. And that's true enough, Ned. I've eaten myself,
+no less than two very decent pair in the service. I'll
+have it out of Congress yet though, I'll be hanged if I
+don't. None of your figures for me! I say, boys, I am
+going home.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>1st Sol</i>. Well, go home, and&mdash;can't any body else
+breathe? Why don't you answer me, John?&mdash;What
+would you have us do?&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>4th Sol</i>. Ask Will Wilson there.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>1st Sol</i>. Will?&mdash;Where is he?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>4th Sol</i>. There he stands, alongside of the picket there,
+his hands in his pockets, whistling, and looking as wise
+as the dragon. Mind you, there's always something
+pinching at the bottom of that same whistle, though its
+such a don't-care sort of a whistle too. Ask Will, he'll
+tell you.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>3d Sol</i>. Ay, Will has been to the new quarters to-day.
+See, he's coming this way.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>5th Sol</i>. And he saw Striker there, fresh from the Jerseys,
+come up along with that new General there, yesterday.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>3d Sol</i>. General Arnold?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>5th Sol</i>. Ay, ay, General Arnold it is.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>6th Sol</i>. [<i>Advancing</i>.] I say, boys&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>4th Sol</i>. What's the matter, Will?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>6th Sol</i>. Do you want to know what they say below?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>All</i>. Ay, ay, what's the news?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>6th Sol</i>. All up there, Sirs. A gone horse!&mdash;and he
+that turns his coat first, is the best fellow.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>4th Sol</i>. No?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>6th Sol</i>. And shall I tell you what else they say?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>4th Sol</i>. Ay.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>6th Sol</i>. Shall I?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>All</i>. Ay, ay. What is it?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>6th Sol</i>. That we are a cowardly, sneaking, good-for-nothing
+pack of poltroons, here in the north. There's
+for you! There's what you get for your pains, Sirs.
+And for the rest, General Schuyler is to be disgraced, and
+old Gates is to be set over us again, and&mdash;no matter for
+the rest. See here, boys. Any body coming? See here.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>3d Sol</i>. What has he got there?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>2nd Sol</i>. The Proclamation! The Proclamation!
+Will you be good enough to let me see if there is
+not a picture there somewhere, with an Indian and a
+tomahawk?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>6th Sol</i>. Now, Sirs, he that wants a new coat, and a
+pocket full of money&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>3d Sol</i>. That's me fast enough.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>2nd Sol</i>. If he had mentioned a shirt-sleeve now, or a
+rim to an old hat&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>4th Sol</i>. Or a bit of a crown, or so.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>6th Sol</i>. He that wants a new coat&mdash;get off from my
+toes, you scoundrel.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>All</i>. Let's see. Let's see. Read&mdash;read.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>7th Sol</i>. (<i>Spouting</i>.) "And he that don't want his
+house burned over his head, and his wife and children,
+or his mother and sisters, as the case may be, butchered
+or eaten alive before his eyes&mdash;"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>3d Sol</i>. Heavens and earth! It 'ant so though, Wilson, is it?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>7th Sol</i>. "Is required to present himself at the said village
+of Skeensborough, on or before the 20th day of August
+next. Boo&mdash;boo&mdash;boo&mdash;Who but I. Given under my
+hand."&mdash;If it is not <i>it</i>&mdash;it is something very like it, I can
+tell you, Sirs. I say, boys, the old rogue wants his neck
+wrung for insulting honest soldiers in that fashion; and
+I say that you&mdash;for shame, Will Willson.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>4th Sol</i>. Hush!&mdash;the Colonel!&mdash;Hush!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>2nd Sol</i>. And who is that proud-looking fellow, by his side?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>4th Sol</i>. Hush! General Arnold. He's a sharp one&mdash;roll
+it up&mdash;roll it up.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>6th Sol</i>. Get out,&mdash;you are rumpling it to death.
+</p>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>Two American officers are seen close at hand, in a bend of the ascending road; the soldiers enter the woods</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<hr width="33%">
+
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+
+<!--NewPage-->
+
+<h3>DIALOGUE III.</h3>
+
+<h4>SCENE. <i>The same</i>.</h4>
+
+<p>
+<i>1st Officer</i>. I cannot conceal it from you, Sir; there is
+but one feeling about it, as far as I can judge, and I had
+some chances in my brief journey&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>2nd Off</i>. Were you at head-quarters?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>1st Off</i>. Yes,&mdash;and every step of this retreating army
+only makes it more desperate. I never knew any thing
+like the mad, unreasonable terror this army inspires.
+Burgoyne and his Indians!&mdash;"<i>Burgoyne and the Indians</i>"&mdash;there
+is not a girl on the banks of the Connecticut
+that does not expect to see them by her father's
+door ere day-break. Colonel Leslie, what were those
+men concealing so carefully as we approached just now?&mdash;Did
+you mark them?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>2nd Off</i>. Yes. If I am not mistaken, it was the
+paper we were speaking of.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>1st Off</i>. Ay, ay,&mdash;I thought as much.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>2nd Off</i>. General Arnold, I am surprised you should
+do these honest men the injustice to suppose that such
+an impudent, flimsy, bombastic tirade as that same proclamation
+of Burgoyne's, should have a feather's weight
+with any mother's son of them.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Arnold</i>. A feather's, ay a feather's, just so; but when
+the scales are turning, a feather counts too, and that is
+the predicament just now of more minds than you think
+for, Colonel Leslie. A pretty dark horizon around us just
+now, Sir,&mdash;another regiment goes off to-morrow, I hear.
+Hey?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Leslie</i>. Why, no. At least we hope not. We think
+we shall be able to keep them yet, unless&mdash;that paper
+might work some mischief with them perhaps, and it
+would be rather a fatal affair too, I mean in the way of
+example.&mdash;These Green Mountain Boys&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Arnold</i>. Colonel Leslie, Colonel Leslie, this army is
+melting away like a snow-wreath. There's no denying
+it. Your General misses it. The news of one brave
+battle would send the good blood to the fingers' ends
+from ten thousand chilled hearts; no matter how fearful
+the odds; the better, the better,&mdash;no matter how large
+the loss;&mdash;for every slain soldier, a hundred better would
+stand on the field;&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Leslie</i>. But then&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Arnold</i>. By all that's holy, Sir, if I were head here,
+the red blood should smoke on this grass ere to-morrow's
+sunset. I would have battle here, though none but the
+birds of the air were left to carry the tale to the nation.
+I tell you, Colonel Leslie, a war, whose resources are
+only in the popular feeling, as now, and for months to
+come, this war's must be; a war, at least, which depends
+wholly upon the <i>unselfishness</i> of a people, as this war
+does, can be kept alive by excitement only. It was
+wonderful enough indeed, to behold a whole people, the
+low and comfort-loving too, in whose narrow lives that
+little world which the sense builds round us, takes such
+space, forsaking the tangible good of their merry firesides,
+for rags and wretchedness,&mdash;poverty that the thought of
+the citizen beggar cannot reach,&mdash;the supperless night
+on the frozen field; with the news perchance of a home
+in ashes, or a murdered household, and, last of all, on some
+dismal day, the edge of the sword or the sharp bullet
+ending all;&mdash;and all in defence of&mdash;what?&mdash;an idea&mdash;an
+abstraction,&mdash;a thought:&mdash;I say this was wonderful
+enough, even in the glow of the first excitement. But
+now that the Jersey winter is fresh in men's memories,
+and Lexington and Bunker Hill are forgotten, and all
+have found leisure and learning to count the cost; it
+were expecting miracles indeed, to believe that this army
+could hold together with a policy like this. Every step
+of this retreat, I say again, treads out some lingering
+spark of enthusiasm. Own it yourself. Is not this
+army dropping off by hundreds, and desertion too,
+increasing every hour, thinning your own ranks and
+swelling your foes?&mdash;and that, too, at a crisis&mdash;Colonel
+Leslie, retreat a little further, some fifty miles further;
+let Burgoyne once set foot in Albany, and the business
+is done,&mdash;we may roll up our pretty declaration as fast
+as we please, and go home in peace.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Leslie</i>. General Arnold, I have heard you to the
+end, though you have spoken insultingly of councils in
+which I have had my share. Will you look at this little
+clause in this paper, Sir. The excitement you speak of
+will come ere long, and that at a rate less ruinous than
+this whole army's loss. There's a line&mdash;there's a line,
+Sir, that will make null and void, very soon, if not on
+the instant, all the evil of these golden promises.
+There'll be excitement enough ere long; but better blood
+than that shed in battle fields must flow to waken it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Arnold</i>. I hardly understand you, Sir. Is it this threat you point at?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Leslie</i>. Can't you see?&mdash;They have let loose these
+hell-hounds upon us, and butchery must be sent into our
+soft and innocent homes;&mdash;beings that we have sheltered
+from the air of heaven, brows that have grown pale at
+the breath of an ungentle word, must meet the red knife
+of the Indian now. Oh God, this is war!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Arnold</i>. I understand you, Colonel Leslie. There
+was a crisis like this in New Jersey last winter, I know,
+when our people were flocking to the royal standard, as
+they are now, and a few fiendish outrages on the part of
+the foe changed the whole current in our favor. It may
+be so now, but meanwhile&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Leslie</i>. Meanwhile, this army is the hope of the
+nation, and must be preserved. We are wronged, Sir.
+Have we not done all that men could do? What were
+twenty pitched battles to such an enemy, with a force
+like ours, compared with the harm we have done them?
+Have we not kept them loitering here among these hills,
+wasting the strength that was meant to tell in the quivering
+fibres of men, on senseless trees and stones,
+paralyzing them with famine, wearying them with unexciting,
+inglorious toil, until, divided and dispirited, at
+last we can measure our power with theirs, and fight,
+not in vain? Why, even now the division is planning
+there, which will bring them to our feet. And what to
+us, Sir, were the hazards of one bloody encounter, to
+the pitiful details of this unhonored warfare?&mdash;We are
+wronged&mdash;we are wronged, Sir.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Arnold</i>. There is some policy in the plan you speak
+of,&mdash;certainly, there is excellent policy in it if one had
+the patience to follow it out; but then you can't make
+Congress see it, or the people either; and so, after all,
+your General is superseded. Well, well, at all events he
+must abandon this policy now,&mdash;it's the only chance left
+for him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Leslie</i>. Why; howso?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Arnold</i>. Or else, don't you see?&mdash;just at the point
+where the glory appears, this eastern hero steps in,
+and receives it all; and the laurels which he has been
+rearing so long, blow just in time to drop on the brow of
+his rival.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Leslie</i>. General Arnold,&mdash;excuse me, Sir&mdash;you do
+not understand the man of whom you speak. There
+is a substance in the glory he aims at, to which,
+all that you call by the name is as the mere shell
+and outermost rind. Good Heavens! Do you think
+that, for the sake of his own individual fame, the
+man would risk the fate of this great enterprize?&mdash;What
+a mere fool's bauble, what an empty shell of honor,
+would that be. If I thought he would&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Arnold</i>. It might be well for you to lower your voice
+a little, Sir; the gentleman of whom you are speaking is
+just at hand.
+
+<p align="center">
+[<i>Other officers are seen emerging from the woods</i>.]
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>3d Off</i>. Yes, if this rumor holds, Lieutenant Van
+Vechten, your post is likely to become one of more honor
+than safety. Gentlemen&mdash;Ha!&mdash;General Arnold! You
+are heartily welcome;&mdash;I have been seeking you, Sir.
+If this news is any thing, the movement that was planned
+for Wednesday, we must anticipate somewhat.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Leslie</i>. News from the enemy, General?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Gen. Schuyler</i>. Stay&mdash;those scouts must be coming
+in, Van Vechten. Why, we can scarce call it news yet, I
+suppose; but if this countryman's tale is true, Burgoyne
+himself, with his main corps, is encamping at this moment
+at the Mills, scarce three miles above us.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Arnold</i>. Ay, and good news too.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Leslie</i>. But that cannot be, Sir&mdash;Alaska&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Gen. Schuyler</i>. Alaska has broken faith with us if it is,
+and the army have avoided the delay we had planned
+for them.&mdash;That may be.&mdash;This man overheard their
+scouts in the woods just below us here.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Arnold</i>. And if it is,&mdash;do you talk of retreat, General
+Schuyler? In your power now it lies, with one hour's
+work perchance, to make those lying enemies of yours
+in Congress eat the dust, to clear for ever your blackened
+fame. Why, Heaven itself is interfering to do you right,
+and throwing honor in your way as it were! Do you talk
+of retreat, Sir, now?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Gen. Schuyler</i>. Heaven has other work on hand just
+now, than righting the wrongs of such heroes as you and I,
+Sir. Colonel Arnold&mdash;I beg your pardon, Sir, Congress
+has done you justice at last I see,&mdash;General Arnold, you
+are right as to the consequence, yet, for all that, if this
+news is true, I must order the retreat. My reputation
+I'll trust in God's hands. My honor is in my own keeping.
+</p>
+
+<p align="right">
+[<i>Exeunt Schuyler, Leslie, and Van Vechten</i>.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Arnold</i>. There's a smoke from that chimney; are those houses inhabited, my boy?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Boy</i>. Part of them, Sir. Some of our people went oft
+to-day. That white house by the orchard&mdash;the old parsonage
+there? Ay, there are ladies there Sir, but I heard
+Colonel Leslie saying this morning 'twas a sin and a
+shame for them to stay another hour.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Arnold</i>. Ay, Ay. I fancied the Colonel was not dealing
+in abstractions just now.
+</p>
+
+<p align="right">
+[<i>Exeunt</i>.
+</p>
+
+<hr width="33%">
+
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+
+<!--NewPage-->
+
+<h3>DIALOGUE IV.</h3>
+
+<h4>SCENE. <i>A room in the Parsonage,&mdash;an old-fashioned summer parlor.&mdash;-On the side a door and windows opening into an orchard, in front, a yard filled with shade trees. The view beyond bounded by a hill partly wooded. A young girl, in the picturesque costume of the time, lies sleeping on the antique sofa. Annie sits by a table, covered with coarse needlework, humming snatches of songs as she works</i>.</h4>
+
+<p>
+<i>Annie</i>, (<i>singing</i>.)<br>
+
+&nbsp;&nbsp; <i>Soft peace spreads her wings and flies weeping away.
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Soft peace spreads her wings and flies weeping away.
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And flies weeping away.
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; The red cloud of war o'er our forest is scowling,
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Soft peace spreads her wings and flies weeping away.
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Come blow the shrill bugle, the war dogs are howling,
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Already they eagerly snuff out their prey&mdash;
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; The red cloud of war&mdash;the red cloud of war</i>&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<br>
+Yes, let me see now,&mdash;with a little plotting this might
+make two&mdash;two, at least,&mdash;and then&mdash;
+<br>
+&nbsp;
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <i>The red cloud of war o'er our forest is scowling,
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Soft peace spreads her wings and flies weeping away,
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; The infants affrighted cling close to their mothers,
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; The youths grasp their swords, and for combat prepare;
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; While beauty weeps fathers, and lovers, and brothers,
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Who are gone to defend</i>&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&mdash;Alas! what a golden, delicious afternoon is blowing
+without there, wasting for ever; and never a glimpse of
+it. Delicate work this! Here's a needle might serve for
+a genuine stiletto! No matter,&mdash;it is the cause,&mdash;it is
+the cause that makes, as my mother says, each stitch in
+this clumsy fabric a grander thing than the flashing of
+the bravest lance that brave knight ever won.
+<br>
+&nbsp;
+<br>
+(<i>Singing</i>)
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; <i>The brooks are talking in the dell,
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Tul la lul, tul la lul,
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; The brooks are talking low, and sweet,
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Under the boughs where th' arches meet;
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Come to the dell, come to the dell,
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Oh come, come</i>.
+<br>
+&nbsp;
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; <i>The birds are singing in the dell,
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Wee wee whoo, wee wee whoo;
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; The birds are singing wild and free,
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; In every bough of the forest tree,
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Come to the dell, come to the dell,
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Oh come, come</i>.
+<br>
+&nbsp;
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; <i>And there the idle breezes lie,
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Whispering, whispering,
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Whispering with the laughing leaves.
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And nothing says each idle breeze,
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; But come, come, come, O lady come,
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Come to th' dell</i>.
+<br>
+</p>
+
+<p align="center">
+[<i>Mrs. Grey enters from without</i>.]
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mrs. G</i>. Do not sing, Annie.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Annie</i>. Crying would better befit the times, I know,&mdash;Dear mother, what is this?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mrs. G</i>. Hush,&mdash;asleep&mdash;is she?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Annie</i>. This hour, and quiet as an infant. Need
+enough there was of it too. See, what a perfect damask
+mother!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mrs. G</i>. Draw the curtain on that sunshine there.
+This sleep has flushed her. Ay, a painter might have
+dropped that golden hair,&mdash;yet this delicate beauty is but
+the martyr's wreath now, with its fine nerve and
+shrinking helplessness. No, Annie; put away your hat,
+my love,&mdash;you cannot go to the lodge to-night.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Annie</i>. Mother?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mrs. G</i>. You cannot go to the glen to-night. This is
+no time for idle pleasure, God knows.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Annie</i>. Why, you have been weeping in earnest, and
+your cheek is pale.&mdash;And now I know where that sad
+appointment led you. Is it over? That it should be in
+our humanity to bear, what in our ease we cannot, <i>cannot</i>
+think of!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mrs. G</i>. Harder things for humanity are there than
+bodily anguish, sharp though it be. It was not the boy,&mdash;the
+mother's anguish, I wept for, Annie.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Annie</i>. Poor Endross! And he will go, to his dying
+day, a crippled thing. But yesterday I saw him springing
+by so proudly! And the mother&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mrs. G</i>. "<i>Words, words</i>," she answered sternly
+when I tried to comfort her; "ay, words are easy.
+<i>Wait till you see your own child's blood</i>. Wait till you
+stand by and see his young limbs hewn away, and the
+groans come thicker and thicker that you cannot soothe;
+and then let them prate to you of the good cause."
+Bitter words! God knows what is in store for us;&mdash;all
+day this strange dread has clung to me.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Annie</i>. Dear mother, is not this the superstition you
+were wont to chide?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mrs. G</i>. Ay, ay, we should have been in Albany ere
+this. In these wild times, Annie, every chance-blown
+straw that points at evil, is likely to prove a faithful index;
+and if it serve to nerve the heart for it, we may call
+it heaven-sent indeed. Annie,&mdash;hear me calmly, my
+child,&mdash;the enemy, so at least goes the rumor, are nearer
+than we counted on this morning, and&mdash;hush, not a word.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Annie</i>. She is but dreaming. Just so she murmured
+in her sleep last night; twice she waked me with the
+saddest cry, and after that she sat all night by the window
+in her dressing-gown, I could not persuade her to
+sleep again. Tell me, mother, you say <i>and</i>&mdash;and what?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mrs. G</i>. I cannot think it true, 'tis rumored though,
+that these savage neighbors of ours have joined the enemy.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Annie</i>. No! no! Has Alaska turned against us?
+Why, it was but yesterday I saw him with Leslie in
+yonder field. 'Tis false; it must be. Surely he could
+not harm us.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mrs. G</i>. And false, I trust it is. At least till it is
+proved otherwise, Helen must not hear of it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Annie</i>. And why?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mrs. Grey</i>. She needs no caution, and it were useless
+to add to the idle fear with which she regards them all,
+already. Some dark fancy possesses her to-day; I have
+marked it myself.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Annie</i>. It is just two years to-morrow, mother, since
+Helen's wedding day, or rather, that sad day that should
+have seen her bridal; and it cannot be that she has quite
+forgotten Everard Maitland. Alas, he seemed so noble!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mrs. G</i>. Hush! Never name him. Your sister is
+too high-hearted to waste a thought on him. Tory!
+Helen is no love-lorn damsel, child, to pine for an unworthy
+love. See the rose on that round cheek,&mdash;it
+might teach that same haughty loyalist, could he see her
+now, what kind of hearts 'tis that we patriots wear,
+whose strength they think to trample. Where are you
+going, Annie?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Annie</i>. Not beyond the orchard-wall. I will only
+stroll down the path here, just to breathe this lovely air
+a little; indeed, there's no fear of my going further now.
+
+<p align="right">
+[<i>Exit</i>.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mrs. G</i>. Did I say right, Helen? It cannot be feigned.
+Those quick smiles, with their thousand lovely
+meanings; those eyes, whose beams lead straight to the
+smiling soul. Principle is it? There is no principle in
+this, but joy, or else it strikes so deep, that the joy grows
+up from it, genuine, not feigned; and yet I have found
+her weeping once or twice of late, in unexplained agony.
+Helen!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. Oh mother! is it you? Thank God. I thought&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mrs. G</i>. What did you think? What moves you thus?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. I thought&mdash;'tis nothing. This <i>is</i> very strange.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mrs. G</i>. Why do you look through that window thus?
+There's no one there! What is it that's so strange?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. Is it to-morrow that we go?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mrs. G</i>. To Albany? Why, no; on Thursday. You
+are bewildered, Helen! surely you could not have forgotten that.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. I wish it was to-day. I do.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mrs. G</i>. My child, yesterday, when the question was
+debated here, and wishing might have been of some
+avail, 'tis true you did not say much, but I thought, and
+so we all did, that you chose to stay.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. Did you? Mother, does the road to Albany
+wind over a hill like that?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mrs. G</i>. Like what, Helen?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. Like yonder wooded hill, where the soldiers
+are stationed now?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mrs. G</i>. Not that I know of? Why?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. Perhaps we may cross that very hill,&mdash;no&mdash;could we?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mrs. G</i>. Not unless we should turn refugees, my
+love; an event of which there is little danger just now, I
+think. That road, as indeed you know yourself, leads
+out directly to the British camp.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. Yes&mdash;yes&mdash;it does. I know it does. I will
+not yield to it. 'Tis folly, all.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mrs. G</i>. You talk as though you were dreaming still;
+my child. Put on your hat, and go into the garden for
+a little, the air is fresh and pleasant now; or take a ramble
+through the orchard if you will, you might meet Annie
+there,&mdash;no, yon she comes, and well too. It's quite
+time that I were gone again. I wish that we had nothing
+worse than dreams on hand. Helen, I must talk with
+you about these fancies; you must not thus unnerve
+yourself for real evil.
+</p>
+
+<p align="right">
+[<i>Exit</i>.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. It were impossible,&mdash;it could not be!&mdash;how
+could it be?&mdash;Oh! these are wild times. Unseen powers
+are crossing their meshes here around us,&mdash;and, what
+am I&mdash;Powers?&mdash;there's but one Power, and that&mdash;
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; &mdash;"He careth for the little bird,
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Far in the lone wood's depths, and though dark weapons
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And keen eyes are out, it falleth not
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; But at his will."
+</p>
+
+<p align="right">
+[<i>Exit</i>.
+
+</p>
+
+&nbsp;<br>
+&nbsp;<br>
+&nbsp;<br>
+&nbsp;<br>
+&nbsp;<br>
+&nbsp;<br>
+
+<!--NewPage-->
+
+<a name="part2"><!--MARKER--></a>
+<h2>PART SECOND</h2>
+
+<hr width="33%">
+
+<center>
+LOVE
+</center>
+
+<hr width="33%">
+
+<h3>DIALOGUE I.</h3>
+
+<h4>SCENE. <i>A little glen in the woods near Fort Edward. A young British Officer appears, attended by a soldier in the American uniform; the latter with a small sealed pacquet in his hand</i>.</h4>
+
+<p>
+<i>Off</i>. Hist!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Sol</i>. Well, so I did; but&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Off</i>. Hist, I say!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Sol</i>. A squirrel it is, Sir; there he sits.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Off</i>. By keeping this path you avoid the picket on
+the hill. It will bring you out where these woods skirt
+the vale, and scarcely a hundred rods from the house itself.
+
+<p align="center">
+[<i>Calling without</i>.]
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Sol</i>. Captain Andre&mdash;Sir.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Off</i>. It were well that the pacquet should fall into no
+other hands. With a little caution there is no danger.
+It will be twilight ere you get out of these woods&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Sol</i>. I beg your pardon, Sir; but here is that young
+Indian guide of mine, after all, above there, beckoning me.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Off</i>. Stay&mdash;you will come back to the camp ere midnight?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Sol</i>. Unless some of these quick-eyed rebels see through my disguise.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Off</i>. Do not forget the lodge as you return. A little
+hut of logs just in the edge of the woods, but Siganaw
+knows it well.
+</p>
+
+<p align="right">
+[<i>Exit the Soldier</i>.
