Part 2 (1/2)
”That old man was sure death,” remarked Kinnison. ”I knew the old fellow well. He had the name of being one of the best shots around that part of the country. I should never want to be within his range.”
”The old man immortalized himself,” said Hand.
”It served the 'tarnal rascals right,” observed Hanson. ”They only reaped what they had sown. War's a horrible matter, altogether, and I don't like it much; but I like to see it done up in that old man's style, if it is done at all.”
”I should like to have seen that royal officer that said he could march through our country with three regiments,” said Kinnison. ”If he was with Smith and Pitcorn that day, he saw there was a little of the bulldog spirit in the Yankees.”
”I think,” observed Pitts, ”we might have that old, heart-firing, arm-moving tune called Yankee Doodle. Come, Brown, pipe.”
”Ay,” replied Brown, ”that tune came out of this here fife naturally--almost without my blowing it. For some time, I couldn't work anything else out of it.”
”Come, pipe and drum the old tune once more,” cried Colson; and it was piped and drummed by Brown and Hanson in the real old continental style.
The effect on the company was electric. Knives, and forks, and feet, kept time to the well-known music. Some of the old men could scarcely restrain themselves from attempting a cheer, and the young men felt themselves stirred by a feeling of patriotism they had scarcely known before. The spirit of 1775 dwelt in the music, and, as the quick notes started from fife and drum, visions of farmers leaving the plough in the furrow and shouldering the rusty and unbayoneted firelock--of citizens leaving their business and homes to grasp the sword and gun--of stout-hearted, strong-armed minute-men, untrained to war's manoeuvres, marching and battling with the well-disciplined, war-schooled, and haughty Britons, made confident by a more than Roman career of victory--and of the glorious fight at Breed's Hill--came to the minds of all present. Three cheers were given, when the musicians had concluded, for the tune itself, and three more for those who had played it.
”More ale,” called out Hand, and more ale was brought; and then Hand proposed as a toast--”The memory of the men who fell on the 19th of April, 1775.” This was drank standing, and a short pause ensued.
FIFER'S STORY.
”Now,” said Kinnison, ”I expect that some of you men who know something about them times shall keep your promise of following my story.”
”I'll tell you a story,” replied Brown, the fifer. ”P'raps some of you won't swallow it; but it's all fact, and that you'll find if you choose to hunt for the papers. It's chiefly about me and my fife, and Hanson and his drum.”
”Pipe away, Brown,” said Kinnison.
”Well, you see,” began Brown, ”Hanson and I were drummer and fifer in Colonel Brooks' regiment, at Saratoga, and we were in the battle of Stillwater, fought on the nineteenth of September. I'm not going to 'spin a yarn,' as the sailors say, in the way of an account of that battle, for that has been said and sung often enough. It is sufficient for me to say, that it was the hardest fought, and the bloodiest battle that ever I saw, and Hans n and I were in the thickest of it, where the bullets were hailing. Our regiment suffered a good deal in the way of losing men, and I saw many an old friend fall near me. But at dusk, when most of the Americans were ordered to camp, I and Hanson were unhurt.
Colonel Brooks kept the field when the other officers retired with their forces. Some of the men of his regiment were tired and grumbled, but he wanted to show the enemy that they had gained no advantage over us, and that our spirits were as strong as when the day's work commenced. This conduct you might have expected from what you have heard of Brooks'
character. He was all game--Brooks was. One of those whip or die men, that are not to be found everywhere. Well, as I said, our regiment remained on the field, and finally got into a skirmish with some of the German riflemen. We knew they were German riflemen by the bra.s.s match-cases on their b.r.e.a.s.t.s. In this skirmish, a ball struck me on the hand, went through it, and knocked my fife clear away beyond our flank.
Well, I couldn't part with my Yankee Doodle pipe in that way, without trying to get hold of it again. So I told Hanson, and he put down his drum, and proposed that we should go and get it; and we did go out together, while the b.a.l.l.s were whizzing round our ears, and got the pipe.”
”Hold on, Brown,” interrupted Kinnison. ”Wasn't it a dark night?”
”Yes,” replied Brown; ”but we saw where the fife lay, by the quick flashes of the guns. Didn't we, Hanson?”
”Yes; it's a fact,” replied the drummer; ”and when we returned, I found a couple of b.a.l.l.s had pa.s.sed through the heads of my drum.”
”I told you I thought you wouldn't swallow it,” observed Brown; ”but here's the fife, and here's the mark where the ball pa.s.sed through my hand.” Brown exhibited the scar, and doubt seemed to be set at rest.
Kinnison, however, shook his head, as if unsatisfied.
”There wasn't a great deal in the mere going after the fife at such a time,” continued the fifer, ”but I thought I'd mention it, to give you an idea of Hanson's spirit.”
”Very well,” remarked Hand, ”we are satisfied now that both Mr. Brown and Mr. Hanson are really men of spirit.”
ARNOLD'S EXPEDITION.
”Mr. Davenport,” said one of the young men, ”won't you entertain us with an account of something you saw or joined in, or did yourself, during the war?”
”Were any of you at Quebec, with Arnold and Montgomery?” inquired one of the veterans who had been an attentive and silent listener to the preceding narratives.
”I accompanied Colonel Arnold on the expedition up the Kennebec,”