+</p>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>The call in the thicket above is repeated, and another young officer enters the glen</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>2nd Off</i>. Hillo, Maitland! These woods yield fairies,&mdash;come this way.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>1st Off</i>. For God's sake, Andre! (<i>motioning silence</i>.) Are you mad?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Andre</i>. Well, who are they?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mait</i>. <i>Who</i>? Have you forgotten that we are on the
+enemy's ground? Soldiers from the fort, no doubt.
+They have crossed that opening twice since we stood here.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Andre</i>. Well, let them cross twice more. I would run
+the risk of a year's captivity, at least, for one such glimpse.
+Nay, come, she will be gone.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mait</i>. Stay,&mdash;not yet. There, again!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Andre</i>. Such a villainous scratching as I got in that
+pass just now. It must have cost the rogues an infinite
+deal of pains though. A regular, handsome sword-cut
+is nothing to a dozen of these same ragged scratches,
+that a man can't swear about. After all, Captain Maitland,
+these cunning Yankees understand the game.
+They will keep out of our way, slyly enough, until we
+are starved, and scratched, and fretted down to their proportions,
+meanwhile they league the very trees against us.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mait</i>. As to that, we have made some leagues ourselves,
+I think, quite as hard to be defended, Sir.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Andre</i>. It may be so. Should we not be at the river by this?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mait</i>. Sunset was the time appointed. We are as
+safe here, till then.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Andre</i>. 'Tis a little temple of beauty you have lighted
+on, in truth. These pretty singers overhead, seem to
+have no guess at our hostile errand. Methinks their
+peaceful warble makes too soft a welcome for such warlike
+comers. Hark! [<i>Whistling</i>.] That's American.
+One might win bloodless laurels here. Will you stand
+a moment just as you are, Maitland;&mdash;'tis the very thing.
+There's a little space in my unfinished picture, and with
+that <i>a la Kemble</i> mien, you were a fitting mate for this
+young Dian here, (<i>taking a pencil sketch from his
+portfolio</i>,)&mdash;the beauty-breathing, ay, beauty-breathing, it's no
+poetry;&mdash;for the lonesome little glen smiled to its darkest
+nook with her presence.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mait</i>. What are you talking of, Andre? Fairies and
+goddesses!&mdash;What next?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Andre</i>. I am glad you grow a little curious at last.
+Why I say, and your own eyes may make it good if you
+will, that just down in this glen below here, not a hundred
+rods hence, there sits, or stands, or did some fifteen
+minutes since, some creature of these woods, I suppose
+it is; what else could it be? Well, well, I'll call no
+names, since they offend you, Sir; but this I'll say, a young
+cheek and smiling lip it had, whate'er it was, and
+round and snowy arm, and dimpled hand, that lay
+ungloved on her sylvan robe, and eyes&mdash;I tell you plainly,
+they lighted all the glen.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mait</i>. Ha? A lady?&mdash;there? Are you in earnest?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Andre</i>. A lady, well you would call her so perchance.
+Such ladies used to spring from the fairy nut-shells, in the
+old time, when the kings' son lacked a bride; and if this
+were Windsor forest that stretches about us here, I might
+fancy, perchance, some royal one had wandered out, to
+cool the day's glow in her cheek, and nurse her love-dream;
+but here, in this untrodden wilderness, unless
+your ladies here spring up like flowers, or drop down on
+invisible pinions from above, how, in the name of reason,
+came she here?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mait</i>. On the invisible pinions of thine own lady-loving
+fancy; none otherwise, trust me.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Andre</i>. Come, come,&mdash;see for yourself. On my word
+I was a little startled though, as my eye first lighted on
+her, suddenly, in that lonesome spot. There she sat, so
+bright and still, like some creature of the leaves and
+waters, such as the old Greeks fabled, that my first
+thought was to worship her; my next&mdash;of you, but I
+could not leave the spot until I had sketched this; I
+stood unseen, within a yard of her; for I could see her
+soft breath stirring the while. See, the scene itself was
+a picture,&mdash;the dark glen, the lonesome little lodge, on the
+very margin of the fairy lake&mdash;here she sat, motionless
+as marble; this bunch of roses had dropped from her
+listless hand, and you would have thought some tragedy
+of ancient sorrow, were passing before her, in the invisible
+element, with such a fixed and lofty sadness she
+gazed into it. But of course, of course, it is nothing to <i>your</i>
+eye; for me, it will serve to bring the whole out at
+my leisure. Indeed, the air, I think, I have caught a little
+as it is.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mait</i>. A little&mdash;you may say it. She is there, is she?&mdash;sorrowful;
+well, what is't to me?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Andre</i>. What do you say?&mdash;There?&mdash;Yes, I left her
+there at least. Come, come. I'll show you one will
+teach you to unlearn this fixed contempt of gentle woman.
+Come.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mait</i>. Let go, if you please, Sir. She who gave me
+my first lesson in that art, is scarcely the one to bid me
+now unlearn it, and I want no new teaching as yet,
+thank Heaven. Will you come? We have loitered
+here long enough, I think.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Andre</i>. What, under the blue scope&mdash;what the devil
+ails you, Maitland?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mait</i>. Nothing, nothing. This much I'll say to you,
+&mdash;<i>that lady is my wife</i>.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Andre</i>. Nonsense!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mait</i>. There lacked&mdash;three days, I think it was, three
+whole days, to the time when the law would have given
+her that name; but for all that, was she mine, and is;
+Heaven and earth cannot undo it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Andre</i>. Are you in earnest? Why, are we not here
+in the very heart of a most savage wilderness, where
+never foot of man trod before,&mdash;unless you call these
+wild red creatures men?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mait</i>. You talk wildly; that path, followed a few
+rods further, would have brought you out within sight of
+her mother's door.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Andre</i>. Ha! you have been in this wilderness then, ere now?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mait</i>. Have you forgotten the fortune I wasted once
+on a summer's seat, some few miles up, on the lake above?
+These Yankees did me the grace to burn it, just as the
+war broke out.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Andre</i>. Ay, ay, that was <i>here</i>. I had forgotten the
+whereabouts. Those blackened ruins we passed last
+evening, perchance;&mdash;and the lady&mdash;my wood-nymph,
+what of her?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mait</i>. Captain Andre, I beg your pardon, Sir. That
+sketch of yours reminded me, by chance perhaps, of one
+with whom some painful passages of my life are linked;
+and I said, in my haste, what were better left unsaid.
+Do me the favor not to remind me that I have done so.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Andre</i>. So&mdash;so! And I am to know nothing more of
+this smiling apparition; nay, not so much as to speak
+her name? Consider, Maitland, I am your friend it is
+true; but, prithee, consider the human in me. Give her
+a local habitation, or at least a name.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mait</i>. I have told you already that the lady you speak
+of resides not far hence. On the border of these woods
+you may see her home. I may point it out to you securely,
+some few days hence;&mdash;to-night, unless you
+would find yourself in the midst of the American army,
+this must content you.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Andre</i>. A wild risk for a creature like that! Have
+these Americans no safer place to bestow their daughters
+than the fastnesses of this wilderness?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mait</i>. It would seem so. Yet it is her home. Wild
+as it looks here, from the top of that hill, where our men
+came out on the picket just now so suddenly, you will
+see as fair a picture of cultured life as e'er your eyes
+looked on. No English horizon frames a lovelier one.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Andre</i>. <i>Here</i>? No!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mait</i>. Between that hill and the fort, there stretches a
+wide and beautiful plain, covered with orchards and meadows
+to the wood's edge; and here and there a gentle
+swell, crowned with trees, some patch of the old wilderness.
+The infant Hudson winds through it, circling in
+its deepest bend one little fairy isle, with woods enough
+for a single bower, and a beauty that fills and characterizes,
+to its remotest line, the varied landscape it centres;
+and far away in the east, this same azure mountain-chain
+we have traced so long, with its changeful light and
+shade, finishes the scene.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Andre</i>. You should have been a painter, Maitland.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mait</i>. The first time I beheld it&mdash;one summer evening
+it was, from the woods on the hill's brow;&mdash;we were a
+hunting party, I had lost my way, and ere I knew it
+there I stood;&mdash;its waters lay glittering in the sunset
+light, and the window-panes of its quiet dwellings were
+flashing like gold,&mdash;the old brown houses looked out
+through the trees like so many lighted palaces; and even
+the little hut of logs, nestling on the wood's edge, borrowed
+beauty from the hour. I was miles from home;
+but the setting sun could not warn me away from such
+a paradise, for so it seemed, set in that howling wilderness,
+and&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Andre</i>. Prithee, go on. I listen.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mait</i>. I know not how it was, but as I wandered slowly
+down the shady road, for the first time in years of
+worldliness, the dream that had haunted my boyhood revived
+again. Do you know what I mean, Andre?&mdash;that
+dim yearning for lovelier beings and fairer places, whose
+ideals lie in the heaven-fitted mind, but not in the wilderness
+it wakes in; that mystery of our nature, that
+overlooked as it is, and trampled with unmeaning things
+so soon, hides, after all, the whole secret of this life's dark
+enigma.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Andre</i>. But see,&mdash;our time is well-nigh gone,&mdash;this is
+philosophy&mdash;I would have heard a love tale.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mait</i>. It was then, that near me, suddenly I heard the
+voice that made this dull, real world, thenceforth a richer
+place for me than the gorgeous dream-land of childhood
+was of old.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Andre</i>. Ay, ay&mdash;go on.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mait</i>. Andre, did you ever meet an eye, in which the
+intelligence of our nature idealized, as it were, the very
+poetry of human thought seemed to look forth?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Andre</i>. One such.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mait</i>.&mdash;That reflected your whole being; nay, revealed
+from its mysterious depths, new consciousness, that
+yet seemed like a faint memory, the traces of some old
+and pleasant dream?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Andre</i>. Methinks the heavenly revelation itself doth that.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mait</i>. Such an eye I saw then shining on me. A
+clump of stately pines grew on the sloping road-side, and,
+looking into its dark embrasure, I beheld a group of merry
+children around a spring that gurgled out of the hillside
+there, and among them, there sat a young girl clad
+in white, her hat on the bank beside her, tying a wreath
+of wild flowers. That was all&mdash;that was all, Andre.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Andre</i>. Well, she was beautiful, I suppose? Nay, if it
+was the damsel I met just now I need not ask.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mait</i>. Beautiful? Ay, they called her so. <i>Beauty</i>
+I had seen before; but from that hour the sun shone with
+another light, and the very dust and stones of this dull
+earth were precious to me. <i>Beautiful?</i> Nay, it was
+<i>she</i>. I knew her in an instant, the spirit of my being;
+she whose existence made the lovely whole, of which
+mine alone had been the worthless and despised fragment.
+There are a thousand women on the earth the
+artist might call as lovely,&mdash;show me another that I can
+worship.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Andre</i>. Worship! This is Captain Everard Maitland.
+If I should shut my eyes now&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mait</i>. Well, go on; but I tell you, ne'ertheless, there
+have been times, even in this very spot,&mdash;we often wandered
+here when the day was dying as it is now,&mdash;here
+in her soft, breathing loveliness, she has stood beside me,
+when I have,&mdash;<i>worshipped?</i>&mdash;nay, feared her, in her
+holy beauty, as we two should an angel who should
+come through that glade to us now.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Andre</i>. True it is, something of the Divinity there is
+in beauty, that, in its intenser forms, repels with all its
+winningness, until the lowliness of love looks through it.
+Well&mdash;you worshipped her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mait</i>. Nay, you have told the rest. I would have worshipped;
+but one day there came a look from those beautiful
+eyes, when I met them suddenly, with a gaze that
+sought the mystery of their beauty,&mdash;a single look, and
+in an instant the drooping lash had buried it forever;
+but I knew, ere it fell, that the world of her young being
+was all mine already. Another life had been forever
+added unto mine; a whole creation; yet, like Eden's
+fairest, it but made another perfect; a new and purer <i>self</i>;
+and in it grew the heaven, and the fairy-land of
+my old dreams, lovelier than ever. You have loved
+yourself, Andre, else I should weary you.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Andre</i>. Not a bit the more do I understand you
+though. You talk most lover-like; that's very clear, yet I
+must say I never saw the part worse played. Why,
+here's your ladye-love, this self-same idol of whom you
+rave, at this moment perchance, breathing within these
+woods,&mdash;years too&mdash;two mortal years it must be, since
+you have seen her face; and yet&mdash;you stand here yet,
+with folded arms;&mdash;a goodly lover, on my word!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mait</i>. Softly, Sir! you grace me with a title to which
+I can lay no claim. Lover I <i>was</i>, may be. I am no
+lover now, not I&mdash;not I; you are right; I would not walk
+to that knoll's edge to see the lady, Sir.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Andre</i>. Well, I must wait your leisure, I see.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mait</i>. And yet, the last time that we stood together
+here, her arm lay on mine, my promised wife. A few
+days more, and by <i>my</i> name, all that loveliness had gone.
+There needed only that to make that tie holy in all
+eyes, the holiest which the universe held for us; but
+needed there that, or any thing to make it such in ours.
+Why, love lay in her eye, that evening, like religion,
+solemn and calm.&mdash;We should have smiled then at
+the thought of any thing in height or depth, ending, what
+through each instant seemed to breathe eternity from
+its own essence;&mdash;we were one, <i>one,</i>&mdash;that trite word
+makes no meaning in your ear.&mdash;to me, life's roses burst
+from it; music, sunshine, Araby, should image what it
+means; what it meant rather, for it is over.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Andre</i>. What was it, Maitland?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mail</i>. Oh,&mdash;well,&mdash;she did not love me; that was all.
+So far my story has told the seeming only, but ere long
+the trial came, and then I found it <i>was</i> seeming, in good
+sooth. The Rebellion had then long been maturing, as
+you know; but just then came the crisis. It was the
+one theme everywhere. Of course I took my king's
+part against these rebels, and at once I was outraged,
+wronged beyond all human bearing. Her mad brother,
+her's, <i>her's</i> what a world of preciousness, Andre, that little
+word once enshrined for me; and still it seems like
+some broken vase, fragrant with what it held.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Andre</i>. And ever with that name, a rosy flash
+Paints, for an instant, all my world.
+Nay, 'tis a little love-poem of my own; go on, Maitland.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mait</i>. This brother I say, quarrelled with me, though
+I had borne from him unresentingly, what from another
+would have seemed insult. We quarrelled at last, and
+the house was closed against me, or would have been
+had I sought access; for I walked sternly by its pleasant
+door that afternoon, though I remember now how the
+very roses that o'erhung the porch, the benched and
+shaded porch, that lovely lingering place, seemed to
+beckon me in. It was a breathless summer day, and the
+vine curled in the open window,&mdash;even now those lowly
+rooms make a brighter image of heaven to me than the
+jewelled walls that of old grew in the pageant of our
+sabbath dreams.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Andre</i>. And thus you abandoned your love? A quarrel
+with her brother?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mait</i>. I never wronged her with the shadow of a
+doubt. Directly, that same day, I wrote to her to fix
+our meeting elsewhere, that we might renew our broken
+plans in some fitter shape for the altered times.
+She sent me a few lines of grave refusal, Sir; and the
+next letter was returned unopened.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Andre</i>. 'Twas that brother! Pshaw! 'twas that brother,
+Maitland. I'll lay my life the lady saw no word of it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mait</i>. I might have thought so too, perchance; but that
+same day,&mdash;the morning had brought the news from Boston,&mdash;I
+met her by chance, by the spring in the little grove
+where we first met; and&mdash;Good Heavens! she talked of
+brothers! Brothers, mother, sisters!&mdash;What was their
+right to mine? All that the round world holds, or the
+universe, what could it be to her?&mdash;that is, if she had
+loved me ever; which, past all doubt, she never did.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Andre</i>. Maitland! Heavens, how this passion blinds
+you! And you expected a gentle, timid girl like that to
+abandon all she loved. Nay, to make her home in the
+very camp, where death and ruin unto all she loved, was
+the watchword?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mait</i>. I beg your pardon, Sir. I looked for no such
+thing. I offered to renounce my hopes of honor here for
+her; a whole life's plans, for her sake I counted nothing.
+I offered her a home in England too, the very real of her
+girlhood's wish; my blighted fortunes since, or a home
+in yonder camp,&mdash;never, never. But if I had, ay, if I
+had,&mdash;that is not <i>love</i>, call it what you will, it is not love,
+to which such barriers were any thing.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Andre</i>. Oh well, a word's a word. That's as one
+likes. Only with your definition, give me leave to say,
+marvellous little love, Captain Maitland, marvellous little
+you will find in this poor world of ours.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mait</i>. I'll grant ye.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Andre</i>. If there is any thing like it outside of a poet's
+skull, ne'er credit me.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mait</i>. Strange it should take such shape in the creating
+thought and in the yearning heart, when all reality
+hath not its archetype.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Andre</i>. Hist!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mait</i>. A careful step,&mdash;one of our party I fancy.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Andre</i>. 'Tis time we were at the rendezvous. If we
+have to recross the river as we came, on the stumps of
+that old bridge, we had best keep a little day-light with
+us, I think.
+</p>
+
+<p align="right">
+[<i>Exeunt</i>.
+</p>
+
+<hr width="33%">
+
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+
+<!--NewPage-->
+
+<h3>DIALOGUE II.</h3>
+
+<h4>SCENE. <i>A chamber in the Parsonage. Helen leaning from the open window</i>.</h4>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>Annie enters</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Annie</i>. Helen Grey, where on earth have you been? <i>Wood flowers!</i>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. Come and look at this sunset.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Annie</i>. Surely you have not, you cannot have been in
+those woods, Helen: and yet, where else could this periwinkle
+grow, and these wild roses?&mdash;Delicious!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. Hear that flute. It comes from among those
+trees by the river side.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Annie</i>. It is the shower that has freshened every
+thing, and made the birds so musical. You should
+stand in the door below, as I did just now, to see the fort
+and the moistened woods stands out from that black sky,
+with all this brightness blazing on them.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. 'Tis lovely&mdash;all.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Annie</i>. There goes the last golden rim over the blackening
+woods; already even a shade of tender mourning
+steals over all things, the very children's voices under this
+tree,&mdash;how soft they grow.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. Will the day come when we shall see him
+sink, for the last time, behind those hills?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Annie</i>. Nay, Helen, why do you mar this lovely hour
+with a thought like that?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. And in another life, shall we see light, when
+his, for us, shines no more?&mdash;What sound is that?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Annie</i>. That faint cry from the woods?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. No,&mdash;more distant,&mdash;far off as the horizon, like
+some mighty murmur, faintly borne, it came.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Annie</i>. I wish that we had gone to-day. I do not
+like this waiting until Thursday;&mdash;just one of that elder
+brother's foolish whims it was. I cannot think how your
+consent was won to it. Did you meet any one in your
+walk just now?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. No&mdash;Yes, yes, I did. The little people where
+I went, I met by hundreds, Annie. Through the dark
+aisles, and the high arches, all decked in blue, and gold,
+and crimson, they sung me a most merry welcome.
+And such as these&mdash;see&mdash;You cannot think how like
+long-forgotten friends they looked, smiling up from their
+dark homes, upon me.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Annie</i>. You have had chance enough to forget them,
+indeed,&mdash;it is two years, Helen, since you have been in
+those woods before. What could have tempted you there
+to-day?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. Was there <i>danger</i> then?&mdash;was there danger
+indeed?&mdash;I was by the wood-side ere I knew it, and
+then,&mdash;it was but one last look I thought to take&mdash;nay,
+what is it, Annie? George met me as I was coming
+home, and I remember something in his eye startled me
+at first; but if there was danger, I should have known of
+it before.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Annie</i>. How could we dream of your going there
+this evening, when we knew you had never set your
+foot in those woods since the day Everard Maitland left
+Fort Edward?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. Annie!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Annie</i>. For me, I would as soon have looked to see
+Maitland himself coming from those woods, as you.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. Annie! Annie Grey! You must not, my sister&mdash;do
+not speak that name to me, never again, <i>never</i>.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Annie</i>. Why, Helen, I am sorry to have grieved you
+thus; but I thought&mdash;Look! look! There go those officers
+again,&mdash;there, in the lane between the orchards,
+Scarcely half an hour ago they went by to the fort in
+just such haste. There is something going on there, I
+am sure.
+</p>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>Helen rises from the window, and walks the room</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Annie</i>. In truth there was a rumor this afternoon,&mdash;you
+are so timid and fanciful, our mother chose you
+should not hear it while it was rumor only; but 'tis said
+that a party of the enemy have been seen in those woods
+to-day, and, among them, the Indians we have counted
+so friendly. Do you hear me, Helen?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. That he should <i>live</i> still! Yes, it is all real
+still! That heaven of my thought, that grows so like a
+pageant to me, is still <i>real</i> somewhere. Those eyes&mdash;they
+are darkly shining now; this very moment that
+passes <i>me</i>, drinks their beauty;&mdash;that voice,&mdash;that tone,&mdash;that
+very tone&mdash;on some careless ear, even now it wastes
+its luxury of blessing. Continents of hail and darkness,
+the polar seas&mdash;all earth's distance, could never have
+parted me from him; but now I live in the same world
+with him, and the everlasting walls blacken between
+us. Those looks may shine on the dull earth and senseless
+stones, but not on me; on uncaring eyes, but not on
+mine; though for one moment of their lavished wealth,
+I could cheaply give a life without them; never again,
+never, never, never shall their love come to me.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Annie</i>. Who would have thought she could cherish in
+secret a grief like this? Dear sister, we all believed
+you had forgotten that sad affair long ago,&mdash;we thought
+that you were happy now.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. Happy?&mdash;I am, you were right; but I have been
+to-day down to the very glen where we took that last
+lovely walk together, and all the beautiful past came
+back to me like life.&mdash;I <i>am</i> happy; you must count me
+so still.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Annie</i>. With what I have just now heard, how can I?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. It is this war that has parted us; and so, this
+is but my part in these noble and suffering times, and
+that great thought reaches overall my anguish. But for
+this war I might have been&mdash;hath this world such flowers,
+and do they call it a wilderness?&mdash;I might have been,
+even now, you know it, Annie, his wife, his wife, <i>his</i>.
+But our hearts are cunningly made, many-stringed; and
+often much good music is left in them when we count
+them broken. That which makes the bitterness of this
+lot, the inconceivable, unutterable bitterness of it, even
+that I can bear now, calmly, and count it God's kindness
+too.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Annie</i>. I do not understand you, sister.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. What if this young royalist, Annie, when he
+quarrelled with my brother, and took arms against my
+country, what if he had kept faith to <i>me?</i>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Annie</i>. Well.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen. Well?</i> Oh no, it would not have been well.
+Why, my home would have been with that pursuing
+army now, my fate bound up with that hollow cause,&mdash;these
+very hands might have fastened the sword of oppression;
+nay, the sword whose edge was turned against
+you, against you all, and against the cause, that with
+tears, night and morning, you were praying for, and with
+your heart's best blood stood ready to seal every hour.
+No, it is best as it is; or if my wish grows deeper still, if
+in my heart I envy, with murmuring thought, the blessed
+brides, on whose wedding dawns the laughing sun of
+peace, then with a wish I cast away the glory of these
+suffering times.&mdash;It is best as it is. I am content.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Annie</i>. I wish I could understand you, Helen. You
+say, "if he had kept faith to you;"&mdash;carried you off, you
+mean! Do you mean, sister Helen, that of your own
+will you would ever have gone with him, with Everard
+Maitland,&mdash;that traitor?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen. Gone with him</i>? Would I not? Would I
+not? Dear child, we talk of what, as yet, you know nothing
+of. Gone with <i>him</i>? Some things are holy, Annie,
+only until the holier come.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Annie</i>. (<i>looking toward the door</i>.) Stay, stay. What
+is it, George?
+</p>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>George Grey comes in</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>George</i>. I was seeking our mother. What should it
+be, but ill news? This tide is against us, and if it be
+not well-nigh full, we may e'en fold our arms for the rest.
+There, read that. (<i>Throwing her a letter</i>.)
+</p>
+<p>
+Every face you see looks as if a thunder-cloud were
+passing it. I heard one man say, just now, as I came in,
+that the war would be over in a fortnight's time.
+There'll be some blood spilt ere then, I reckon though.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. What paper is that that reddens her cheek so suddenly?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Annie</i>. The McGregor's!&mdash;think of it, Helen,&mdash;gone
+over to the British side, and St. John of the Glens, and&mdash;who
+brought you this letter, George? 'Tis false! I
+do not believe it, not a word of it. Why, here are twenty
+names, people that we know, the most honorable,
+too,&mdash;forsaking us now, at such a crisis!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>George</i>. Self-defence, self-defence, sister; their lands
+and their houses must be saved from devastation. What
+sort of barracks think you, would that fine country-seat of
+McGregor's make?&mdash;and St. John's&mdash;<i>he</i> is a farmer you
+know, and his fields are covered with beautiful grain,
+that a week will ripen, and so, he is for turning his sword
+into a sickle;&mdash;besides, there are worse things than pillage
+threatened here. Look, (<i>unfolding a hand-bill</i>.)
+Just at this time comes this villainous proclamation
+from Skeensborough, scattered about among our soldiers
+nobody knows how, half of them on the eve of desertion
+before, and the other half&mdash;what ails you, Helen?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. There he stands!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Annie</i>. Is she crazed? Why do you clasp your hands
+so wildly? for Heaven's sake, Helen!&mdash;her cheek is
+white as death.&mdash;Helen!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. Is he gone, Annie?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Annie</i>. As I live, I do not know what you are talking
+of. Nay, look; there is no one here, none that you
+need fear, most certainly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. I saw him, his eye was on me; there he
+stood, looking through that window, smiling and beckoning me.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>George</i>. Saw him? Who, in Heaven's name? This is fancy-work.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. I saw him as I see you now. He stood on
+that roof,&mdash;an Indian,&mdash;I saw the crimson bars on his
+face, and the blanket, and the long wild hair on his
+shoulders; and&mdash;and, I saw the gleaming knife in his
+girdle,&mdash;Oh God! I did.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>George</i>. Ay, ay, 'twas that scoundrel that dogged us
+in our way home, I'll lay my life it was.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. In our way home? An <i>Indian</i>, I said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>George</i>. Well, well, and I say an Indian, a rascal Indian,
+was watching and following us all the way home just now.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. George!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>George</i>. Then you did not see him after all. In truth,
+I did not mean you should, for we could not have hurried
+more, but all the time we sat in that shanty, while it
+rained, about as far off as that chair from me, stood this
+same fellow among the bushes, watching us, or rather
+you. And you saw him here t He might have crept
+along by that orchard wall. What are you laughing at,
+Annie?&mdash;I will go and see what sort of a guard we
+have.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Annie</i>. If you knew as much of Helen's Indians as I
+do, you would hardly be in such a hurry, George, I mean
+about this one that was here just now, for there are Indians
+in yonder forest I suppose; but since we were so
+high, I never walked in the woods with her once, but
+that we encountered one, or heard his steps among the
+bushes at least; and if it chanced to be as late as this,
+there would be half a dozen of them way laying us in
+the road,&mdash;but sometimes they turned out squirrels,
+and sometimes logs of wood, and sometimes mere air,
+air of about this color. We want a little light, that is all.
+There is no weapon like that for these fancy-people. I
+can slay a dozen of them with a candle's beams.
+</p>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>George goes out</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. Do not laugh at me to-night, Annie.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Annie</i>. But what should the Indians want of you,
+pry'thee; tell me that, Helen?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. God knows. Wait till the sun sets to-morrow,
+and I will laugh with you if you are merry then.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Annie</i>. Why to-morrow?&mdash;because it is our last day
+here? Tuesday&mdash;Wednesday&mdash;yes; the next day we
+shall be on the road to Albany.
+</p>
+
+<p align="right">
+[<i>Exit</i>.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. I am awake now. Watched me in the glen?&mdash;followed
+me home? Those woods are full of them.&mdash;But
+what has turned their wild eyes on me?
+</p>
+<p>
+It is but one day longer;&mdash;we have counted many, in
+peril and fear, and <i>this</i>, is the last;&mdash;even now how softly
+the fearful time wastes. <i>One day!</i>&mdash;Oh God, thou
+only knowest what its shining walls encircle. (<i>She leans
+on the window, musing silently</i>.) Two years ago I
+stood here, and prayed to die.-On that same tree my
+eye rested then. With what visions of hope I played
+under it once, building bowers for fairies I verily thought
+would come, and dreaming, with yearning heart, of glorious
+and beautiful things this world <i>hath not</i>. But, that wretched
+day, through blinding tears, I saw the sunlight on its glossy leaves,
+and I said, 'let me see that light no more.' Surely the bitterness
+is deep when that which hath colored all our unfolded being, is a
+weariness. For what more hath life for me I thought, its lesson is
+learned and its power is spent,&mdash;it can please, and it can
+trouble me no more; and why should I stay here in vain
+and wearily?
+</p>
+<p>
+It was sad enough, indeed, to see the laughing spring
+returning again, when the everlasting winter had set in
+within, to link with each change of the varied year,
+sweet with a life's memories, such mournfulness; laying
+by, one by one, all hope's blessed spells, withered and
+broken forever,&mdash;the moonlight, the songs of birds, the
+blossom showers of April, the green and gold of autumn's
+sunset,&mdash;it was sad, but it was not in vain.&mdash;Not in vain,
+Oh God, didst thou deny that weeping prayer.
+</p>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>A merry voice is heard without, and a child's face peeps through the window that overlooks the orchard</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Child</i>. Look! look! sister Helen! see what I have
+found on the roof of the piazza here,&mdash;all covered with
+wampum and scarlet, and here are feathers too&mdash;two
+feathers in it, blue and yellow&mdash;eagle's feathers they are,
+I guess.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i> (<i>approaching the window</i>.) Let me see, Willy.
+What, did you find it here?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Willy.</i> Just under the window here. Frank and I
+were swinging on the gate; and&mdash;there is something
+hard in it, Helen,&mdash;feel.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. Yes, it is very curious; but&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Willy</i>. There comes Netty with the candle; now we
+can see to untie this knot.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. Willy, dear Willy, you must give it to me, you
+must indeed, and&mdash;I will paint you a bird to-morrow.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Willy</i>. A blue-bird, will you? A real one?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. Yes, yes;&mdash;run down little climber; see how
+dark it grows, and Frank is waiting, see.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Willy</i>. Well. But mind you, it must be a blue bird
+then. A real one. With the red on his breast, and all.
+</p>
+
+<p align="right">
+[<i>Exit</i>.
+</p>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>She walks to the table, unfastening the envelope</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. What sent that thrill of forgotten life through
+me then?&mdash;that wild, delicious thrill? This is strange,
+indeed. A sealed pacquet within! and here&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>She glances at the superscription, and the pacquet drops from her hand</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+No&mdash;no. I have seen that hand-writing in my dreams
+before, but it dissolved always. What's joy better than
+grief, if it pierce thus? Can never a one of all the soul's
+deep melodies on this poor instrument be played out, then
+&mdash;trembling and jarring thus, even at the breath of its
+most lovely passion.&mdash;And yet, it is some cruel thing, I
+know.
+</p>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>The pacquet opened, discovers Helen's miniature, a book, a ring, and other tokens</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<br>
+Cruel indeed! That little rose!&mdash;He might have spared
+me this. A dull reader I were, in truth, if this needed
+comment,&mdash;but I knew it before. He might have spared
+me this.
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>She leans over the recovered relics with a burst of passionate weeping</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<br>
+Yet, who knows&mdash;(<i>lifting her head with a sudden
+smile</i>,) some trace, some little curl of his pencil I may
+find among these leaves yet, to tell me, as of old,&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>A letter drops from the book, she tears it eagerly open</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<br>
+(<i>Reading</i>.) These cold words I understand, but&mdash;<i>letters!</i>&mdash;He
+wrote me none! Was there ever a word between
+us, from the hour when he left me, his fancied bride, to
+that last meeting, when, at a word, and ere I knew what
+I had said, he turned on me that cold and careless eye,
+and left me, haughtily and forever? And now&mdash;(<i>reading</i>)&mdash;misapprehension,
+has it been! Is the sun on
+high again?&mdash;in this black and starless night&mdash;the noonday
+sun? He loves me still.&mdash;Oh! this joy weighs like
+grief.
+</p>
+<p>
+Shall I see him again? Joy! joy! Beautiful sunshine
+joy! Who knows the soul's rich depths till joy
+hath lighted them?&mdash;from the dim and sorrowful haunts
+of memory will he come again into the living present!
+Shall I see those eyes, looking on me? Shall I hear my
+name in that lost music sound once more?&mdash;His?&mdash;Am
+I his again? New mantled with that shining love, like
+some glorious and beautiful stranger I seem to myself, <i>Helen</i>&mdash;the
+bright and joy-wreathed thing his voice
+makes that name mean&mdash;My life will be all full of that
+blest music. I shall be Helen, evermore his&mdash;his.
+</p>
+<p>
+No,&mdash;it would make liars of old sages,&mdash;and all books
+would read wrong. A life of such wild blessedness? It
+would be fearful like living in some magic land, where
+the honest laws of nature were not. A life?&mdash;a moment
+were enough. Ages of common life would shine in it.
+(<i>Reading again</i>.) "Elliston's hut?"&mdash;"If I choose that
+the return should be mutual,&mdash;and the memorials of a despised
+regard can at best be but an indifferent possession;&mdash;a
+pacquet reinclosed directly in this same envelope,
+and left at the hut of the missionary, cannot fail to reach
+him safely."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Safely."&mdash;Might he not come there safely then?
+And might I not go thither safely too, in to-morrow's
+light?
+</p>
+<p>
+O God, let not Passion lead me now. The centre
+beaming truth, not passion's narrow ray, must light me
+here!&mdash;But am I not his?
+</p>
+<p>
+Once more, one horizon circles, for a day, our long-parted
+destinies; another, and another wave of these
+wild times will drift them asunder again, forever; and
+I count myself his wife. His wife?&mdash;nay, his bride, his
+two years' bride, to-night, his wife, to-morrow. He must
+meet me there, (<i>writing</i>) at noon, I will say.&mdash;I did not
+think that little hut of logs should have been my marriage-hall;&mdash;he
+must meet me there, and to-morrow is
+my bridal day.
+</p>
+
+<hr width="33%">
+
+&nbsp;<br>
+&nbsp;<br>
+&nbsp;<br>
+&nbsp;<br>
+&nbsp;<br>
+&nbsp;<br>
+
+<!--NewPage-->
+
+<a name="part3"><!--MARKER--></a>
+<h2>PART THIRD.</h2>
+
+<hr width="33%">
+
+<center>
+FATE.
+</center>
+
+<hr width="33%">
+
+<h3>DIALOGUE I.</h3>
+
+<h4>SCENE. <i>The hill&mdash;Night&mdash;Large fires burning&mdash;Sentinels dimly seen in the back-ground. A young Indian steals carefully from the thicket. He examines the ground and the newly-felled trees.</i></h4>
+
+<p>
+<i>Indian</i>. One, two, three. And this is ringed. The
+dogs have spoiled the council-house.
+</p>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>Soldiers rush forward</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>1st Sol</i>. So, Mr. Red-skin! would not you like a scalp
+or two now, to string on your leggings? Maybe we can
+help you to one or so. Hold fast. Take care of that
+arm, I know him of old.
+</p>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>The Indian, with a violent struggle, disengages himself, and darts into the thicket</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<br>
+No? well,&mdash;dead or alive, we must have you on our side
+again. (<i>Firing</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>2nd Sol</i>. <i>He's</i> fixed, Sir.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>1st Sol</i>. Hark. Hark,&mdash;off again! Let me go.
+What do you hold me for, you scoundrel?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>2nd Sol</i>. Don't make a fool of yourself, Will Wilson.
+There will be a dozen of them yelling around you there.
+Besides, he is half way to the swamp by this. Look
+here; what's this, in the grass here?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>1st Sol</i>. There was something in his hand, but he
+clenched it through it all,&mdash;this is a letter. Bring it to
+the fire.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>2nd Sol</i>. (<i>reading</i>.) "<i>This by the Indian, as in case
+I am taken, he may reach the camp in safety. Not
+over three thousand men in all, I should think,&mdash;very
+little ammunition, soldiers mostly discouraged.&mdash;In
+Albany, they are tearing the lead off the windows of the
+houses, and taking the weights from the shops for ball.
+Talk of retreating on Thursday to the new encampment,
+five miles below. More when I get to you</i>."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>More!</i> Humph! A pretty string of lies he has got
+here already. This must go to the General, Dick.
+</p>
+
+<p align="right">
+[<i>Exeunt</i>.
+</p>
+
+<hr width="33%">
+
+&nbsp;<br>
+&nbsp;<br>
+&nbsp;<br>
+&nbsp;<br>
+&nbsp;<br>
+&nbsp;<br>
+
+<!--NewPage-->
+
+<h3>DIALOGUE II.</h3>
+
+<h4>SCENE. <i>Chamber in the Parsonage. Moonlight. Annie sitting by the window, the door open into an adjoining room</i>.</h4>
+
+<p>
+<i>Annie</i>. (<i>Calling</i>.) Come, come,&mdash;why do you sit
+there scribbling so late, Helen? Come, and enjoy this
+beautiful night with me. Ay, what a world of invisible
+life amid the dew and darkness utters its glad voices;
+even the little insect we never saw by day, makes us feel
+for once the great brotherhood of being. This day week
+we shall be in Albany,&mdash;no more such scenes as this
+then.
+</p>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>Helen approaches the window, and puts her arm gently around her sister</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. No more!&mdash;It was a sad word you were saying, Annie.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Annie</i>. How you startled me. Your hands are cold,&mdash;cold
+as icicles, and trembling too. What ails you, Helen?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. 'Tis nothing.&mdash;How often you and I have
+stood together thus, looking down on that old bridge.&mdash;Summer
+and winter.&mdash;Do you remember the cold snowy
+moonlights of old, when the sound of the distant bell
+had hope in it? We shall stand together thus, no more.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Annie</i>. Do not speak so sadly, Helen. I cannot think
+they will destroy our home in mere wantonness. Was
+there not some one coming up the path just now?
+Hark! there is news with that tone.
+</p>
+
+<p align="right">
+[<i>Exit</i>.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. A little more, an hour perchance, and he will
+read my letter. Why do I tremble thus? Is it because
+I have done wrong, that these dark misgivings haunt
+me? No,&mdash;it is not remorse&mdash;'tis very like&mdash;yet remorse
+it is not. Danger, there is none. I shall but walk to the
+wood-side as to-day, that little path to the hut is quickly
+trod, and he will be waiting there. I shall be safe then,
+safe as I care to be.&mdash;Why do I stand here reasoning
+thus? Safe? And if I were not, what is it to me now?
+The dark plan is laid. The fearful acting now is all
+that's left for me.
+</p>
+<p>
+This must go to the lodge to-night, and ere my mother
+returns;&mdash;to tell them now, would be to make my scheme
+impossible.
+</p>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>She begins, with a reluctant air, to fold the dresses, which are lying loosely by her</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<br>
+Oh God! whence do these dark and horrible thoughts
+grow?&mdash;Nay, feeling not born of thought. That wedding
+robe looks like a shroud to me! I cannot. Shadows
+from things unseen are upon me. The future is a
+night of tempest, where I hear nothing but the breaking
+boughs, and the whirl and crash of the mourning blast.
+Oh God! there is no refuge for the fearful, but in thee.&mdash;To
+thee&mdash;no. If there is power in prayer of mine, hath
+it not already doomed that wicked cause, my fate is linked
+with now. I cannot pray.&mdash;Can I not?&mdash;How the
+pure strength comes welling up from its infinite depths.
+</p>
+<p>
+Hear me&mdash;not with lip service, I beseech thee now,
+but with the earnestness that stays the rushing heart's
+blood in its way.&mdash;Hear me. Let the high cause of
+right and freedom, whose sad banner, now, on yonder
+hill, floats in this summer air; whose music on this soft
+night-breeze is borne&mdash;let it prevail&mdash;though <i>I</i>, with all
+this sensitive, warm, shrinking life; with all this new-found
+wealth of love and hope, lie on its iron way.
+</p>
+<p>
+I am safe now.&mdash;This life that I feel now, steel cannot
+reach.
+</p>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>Annie enters</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Annie</i>. Dear Helen, dress yourself. It is all true!
+We must go to-night, we must indeed. They are dismantling
+the fort now.&mdash;Come to the door, and you can
+hear them if you will; and here is word from Henry, we
+must be ready before morning&mdash;the British are within
+sight. Do you hear me, Helen? Do not stand looking
+at me in that strange way.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. To-night!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Annie</i>. I was frightened myself at first, sadly; but
+there is no danger, not the least. We shall be in Albany
+to-morrow, Henry says. Come, Helen, there is no one
+to see to any thing but ourselves. They are running
+about like mad creatures there below, and the children,
+are crying, and such a time you never saw.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. To-night! That those beautiful lips should
+speak it! Take it back. It cannot be. It must not be.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Annie</i>. Why do you look so reproachfully at me?
+Helen, you astonish and frighten me!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. Yes&mdash;yes&mdash;I see it all. And why could I not
+have known this one hour sooner?&mdash;Even now it may
+not be too late. Annie&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Annie</i>. Thank Heaven,&mdash;there is my mother's voice at last.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. Annie, stay. Do not mark what I have
+said in the bewilderment of this sudden fear. Is George
+below?&mdash;Who brought this news?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Annie</i>. One of the men from the fort.&mdash;George has
+not been home since you sent him to Elliston's. She is
+calling me. Make haste and come down, Helen.
+</p>
+
+<p align="right">
+[<i>Exit</i>.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. They will leave me alone. They will leave
+me here alone. And why could I not have known this
+one hour sooner?&mdash;I could have bid him come to-night&mdash;If
+the invisible powers are plotting against me, it is well.
+Could I have thought of this?&mdash;and yet, how like something
+I had known before, it all comes upon me.&mdash;Can I
+stay here alone?&mdash;Could I?&mdash;No never, never! He
+must come for me to-night. Perchance that pacquet
+still lies at yonder hut, and it is not yet too late to recal
+my letter;&mdash;if it is&mdash;if it is, I must find some other messenger.
+Thank God!&mdash;there is one way. Elliston can
+send to that camp to-night. He can&mdash;even now,&mdash;He
+can&mdash;he will.&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p align="right">
+[<i>Exit</i>.
+</p>
+
+
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+
+<!--NewPage-->
+
+<h3>DIALOGUE III.</h3>
+
+<h4>SCENE. <i>The porch. Helen waiting the return of her messenger from the hut</i>.</h4>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. How quiet and soft it all lies in this solemn
+light. Is it illusion?&mdash;can it be?&mdash;that old, familiar look,
+that from these woods and hills, and from this moon-lit
+meadow, seems to smile on me now with such a holy
+promise of protection and love?&mdash;The merry trill in this
+apple-tree is the very sound that, waking from my infant
+sleep in the hush of the summer midnight, of old lulled,
+nay, wakened my first inward thought. Oh that my heart's
+youngest religion could come again, the feeling with
+which a little child looks up to these mighty stars, as the
+spangles on his home-roof, while he stands smiling beneath
+the awful shelter of the skies, as under a father's
+dome. But these years show us the evil that mocks that
+trust.
+</p>
+<p>
+'Tis he,&mdash;What a mere thread of time separates me
+from my fate, and yet the darkness of ages could not hide
+it more surely. Already he has reached the lane. Another
+minute will show me all. Will the pacquet be in
+his hand, or will it not? I will be calm&mdash;it shall be like
+a picture to me.
+</p>
+<p>
+Ah! there is an immeasurable power about us, a foreign
+and strange thing, that answers not to the soul, that
+seems to know or to heed nothing of the living suffering,
+rejoicing being of the spirit. Why should I struggle
+with it any longer? From my weeping childhood to this
+hour, it hath set its iron bars about me; no&mdash;softly yielding,
+hath it not sometimes, the long, undreamed-of vistas
+opened, bright as heaven,&mdash;and now, maybe&mdash;how
+slow he moves&mdash;even now perchance.&mdash;This is wrong.
+The Infinite is One. The Goodness Infinite, whose
+everlasting smile lighteth the inner soul, and the Power
+Infinite, whose alien touch without, in darkness comes,
+they are of One, and the good know it.
+</p>
+
+<center>
+<i>The Messenger</i>. (<i>Coming up the path</i>.)
+</center>
+
+<p>
+Bless you, Miss! The pacquet had been gone this hour!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. Gone! Well.&mdash;And Elliston&mdash;what said he?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mess</i>. I brought this note of yours back, Miss Helen.
+Father Elliston was gone. Here has been an Indian
+killed on Sandy Hill this evening, Alaska's own son as
+it turns out, and such a hubbub as they are making about
+it you never heard. I met a couple of squaws myself,
+yelling like mad creatures, and the woods are all alive
+with them. The priest has gone down to their village
+to pacify them if it may be,&mdash;so I brought the note back,
+Miss Helen, for there was no one there but a little rascal
+of an Indian, and I would not trust the worth of a feather
+with one of them. Was I right?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. Yes. Give it to me. How far is it to the British camp?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mess</i>. Why, they are just above here at Brandon's
+Mills they say, that is, the main body. It can't be over
+three miles, or so.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen. Three</i> miles! only three miles of this lovely
+moonlight road between us.&mdash;William McReady, go to
+that camp for me to-night.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mess</i>. To the British camp?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. Ay.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mess</i>. To the British camp! Lord bless you, Miss.
+I should be shot&mdash;I should be shot as true as you are a
+living woman. I should be shot for a deserter, or, what's
+worse, I should be hanged for a spy.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. What shall I do!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mess</i>. And besides, there's Madame Grey will be
+wanting me by this time. See how the candles dance
+about the rooms there.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. Yes, you are right. We must go in and help them. Come.
+</p>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>They enter the house</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+
+<!--NewPage-->
+
+<h3>DIALOGUE IV.</h3>
+
+<h4>SCENE. <i>The British camp. Moonlight. A lady in a rich travelling dress, standing in the door of a log-hut</i>.</h4>
+
+<p>
+<i>Lady Ackland</i>. (<i>Talking to her maid within</i>.)
+What is the matter, Margaret? What do you go stealing
+about the walls so like a mad woman for, with that
+shoe in your hand?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Maid</i>. (<i>Within</i>.) There, Sir!&mdash;your song is done!&mdash;there's
+one less, I am certain of that. <i>Coming to the
+door</i>.) If ever I get home alive, my lady&mdash;Ha!&mdash;(<i>striking
+the door with her slipper</i>.) If ever&mdash;you are there,
+are you? I believe I have broken my ear in two. The
+matter? Will your ladyship look here?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Lady A</i>. Well.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Maid</i>. And if ever I get back to London, I'll say well
+too. If ever I get back to London alive, my lady,&mdash;I'll see&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Lady A</i>. What will you see, Margaret? Nothing
+lovelier than this, I am sure. Are you not ashamed to
+stand muttering there? Come here, and look at this
+beautiful night.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Maid</i>. La, Lady Harriet!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Lady A</i>. Listen! How still the camp is now! You
+can hear the rush of those falls we passed, distinctly.
+How pretty the tents look there, in that deep shade.
+These tuneful frogs and katy-dids must be our nightingales
+to-night. Indeed, as I stand now, I could almost
+fancy that fine wood there was my father's park; nay, methinks
+I see the top of the old gray turrets peeping out
+among the shadows there. Look, Margaret, do you see?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Maid</i>. La! I can see woods enough, my lady, if that
+is what you mean,&mdash;nothing else, and I have seen
+enough of them already to last me one life through. Yes,
+here's a pretty tear I have got amongst them!&mdash;Two
+guineas and a half it cost me in London,&mdash;I pray I may
+never set my eyes on a wood again,
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Lady A</i>. This was some happy home once, I know.
+See that rose-bush, and this little bed of flowers.&mdash;Here
+was a pretty yard&mdash;there went the fence,&mdash;and there,
+where that waggon stands, by that broken pear-tree,
+swung the gate. And pleasant meetings there have
+been at this door, no doubt, and sorrowful partings too,&mdash;and
+hearts within have leaped at the sound of that
+gate, and merry tales have been told by that desolate
+hearth. In this little lonely unthought-of place, the mysterious
+world of the human soul has unfolded,&mdash;the drama
+of life been played, as grandly in the eyes of angels as
+in the proud halls where my life dawned. And there are
+hearts that cling to this desolate spot as mine does to
+that far-off home. We have driven them away in sorrow
+and fear. This is war!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Maid</i>. I wonder who is fluting under that tree there,
+so late. They are serenading that Dutch woman, as I live.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Lady A</i>. The Baroness, are you talking of, Margaret?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Maid</i>. A baroness! Good sooth!&mdash;she looks like it,
+in that yellow silk, and those odious beads, fussing about.
+If your ladyship will believe me, I saw her sitting in
+her tent to-night, ay, in the door, feeding that wretched
+child with her own hands. We can't be thankful
+enough they did not put her in here with us, I'll own.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Lady A</i>. Hush, hush, for shame! We might well
+have spared that empty room. Come, we'll go in&mdash;It's
+very late. Strange that Sir George should not be here
+ere this.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Maid</i>. Look, my lady! Here's some one at the gate.
+</p>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>An officer enters the little court, with a hasty step</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Officer</i>. Good evening to your ladyship.&mdash;Is Captain
+Maitland here?&mdash;Sir George told me that he left him here.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Lady A</i>. Ay, but he has been gone this hour. Stay,
+it is Andre's flute you hear below there, and some one
+has joined him just now&mdash;yes, it is he.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Off</i>. Under that tree;&mdash;thank you, my lady.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Lady A</i>. Stay, Colonel Hill,&mdash;I beg your pardon, but
+you spoke so hastily.&mdash;This young Maitland is a friend
+of ours, I trust there is nothing that concerns him painfully.&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Off</i>. Oh nothing, nothing, except that he is ordered
+off to Fort Ann to-night. There are none of us that
+know these wild routes as well as he.
+</p>
+
+<p align="right">
+[<i>Exit</i>.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Lady A</i>. Good Heavens! What noise is that?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Maid</i>. Lord 'a mercy! The battle is coming?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Lady A</i>. Hush! (<i>To a sentinel who goes whistling
+by</i>.) Sirrah, what noise is that?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Sentinel</i>. It's these Indians, my lady; they have found
+the son of some chief of theirs murdered in these woods,
+and they are bringing him to the camp now. That's the
+mourning they make.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Lady A</i>. The Lord protect us!
+</p>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>They enter the house</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<hr width="33%">
+
+&nbsp;<br>
+&nbsp;<br>
+&nbsp;<br>
+&nbsp;<br>
+&nbsp;<br>
+&nbsp;<br>
+
+<!--NewPage-->
+
+<h3>DIALOGUE V.</h3>
+
+<h4>SCENE. <i>The interior of a tent. Maitland, in travelling equipments, pacing the floor</i>.</h4>
+
+
+<p>
+<i>Maitland</i>. William! Ho there!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Servant</i>. (<i>Looking in</i>.) Your honor?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mait</i>. Is not that horse ready yet?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Ser't</i>. Presently, your honor.
+</p>
+
+<p align="right">
+[<i>Exit</i>.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mait</i>. So the fellow has been here, it seems, and returned
+again to Fort Edward without seeing me. Of
+course, my lady deigns no answer.&mdash;An answer! Well,
+I thought I expected none. Ten minutes ago I should
+have sworn I expected none. Why, by this time that
+letter of mine has gone the rounds of the garrison, no
+doubt. William!
+</p>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>The servant enters</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bring that horse round, you rascal,&mdash;must I be under
+your orders too, forsooth?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Ser't</i>. Certainly, your honor,&mdash;but if he could but just,
+&mdash;I am a-going, Sir,&mdash;but if he could but just take a
+mouthful or two more. There's never a baiting-place till&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mait</i>. Do you hear?
+</p>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>The Servant retreats hastily</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mait</i>. The curse of having lived in these wilds cleaves
+to me in all things. Here are Andre and Mortimer, and
+a hundred more, and none but I for this midnight service.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Ser't</i>. (<i>Re-entering</i>.) The horse is waiting, Sir,&mdash;but
+here's two of these painted creturs hanging about the
+door, waiting to see you. (<i>Handing him a packet</i>.)
+There's no use in swearing at them, Sir, they don't understand it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mait</i>. (<i>Breaking the seals hastily, he discovers the
+miniature</i>.) Back again! Well, we'll try drowning
+next,&mdash;nay, this is as I sent it! That rascal dropped it
+in the woods perhaps! Softly,&mdash;what have we here!
+</p>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>He discovers, and reads the letter</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Who brought this?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Ser't</i>. The Indian that was here yesterday.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mait</i>. Alaska! Here's blood on the envelope, on the
+letter too, and here&mdash;This packet has been soaked in
+blood. (<i>Re-reading the letter</i>.)
+</p>
+<p>
+"To-morrow"&mdash;"twelve o'clock" to-morrow&mdash;Look
+if the light be burning in the Lady Ackland's window,&mdash;she
+was up as I passed. "Twelve o'clock"&mdash;There are
+more horses on this route than these cunning settlers
+choose to reckon. Why, there are ten hours yet&mdash;I
+shall be back ere then. Helen&mdash;do I dream?&mdash;This is
+love!&mdash;How I have wronged her.&mdash;This <i>is</i> love!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Ser't</i>. (<i>At the door</i>.) The horse is waiting, Sir,&mdash;and
+this Indian here wont stir till he sees you.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mait</i>. Alaska&mdash;I must think of it,&mdash;<i>risk?</i>&mdash;I would
+pledge my life on his truth. He has seen her too,&mdash;I remember
+now, he saw her&mdash;with me at the lake. Let him
+come in.&mdash;No, stop, I will speak with him as I go.
+</p>
+
+<p align="right">
+[<i>Exeunt</i>.
+</p>
+
+<hr width="33%">
+
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+
+<!--NewPage-->
+
+<h3>DIALOGUE VI.</h3>
+
+<h4>SCENE. <i>Lady Ackland's door</i>.</h4>
+
+<p>
+<i>Lady Ackland</i>. Married!&mdash;His wife?&mdash;Well, I think
+I'll not try to sleep again. There goes Orion with
+his starry girdle.&mdash;Married&mdash;is he?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Maid</i>. Was not that Captain Maitland that was talking
+here just now, Lady Harriet?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Lady A</i>. Go to bed, Margaret,&mdash;go to bed,&mdash;but look
+you though. To-morrow with the dawn that furnishing
+gear we left in the tent must be unpacked, and this
+empty room&mdash;whose wife, think you, is my guest tomorrow,
+Margaret?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Maid</i>. Bless me! If I were to guess till daylight, my lady&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Lady A</i>. This young Maitland, you think so handsome, Margaret&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Maid</i>. I?&mdash;la, it was not I, my lady, I am sure.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Lady A</i>.&mdash;He will bring us his wife home here tomorrow,
+a young and beautiful wife.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Maid</i>. Wife?&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Lady A</i>. Poor child,&mdash;we must give her a gentle welcome.
+Do you remember those flowers we saw in the
+glen as we passed?&mdash;I will send for them in the morning,
+and we will fill the vacant hearth with these blossoming
+boughs.&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Maid</i>. But, here&mdash;in these woods, a wife!&mdash;where on
+earth will he bring her from, my lady?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Lady A</i>. Ay, we shall see, to-morrow we shall see,&mdash;go
+dream the rest.
+</p>
+
+<p align="right">
+[<i>Exit the maid</i>.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Lady A</i>. Who would have thought it?&mdash;so cold and
+proud he seemed, so scornful of our sex.&mdash;And yet I
+knew something there lay beneath it all.&mdash;Even in that
+wild, gay mood, when the light of mirth filled and o'er-flowed
+those splendid eyes,&mdash;deeper still, I saw always
+the calm sorrow-beam shining within.
+</p>
+<p>
+That picture he showed me&mdash;how pretty it was!&mdash;The
+face haunts me with its look of beseeching loveliness.&mdash;Was
+there anything so sorrowful about it though?&mdash;Nay,
+the look was a smile, and yet a strange mourn-fulness
+clings to my thought of it now. Well, if the painter
+hath not dissembled in it&mdash;the <i>painter</i>?&mdash;no. The
+spirit of those eyes was of no painter's making. From
+the <i>Eidos</i> of the Heavenly Mind sprung that.
+</p>
+<p>
+I shall see her to-morrow.&mdash;Nay, I must meet her in
+the outskirts of the camp,&mdash;so went my promise,&mdash;if
+Maitland be not here ere then.
+</p>
+
+<p align="right">
+[<i>Exit</i>.
+</p>
+
+<hr width="33%">
+
+&nbsp;<br>
+&nbsp;<br>
+&nbsp;<br>
+&nbsp;<br>
+&nbsp;<br>
+&nbsp;<br>
+
+<!--NewPage-->
+
+<h3>THOUGHTS.</h3>
+
+<h4>SCENE. <i>The Hill. The Student's Night-watch</i>.</h4>
+
+<p>
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; How beautiful the night, through all these hours
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Of nothingness, with ceaseless music wakes
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Among the hills, trying the melodies
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Of myriad chords on the lone, darkened air,
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; With lavish power, self-gladdened, caring nought
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; That there is none to hear. How beautiful!
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; That men should live upon a world like this,
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Uncovered all, left open every night
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; To the broad universe, with vision free
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; To roam the long bright galleries of creation,
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Yet, to their strange destiny ne'er wake.
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Yon mighty hunter in his silver vest,
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; That o'er those azure fields walks nightly now,
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; In his bright girdle wears the self-same gems
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; That on the watchers of old Babylon
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Shone once, and to the soldier on her walls
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Marked the swift hour, as they do now to me.
+<br>
+&nbsp;<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Prose is the dream, and poetry the truth.
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; That which we call reality, is but
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Reality's worn surface, that one thought
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Into the bright and boundless all might pierce,
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; There's not a fragment of this weary real
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; That hath not in its lines a story hid
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Stranger than aught wild chivalry could tell.
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; There's not a scene of this dim, daily life,
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; But, in the splendor of one truthful thought
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; As from creation's palette freshly wet,
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Might make young romance's loveliest picture dim,
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And e'en the wonder-land of ancient song,&mdash;
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Old Fable's fairest dream, a nursery rhyme.
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; How calm the night moves on, and yet
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; In the dark morrow, that behind those hills
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Lies sleeping now, who knows what waits?&mdash;'Tis well.
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; He that made this life, I'll trust with another.
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; To be,&mdash;there was the risk. We might have waked
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Amid a wrathful scene, but this,&mdash;with all
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Its lovely ordinances of calm days,
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; The golden morns, the rosy evenings,
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Its sweet sabbath hours and holy homes,&mdash;
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; If the same hidden hand from whence these sprung,
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; That dark gate opens, what need we fear there?&mdash;
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Here's wrath, but none that hath not its sure pathway
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Upward leading,&mdash;there are tears, but 'tis
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; A school-time weariness; and many a breeze
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And lovely warble from our native hills,
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Through the dim casement comes, over the worn
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And tear-wet page, unto the listening ear
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Of our home sighing&mdash;to the <i>listening</i> ear.
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Ah, what know we of life?&mdash;of that strange life
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; That this, in many a folded rudiment,
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; With nature's low, unlying voice, doth point to.
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Is it not very like what the poor grub
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Knows of the butterfly's gay being?&mdash;
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; With its colors strange, fragrance, and song,
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And robes of floating gold with gorgeous dyes,
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And loveliest motion o'er wide, blooming worlds.
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; That dark dream had ne'er imaged!&mdash;
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Ay, sing on,
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Sing on, thou bright one, with the news of life,
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; The everlasting, winging o'er our vale.
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Oh warble on, thy high, strange song.
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; What sayest thou?&mdash;a land o'er these dark cliffs,
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; A land all glory, where the day ne'er setteth&mdash;
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Where bright creatures, mid the deathless shades,
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Go singing, shouting evermore? And yet
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; 'Twere vain. That wild tale hath no meaning here,
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Thou warbler from afar. Like music
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Of a foreign tongue, on our dull sense,
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; The rich thought wastes.&mdash;We have been nursed in tears,
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Thro' all we've known of life, we have known grief,
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And is there none in life's deep essence mixed?
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Is sorrow but the young soul's garment then?&mdash;
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; A baby mantle, doffed forever here,
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Within these lowly walls.
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And we were born
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Amid a glad creation!&mdash;-then why hear we ne'er
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; The silver shout, filling the unmeasured heaven?&mdash;
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Why catch we e'er the rich plume's rustle soft,
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Or sweep of passing lyre! Our tearful home
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Hung 'mid a gay, rejoicing universe,
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And ne'er a glimpse adown its golden paths?&mdash;
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Oh are there eyes, soft eyes upon us,
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; In the dark and in the day, shining unseen,
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And everlasting smiles, brightening unfelt
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; On all our tears: News sweet and strange ye bring.
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Hither we came from our Creator's hands,
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Bright earnest ones, looking for joy, and lo,
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; A stranger met us at the gate of life,
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; A stranger dark, and wrapped us in her robe,
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And bore us on through a dim vale.&mdash;Ah, not
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; The world we looked for,&mdash;for an image in.
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Our souls was born, of a high home, that yet
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; We have not seen. And were our childhood's yearnings,
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Its strange hopes, no dreams then,&mdash;dim revealings
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Of a land that yet we travel to?&mdash;
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; But thou, oh foster-mother, mournful nurse,
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; So long upon thy sable vest we're leaned,
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Thou art grown dear to us, and when at last
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; At yonder blue and burning gate
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Thou yieldest up thy trust, and joy at last
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; In her own wild embrace enfolds us once, e'en
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; From the jewelled bosom of that dazzling one,
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; From the young roses of that smiling face,
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Shall we not turn to thee, for one last glimpse
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Of that wan cheek, and solemn eye of love,
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And watch thy stately step, far down
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; This dim world's fading paths? Take us, kind sorrow!
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; We will lean our young head meekly on thee;
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Good and holy is thy ministry,
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Oh handmaid of the Halls thou ne'er mayst tread.
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And let the darkness gather round that world,
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Not for the vision of thy glittering walls
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; We ask, nor glimpse of brilliant troops that roam
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Thine ancient streets, thou sunless city,&mdash;
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Wrap thy strange pavillions still in clouds,
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Let the shades slumber round thy many homes,
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; By faith, and not by sight, through lowly paths
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Of goodness, sorrow-led, to thee we come.
+<br>
+</p>
+
+<hr width="33%">
+
+&nbsp;<br>
+&nbsp;<br>
+&nbsp;<br>
+&nbsp;<br>
+&nbsp;<br>
+&nbsp;<br>
+
+<!--NewPage-->
+
+<a name="part4"><!--MARKER--></a>
+<h2>PART FOURTH.</h2>
+
+<hr width="33%">
+
+<center>
+FULFILMENT.
+</center>
+
+<hr width="33%">
+
+<h3>DIALOGUE I.</h3>
+
+<hr width="33%">
+
+<h4>SCENE. <i>The ground before the fort. Baggage wagons. Cannon dismounted. Confused sounds within. A soldier is seen leaning on his rifle</i>.</h4>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>Another soldier enters</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>2nd Sol</i>. It's morning! Look in the east there. What
+are we waiting for?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>1st Sol</i>. Eh! The devil knows best, I reckon, Sir.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>2nd Sol</i>. Hillo, John! What's the matter there?
+Here's day-break upon us! What are we waiting for?
+</p>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>Another soldier enters</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>3d Sol</i>. To build a bridge&mdash;that is all.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>2nd Sol</i>. A bridge?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>3d Sol</i>. We shall be off by to-morrow night, no doubt of
+it,&mdash;if we don't chance to get cooked and eaten before
+that time,&mdash;some little risk of that.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>2nd Sol</i>. But what's the matter below there, I say?
+The bridge? what ails it?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>3d Sol</i>. Just as that last wagon was going over, down
+comes the bridge, Sirs, or a good piece of it at least.&mdash;What
+else could it do?&mdash;timbers half sawn away!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>2nd Sol</i>. Some of that young jackanape's work! <i>Aid-de-camp!</i>
+I'd <i>aid</i> him. He must be ordering and fidgetting,
+and fuming.&mdash;Could not wait till we were over.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>1st Sol</i>. All of a piece, boys!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>3d Sol</i>. Humph. I wish it had been,&mdash;the bridge, I mean.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>1st Sol</i>. But, I say, don't you see how every thing,
+little and great, goes one way, and that, against us?
+Chance has no currents like this! It's a bad side that
+Providence frowns on. I think when Heaven deserts a
+cause, it's time for us poor mortals to begin to think about it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>3d Sol</i>. Now, if you are going to do so mean a thing
+as that, don't talk about Heaven&mdash;prythee don't.
+
+<p align="right">
+[<i>They pass on</i>.
+</p>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>Two other soldiers enter</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>4th Sol</i>. (<i>singing</i>.)
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+&nbsp;&nbsp; <i>Yankee doodle is the tune
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Americans delight in,
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+&nbsp;&nbsp; 'Twill do to whistle, sing, or play,
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; And just the thing for fighting.
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Yankee doodle, boys, huzza&mdash;</i>
+<br>
+&nbsp;<br>
+(<i>Breaking off abruptly</i>.) I do not like the looks of it, Will.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>5th Sol</i>. Of what?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>4th Sol</i>. Of the morning that begins to glimmer in the east there.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>5th Sol</i>. No? Why, I was thinking just now I never
+saw a handsomer summer's dawning. That first faint
+light on the woods and meadows, there is nothing I like
+better. See, it has reached the river now.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>4th Sol</i>. But the mornings we saw two years ago
+looked on us with another sort of eye than this,&mdash;it is not
+the glimmer of the long, pleasant harvest day that we see
+there.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>5th Sol</i>. We have looked on mornings that promised
+better, I'll own. I would rather be letting down the bars
+in the old meadow just now, or hawing with my team
+down the brake; with the children by my side to pick
+the ripe blackberries for our morning meal, than standing
+here in these rags with a gun on my shoulder. Let
+well alone.&mdash;We could not though.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>4th Sol</i>. (<i>Handing him a glass</i>.) See, they are beginning
+to form again. It looks for all the world like a funeral train.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>5th Sol</i>. What was the Stamp Act to us, or all the
+acts beyond the sea that ever were acted, so long as
+they left us our golden fields, our Sabbath days, the quiet
+of the summer evening door, and the merry winter
+hearth. <i>The Stamp Act?</i> It would have been cheaper
+for us to have written our bills on gold-leaf, and for
+tea, to have drunk melted jewels, like the queen I read
+of once; cheaper and better, a thousand times, than the
+bloody cost we are paying now.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>4th Sol</i>. It was not the money, Will,&mdash;it was not the
+money, you know. The wrong it was. We could not
+be trampled on in that way,&mdash;it was not in us&mdash;we could not.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>5th Sol</i>. Ay, ay. A fine thing to get mad about was
+that when we sat in the door of a moonlight evening and
+the day's toils were done. It was easy talking then.
+<i>Trampled on!</i> I will tell you when I was nearest being
+trampled on, Andros,&mdash;when I lay on the ground below
+there last winter,&mdash;on the frozen ground, with the blood
+running out of my side like a river, and a great high-heeled
+German walking over my shoulder as if I had
+been a hickory log. I can tell you, Sir, that other was a
+moon-shiny sort of a trampling to that. I shall bear to be
+trampled on in figures the better for it, as long as I live.
+Between ourselves now&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>4th Sol</i>. There's no one here.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>5th Sol</i>. There are voices around that corner, though.
+Come this way.
+</p>
+
+<p align="right">
+[<i>They pass on</i>.
+</p>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>Another group of Soldiers</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>1st Sol</i>. Then if nothing else happens, we are off now.
+Hillo, Martin! Here we go again&mdash;skulking away.
+Hey? What do you say now? Hey, Mr. Martin, what do you say now?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>2nd Sol</i>. (<i>Advancing</i>.) What I said before.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>1st Sol</i>. But where is all this to end, Sir? Tell us
+that&mdash;tell us that.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>3d Sol</i>. Yes, yes,&mdash;tell us that. If you don't see Burgoyne
+safe in Albany by Friday night, never trust me, Sirs.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>1st Sol</i>. A bad business we've made of it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>4th Sol</i>. Suppose he gets to Albany;&mdash;do you think
+that would finish the war?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>3d Sol</i>. Well, indeed, I thought that was settled on all
+hands, Sir. I believe the General himself makes no secret
+of that.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>4th Sol</i>. And what becomes of us all then? We
+shall go back to the old times again, I suppose;&mdash;weren't
+so very bad though, Sam, were they?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>1st Sol</i>. We have seen worse, I'll own.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>3d Sol</i>. And what becomes of our young nation here,
+with its congress and its army, and all these presidents,
+and generals, and colonels, and aide-de-camps?&mdash;wont it
+look like a great baby-house when the hubbub is over,
+and the colonies settle quietly down again?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>2nd Sol</i>. Faith, you take it very coolly. Before that
+can happen, do you know what must happen to you?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>1st Sol</i>. Nothing worse than this, I reckon.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>2nd Sol</i>. (<i>makes a gesture to denote hanging</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>4th Sol</i>. What would they hang us though? Do you
+think they would really hang us, John?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>2nd Sol</i>. Wait and see.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>1st Sol</i>. Nonsense! nonsense! A few of the ringleaders,
+Schuyler, and Hancock, and Washington, and a
+few such, they will hang of course,&mdash;but for the rest,&mdash;we
+shall have to take the oath anew, and swallow a few
+duties with our sugar and tea, and&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>2nd Sol</i>. You talk as if the matter were all settled already.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>1st Sol</i>. There is no more doubt of it, than that you
+and I stand here this moment. Why, they are flocking
+to Skeensborough from all quarters now, and this poor
+fragment,&mdash;this miserable skeleton of an army, which is
+the only earthly obstacle between Burgoyne and Albany,
+why, even this is crumbling to pieces as fast as one can
+reckon. Two hundred less than we were yesterday at
+this hour, and to-morrow&mdash;how many are off to-morrow?
+Ay, and what are we doing the while? Bowing and
+retreating, cap in hand, from post to post, from Crown
+Point to Ticonderoga, from Ticonderoga to Fort Edward,
+from Fort Edward onward; just showing them
+down, as it were, into the heart of the land. Let them
+get to Albany&mdash;Ah, let them once get to Albany, they'll
+need no more of our help then, they'll take care of themselves
+then and us too.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>2nd Sol</i>. They'll never get to Albany.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>1st Sol</i>. Hey?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>2nd Sol</i>. They'll never get to Albany.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>1st Sol</i>. What's to hinder them?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>2nd Sol</i>. We,&mdash;yes we,&mdash;and such as we, craven-hearted
+as we are. They'll never get to Albany until we
+take them there captives.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>3d Sol</i>. Then they'll wait till next week, I reckon.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>1st Sol</i>. Ha ha ha! Ha ha ha! How many prisoners
+shall we have a-piece, John? How many regiments,
+I mean? They'll open the windows when we get there,
+won't they? I hope the sun will shine that day. How
+grandly we shall march down the old hill there, with our
+train behind us. I shall have to borrow a coat of one of
+them though, they might be ashamed of their captor else.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>3d Sol</i>. When is this great battle to be, John? This
+don't look much like it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>4th Sol</i>. I think myself, if the General would only give
+us a chance to fight&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>2nd Sol</i>. A chance to throw your life away,&mdash;he will
+never give you. A chance to fight, you will have ere
+long,&mdash;doubt it not. Our General might clear his blackened
+fame, by opposing this force to that,&mdash;this day he
+might;&mdash;he will not do it. The time has not yet come.
+But he will spare no pains to strengthen the army, and
+prepare it for victory, and the glory he will leave to his
+rival. Recruits will be pouring in ere long. General
+Burgoyne's proclamation has weakened us,&mdash;General
+Schuyler will issue one himself to-day.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>1st Sol</i>. Will he? will he? What will he proclaim?&mdash;As
+to the recruits he gets, I'll eat them all, skin and
+bone. What will he proclaim? You see what Burgoyne
+offers us. On the one hand, money and clothing,
+and protection for ourselves and our families; and on the
+other, the cord, and the tomahawk, and the scalping-knife.
+Now, what will General Schuyler set down over
+against these two columns?&mdash;What will he offer us?&mdash;To
+lend us a gun, maybe,&mdash;leave to follow him from one
+post to another, barefooted and starving, and for our
+pains to be cursed and reviled for cowards from one end
+of the land to the other. And what will he threaten?
+Ha, we were cowards indeed, if we feared what he could
+threaten. What thing in human nature will he speak
+to?&mdash;say.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>2nd Sol</i>. I will tell you. To that spirit in human nature
+which resists the wrong, the fiendish wrong threatened
+there. Ay, in the basest nature that power sleeps,
+and out of the bosom of Omnipotence there is nothing
+stronger. It has wakened here once, and this war is its
+fruit. It slumbers now. Let Burgoyne look to it that
+he rouse it not himself for us. Let him look to it. For
+every outrage of those fiendish legions, thank God.&mdash;It
+lays a finger on the spring of our only strength. <i>What</i>
+will he offer us? I will tell you.&mdash;A chance to live, or to
+die,&mdash;<i>men</i>,&mdash;ay, to leave a sample of manhood on the
+earth, that shall wring tears from the selfish of unborn
+ages, as they feel for once the depths of the slumbering
+and godlike nature within them. And Burgoyne,&mdash;oh!
+a coat and a pair of shoes, he offers, and&mdash;how many
+pounds?&mdash;Are you men?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>4th Sol</i>. What do you say, Sam?&mdash;Talks like a minister, don't he?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>1st Sol</i>. Come, come,&mdash;there's the drum, boys. You
+don't bamboozle me again! I've heard all that before.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>3d Sol</i>. Nor me.&mdash;I don't intend to have my wife and
+children tomahawked,&mdash;don't think I can stand that, refugee or not.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>2nd Sol</i>. Here they come.
+</p>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>Other Soldiers enter</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>5th Sol</i>. All's ready, all's ready.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>6th Sol</i>. (<i>singing</i>.)
+<br>
+"<i>Come blow the shrill bugle, the war dogs are howling</i>,"&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p align="right">
+[<i>Exeunt</i>.
+</p>
+
+<hr width="33%">
+
+&nbsp;<br>
+&nbsp;<br>
+&nbsp;<br>
+&nbsp;<br>
+&nbsp;<br>
+&nbsp;<br>
+
+<!--NewPage-->
+
+<h3>DIALOGUE II.</h3>
+
+<h4>SCENE. <i>Before the door of the Parsonage. Trunks, boxes, and various articles of furniture, scattered about the yard. Two men coming down the path</i>.</h4>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>George Grey enters</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>George</i>. Those trunks in the forward team. Make
+haste. We've no time to lose. This box in the wagon
+where the children are.&mdash;Carefully&mdash;carefully, though.
+</p>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>A Soldier enters</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Sol</i>. Hurra, hurra, the house there! Are you ready?
+Ten minutes more.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>George</i>. Get out. What do you stand yelling there
+for? We know all about it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Sol</i>. But your brother, the Captain, says, I must hurry
+you, or you'll be left behind.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>George</i>. Tell my brother, the Captain, I'll see to that.
+We want no more hurrying. We have had enough of
+that already, and much good it has done us too. Stop,
+stop,&mdash;not that. We must leave those for the Indians to
+take their tea in.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Workman</i>. But the lady said&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>George</i>. Never mind the lady. Well, Annie, are you
+ready? Don't stand there crying; there's no use. We
+may come back here again yet, you know. Many a
+pleasant sunrise we may see from these windows yet.
+Heaven defend us, here is this aunt of ours.&mdash;What on
+earth are they bringing now?
+</p>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>A Lady in the door with a couple of portraits, followed by others bringing baskets and boxes, etc</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Lady</i>. That will do, set them down; now, the Colonel
+and his lady, on the back room wall, just over against
+the beaufet. Stop a moment. I'll go with you myself.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Betty</i>. (In, the door.) Lord 'a mercy! Here it is
+broad day-light. What are we waiting for? I am all
+ready. Why don't we go?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>George</i>. I tell you, Aunt Rachael, the thing is impossible.
+This trumpery can't go, and there's the end of it.
+St. George and the Dragon&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Miss Rachael</i>. Never mind this young malapert&mdash;do as I bid you.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Betty</i>. Lord 'a mercy, we shall all be murdered and
+scalped, every soul of us. Bless you&mdash;there it is in the
+garret now!&mdash;just hold this umberell a minute, Mr.
+George,&mdash;think of those murderous Indians wearing my
+straw bonnet. Lord bless you! What are you doing?
+a heaving my umberell over the fence, in that fashion!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>George</i>. These women will drive me mad I believe.
+Let that box alone, you rascal. Lay a finger on that
+trumpery there I say, and you'll find whose orders you
+are under; as for the Colonel and his lady, they'll get a
+little drink out of the first puddle we come to, I reckon.
+</p>
+
+<p align="right">
+[<i>Goes out</i>.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Miss R</i>. (<i>Coming from the house</i>.) That will do.
+That is all,&mdash;in the green wagon, John&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Ser't</i>. But the children&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Miss R</i>. Don't stand there, prating to me at a time
+like this. Make haste, make haste!
+</p>
+<p>
+How perfectly calm I am! I would never have believed
+it;&mdash;just tie this string for me, child, my hands
+twitch so strangely,&mdash;they say the British are just down
+in the lane here, with five thousand Indians, Annie.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Annie</i>. It is no such thing. Aunt Rachael. The British
+are quietly encamped on the other side of the river;
+three miles off at least.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Miss R</i>. I thought as much. A pretty hour for us to
+be turned out of house and home to be sure. Not a wink
+have I slept this blessed night. Hark! What o'clock
+is that? George, George! where is that boy? Just run
+and tell your mother, Annie, just tell her, my dear, will
+you, that we shall all be murdered. Maybe she will make
+haste a little. Well, are they in?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Ser't</i>. The pictures? They are in,&mdash;yes'm. But
+Miss Kitty's a crying, and says as how she won't go,
+and there's the other one too; because, Ma'am, their toes&mdash;you
+see there's the trunk in front gives 'em a leetle slope
+inward, and then that chest under the seat&mdash;If you
+would just step down and see yourself, Ma'am.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Miss R</i>. I desire to be patient.
+
+<p align="right">
+[<i>They go out</i>.
+</p>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>Annie sits on the bench of the little Porch, weeping. Mrs. Gray enters from within</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Annie</i>. Shall I never walk down that shady path
+again? Shall I enter those dear rooms no more?
+There are voices there they cannot hear. From the life
+of buried years, ten thousand scenes, all vacancy toother
+eyes, enrich those walls for us; the furniture that money
+cannot buy, that only the joy and grief of years can purchase.
+They will spoil our pleasant home,&mdash;will they
+not, mother?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mrs. G</i>. Pleasant, ay, pleasant indeed, has it been to
+us. God's will be done. Do not weep, Annie. We
+have counted the cost;&mdash;many a safe and happy home
+there will be in the days to come, whose light shall spring
+from this forgotten sorrow. God's will be done.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Annie</i>. Mother, they are all ready now; is Helen in
+her room still?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mrs. G</i>. Go call her, Annie. Hours ago it was I sent
+her there. I thought she might get some little sleep ere
+the summons came. Call her, my child. How deadly
+pale she was!
+</p>
+
+<p align="right">
+[<i>Annie goes in</i>.
+</p>
+
+<hr width="33%">
+
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+
+<!--NewPage-->
+
+<h3>DIALOGUE III.</h3>
+
+<h4>SCENE. <i>A Chamber partly darkened, the morning air steals faintly through the half-open shutters. Helen before the mirror, leaning upon the toilette, her face buried in her hands, her long hair unbound, and flowing on her shoulders</i>.</h4>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>Annie enters</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Annie</i>. Helen! Why, Helen, are you asleep there?
+Come, we are going now. After keeping us on tiptoe
+for hours, the summons has come at last. Indeed, there
+is hardly time for you to dress. Shall I help you?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. (<i>Rising slowly</i>.) God help me. Bid my
+mother come here, Annie.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Annie</i>. What ails you, Helen?&mdash;there is no time,&mdash;you
+do not understand me,&mdash;there is not one moment to
+be lost. Let me wind up this hair for you.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. Let go!&mdash;Oh God&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Annie</i>. Helen Grey!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. It was a dream,&mdash;it was but a foolish dream.
+It must not be thought of now,&mdash;it will never do. Bid
+my mother come here, I am ready now.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Annie</i>. Ready, Helen!&mdash;ready?&mdash;in that dressing-gown,
+and your hair&mdash;see here,&mdash;are you ready, Helen?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. Yes,&mdash;bid her come.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Annie</i>. Heaven only knows what you mean with this
+wild talk of yours, but if you are not mad indeed, I intreat
+you, sister, waste no more of this precious time.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. No, no,&mdash;we must not indeed. It was wrong,
+but I could not&mdash;go,&mdash;make haste, bid her come.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Annie</i>. She is crazed, certainly!
+</p>
+
+<p align="right">
+[<i>Goes out</i>.
+</p>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>Helen stands with her arms folded, and her eye fixed on the door</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>Mrs. Grey enters</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mrs. G</i>. My child! Helen, Helen! Why do you stand there thus?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. Mother&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mrs. G</i>. Nay, do not stay to speak. There&mdash;throw
+this mantle around you. Where is your hat?&mdash;not here!&mdash;Bridal gear!
+</p>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>George enters</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>George</i>. On my word! Well, well, stand there a
+little longer, to dress those pretty curls of yours, and
+&mdash;humph&mdash;there's a style in vogue in yonder camp
+for rebels just now; we'll all stand a chance to try, I think.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. George!&mdash;George Grey!&mdash;Be still,&mdash;be still.&mdash;
+We must not think of that. It was a dream.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>George</i>. Is my sister mad?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. Mother&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mrs. G</i>. Speak, my child.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. Mother&mdash;my blessed mother,&mdash;(<i>aside</i>.) 'Tis
+but a brief word,&mdash;it will be over soon.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mrs. G</i>. Speak, Helen.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. I cannot go with you, mother.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mrs. G</i>. Helen?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>George</i>. Not go with us?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mrs. G</i>. Helen, do you know what you are saying?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>George</i>. You are in jest, Helen; or else you are
+mad,&mdash;before another sunset the British army will be encamping here.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. Hear me, mother. A message from the British
+camp came to me last night,&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mrs. G</i>. The British camp?&mdash;Ha!&mdash;ha! Everard
+Maitland! God forgive him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. Do not speak thus. It was but a few cold
+and careless lines he sent me,&mdash;my purpose is my own.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mrs. G</i>. And&mdash;what, and he does not know?&mdash;Helen
+Grey, this passes patience.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. He does, Here is the answer that has just
+now come; for I have promised to meet him to-day at
+the hut of the missionary in yonder woods.&mdash;I can
+hardly spell these hasty words; but this I know, he will
+surely come for me,&mdash;though he bids me wait until I
+hear his signal,&mdash;so I cannot go with you, mother.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mrs. G</i>. Where will you go, Helen?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. Everard is in yonder camp;&mdash;where should the
+wife's home be?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mrs. G</i>. The wife's?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. These two years I have been his bride;&mdash;his
+wedded wife I shall be to-day. Yonder dawns my bridal day.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>George</i>. What does she say? What does Helen say?
+I do not understand one word of it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mrs. G</i>. She says she will go to the British camp.
+Desertions thicken upon us. Hark!&mdash;they are calling us.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>George</i>. To the British camp?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mrs. G</i>. Go down, George, go down. Your sister
+talks wildly and foolishly, what you should not have
+heard, what she will be sorry for anon; go down, and
+tell them they must wait for us a little,&mdash;we will be there
+presently.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>George</i>. Hark! (<i>going to the door</i>.)&mdash;another message.
+Do you hear?&mdash;Helen may be ready yet, if she will.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mrs. G</i>. Blessed delay! Go down, George; say
+nothing of this. There is time yet. Tell them we will
+be there presently.
+</p>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>George goes out</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mrs. G</i>. Did you think I should leave you here to accomplish
+this frantic scheme?&mdash;Did you dream of it, and
+you call me mother?&mdash;but what do you know of that
+name's meaning? Do not turn away from me thus, my
+child; do not stand with that fixed eye as though some
+phantom divinity were there. I shall not leave you here,
+Helen, never.
+</p>
+<p>
+Come, come; sit down with me in this pleasant window,
+there is time yet,&mdash;let us look at this moonlight
+scheme of yours a little. Would you stay here in this
+deserted citadel, alone? My child, our army are already
+on their march. In an hour more you would be the only
+living thing in all this solitude. Would you stay here
+alone, to meet your lover too?&mdash;Bethink yourself, Helen.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. This Canadian girl will stay with me, and&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mrs. G</i>. A girl!&mdash;Helen, yesterday an army's
+strength, the armies of the nation, the love of mother,
+and brothers, and sisters, all seemed nothing for protection
+to your timid and foreboding thought; and now,
+when the enemy are all around us,&mdash;do you talk of a
+single girl? Why, the spirit of some strange destiny is
+struggling with your nature, and speaks within you, but
+we will not yield to it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. You have spoken truly, mother. There is one
+tie in these hearts of ours, whose strength makes destiny,
+and where that leads, there lie those iron ways that are
+of old from everlasting. This is Heaven's decree, not
+mine.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mrs. G</i>. Do not charge the madness of this frantic
+scheme on Heaven, my child.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen. Everard!</i>&mdash;no, no, I cannot show to another
+the lightning flash, that with that name reveals my destiny,&mdash;yet
+the falling stone might as soon&mdash;question of its
+way. Renounce him?&mdash;you know not what you ask!
+all there is of life within me laughs at the wild impossibility.
+</p>
+<p>
+Mother, hear me. There is no danger in my staying
+here,&mdash;none real. The guard still keep their station on
+yonder hill, and the fort itself will not be wholly abandoned
+to-day. Everard will come for me at noon.&mdash;It is
+impossible that the enemy should be here ere then; nay,
+the news of this unlooked-for movement will scarce have
+reached their camp.&mdash;<i>Real</i> danger there is none, and&mdash;Do
+not urge me. I know what you would say; the bitter
+cost I have counted all, already, all&mdash;<i>all</i>. That Maitland
+is in yonder camp, that&mdash;is it not a strange blessedness
+which can sweeten anguish such as this?&mdash;that he
+loves me still, that he will come here to-day to make me
+his forever,&mdash;this is all that I can say, my mother.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mrs. G</i>. Will you go over to the British side, Helen?
+Will you go over to the side of wrong and oppression?
+Would you link yourself with our cruel and pursuing
+enemy? Oh no, no no,&mdash;that could not be&mdash;never,
+Amid the world of fearful thoughts that name brings, how
+could we place your image? Oh God, I did not count
+on this. I knew that this war was to bring us toil, and
+want, and fear, and haply bloody death; and I could have
+borne it unmurmuringly; but&mdash;God forgive me,&mdash;that the
+child I nursed in these arms should forsake me, and join
+with our deadly foes against us&mdash;I did not count on this.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. Yes&mdash;that's the look,&mdash;the very look&mdash;all night
+I saw it;&mdash;it does not move me now, as it did then. It is
+shadows of these things that are so fearful, for with the real
+comes the unreckoned power of suffering.
+Mother, this dark coil hath Heaven wound, not we.
+The tie which makes his path the way of God to me,
+was linked ere this war was,&mdash;and war cannot undo it
+now. It is a bitter fate, I know,&mdash;a bitter and a fearful one.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mrs. G</i>. Ay, ay,&mdash;thank God! You had forgotten,
+Helen, that in that army's pay, nay, all around us even now
+are hordes and legions.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. I know it,&mdash;I know it all. I do indeed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mrs. G</i>. Helen, will you place yourself defenceless
+amidst that savage race, whose very name from your
+childhood upwards, has filled you with such strange fear?
+Yesterday I chid you for those fancies,&mdash;I was wrong,&mdash;they
+were warnings, heaven-sent, to save you from this
+doom. What was that dream you talked of then?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. Dreams are nothing. Will you unsay a life's
+lessons now when most I need them?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mrs. G</i>. Yesterday, all day, a shadow as of coming
+evil lay upon me, but now I remember the forgotten vision
+whence it fell. Yesternight I had a dream, Helen,
+such as yours might be; for in my broken and fevered
+slumbers, wherever I turned, one vision awaited me.
+There was a savage arm, and over it fell a shower of
+golden hair, and ever and anon, in the shadowy light of
+my dream, a knife glittered and waved before me. We
+were safe, but over one,&mdash;some young and innocent and
+tender one it was&mdash;there hung a hopeless and inexorable
+fate. Once methought it seemed the young English girl
+that was wedded here last winter, and once she turned
+her eye upon me&mdash;Ha!&mdash;I had forgotten that glance of
+agony&mdash;surely, Helen, it was <i>yours</i>.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mrs. G</i>. Helen! my child&mdash;(<i>Aside</i>.) There it is,
+that same curdling glance,&mdash;'twas but a dream, Helen.
+Why do you stand there so white and motionless&mdash;why
+do you look on me with that fixed and darkening eye?&mdash;'twas
+but a dream!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. And where were you?&mdash;tell me truly. Was it
+not by a gurgling fountain among the pine trees there?
+and was it not noon-day in your dream, a hot, bright, sultry
+noon, and a few clouds swelling in the western sky,
+and nothing but the trilling locusts astir?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mrs. G</i>. How wildly you talk; how should I remember
+any thing like this?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. I will not yield to it; tempt me not. 'Tis folly
+all, I know it is. Danger there is none. Long ere yonder
+hill is abandoned, Everard will be here; and who
+knows that I am left here alone, and who would come
+here to seek me out but he? Oh no, I cannot break
+this solemn faith for a dream. What would he give to
+know I held my promise and his love lighter than a
+dream? I must <i>stay</i> here, mother.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mrs. G</i>. No, my child. Hear me. If this must be indeed,
+if all my holy right in you is nothing, if you will indeed
+go over to our cruel enemy, and rejoice in our sorrows
+and triumph in our overthrow&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. Hear her&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mrs. G</i>. Be it so, Helen,&mdash;be it so; but for all that, do
+not stay here to-day. Bear but a little longer with our
+wearisome tenderness, and wait for some safer chance
+of forsaking us. Come.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. If I could&mdash;Ah, if I could&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mrs. G</i>. You can&mdash;you will. Here, let me help you,
+we shall be ready yet. No one knows of this wild
+scheme but your brother and myself, no one else shall
+ever know it. Come.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. If I could. 'Tis true, I did not know when I
+sent him this promise you would leave me alone ere the
+hour should come. Perhaps&mdash;no, it would never do.
+When he comes and finds that, after all, I have deserted
+him, once with a word I angered him, and for years it
+was the last between us;&mdash;and what safer chance will
+there be in these fearful times of meeting him? No, no.
+If we do not meet now, we are parted for ever;&mdash;if I do
+not keep my promise now, I shall see him no more.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mrs. G</i>. See him no more then. What is he to us&mdash;this
+stranger, this haughty, all-requiring one? Think of
+the blessed days ere he had crossed our threshold. You
+have counted all, Helen? The anguish that will bring
+tears into your proud brother's eyes, your sister's comfortless
+sorrow?&mdash;did you think of her lonely and saddened
+youth? You counted the wild suffering of this
+bitter moment,&mdash;did you think of the weary years, the
+long sleepless nights of grief, the days of tears; did you
+count the anguish of a mother's broken heart, Helen?
+God only can count that.
+</p>
+<p>
+You did not&mdash;there come the blessed tears at last.
+Here's my own gentle daughter, once again. Come,
+Helen, see, they are waiting for us. There stands the
+old chaise under the locust tree. You and I will ride
+together. Come, 'tis but a few steps down that shady
+path, and we are safe&mdash;a few steps and quickly trod.
+Hark! the respite is past even now. Do you stand
+there marble still? Helen, if you stay here, we shall
+see you no more. This lover of yours hates us all. He
+will take you to England when the war is over if you
+outlive its bloody hazards, and we are parted for ever.
+I shall see you no more, Helen, my child; my child, I shall
+see you no more. (<i>She sinks upon the chair, and
+weeps aloud</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. Has it come to this? Will you break my
+heart? If it were continents and oceans that you bade
+me cross, but those few steps&mdash;Ah, they would sever me
+from him for ever, and I cannot, I cannot, I can <i>not</i> take
+them,&mdash;there is no motion so impossible. Yes, they are
+calling us. Do not stay.
+</p>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>Annie enters</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Annie</i>. Mother, will you tell me what this means?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mrs. G</i>. Yes, come in. We will waste no more time
+about it. She will stay here to meet her lover, she will
+forsake us for a traitor. We have nursed an enemy
+among us. The babe I cherished in this bosom, whose
+sleeping face I watched with a young mother's love,
+hath become my enemy. Oh my God&mdash;is it from thee?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Annie</i>. Helen! my sister! Helen!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mrs. G</i>. Ay, look at her. Would you think that the
+spirit which heaves in that light frame, and glances in
+those soft eyes, held such cruel power? Yesterday I
+would have counted it a breath in the way of my lightest
+purpose, and now&mdash;come away, Annie&mdash;it is vain, you
+cannot move her.
+</p>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>George enters</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>George</i>. Mother, if Helen will not go now, we must
+leave her to her fate or share it with her. Every wagon
+is on the road but ours. A little more, and we shall be
+too late for the protection of the army. Shall I stay with her?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mrs. G</i>. No, never. That were a sure and idle
+waste of life. Helen, perhaps, may be safe with them.
+Oh. yes, the refugees are safe, else desertion would grow
+out of fashion soon.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Annie</i>. Refugees! Refugee! Helen!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mrs. G</i>. It sounds strange for one of us I know. You
+will grow used to it soon. Helen belongs to the British
+side, she will go over to them to-day, but she must go
+alone, for none of us would be safe in British hands, at
+least I trust so&mdash;this morning's experience might make
+me doubtful, but I trust we are all true here yet beside.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Annie</i>. Have I heard aright, Helen?&mdash;or is this all
+some fearful dream? You and I, who have lived together
+all the years of our lives, to be parted this moment,
+and for ever,&mdash;no, no!
+</p>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>A young American Officer enters hastily</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Capt. Grey</i>. Softly, softly! What is this? Are you in
+this conspiracy to disgrace me, mother? Oh, very well;
+if you have all decided to stay here, I'll take my leave.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Annie</i>. Oh, Henry, stay. You can persuade her it may be.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Capt. G. Persuade</i>! What's all this! A goodly
+time for rhetoric forsooth! Who's this that's risking all
+our lives, waiting to be persuaded now?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mrs. G</i>. That Tory, Henry! We should have thought
+of this. Ah, if we had gone yesterday,&mdash;that haughty
+Maitland,&mdash;she will stay here to meet him! She will
+marry him, my son.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Capt. G</i>. Maitland!&mdash;and stay here!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. Dear Henry, let us part in kindness. Do not
+look on me with that angry eye. It was I that played
+with you in the woods and meadows, it was I that
+roamed with you in those autumn twilights,&mdash;you loved
+me then, and we are parting for ever it may be..
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Capt. G</i>. (<i>To the children at the door</i>.) Get you
+down, young ones, get you down. Pray, mother, lead
+the way, will you?&mdash;break up this ring. Come, Helen,
+you and I will talk of this as we go on, only in passing
+give me leave to say, of all the mad pranks of your novel
+ladies, this caps the chief. You have outdone them,
+Helen; I'll give you credit for it, you have outdone them all.
+</p>
+<p>
+Why you'll be chronicled,&mdash;there's nothing on record
+like it, that ever I heard of; I am well-read in romances
+too. We'll have a new love-ballad made and set to tune,
+under the head of "Love and Murder," it will come
+though, if you don't make haste a little. Come, come.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. Henry!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Capt. G</i>. Are you in earnest, Helen? Did you suppose
+that we were mad enough to leave you here?
+You'll not go with us? But you will, by Heaven!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. Henry! Mother!&mdash;Nay, Henry, this is vain. I
+shall stay here, I shall&mdash;I shall stay here,&mdash;so help me
+Heaven.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Capt. G</i>. Helen Grey! Is that young lioness there
+my sometime sister?&mdash;my delicate sister?&mdash;with her foot
+planted like iron, and the strength of twenty men nerving her arm?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. Let go.&mdash;I shall stay here.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Capt. G</i>. Well, have your way, young lady, have your
+way; but&mdash;Mother, if you choose to leave that mad girl
+here, you can,&mdash;but as for this same Everard Maitland,
+look you, my lady, if I don't stab him to his heart's core,
+never trust me.
+</p>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>He goes out&mdash;Mrs. Grey follows him to the door</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mrs. G</i>. Stay, Henry,&mdash;stay. What shall we do?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Capt. G</i>. Do!&mdash;Indeed, a straight waistcoat is the
+only remedy I know of, Madam, for such freaks as these.
+If you say so, she shall go with us yet.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mrs. G</i>. Hear me. This is no time for passion now
+Hear me, Henry. This Maitland, <i>Tory</i> as he is, is her betrothed
+husband, and she has chosen her fate with him;
+we cannot keep her with us; nay, with what we have
+now seen, it would be vain to think of it, to wish it even.
+She must go to him,&mdash;it but remains to see that she meets
+him safely. Noon is the hour appointed for his coming.
+Could we not stay till then?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Capt. G</i>. Impossible. Noon?&mdash;well.&mdash;Oh, if its all
+fixed upon;&mdash;if you have settled it between yourselves
+that Helen is to abandon us and our protection, for
+Everard Maitland's and the British, the sooner done, the
+better. She's quite right,&mdash;she's like to find no safer
+chance for it than this. Noon,&mdash;there is a picket left on
+yonder hill till after that time, certainly, and a hundred
+men or so in the fort. I might give Van Vechten a hint
+of it&mdash;nay, I can return myself this afternoon, and if she
+is not gone then, I will take it upon me she is not left a
+second time. Of course Maitland would be likely to
+care for her safety. At all events there's nothing else
+for us to do, at least there's but one alternative, and
+that I have named to you.
+</p>
+
+<p align="right">
+[<i>They go out together</i>.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. (<i>She has stood silently watching them</i>.) He
+has gone, without one parting look&mdash;he has gone! So
+break the myriad-tied loves, it hath taken a life to weave.
+This is a weary world.
+</p>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>She turns to her sister, who leans weeping on the window-seat</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<br>
+Come, Annie, you and I will part in kindness, will we
+not? No cruel words shall there be here. Pleasant hath
+your love been unto me, my precious sister. Farewell, Annie.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Annie</i>. Shall I never hear your voice again, that
+hath been the music of my whole life? Is your face
+henceforth to be to me only a remembered thing? Helen,
+you must not stay here. The Indians,&mdash;it was no idle
+fear, the half of their bloody outrages you have not heard;
+they will murder you, yes, <i>you</i>. The innocence and loveliness
+that is holy to us, is nothing in their eyes, they
+would as soon sever that beautiful hair from your brow&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. Hush, hush. There is no danger, Annie. The
+dark things of destiny are God's; the heart, the heart only, is ours.
+</p>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>Mrs. Grey re-enters</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mrs. G</i>. (<i>to Annie</i>.) Come, come, my child. This is
+foolish now. All is ready. Janette will stay with you, Helen.
+</p>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>Laughing voices are heard without, and the children's faces are seen peeping in the door</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Willy</i>. Dear mother, are you not ready yet? We have
+been in the wagon and out a hundred times. Oh, Helen,
+make haste. The sun is above the trees, and the grass
+on the roadside is all full of diamonds. The last soldiers
+are winding down the hollow now. Is not Helen
+going, Mother?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mrs. G</i>. Your sister Helen is going from us forever.
+Come in and kiss her once, and then make haste&mdash;you
+must not all be lost.
+</p>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>They enter</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Willy</i>. Ah, why don't you go with us, sister?&mdash;Such
+a beautiful ride we shall have. You never heard such a
+bird-singing in all your life.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Frank</i>. We shall go by the Chesnut Hollow, George
+says we shall. Smell of these roses, Helen. Must she
+stay here? Hark, Willy, there's the drum. Good-bye,
+How sorry I am you will not go with us.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Willy</i>. So am I. What makes you stand so still and
+look at us so? Why don't you kiss me? Good-bye, Helen.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. (<i>Embracing them silently</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Annie</i>. Will you leave her here alone, mother? Will you?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mrs. G</i>. No. There is a guard left on yonder hill,
+and the fort is not yet abandoned wholly. Besides, the
+army encamp at the creek, and Henry himself will
+return this afternoon. She will be gone ere then, though.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. Those merry steps and voices, those little, soft
+clinging hands and rosy lips, have vanished forever. For
+all my love I shall be to them but as the faint trace of
+some faded dream. This is a weary world.
+</p>
+<p>
+Come, George, farewell. How I have loved to look on
+that young brow. Be what my dreams have made you.
+Fare you well.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>George</i>. Farewell, Helen.
+</p>
+
+<p align="right">
+[<i>He goes out hastily</i>.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. Will he forget me?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mrs. G</i>. And farewell, Helen. Fare ye well.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. Will she leave me thus?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mrs. G</i>. Do not go to the hut&mdash;do not leave this door
+until you are sure of the signal you spoke of, Helen.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. She will not look at me,&mdash;Mother!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mrs. G</i>. Farewell, Helen; may the hour never come
+when you need the love you have cast from you now so freely.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. Will you leave me thus? Is not our life together
+ending here? In that great and solemn Hereafter
+our ways may meet again; but by the light of sun, or
+moon, or candle, or underneath these Heavens, no more.
+Oh! lovely, lovely have you been unto me, a spirit of
+holiness and beauty, building all my way.&mdash;Part we thus?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mrs. G</i>. Farewell, Helen.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. Part we thus?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mrs. G</i>. Fare ye well, Helen Grey, my own sweet
+and precious child, my own lovely, lovely daughter, fare
+ye well, and the Lord be with you. The Lord keep you,
+for I can keep you now no more. The Lord watch over
+you, my helpless one, mine, mine, mine, all mine, though
+I leave you thus; my world of untold wealth, unto another.
+Nay, do not sorrow, my blessed child,&mdash;you will
+be happy yet. Fear nothing,&mdash;if this must be, I say, fear
+nothing. You think that you are doing right in forsaking
+us thus;&mdash;it may be that you are. If in the strength
+of a pure conscience you stay here to-day,&mdash;be not afraid.
+When you lay here of old, a lisping babe, I told you of
+One whose love was better than a mother's. Now farewell,
+and trust in Him. Farewell, mine eye shall see thee
+yet again. Farewell.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. No, no; leave me not.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mrs. G</i>. Unclasp these hands, I cannot stay.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. Never&mdash;never.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mrs. G</i>. Untwine this wild embrace, or, even now,&mdash;even
+now&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. Farewell, mother. Annie Grey, farewell.
+</p>
+
+<p align="right">
+[<i>They go</i>.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. This is a weary world. Take me home. To
+the land where there is no crying or bitterness, take me home.
+</p>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>The noise of retreating steps is heard, and the sound of the outer door closing heavily</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. They are gone,&mdash;not to church,&mdash;not for the
+summer's ride. I shall see them no more.&mdash;In heaven
+it may be; but by the twilight hearth, or merry table, at
+morn, or noon, or evening, in mirth or earthly tenderness, no more.
+</p>
+<p>
+Hark! There it is!&mdash;that voice,&mdash;I hear it now, I do.
+A dark eternity had rolled between us, and I hear it yet
+again. They are going now. Those rolling wheels, oh
+that that sound would last. There is no music half so
+sweet. Fainter&mdash;fainter&mdash;it is gone&mdash;no&mdash;that was but
+the hollow.&mdash;Hark&mdash;
+</p>
+<p>
+Now they are gone, indeed. So breaks the sense's last
+link between me and that world.
+</p>
+
+<hr width="33%">
+
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+
+<!--NewPage-->
+
+<a name="part5"><!--MARKER--></a>
+<h2>PART FIFTH.</h2>
+
+<hr width="33%">
+
+<center>
+FULFILLMENT
+</center>
+
+<hr width="33%">
+
+<h3>DIALOGUE I.</h3>
+
+<h4>SCENE. <i>The hill. A young Soldier enters</i>.</h4>
+
+<p>
+How gloriously, with what a lonely majesty the morning
+wastes in that silent valley there; with its moving
+shadows, and breeze and sunshine, and its thousand delicious
+sounds mocking those desolate homes&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>He stops suddenly, and looks earnestly into the thicket</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This is strange, indeed. This feeling that I cannot
+analyze, still grows upon me. <i>Presentiment?</i> Some
+dark, swift-flying thought, leaves its trace, and the cause-seeking
+mind, in the range of its own vision finding none,
+looks to the shadowy future for it.
+</p>
+
+<p align="right">
+[<i>He passes on</i>.
+</p>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>Two Indian Chiefs, in their war-dress, emerge from the thicket, talking in suppressed tones</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>1st Chief</i>. Hoogh! Hoogh! Alaska fights to revenge
+his son,&mdash;we spill our blood to revenge his son, and he
+thinks to win gifts besides. Hugh! A brave chief he is!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>2nd Chief</i>. Your talk is not good, Manida. They are
+our enemies,&mdash;we shall conquer them, we shall see their
+chestnut locks waving aloft, we shall dance and shout
+all night around them, and the eyes of the maidens shall
+meet ours in the merry ring, sparkling with joy, as we
+shout "Victory! victory! our enemies are slain,&mdash;our
+foot is on their necks, we have slain our enemies!" What
+more, Manida? Is it not enough?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>1st Chief</i>. No. I went last night with Alaska to the
+camp above, to the tent of the young sachem of the lake,
+and he promised him presents, rich and many, for an errand
+that a boy might do. I asked Alaska to send me for
+him, and he would not.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>2nd Chief</i>. The young white sachem was Alaska's
+friend, many moons ago, when Alaska was wounded and
+sick.&mdash;He must revenge young Siganaw, but he must
+keep his faith to his white friend, too.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>1st Chief</i>. Ah, but I know where the horse is hidden
+and the paper. When the tomahawks flash here, and
+the war-cry is loudest, we will steal away. Come, and I
+will share the prize with you.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>2nd Chief</i>. No, I will tell my brother chief that Manida
+is a treacherous friend.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>1st Chief</i>. You cannot. It is too late. Hist! Quick,
+lower&mdash;lower&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p align="right">
+[<i>They crouch among the trees</i>.
+</p>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>Another Soldier emerges from the wood-path, singing</i>.)
+</p>
+<p>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+&nbsp;&nbsp; "<i>Then march to the roll of the drum,
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; It summons the brave to the plain,
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Where heroes contend for the home
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Which perchance they may ne'er see again</i>."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+(<i>Pausing abruptly</i>.) Well, we are finely manned here!
+</p>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>1st Soldier re-enters</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>2nd Sol</i>. How many men do you think we have in all,
+upon this hill, Edward?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>1st Sol</i>. Hist!&mdash;more than you count on, perhaps.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>2nd Sol</i>. Why? What is the matter? Why do you
+look among those bushes so earnestly?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>1st Student</i>. It is singular, indeed. I can hardly tell
+you what it is, but twice before in my round, precisely
+in this same spot, the same impression has flashed upon
+me, though the sense that gives it, if sense it is, will not
+bide an instant's questioning. There! Hist! Did
+nothing move there then?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>2nd Sol</i>. I see nothing. This comes of star-gazing,
+when you should have slept. Though as to that, I have
+nothing to complain of, certainly. I had to thank your
+taste that way, last night, for an hour of the most delicious
+slumber. It was like that we used to snatch of
+old, between the first stroke of the prayer-bell and its dying peal.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>1st Sol</i>. I am glad you could sleep. For myself, such
+a world of troubled thoughts haunted me, I found more
+repose in waking.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>2nd Sol</i>. Then I wish you could have shared my
+dream with me, as indeed you seemed to, for you were
+with me through it all. A blessed dream it was, and yet&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>1st Sol</i>. Well, let me share it with you now.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>2nd Sol</i>. I cannot tell you how it was, that in honor
+and good conscience we had effected it, but somehow,
+methought our part in this sickening warfare was accomplished,
+and we were home again. Oh the joy of
+it! oh the joy of it! Even amid my dream, methought
+we questioned its reality, so unearthly in its perfectness,
+it seemed. We stood upon the college-green, and the
+sun was going down with a strange, darkling splendor;
+and from afar, ever and anon came the thunder roll of
+battle; but we had nought to do with it; our part was
+done; our time was out; we were to fight no more. And
+there we stood, watching the students' games; and there
+too was poor <i>Hale</i>, merry and full of life as e'er he was,
+for never a thought of his cruel fate crossed my dream.
+Suddenly we saw two ladies, arm in arm, come swiftly
+down the shady street, most strangely beautiful and
+strangely clad, with long white robes, and garlands in
+their hair, and such a clear and silvery laugh, and something
+fearful in their loveliness withal; and one of them,
+as she came smiling toward us&mdash;do you remember that
+bright, fair-haired girl we met in yonder lane one noon?
+&mdash;Just such a smile as hers wore the lady in my dream.
+Then, into the old chapel we were crowding all; that
+long-deferred commencement had come on at last; we
+stood upon a stage, and a strange light filled all the
+house, and suddenly the ceiling swelled unto the skiey
+dome, and nations filled the galleries; and I woke, to find
+myself upon a soldier's couch, and the reveille beating.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>1st Sol</i>. Well, if it cheered you, 'twas a good dream
+most certainly, though, yet&mdash;the dream-books might not
+tell you so. Will you take this glass a moment?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>2nd Sol</i>. What is it?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>1st Sol</i>. That white house by the orchard, in the door
+&mdash;do you see nothing?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>2nd Sol</i>. Yes, a figure, certainly;&mdash;yes, now it moves.
+I had thought those houses were deserted,&mdash;it is time
+they were I think, for all the protection we can give
+them. How long shall we maintain this post, think you,
+with such a handful?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>1st Sol</i>. Till the preparations below are complete, I
+trust so at least, for we have watchers in these woods, no
+doubt, who would speedily report our absence.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>2nd Sol</i>. Well, if we all see yonder sun go down, 'tis
+more than I count on.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>1st Sol</i>. A chance if we do&mdash;a chance if we do. Will
+the hour come when this infant nation shall forget her
+bloody baptism?&mdash;the holy name of truth and freedom,
+that with our hearts' blood we seal upon her in these days of fear?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>2nd Sol</i>. Ay, that hour may come.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>1st Sol</i>. Then, with tears, and <i>blood</i> if need be, shall
+she learn it anew; and not in vain shall the bones of the
+martyrs moulder in her peopled vales. For human nature,
+in her loftiest mood, was this beautiful land of old
+built, and for ages hid. Here&mdash;her cradle-dreams behind
+her flung; here, on the height of ages past,
+her solemn eye down their long vistas turned, in a
+new and nobler life she shall arise here. Ah, who knows
+but that the book of History may show us at last on its
+long-marred page&mdash;<i>Man</i> himself,&mdash;no longer the partial
+and deformed developments of his nature, which each
+successive age hath left as if in mockery of its ideal,&mdash;but,
+man himself, the creature of thought,&mdash;the high, calm,
+majestic being, that of old stood unshrinking beneath
+his Maker's gaze. Even, as first he woke amid the gardens
+of the East, in this far western clime at last he shall
+smile again,&mdash;a perfect thing.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>2nd Sol</i>. In your earnestness, you do not mark these
+strange sounds, Edward. Listen. (<i>He grasps his sword</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>A Soldier rushes down the path</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>3d Sol</i>. We are surrounded! Fly. The Indians are upon us. Fly.
+</p>
+
+<p align="right">
+[<i>Rushes on</i>.
+</p>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>Another Soldier bursts from the woods</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>4th Sol</i>. God! They are butchering them above there,
+do not stand here!
+</p>
+
+<p align="right">
+[<i>Rushes down the hill</i>.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>2nd Sol</i>. Resistance is vain. Hear those shrieks!
+There is death in them. Resistance is vain.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>1st Sol</i>. Flight is vain. Look yonder! Francis,&mdash;
+the dark hour hath come!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>2nd Sol</i>. Is it so? Mother and sister I shall see no more.
+</p>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>A number of Indians, disfigured with paint and blood, and brandishing their knives, come rushing down the road, uttering short, fierce yells. Others from below, bringing back the fugitives</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>1st Sol</i>. We shall die together. God of Truth and
+Freedom, unto thee our youthful spirits trust we.
+</p>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>The Indians surround them. Fighting to the last, they fall</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<hr width="33%">
+
+&nbsp;<br>
+&nbsp;<br>
+&nbsp;<br>
+&nbsp;<br>
+&nbsp;<br>
+&nbsp;<br>
+
+<!--NewPage-->
+
+<h3>DIALOGUE II.</h3>
+
+<h4>SCENE. <i>The deserted house&mdash;the chamber&mdash;Helen by the table&mdash;her head bowed and motionless. She rises slowly from her drooping posture</i>.</h4>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. It is my bridal day. I had forgotten that.
+(<i>Looking from the window</i>.) Is this real? Am I here
+alone? My mother gone? The army gone? brothers
+and sisters gone, and those woods full of armed Indians?
+I am awake. This is not the light of dreams,&mdash;'tis the
+sun that's shining there. Not the fresh arid tender morning
+sun, that looked in on that parting. Hours he has
+climbed since then, to turn those shadows thus,&mdash;hours that
+to me were nothing.&mdash;Alone?&mdash;deserted&mdash;defenceless?
+Of my own will too? There was a <i>law</i> in that will,
+though, was there not? (<i>Turning suddenly from the
+window</i>.) Shall I see him again? The living real of
+my thousand dreams, in the light of life, will he stand
+here to-day?&mdash;to-day? No, no. Is this swift flow of
+being leading on to <i>that</i>? Oh day of anguish, if in
+thine awful bosom, still, that dazzling instant sleeps, I
+can forgive the rest.
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>She stands by the toilette, and begins to gather once more the long hair from her shoulders. Suddenly a low voice at the door breaks the stillness. The Canadian servant looks in</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Jan</i>. I ask your pardon&mdash;Shall I come in, Ma'amselle?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. Ay, ay, come in. How strangely any voice
+sounds amid this loneliness. I am glad you are here.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Jan</i>. (<i>Entering</i>.) Beautiful! Santa Maria! How
+beautiful! May I look at these things, Ma'amselle?
+(<i>Stopping by the couch strewn with bridal gear</i>.) Real
+Brussels! And the plume in this bonnet, was there ever
+such a lovely droop?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. Come, fasten this clasp for me, Netty. I thought
+to have had another bridesmaid once, but&mdash;that is past&mdash;
+Yes, I am a bride to-day, and I must not wait here unadorned.
+(<i>Aside</i>.) He shall have no hint from me this
+day of "<i>altered fortunes</i>." As though these weary
+years had been but last night's dream, and my wedding-day
+had come as it was fixed, so will I meet him.&mdash;Yet
+I thought to have worn my shroud sooner than this robe.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Jan</i>. This silk would stand alone, Ma'amselle,&mdash;and
+what a lovely white it is! Just such a bodice as this
+I saw my Lady Mary wear, two years ago this summer,
+in Quebec; only, this is a thought deeper. But, Santa
+Maria! how it becomes a shape like yours!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. What a world of buried feeling lives again as
+I feel the clasp of this robe once more! Will he say
+these years have changed me?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Jan</i>. (<i>Aside</i>) I do not like that altered mien. How
+the beauty flashes from her? Is it silk and lace that can
+change one so? Here are bracelets too, Ma'amselle; will you wear them?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. Yes. Go, look from the window, Janette,
+down the lane to the woods. I am well-high ready now.
+He will come,&mdash;yes, he will come.
+</p>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>Janette retreats to the window,&mdash;her eye still following the lady</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Jan</i>. I have seen brides before, but never so gay a one
+as this. It is strange and fearful to see her stand here
+alone, in this lonesome house, all in glistening white,
+smiling, and the light flashing from her eyes thus. She
+looks too much like some radiant creature from another
+world, to be long for this.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. He will come, why should he not? Netty, fix
+your eye on that opening in the woods, and if you see
+but a shadow crossing it, tell me quickly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Jan</i>. I can see nothing&mdash;nothing at all. Marie sanctissima!&mdash;how
+quiet it is! The shadows are straight here now, Miss Helen.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. Noon&mdash;the very hour has come! Another
+minute it may be.&mdash;Noon, you said, Netty?
+</p>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>Joining Janette at the window</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Jan</i>. Yes, quite&mdash;you can see; and hark, there's the
+clock. Oh, isn't it lonesome though? See how like the
+Sunday those houses look, with the doors all closed and
+the yards and gardens still as midnight. If we could but
+hear a human voice!&mdash;whose, I would not care.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. How like any other noon-day it comes! The
+faint breeze plays in those graceful boughs as it did yesterday;
+that little, yellow butterfly glides on its noiseless
+way above the grass, as then it did;&mdash;just so, the shadows
+sleep on the grassy road-side there;&mdash;yes, Netty,
+yes, <i>'tis</i> very lonely.&mdash;Hear those merry birds!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Jan</i>. But I would rather hear that signal, Miss Helen,
+a thousand times, than the best music that ever was played.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. I shall see him again. That wild hope is wild
+no longer. To doubt were wilder now. Ay, Fate must
+cross my way with a bold hand, to snatch that good from
+me now. And yet,&mdash;alas, in the shadowy future it lieth
+still, and a dark and treacherous realm is that! The joys
+that blossom on its threshold are not ours&mdash;It may be, even
+now, darkness and silence everlasting lie between us.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Jan</i>. Hark&mdash;Hark!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. What is it?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Jan</i>. Hark!&mdash;There!&mdash;Do you hear nothing?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. Distant voices?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Jan</i>. Yes&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. I do&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Jan</i>. Once before,&mdash;'twas when I stood in the door below,
+I heard something like this; but the breeze just then
+brought the sound of the fall nearer, and drowned it.
+There it is!&mdash;Nearer. The other window, Miss Helen.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. From that hill it comes, does it not?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Jan</i>. Yes&mdash;yes, I should think it did. Oh yes. There
+is a guard left there&mdash;I had forgotten that. Mon Dieu!
+How white your lips are! Are you afraid, Ma'amselle?
+</p>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>Helen stands gazing silently from the window</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Jan</i>. There is no danger. It must have been those
+soldiers that we heard,&mdash;or the cry of some wild animal
+roaming through yonder woods&mdash;it might have been,&mdash;how
+many strange sounds we hear from them. At another
+time we should never have thought of it. I think
+we should have heard that signal though, ere this,&mdash;I do, indeed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. What is it to die? Nor wood nor meadow, nor
+winding stream, nor the blue sky, do <i>they</i> see; nor the voice
+of bird or insect do they hear; nor breeze, nor sunshine,
+nor fragrance visits them. Will there be nothing left that
+makes this being then? The high, Godlike purpose&mdash;the
+life whose breath it is,&mdash;can <i>that</i> die?&mdash;the meek
+trust in Goodness Infinite,&mdash;can <i>that</i> perish? No.&mdash;This
+is that building of the soul which nothing can dissolve,
+that house eternal, that eternity's wide tempests cannot
+move. No&mdash;no&mdash;I am not afraid. No&mdash;Netty, I am not
+afraid.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Jan</i>. Will you come here, Miss Helen?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. Well.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Jan</i>. Look among those trees by the road-side&mdash;those
+pine trees, on the side of the hill, where my finger
+points.&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. Well&mdash;what is it?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Jan</i>. Do you see&mdash;what a blinding sunshine this is&mdash;do
+you see something moving there?&mdash;wait a moment&mdash;they
+are hid among the trees now&mdash;you will see them
+again presently&mdash;There!&mdash;there they come, a troop of them, see.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. Yes&mdash;<i>Indians</i>&mdash;are they not?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Jan</i>. Ay&mdash;it must have been their yelling that
+we heard.&mdash;We need not be alarmed.&mdash;They are from
+the camp&mdash;they have come to that spring for water. The
+wonder is, your soldiers should have let them pass.&mdash;You
+will see them turning back directly now.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. (<i>Turning from the window</i>.) Shelter us&mdash;all
+power is thine.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Jan</i>. Holy Virgin!&mdash;they are coming this way. Those
+creatures are coming down that hill, as I live. Yes,
+there they come.
+</p>
+<p>
+This strip of wood hides them now. What keeps
+them there so long? Ay, ay,&mdash;I see now&mdash;I am sorry I
+should have alarmed you so, Ma'amselle, for nothing
+too&mdash;They have struck into those woods again, no doubt;
+they are going back to their camp by the lower route.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. No.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Jan</i>. It must be so. There is no doubt of it. Indeed,
+we might be sure they would never dare come here.&mdash;They
+cannot know yet that your army are gone. Besides,
+we should have heard from them ere this. They
+could never have kept their horrid tongues to themselves
+so long, I know.&mdash;Well, if it were to save me, I
+cannot screw myself into this shape any longer. (<i>Rising
+from the window</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. Listen.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Jan</i>. 'Tis nothing but the sound of the river. You
+can make nothing else of it, Ma'amselle,&mdash;unless it is
+these locusts that you hear. I wish they would cease
+their everlasting din a moment.
+</p>
+<p>
+How that breeze has died away! Every leaf is still
+now! There's not a cloud or a speck in all the sky.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. Look in the west&mdash;have you looked there?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Jan</i>. Yes, there are a few little clouds beginning to
+gather there indeed. We shall have a shower yet ere night.
+</p>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>The war-whoop is heard, loud and near</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Jan</i>. Mon Dieu! Here they are! It is all over with
+us! We shall be murdered!
+</p>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>She clasps her hands, and shrieks wildly</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. Hush! hush! Put down that window, and
+come away. We must be calm now.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Jan</i>. It is all over with us,&mdash;what use is there? Do
+you hear that trampling?&mdash;in the street!&mdash;they are coming!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. Janette&mdash;Hear me. Will you throw away
+your life and mine? For shame! Be calm. These
+Indians cannot know that we are here. They will see
+these houses <i>all</i> deserted. Why should they stop to
+search <i>this?</i> Hush! hush! they are passing now.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Jan</i>. They have stopped!&mdash;the trampling has stopped!&mdash;I
+hear the gate,&mdash;they have come into the yard.
+</p>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>A long wild yell is heard under the window. They stand, looking silently at each other. Again it trembles through the room, louder than before</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. I am sorry you stayed here with me.
+Perhaps&mdash;Hark! What was that? What was that? Was it
+not <i>Maitland</i> they said then? It was&mdash;it is&mdash;Don't
+grasp me so.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Jan</i>. Nay&mdash;what would you do?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. I must speak with them. Let go my arm! Do
+you not hear? 'Tis Maitland they are talking of. How
+strangely that blessed name sounds in those tones!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Jan</i>. You must not&mdash;we have tempted Heaven already&mdash;this
+is madness.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. Let go, Janette. It is not you they seek. You
+can conceal yourself. You shall be safe.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Jan</i>. She is wild! Nay, I was mad myself, or I should
+never have stayed here. It were better to have lived
+always with them, than to be murdered thus.
+</p>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>Helen opens the window, and stands for a moment, looking silently down into the court. She turns away, shuddering</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. Can I meet those eyes again?
+</p>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>Again the name of Maitland mingles with the wild and unintelligible sounds that rise from without</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. Can I? (<i>She turns to the window</i>.) What
+can it mean? His own beautiful steed! How fiercely
+he prances beneath that unskilful rein. Where's your
+master, Selma, that he leaves me to be murdered here?
+A letter! He bids me unfasten the door, Janette.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Jan</i>. And will you?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. They are treacherous I know. This will
+do.&mdash;(<i>Taking a basket from the toilette</i>.) Give me that cord.
+(<i>She lets down the basket from the window, and draws
+it up, with a letter in it</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. (<i>Looking at the superscription</i>.) 'Tis his!
+I thought so. Is it ink and paper that I want now?
+(<i>Breaking it open</i>.) Ah, there's no forgery in this, 'Tis
+his! 'tis his!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Jan</i>. How can she stand to look at that little lock of
+hair now?&mdash;smiling as if she had found a bag of diamonds.
+But there's bad news there. How the color
+fades out, and the light in her eye dies away. What can it be?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. (<i>Throwing the letter down, and walking the
+floor hastily</i>.) This is too much! I cannot, I cannot,
+<i>I cannot go with them</i>! How could he ask it of me?
+<i>This is</i> cruel.
+</p>
+<p>
+He knew, perfectly well, how I have always feared
+them&mdash;I cannot go with them.
+</p>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>She takes up the letter</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<br>
+(<i>Reading</i>.) "Possible"&mdash;"If it were possible"&mdash;he
+does not read that word as I did when I kept this promise&mdash;<i>Possible</i>? He does not know the meaning that
+love gives that word&mdash;"If I had known an hour sooner,"
+&mdash;Ay, ay, an hour sooner!&mdash;"Trust me, dear Helen,
+they will not harm you." <i>Trust me</i>, trust me. Won't I?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Jan</i>. She is beckoning them, as I live!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. Bring me that hat and mantle, Netty. I must
+go with these savages.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Jan</i>. <i>Go</i> with them!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. There is no help for it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Jan</i>. With these wild creatures,&mdash;with these painted
+devils?&mdash;No&mdash;Like nothing human they look, I am
+sure. Ah see, see them in their feathers and blankets,
+and that long wild hair. See the knives and the tomahawks
+in their girdles! Holy Mary! Here's one within
+the court!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. Yes, there he stands&mdash;there's life in it
+now.&mdash;There
+they stand&mdash;the chesnut boughs wave over them&mdash;this
+is the filling up of life. They <i>are</i> waiting for me.
+'Tis no dream.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Jan</i>. Dare you go with them? They will murder you.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. If they were but human, I could move them&mdash;and
+yet it is the human in them that is so dreadful. To
+die were sad enough&mdash;to die by violence, by the power
+of the innocent elements, were dreadful, or to be torn of
+beasts; to meet the wild, fierce eye, with its fixed and
+deadly purpose, more dreadful; but ah, to see the human
+soul, from the murderers eye glaring on you, to encounter
+the human will in its wickedness, amid that wild
+struggle&mdash;Oh God! spare me.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Jan</i>. If you fear them so, surely you will not go with them.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. This letter says they are kind and innocent.
+One I <i>should</i> believe tells me there is no cause for fear.
+In his haste he could not find no other way to send for
+me.&mdash;The army will be here soon,&mdash;I <i>must</i> go with them.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Jan</i>. But Captain Grey will come back here again
+this afternoon. Stay,&mdash;stay, and we will go with him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. You can&mdash;yes, you will be safe. For myself, I
+will abide my choice. Surely I need not dread to go
+where my betrothed husband trusts me so fearlessly. I
+count my life worth little more than the price at which he
+values it. Clasp this mantle, Netty.&mdash;And is it thus I go
+forth from these blessed walls at last?&mdash;Through all those
+safe and quiet hours of peace and trust, did this dark end
+to them lie waiting here?&mdash;Are they calling me?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Jan</i>. Yes.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. Well,&mdash;I am ready. (<i>Lingering in the door</i>.) I
+shall sit by that window no more. Never again shall I
+turn those blinds to catch the breeze or the sunshine.
+Yes&mdash;(<i>returning</i>), let me look down on that orchard
+once again. Never more&mdash;never more.
+</p>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>She walks to the door, again pausing on the threshold</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. (<i>solemnly</i>.) Oh God, here, from childhood to
+this hour, morning and evening I have called on thee&mdash;forget
+me not. Farewell, Netty, you will see my mother&mdash;you
+will see them all&mdash;that is past.&mdash;Tell her I had
+seen the Indians, and was not afraid.
+</p>
+
+<p align="right">
+[<i>She goes out</i>.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Jan</i>. It won't take much to make an angel of her,
+there's that in it.
+</p>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>Looking cautiously through the shutters</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There she comes! How every eye in that wild group
+flashes on her! And yet with what a calm and stately
+bearing she meets them. Holy Mary! she suffers that
+savage creature to lift her to her horse, as though he
+were her brother, and the long knife by his side too, glancing
+in the sunshine! The horse, one would think, he
+knew the touch of that white hand on his neck. How
+gently he rears his beautiful head. There they go.
+Adieu! Was there ever so sad a smile?
+</p>
+<p>
+Another glimpse I shall have of them yet beyond those
+trees.&mdash;Yes, there they go&mdash;there they go. I can see
+that lovely plume waving among the trees still.&mdash;Was
+there ever so wild a bridal train?
+</p>
+
+<hr width="33%">
+
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+
+<!--NewPage-->
+
+<h3>DIALOGUE III.</h3>
+
+<h4>SCENE. <i>British Camp. The interior of a Tent richly furnished. An Officer seated at a table covered with papers and maps. A Servant in waiting</i>.</h4>
+
+<p>
+<i>The Officer</i>. (<i>Sipping his wine, and carefully examining
+a plan of the adjacent country</i>.) About here,
+we must be&mdash;let me see.&mdash;I heard the drum from their
+fort this morning, distinctly. Turn that curtain; we
+might get a faint breeze there now.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Ser't</i>. But the sun will be coming that side, Sir. It's
+past two o'clock.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Off</i>. Past two&mdash;a good position&mdash;very. Well, well,&mdash;we'll
+take our breakfast in Albany on Friday morning,
+and if our soldiers fast a day or two ere then, why
+they'll relish it the better;&mdash;once in the rich country beyond&mdash;Ay,
+it will take more troops than this General will
+have at his bidding by that time, to drain the Hudson's
+borders for us.
+</p>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>A Servant enters with a note</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Off</i>. (<i>Reading</i>.) "<i>The Baroness Reidesel's compliments&mdash;do
+her the honor&mdash;-Voisin has succeeded</i>."&mdash;Ay,
+ay,&mdash;Voisin has succeeded,&mdash;I'll warrant that. That
+caterer of hers must be in league with the powers of
+the air, I am certain. General Burgoyne will be but too
+happy, my Lady&mdash;(<i>writing the answer</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p align="right">
+[<i>The Servant goes out</i>.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Off</i>. Past two! The cannon should be in sight ere
+this. This to Sir George Ackland.
+</p>
+
+<p align="right">
+[<i>Exit the Attendant</i>.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Off</i>. Tuesday&mdash;Wednesday.&mdash;If the batteaux should
+get here to-morrow. One hundred teams&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>Another Officer enters the tent</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>1st Off</i>. How goes it abroad, Colonel St. Leger?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>2nd Off</i>. Indeed, Sir, the camp is as quiet as midnight.
+It's a breathless heat. But there are a few dark heads
+swelling in the west. We may have a shower yet ere night.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Bur</i>. Good news that. But here is better, (<i>giving
+the other an open letter</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>St. Leger</i>. Ay, ay, that reads well, Sir.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Bur</i>. And here is another as good. Yes Sir, yes Sir,&mdash;they
+are flocking in from all quarters&mdash;the insurgents are
+laying down their arms by hundreds. It must be a
+miserable fragment that Schuyler has with him by this.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>St. L</i>. General Burgoyne, is not it a singular circumstance,
+that the enemy should allow us to take possession
+of a point like that without opposition,&mdash;so trifling a
+detachment, too? Why, that hill commands the fort,&mdash;certainly
+it does.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Bur</i>. Well&mdash;well. They are pretty much reduced,
+I fancy, Sir. We shall hardly hear much more from
+them. Let me see,&mdash;this is the hill.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>St. L</i>. A pity we could not provoke them into an
+engagement, though! They depend so entirely upon
+the popular feeling for supplies and troops, and the whole
+machinery of their warfare, that it is rather hazardous
+reckoning upon them, after all. If we could draw
+them into an engagement <i>now</i>, the result would be certain.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Bur</i>. Yes, yes; we must contrive to do that ere
+long. Rather troublesome travelling companions they
+make, that's certain. Like those insects that swarm
+about us here,&mdash;no great honor in fighting them, but a
+good deal of discomfort in letting them alone. We must
+sweep them out of our way, I think, or at all events give
+them a brush, that will quiet them a little.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>St. L</i>. Or they might prove, after all, like the gadfly
+in the fable. I do not think this outbreak will be
+any disadvantage in the end, General.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Bur</i>. Not a whit&mdash;not a whit&mdash;they have needed this.
+It will do them good, Sir.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>St. L</i>. The fact is, these colonies were founded in
+the spirit of insubordination, and all the circumstances
+of their position have hitherto tended to develope only
+these disorganizing elements.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Bur</i>. It will do them good, Sir. Depend upon it,
+they'll remember this lesson. Pretty well sickened of
+war are they all. They'll count the cost ere they try it again.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>St. L</i>. We can hardly expect the news from General
+Reidesel before sunset, I suppose.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Bur</i>. If my messenger returns by to-morrow's sunrise,
+it is better fortune than I look for.
+</p>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>Col. St. Leger goes out</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>Burgoyne resumes his plan</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>A Ser't</i>. (<i>At the door</i>.) Capt. Maitland, Sir.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Bur</i>. Capt. Maitland!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Ser't</i>. From Fort Ann, Sir.
+</p>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>Maitland enters</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Bur</i>. Captain Maitland! Good heavens, I thought
+you were at Skeensborough by this,&mdash;what has happened?
+or am I to congratulate myself that the necessity of your
+embassy is obviated. You met them, perhaps?&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Maitland</i>. There's but little cause of congratulation,
+Sir, as these dispatches will prove to you. I returned
+only because my embassy was accomplished.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Bur</i>. Do you mean to say, Captain Maitland, that you
+have seen the waters of Lake Champlain, since you left
+here this morning?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mait</i>. I do, Sir.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Bur</i>. On my word, these roads must have improved
+since we travelled them some two days agone. I am
+sorry for your horses, Sir. You saw General Reidesel?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mait</i>. I left him only at nine o'clock this morning.
+</p>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>Burgoyne examines the dispatches</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Bur</i>. "Twelve oxen to one batteaux!"&mdash;"and but fifty
+teams!" This news was scarcely worth so much haste,
+I think,&mdash;but fifty teams?&mdash;Captain Maitland, had those
+draught horses from Canada not arrived yet?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mait</i>. They were just landing this morning as I left,
+but only one-fourth of the number contracted for.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Bur</i>. Humph! I would like to know what time, at
+this rate&mdash;sit down, Captain Maitland, sit down&mdash;we
+are like to spend the summer here, for aught I see,
+after all. (<i>A long pause, in which Burgoyne resumes
+his reading</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mait</i>. General Burgoyne, I am entrusted with a message
+from General Reidsel to the Baroness. If this is all&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Bur</i>. What were you saying?&mdash;The Baroness&mdash;ay,
+ay&mdash;that's all well enough,&mdash;but Captain Maitland is
+aware, no doubt, there are more important subjects on
+the tapis just now than a lady's behests.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mait</i>. Sir?&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Bur</i>. (<i>Pushing the papers impatiently from him</i>.)
+This will never do. St. George! We'll give these
+rebels other work ere many days, than driving away cattle
+and breaking down bridges for our convenience. Meanwhile
+we must open some new source of supplies, or
+we may starve to death among these hills yet. Captain
+Maitland, I have a proposal to make to you. You are
+impatient, Sir.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mait</i>. General Burgoyne!&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Bur</i>. Nay, nay,&mdash;there's no haste about it. It were
+cruel to detain you now, after the toil of this wild journey.
+You'll find your quarters changed, Captain Maitland.
+We sent a small detachment across the river just
+now. Some of our copper-colored allies had got into a
+fray with the enemy there.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mait</i>. Ha! (<i>returning</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Bur</i>. Nothing of consequence, as it turns out. We
+hoped it would have ended in something. A few of the
+enemy, who were stationed as a guard on a hill not far
+from Fort Edward, were surprised by a party of Indians,
+and killed, to a man, I believe. Afterwards, the victors
+got into a deadly fray among themselves as usual. A
+quarrel between a couple of these chiefs, at some famous
+watering place of theirs, and in the midst of it, a party
+from the fort drove them from the ground;&mdash;this is
+Alaska's own story at least.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mait</i>. <i>Alaska's!</i>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Bur</i>. Alaska?&mdash;Alaska?&mdash;yes, I think it was,&mdash;one of
+these new allies we have picked up here.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mait</i>. (<i>In a whisper</i>.) Good God!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Bur</i>. By the time our detachment arrived there, however,
+the ground was cleared, and they took quiet possession.
+Are you ill, Captain Maitland?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mait</i>. A little,&mdash;it is nothing. I am to cross the river.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Bur</i>, Yes. You will take these papers to Captain
+Andre. You have over-fatigued yourself. You should
+have taken more time for this wild journey.
+</p>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>Maitland goes out</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Bur</i>. I do not like the idea of division, but it cannot be
+helped now. This gallant young soldier were a fitting
+leader for such an enterprize.
+</p>
+
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+
+<!--NewPage-->
+
+<h3>DIALOGUE IV.</h3>
+
+<h4>SCENE. <i>The ground before Maitland's Tent</i>.</h4>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>Maitland and the Indian Chief, Manida, enter</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mait</i>. This is well. (<i>He writes on a slip of paper,
+and gives it to the Indian</i>.) Take that, they will give
+you the reward you ask for it. Let me see your face no
+more, that is all.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Manida</i>. Ha, <i>Monsieur</i>?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mait</i>. Let me see your face no more, I say. Do you understand me?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Manida</i>. (<i>Smiling</i>.) Oui.
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>Maitland turns from him. The Indian goes off in the opposite direction. He stops a moment, and steals a look at Maitland,&mdash;throws his head back with a long silent laugh, and then goes on toward the woods</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mait</i>. (<i>Musing</i>.) I like this. <i>This</i> is womanly!
+Nay, perhaps there is no caprice about it. I may have
+misinterpreted that letter in my haste last night. Very
+likely. Well,&mdash;better this, than that Helen Grey should
+come to evil through fault of mine,&mdash;better this, than the
+anguish of the horrible misgivings that haunted me amid
+my journey.
+</p>
+<p>
+And so pass these faery visions! Nay, not thus. It
+will take longer than this to unlink this one day's hope
+from its thousand fastnesses. I thought, ere this, to have
+met the spirit of those beaming eyes, to have taken to my
+heart for ever this soft, pure being of another life.
+And yet, even as I rode through those lonely hills this
+morning, with every picture my hope painted, there came
+a strange misgiving;&mdash;like some scene of laughing noonday
+loveliness, darkening in the shadow of a summer's cloud.
+</p>
+<p>
+Strange that Alaska should abandon my trust! I cannot
+understand it. Why, I should never have trusted
+her with this rascal Indian. There was something in
+his eye, hateful beyond all thought,&mdash;and once or twice
+I caught a strange expression in it, like malignant triumph
+it seemed. It may be&mdash;no, he must have seen
+her&mdash;that glove he showed me was hers, I know. Good
+God!&mdash;what if&mdash;I think my old experience should
+have taught me there was little danger of her risking
+much in my behalf. Well&mdash;even this is better, than that
+Helen Grey should have come to evil through fault of mine.
+</p>
+
+<hr width="33%">
+
+&nbsp;<br>
+&nbsp;<br>
+&nbsp;<br>
+&nbsp;<br>
+&nbsp;<br>
+&nbsp;<br>
+
+<!--NewPage-->
+
+<a name="part6"><!--MARKER--></a>
+<h2>PART SIXTH</h2>
+
+<hr width="33%">
+
+<center>
+RECONCILIATION.
+</center>
+
+<hr width="33%">
+
+<h3>DIALOGUE I.</h3>
+
+<h4>SCENE. <i>The slope of the Hill near Fort Edward. The road-side, shaded with stately pines and hemlocks</i>.</h4>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>Two British Officers, coming slowly down the road</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>1st Off</i>. Yes, here has been wild work upon this hill
+to-day. They were slaughtered to a man.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>2nd Off</i>. I saw a sight above there, just now, that sickened me of warfare.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>1st Off</i>. And what was that, pry'thee?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>2nd Off</i>. Oh nothing,&mdash;'twas nothing but a dead soldier;
+a common sight enough, indeed; but this was a
+mere youth;&mdash;he was lying in a little hollow on the roadside,
+and as I crossed in haste, I had well-nigh set my
+foot on his brow. Such a brow it was, so young, so noble,
+and the dark chesnut curls clustering about it. I think
+I never saw a more classic set of features, or a look of
+loftier courage than that which death seemed to have
+found and marbled in them. Hark&mdash;that's a water-fall we hear.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>1st Off</i>. I saw him, there was another though, lying
+not far thence, the sight of whom moved me more. He
+was younger yet, or seemed so, and of a softer mould;
+and, torn and bloody as they were, I fancied I could see
+in his garb and appointments, and in every line of his
+features, the traces of some mother's tenderness.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>2nd Off</i>. Listen, Andre! This is beautiful! There's
+some cascade not far hence, worth searching for.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Andre</i>. Yes, just in among those trees you'll find a
+perfect drawing-room, carpeted, canopied, and dark as
+twilight; its verdant seats broidered with violets and
+forget-me-nots; and all untenanted it seems, nay, deserted
+rather, for the music wastes on the lonely air, as if the
+fairy that kept state there, in gossip mood had stolen
+down some neighboring aisle, and would be home anon.
+I would have bartered all the glory of this campaign for
+leave to stretch myself on its mossy bank, for a soft hour or so.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mor</i>. Ay, with Chaucer or the "Faery Queen." If
+one could people these lovely shades with the fresh creations
+of the olden time, knight and lady, and dark enchantress
+and Paynim fierce, instead of Yankee rebels&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Andre</i>. 'Twere well your faery-work were of no lasting
+mould, or these same Yankee rebels would scarce
+thank you for your pains,&mdash;they hold that race in little
+reverence. Alas,&mdash;
+</p>
+<p>
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; No grot divine, or wood-nymph haunted glen,
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Or stream, or fount, shall these young shades e'er know.
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; No beautiful divinity, stealing afar
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Through darkling nooks, to poet's eye thence gleam;
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; With mocking mystery the dim ways wind,
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; They reach not to the blessed fairy-land
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; That once all lovely in heaven's stolen light,
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; To yearning thoughts, in the deep green-wood grew.
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Ah! had they come to light when nature
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Was a wonder-loving, story-telling child!&mdash;
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; The misty morn of ages had gone by,
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; The dreamy childhood of the race was past,
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And in its tame and reasoning manhood,
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; In the daylight broad, and noon-day of all time,
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; <i>This</i> world hath sprung. The poetry of <i>truth</i>,
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; None other, shall her shining lakes, and woods,
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And ocean-streams, and hoary mountains wear.
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Perchance that other day of poesy,
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Unsung of prophets, that upon the lands
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Shall dawn yet, thence shall spring. The self-same mind
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; That on the night of ages once, for us
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Those deathless clusters flung, the self-same mind,
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; With all its ancient elements of might,
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Among us now its ancient glory hides;
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; But, from its smothered power, and buried wealth,
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; A golden future sparkles, decked from deeper founts,
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; A new and lovelier firmament,
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; A thousand realms of song undreamed of now,
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; That shall make Romance a forgotten world,
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And the young heaven of Antiquity,
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; With all its starry groups, a gathered scroll.
+<br>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mor</i>. Ay, Andre, you were born a poet, and have mistaken
+your art. Prythee excuse me, who am but a poor
+soldier, for marring so fine a rhapsody with any thing so
+sublunary; but, methinks, for an enemy's quarters, yonder
+fort shows as peaceable a front of stone and mortar
+as one could ask for. What can it mean that they are
+so quiet there?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Andre</i>. That spy did not return a second time.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mor</i>. The rogues have made sure of him ere this, I
+fancy. They may have given us the slip,&mdash;who knows?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Andre</i>. I would like to venture a stroll through that
+shady street if I thought so. A dim impression that I
+have somewhere seen this view before, haunts me unaccountably.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mor</i>. How I hate that sober, afternoon air, that hangs
+like an invisible presence over it all. You can see it in
+the sunshine on those white walls, you can hear it in the
+hum of the bee from the bending thistle here.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Andre</i>. Of the mind it is. This were lovely as the
+morning light, but for the shade it gathers thence, from
+the thought of decline and the vanishing day. 'Tis a
+pretty spot.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mor</i>. Yes, but the quiet goings-on of life are all hushed there now.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Andre</i>. Ay, this is the hour, when the home-bound
+children swing the gate with a merry spring, and the
+mother sits at her work by the open window, with her quiet
+eye, and the daughter, with the beauty of an untamed soul
+in her's, looks forth on the woods and meadows, and
+thinks of her walk at even-tide. I thought it was something
+like a memory that haunted me thus,&mdash;'tis the spot
+that Maitland talked of yesterday.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mor</i>. Captain Maitland? I saw him just now at the works above.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Andre</i>. Here? On this hill?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mor</i>. Yes,&mdash;something struck me in his mien,&mdash;and
+there he stands with Colonel Hill, above, on the other
+side.&mdash;Mark him now. Your friend is handsome, Andre;
+he is handsome, I'll own,&mdash;but I never liked that
+smile of his, and I think I like it less than ever now.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Andre</i>. Why, that's the genuine Apollo-curl,&mdash;a line's
+breadth deeper were too much, I'll own.
+</p>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>Maitland and another Officer enter</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Off</i>. That is all,&mdash;that is all, I believe, Captain Maitland.
+Yonder pretty dwelling among the trees seems
+an old acquaintance of yours. It has had the ill manners
+to rob me of your eye ever since we stood here, and I
+have had little token that the other senses were not in
+its company. Andre, has your friend never a ladye-love
+in these wilds, you could tell us of?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mor</i>. He is sworn to secresy. Did you mark that glance?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mait</i>. Love! I hold it a pretty theme for the ballad-makers,
+Colonel Hill; but for myself, I have scarce time
+for rhyming just now. Captain Andre, here are papers for you.
+</p>
+
+<p align="right">
+[<i>He walks away, descending the road</i>.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Col. Hill</i>. So! So! What ails the boy?
+</p>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>Looking after him for a moment, and then ascending the hill</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Andre</i>. (<i>Reading</i>.) Humph! Here's prose enough!
+Will you walk up the hill with me, Mortimer? I must
+cross the river again.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mait</i>. First let me seek this horse of mine,&mdash;the rogue
+must have strayed down this path, I think.
+</p>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>He enters the wood</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>Andre walks to and fro with an impatient air, then pauses</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Andre</i>. Well, I can wait no longer for this loiterer.
+
+<p align="right">
+[<i>Exit</i>.
+</p>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>Mortimer re-enters, calling from the woods</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mor</i>. Andre! Maitland! Colonel Hill! Good
+Heavens! Where the devil are they all? Maitland!
+</p>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>Maitland appears, slowly ascending the road</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mor</i>. For the love of Heaven,&mdash;come here.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mail</i>. Nay.&mdash;but what is it?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mor</i>. For God's sake, come,
+</p>
+
+<hr width="33%">
+
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+
+<!--NewPage-->
+
+<h3>DIALOGUE II.</h3>
+
+<h4>SCENE. <i>A little glen, darkly shaded with pines. A fountain issuing from one side, and falling with a curious murmur into the basin below</i>.</h4>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>Mortimer and Maitland enter</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mor</i>. This is the place!&mdash;Well, if hallucinations like
+this can visit mortal eyes, I'll ne'er trust mine again.
+'Tis the spot, I'm sure of it,&mdash;the place, too, that Andre
+was raving about just now.&mdash;The fairies' drawing-room,&mdash;palace
+rather,&mdash;look at these graceful shafts, Maitland,&mdash;and
+fairies' work, it must have been in good earnest.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mait</i>. If it's to admire this clump of pine trees you
+have brought me hither, allow me to say you might have
+spared yourself that trouble. I have seen the place already,
+as often as I care to.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mor</i>. Come this way a little,&mdash;yes, it was just above
+there that I stood,&mdash;it must have been.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mait</i>. If you would give me some little inkling of what
+you are talking about, Lieutenant Mortimer, I should be
+more likely to help you, if it's help you need.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mor</i>. I do not ask you to believe me, but,&mdash;as I was
+springing on my horse just now above there, the gurgling
+of this spring caught my ear, and looking down suddenly&mdash;upon
+my word, Captain Maitland, I am ashamed
+to describe what cannot but seem to you such an improbable
+piece of fancy-work; and yet, true it seemed, as
+that I see you now. I was looking down, as I said, when
+suddenly, among those low evergreens, the brilliant hue
+of a silken mantle caught my eye, and then a woman's
+brow gleamed up upon me. Yes, there in that dark
+cradle, calmly sleeping, all flashing with gold and jewels,
+like some bright vision of olden time, methought there
+lay&mdash;a lady,&mdash;a girl, young and lovely as a dream;&mdash;the
+white plume in her bonnet soiled and broken, and the
+long bright hair streaming heavily on her mantle,&mdash;and
+yet with all its loveliness, such a face of utter sorrow saw
+I never. I <i>saw</i> her, I saw her, as I see you now,&mdash;the
+proud young form with such a depth of grace, in its
+strange repose, and&mdash;where are you going?&mdash;what are
+you doing, Maitland?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mait</i>. Helen Grey!&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mor</i>. You are right. I did not mark that break&mdash;yes&mdash;there
+she lies. Said I right, Maitland?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mait</i>. Helen Grey!&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mor</i>. Maitland! Heavens!&mdash;what a world of anguish
+that tone reveals!&mdash;Why do you stand gazing on that lovely
+sleeper thus?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mait</i>. Bring water. There's a cup at yonder spring.
+Here has been treachery! Devils and fiends have been
+working here against me. We must unclasp this mantle.
+The treasure of the earth lies here.&mdash;Now doth
+mine arm enfold it once, at last. 'Tis sweet, Helen,
+mine own <i>true</i> love; 'tis sweet, even thus.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mor</i>. This letter,&mdash;see&mdash;from those loosened folds it
+just now dropped. This might throw some light, perchance&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mait</i>. Let it be. There's light enough. I want no
+more. Water,&mdash;more water,&mdash;do you see?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mor</i>. Maitland,&mdash;this is vain. Mark this dark spot
+upon her girdle&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mait</i>. Hush, hush,&mdash;there, cover it thus&mdash;'tis nothing,
+Loosen this bonnet&mdash;so&mdash;'twas a firm hand that tied
+that knot; so&mdash;she can breathe now.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mor</i>. How like life, those soft curls burst from their
+loosened pressure! But mark you&mdash;there is no other motion,
+I am sorry to distress you,&mdash;but&mdash;Maitland&mdash;this
+lady is dead.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mait. Dead</i>! Lying hell-hound! <i>Dead</i>! Say that again.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mor</i>. God help you!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mait. Dead</i>! Helen Grey, open these eyes. Here's
+one that, never having seen them, talks of death. Oh
+God! is it thus we meet at last? At last these arms
+are round her, and she knows it not. I look upon her,
+but her eye answers me not. Dead!&mdash;for me? Murdered!&mdash;mine
+own hand hath done it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mor</i>. Why do you start thus?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mait</i>. Hush!&mdash;hush! There!&mdash;again&mdash;that slow
+heavy throb&mdash;again! again!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mor</i>. Good God! she breathes! This is life indeed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mait</i>. (<i>Solemnly</i>.) Ay, thank God. This moment's sweetness is enough.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mor</i>. How like one in troubled sleep she murmurs!
+Mark those tones of sweet and wild entreaty. Listen!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mait</i>. I have heard it again!&mdash;from the buried years
+of love and hope that music came. She is here. 'Tis <i>she</i>.
+This is no marble mockery. She is here! Her
+head is on my bosom. Death cannot rob me of this
+sweetness now.
+</p>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>Talking without</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>A Lady</i>. This way&mdash;I hear their voices. Down this
+pathway&mdash;here they are.
+</p>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>Lady Ackland and Andre enter the Glen</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Lady A</i>. I knew it could not be. They told us she
+was murdered, Maitland. (<i>Starting back</i>.) Ah&mdash;ah&mdash;God
+help thee, Maitland!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mait</i>. Listen, listen. She was speaking but now. There&mdash;again!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Lady A</i>. And this is she! Can the wilderness blossom
+thus? And did God unfold such loveliness&mdash;for a
+waste so cruel?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. (<i>In a low murmur</i>.) We are almost there.
+If we could but pass this glen. Oh God! will they stop
+here? Go on,&mdash;go on. Was not that a white tent I
+saw? Go on. They will not. 'Tis nothing,&mdash;do not weep.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mait</i>. Look at me, Helen.&mdash;Open these eyes. One
+more look&mdash;one more.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Andre</i>. She hears your bidding.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mait</i>. Oh God! Do you see those eyes&mdash;those dim,
+bewildered eyes?&mdash;it is quenched&mdash;quenched. Let her
+lean on you.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Lady A</i>. Gently&mdash;gently, she does not see us yet.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. Oh Mother, I am ill and weary. Here's this
+dream again! Blue sky? and pine-tree boughs? Am I
+here indeed? Yes, I remember now,&mdash;we stood upon
+that cliff&mdash;I am dying. Is there no one here? Whose
+tears are these?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Lady A</i>. Dear child, sweet one, nay, lean on me.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. My mother, oh my mother, come to me. Come,
+Annie, come, come! Strangers all!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mor</i>. Her eye is on him. Hush!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Andre</i>. See in an instant how the light comes flashing
+up from those dim depths again. <i>That</i> is the eye that I
+saw yesterday.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Lady A</i>. That slowly settling smile,&mdash;deeper and
+deeper&mdash;saw you ever any thing so gay, so passing lovely?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. Is it&mdash;is it&mdash;Everard Maitland&mdash;is it <i>thee</i>?
+The living real of my thousand dreams, in the light of
+life doth he stand there now? Doth he? <i>'Tis he!</i>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mait</i>. Helen!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. 'Tis he! That tone's spell builds around me
+its all-sheltering music-walls, and death is nothing. Oh
+God, when at thy dark will dimly revealed, I trembled
+yesterday, I did not think in this most rosy bower to
+meet its fearfulness.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mait</i>. Helen,&mdash;dost thou love me <i>yet</i>?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. Doubter, am I dying here?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mait</i>. 'Tis her own most rich and blessed smile,
+even as of old in mirth it shone upon me. Your murderer,
+you count me then?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Helen</i>. Come hither,&mdash;let me lean on <i>you</i>. Star of
+the wilderness!&mdash;of this life that is fading now, the sun!&mdash;<i>doth</i>
+mine eye see thee, then, at last? Oh! this is
+sweet! On its own holy home my head rests now.
+Everard, in this dark world <i>Love leans on Faith</i>. How
+else, even in God's love and loveliness, could I trust now
+for that strange future on whose bloody threshold I am lying
+here; yes, and in spite of prayers and trust, and struggling
+hopes. And yet&mdash;how beautiful it is&mdash;that love invisible,
+invisible no more. Like glorious sunshine it is
+streaming round me,&mdash;lighting all. The infinite of that
+thy smile hath imaged, as real,&mdash;it beams on me now.
+Have faith, in <i>him</i> I mean; for&mdash;if we meet again&mdash;we'll
+need it then no more; and&mdash;how dim it grows&mdash;nay, let
+me lean on you,&mdash;and&mdash;through <i>this</i> life's darkening
+glass I shall see you no more. Nay, hold me!&mdash;quick!&mdash;where
+art thou?&mdash;Everard!&mdash;He is gone&mdash;gone!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Lady A</i>. Dead!&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mor</i>. She is dead!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Andre</i>. This was Love.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Lady A</i>. See how her eyes are fixed on <i>you</i>. The
+light and love of the vanished soul looks through them
+still. Cruelly hath it been sent thence; and no other
+gleam of its changeful beauty will e'er dawn in them.
+Sadly, oh lovely stranger, I close for ever now these
+dark-fringed lids upon their love and beauty. Yes&mdash;<i>this</i>
+was love!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Andre</i>. And so there was a need-be in its doom. I'll
+ne'er believe <i>that</i> genuine, that is blessed. The fate of
+this life would not suffer it. Ah! if it would, if Heaven
+should leave a gem like that outside her walls, we should
+none of us go thither.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mait</i>. Dead? How beautiful! Yes&mdash;let her lie
+there&mdash;under that lovely canopy. Dead!&mdash;it's a curious
+word&mdash;How comes it that we all stand here? Ha,
+Andre?&mdash;is it you?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Andre</i>. I heard the tale as I crossed just now, from
+an Indian, who was one in the ambuscade this noon&mdash;and
+in the woods on the other side, I found this lady,
+with her attendants, abiding the promise she made you
+last night, to welcome this lovely stranger with her savage
+guides.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mait</i>. Hush, hush. Let it pass. See,&mdash;a bride!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mor</i>. (<i>Aside</i>.) Did he trust her with these murderers?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mait</i>. Ay&mdash;say yes.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Andre</i>. Indeed, Maitland, you wrong yourself. It was
+the treachery of this savage Manida that crossed your
+plans, working the mission of some Higher power,&mdash;as for
+Alaska, you might as soon have doubted me.
+</p>
+<p>
+The Chief he sent for her was one he had known
+years&mdash;but, unfortunately, he was one in the ambuscade
+this morning&mdash;nay, the leader of it; for the murdered Indian
+was his son; and meanwhile amid the fight the
+treacherous Manida, who accompanied him to Maitland's
+tent last night, and heard the promised reward,
+found means to steal from its concealment the letter,
+with which he easily won this trusting lady to accompany him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mor</i>. Ah!&mdash;there it lies.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Andre</i>. It was here in this glen that Alaska, discovering
+the treachery, lay in wait for them with a band of
+chosen warriors, and on that cliff above they fought.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Lady A</i>. (<i>Aside</i>.) And she stood there, amid those
+yelling demons alone! Methinks the angels should have
+come from their unseen dwellings at her prayer. Can
+our humanity's darkest extremity wring no love from the
+invisible?&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Andre</i>. Alaska had regained his charge; but the malignant
+eye, and the deadly arrow of the vanquished Indian
+followed her. She fell, even in the place where you
+found her; for at that same instant a party from the fort
+drove them hence, victor and vanquished. Alaska fled;
+but the murderer, with a tale cunning enough to deceive
+the lover, boldly demanded and obtained the prize.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mor</i>. Mark his changed mien. I would rather see
+tears for a grief like this, than that calm smile with
+which he gazes on her now.
+</p>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>Burgoyne and St. Leger are seen talking in the road above,&mdash;they enter the glen</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Bur</i>. At a crisis like this we might better have lost a
+thousand men in battle! Ah! ah!&mdash;a sight for our enemies,
+Lady Ackland! Where is this Indian?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>St. L</i>. We have sent out for him. No one has seen him as yet.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Bur</i>. Let him be found. Look to it. We will give
+them an example for once. I say, at a crisis like this
+we might better have lost a thousand men in battle,
+for it will turn thousands against us, and rouse the
+slumbering spirit of resistance here, at the very crisis
+when, had it slumbered on a little longer, all was ours.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>St. L</i>. But this was a quarrel among the Indians, and no fault of ours.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Bur</i>. No matter. You will see what Schuyler will
+make of it. His wordy proclamation will have its living
+sequel now. A young and innocent girl, seeking the
+protection of our camp, is inhumanly murdered by Indians
+in our pay. A single tale like this is enough to
+undo at a blow all that we have accomplished here.
+With ten thousand wild aggravations, it will be told in
+every cottage of these borders before to-morrow's sunset.
+</p>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>Another Officer enters hastily</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Off</i>. Here is Arnold, with a thousand men, on the
+brow of the next hill. One of the rebel guard escaped,
+and the news of the massacre here has reached their camp below.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Bur</i>. Said I right?
+</p>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>The three Officers go out together</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Andre</i>. This story is spreading fast, there will be
+throngs here presently. Maitland,&mdash;nay, do not let me
+startle you thus, but&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mait</i>. Is it you? What was it we were saying yesterday?&mdash;we
+should have noted it. This were a picture
+worth your pencilling now. Those silken vestments,&mdash;that
+long, golden hair,&mdash;this youthful shape,&mdash;there's that
+same haughty grace about it, that the smile of these
+thought-lit eyes would disown with every glance. Then
+that letter,&mdash;and the Lady Ackland here,&mdash;Weeping?&mdash;This
+is most strange. I know you all,&mdash;but,&mdash;as I live I
+can't remember how this chanced. How comes it that we
+all stand here? Pearls?&mdash;and white silk?&mdash;a bridal?&mdash;Ha
+ha ha! (<i>Laughing wildly</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Lady A</i>. Take me away. This is too terrible! lean
+stay here no longer. Take me away, Andre.
+</p>
+
+<p align="right">
+[<i>Exeunt Andre and Lady A</i>.
+</p>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>An Officer enters</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>The Officer</i>. We are ordered to withdraw our detachment,
+Captain Maitland. The rebels are just below,
+some two thousand strong, and in no mood to be encountered.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mor</i>. He does not hear you. We must leave that
+murdered lady here, and 'tis vain to think of parting them. Come.
+</p>
+
+<p align="right">
+[<i>Exeunt Mortimer and Officer</i>.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mait</i>. They are gone at last. They are all gone. I
+am alone with my dead bride. I must needs smile&mdash;I
+could not weep when those haughty and prying eyes
+were upon me, but now&mdash;I am alone with my dead bride.&mdash;Helen,
+they are all gone,&mdash;we are alone. How still she
+lies,&mdash;smiling too,&mdash;on that same bank. She will speak,
+surely she will. How lightly those soft lashes lie, as if a
+word would lift them.&mdash;Helen!&mdash;I will be calm and patient
+as a child. This lovely smile is deepening, it will
+melt to words again.&mdash;Hark! that spring,&mdash;that same
+curious murmur! We have checked our sweetest
+words to hear it, we have stood here listening to it, till
+we fancied, in its talk-like tones, wild histories, beautiful
+and sad, the secrets of the woods.&mdash;Oh God!&mdash;and have
+such memories no power here now? In mine ear alone
+doth the spring murmur now. Death! what is't?&mdash;Awake!
+awake,&mdash;by the love that is <i>stronger</i> than
+death,&mdash;awake!&mdash;
+</p>
+<p>
+I thought that scene would shift. It had a heavy,
+dream-like mistiness. <i>This</i> is reality again. <i>These</i>
+are the pine trees that I dreamed of. See! how beautiful!
+With the sharp outline and the vivid hue such as
+our childhood's unworn sense yields, they are waving
+now. Look, Andre, there she sits, the young and radiant
+stranger,&mdash;there, in the golden sunset she is sitting still,
+braiding those flowers,&mdash;see, how the rich life flashes in
+her eye, and yet, just now I dreamed that she was dead,
+and&mdash;and&mdash;Oh my God!
+</p>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>A voice without</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Let go, who stays me?&mdash;where's my sister?
+</p>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>Captain Grey enters</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Grey</i>. Ha! Murderer! art satisfied?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mait</i>. Ay.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Grey</i>. What, do you mock me, Sir?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mait</i>. Let her be. She is mine!&mdash;all mine! my
+love, my bride,&mdash;my <i>bride</i>?&mdash;<i>Murderer</i>?&mdash;Stay!&mdash;Don't
+glare at me! I know you, Sir. I can hurl off
+these mountain shadows yet.&mdash;They'll send some stronger
+devil ere they wrench this hold from me! I know
+you well. What make you here?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Grey</i>. Madness!&mdash;there's little wonder!&mdash;It's the only
+good that Heaven has left for him! My lovely playfellow,&mdash;my
+sister, is it so indeed? Alas! all gently
+lies this hand in mine. There is no angry strength here
+now. Helen!&mdash;Ah! would to God our last words had
+not been in bitterness.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mait</i>. He weeps. I never thought to see tears there.
+List!&mdash;she should not lie there thus. Strange it should
+move you so!&mdash;Think it a picture now. 'Tis but a well-wrought
+painting after all, if one but thinks so. See,&mdash;'tis
+but a sleeping girl, with the red summer light upon
+her cheek, and the slight breeze stirring her golden hair.
+Mark you that shoulder's grace?&mdash;They come.
+</p>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>Leslie, Elliston, and others enter</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Leslie</i>. Oh God, was there none other? My lovely
+cousin, and&mdash;were <i>you</i> the victim? In your bridal glory
+chosen,&mdash;nay, with your heart's holiest law lured to the
+bloody altar! Yet this day's history, and something in
+that calm, high mien, tells me, as freely you had moved
+unto it, though God had spoken by a higher voice, and
+with a martyr's garland beckoned you.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Elliston</i>. Our cause is linked unto that ancient one,
+the cause of Love and Truth; in which Heaven moves
+with unrelenting hand, not sparing its own loveliest
+ones, but unto bloody death freely delivering them.
+</p>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>Grey and Leslie converse apart</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Leslie</i>. Yes&mdash;we will bury her here. 'Tis a fitting
+spot; and unto distant days, this lonely grave, with its
+ever-verdant canopy, shall be even as Love's Shrine.
+Thither, in the calm and smiling summers of those bloodless
+times shall many a fair young pilgrim come, to
+wonder at such love; and living eyes shall weep, and
+living hearts shall heave over its cruel fate, when unto
+her the long-told tale, and all the anguish of this far-off
+day, shall be even as the dim passage of some troubled
+dream. A martyr's garland she hath won indeed; true
+Love's young Martyr there she lies.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Elliston</i>. Yet was that love but the wreathed and glittering
+weapon of a higher doom. In that holy cause,
+whose martyrs strew a thousand fields, truth's, freedom's,
+God's, darkly, by <i>Power Invisible</i> hath this young life
+been offered here.
+</p>
+<p>
+A thousand graves like this, over all this lovely land,
+in lanes and fields, on the lonely hill-side, by the laughing
+stream, and in the depths of many a silent wood, to
+distant days shall speak&mdash;of blood-sealed destinies;
+with voices that no tyrant's power can smother, they
+shall speak.&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Leslie</i>. The light of that chamber window, through
+the soft summer evening will shine here; no mournful
+memory of all the lovely past will it waken. The autumn
+blaze will flicker within those distant walls, and
+gather its pleasant circle again; but <i>she</i> will lie calmly
+here. For ever at her feet the river of her childhood
+shall murmur on, and many a lovely spring-time, like the
+spring-times of her childhood, shall come and go, but no
+yearning hope shall it waken here; the winter shall sing
+through the desolate boughs, and rear its fairy temples
+around her, but nought shall break her dreamless rest.&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mait</i>. Graves! Is it graves they are talking of?
+Will they bury this gay young bride! 'Tis but the
+name; there's nothing sad in it. In the lovely summer
+twilight shall her burial be, and thus; in all her bridal
+array, with the glory of the crimson sunset shining
+through the trees;&mdash;see what a fearful glow is kindling
+on her cheek, and that faint breeze&mdash;or, is it life that stirs
+these curls? Stay!&mdash;whose young brow is this?&mdash;Ha!&mdash;<i>whose</i>
+smile is this? Who is this they would hurry
+away into the darkness of death? The grave! Could
+you fold the rosy and all-speading beauty of heaven in
+the narrow grave? Helen, is it thee?&mdash;my heaven, my
+long-lost heaven; and, even now, but for mine own deed&mdash;Oh
+God! was there no hand but mine?&mdash;but for me&mdash;They
+&mdash;shall not utter it,&mdash;there, thus. There's
+but <i>one</i> cry that could unfold this grief, but that would
+circle the round universe and fill eternity. A sad sight
+this! Is't known who killed this lady, Sir?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Leslie</i>. Of all the wrecks of beautiful humanity that
+strew these paths, we have found none so sad as this!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Elliston</i>. Mark you those groups of soldiers loitering
+on the road-side there?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>An Officer</i>. Curiosity. The regiment that was dismissed
+to-day. They'll be here anon.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Leslie</i>. Ay, let them come.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Off</i>. Look,&mdash;who comes up that winding pathway
+through the trees, with such a swift and stately movement?
+A woman! See how the rude soldiers turn
+aside with awe. Ah, she comes hither.
+</p>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>A voice without</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Where is she?&mdash;stand aside!&mdash;What have you here
+in this dark ring?&mdash;Henry&mdash;nay, let me come.
+</p>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>Mrs. Grey enters the glen</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Grey</i>. For God's sake, Madam, let me lead you hence.
+This is no place for you. Look at this group of men,
+officers, soldiers&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mrs. G</i>. Would you cheat me <i>thus</i>? Is it no place
+for <i>me</i>? What kind of place is't then for her, whose&mdash;Oh
+God!&mdash;think you I do not see that slippered foot, nor
+know whose it is,&mdash;and whose plumed bonnet is it that
+lies crushed there at their feet?&mdash;unhand me, Henry.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Leslie</i>. Nay, let her come,&mdash;'tis best.
+</p>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>She passes swiftly through the parting group</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mrs. G</i>. My daughter!&mdash;<i>Blood</i>? My stricken child
+smile you? No pity was there then? Speak to me, speak!
+Your mother's tears are on your brow, and heed you not?
+Nay, tell me all, my smitten one. This day's dark history
+will you never pour into my ear, that hath treasured so
+often your lightest grief? Alone through that wild anguish
+have you passed, and smile you now? I bade her
+trust in God. Did <i>God</i> see this?
+</p>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>Arnold, and a group of Soldiers, enter the glen</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Arnold</i>. Look there. Ay, ay, look there. You were
+right, Leslie;&mdash;this <i>is</i> better than a battle-field. They'll
+find that this day's work will cost them dear.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mrs. G</i>. Did <i>God</i>, who loves as mothers love their
+babes, see this I Had I been there, with my love, in the
+heavens, could <i>I</i> have given up this innocent and tender
+child a prey to the wild Indians? No!&mdash;and legions of
+pitying angels waiting but my word. No,&mdash;no.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Elliston</i>. Had you been there,&mdash;from that far centre
+whence God's eye sees all, you had beheld what lies in
+darkness here. Forth from this fearful hour you might
+have seen Peace, like a river, flowing o'er the years to
+come; and smiles, ten thousand, thousand smiles, down
+the long ages brightening, sown in this day's tears. Had
+you been there with God's <i>all</i>-pitying eye, the pitying
+legions had waited your word in vain, for once, unto a
+sterner doom, for the world's sake he gave his Son.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Mrs. G</i>. Words! Look there. That mother warned
+me yesterday. "<i>Words, words! My own child's
+blood</i>,"&mdash;I <i>see</i> it now.
+</p>
+
+<p align="center">
+(<i>A group of Soldiers enter</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>A. Soldier</i>. (<i>Whispering</i>.) Who would have thought
+to see tears on <i>his</i> face; look you, Jack Richards.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Another Sol</i>. 'Twas his sister, hush!&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Arnold</i>. Ay, ay, come hither. Look you there!
+Lay down your arms. Seek the royal mercy;&mdash;here it
+is. Your wives, your sisters, and your innocent children;&mdash;let
+them seek the royal shelter;&mdash;it is a safe one. See.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>3d Sol</i>. It was just so in Jersey last winter;&mdash;made
+no difference which side you were.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Arnold</i>. Ask no reasons.&mdash;'Twas in sport may be. 'Tis
+but one, in many such. Shameless tyranny we have
+borne long, and now, for resistance, to red butchery we
+are given over. The sport of lawless soldiers, and savages
+more cruel than the fiends in hell, are we, and the
+gentle beings of our homes;&mdash;but, 'tis the Royal power.
+Lay down your arms.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Soldiers</i>. (<i>Shouting</i>.) <i>No</i>.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Arnold</i>. Nay, nay,&mdash;in its caprice some will be safe,&mdash;it
+may not light on you. See, here's the proclamation.
+(<i>Throwing it among them</i>.) Pardon for rebles.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Soldiers</i>. No&mdash;no. (<i>Shouting</i>.) Away with pardon!&mdash;(<i>Tearing
+the proclamation</i>.) To the death! Freedom for ever!
+</p>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Bride of Fort Edward, by Delia Bacon
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