The Knight Of The Golden Melice by John Turvill Adams (cat reading book txt) π
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Attempt To Escape. "There Is No Great Hazard In It," He Said To
Himself; "But Were I To Get Away I Should Be About As Badly Off As
Now, Unless I Could Meet Sir Christopher Or The Sagamore; And Perhaps
They Have Been Captured By Some Other Party, For Our Folk Do Not
Things By Halves. They Have Taken Away My Snap-Chance, Too, And I
Cannot Shoot With Arrows Like A Savage, So That, As One May Say, I Am
A Sort Of Cat Without Claws. I Know Not What They Can Have Against Me
Now, Or Why I Should Be Afraid Of Them; And Yet, When I Think Of Their
Purgatory Of A Prison, It Makes Me Crawl All Over. A Week's Lodging
There Would About Make An End Of Me. I Think I Have Never Been Quite
The Man I Was Before, Since They Stuck Me There."
Thus Revolving In His Mind The Advantages And Disadvantages Of His
Position, The Remembrance Of His Sufferings During His Imprisonment,
At Last Turned The Scales In Favor Of Liberty, And Philip Began To
Think Of Means To Accomplish His Purpose. He Tried, By Lagging Behind
And Falling Down Once Or Twice, To Get Into The Rear; But This
Manoeuvre The Vigilant Eyes Of Lieutenant Venn Detected, Who Ordered
Him Nearer To The Front, And Directed That He Should Be Watched
Closer. Foiled In This Manner, That Freedom Which But A Moment Before,
And When Apparently In His Power, Seemed Almost A Matter Of
Indifference, Assumed A Constantly Increasing Importance, And The Mind
Of Philip Worked More Actively Than Ever. In A Short Time They Would
Be Out Of The Forest, When Any Attempt At Evasion Would Be Folly, For,
Should He Succeed In Shaking Off His Guard, He Would Run Great Risk Of
Being Shot Down In The Open Space. It Was Therefore Necessary To Think
Quickly.
"If I Only Had Prudence With Me," Thought Philip, "I Be Bound She
Would Have Invented A Dozen Ways To Get Off By This Time. Sweet Wench!
There Is Some Difference Between Sitting On A Log With Her And
Stealing A Smack Once In A While, Though A Slap Be Pretty Sure To
Follow, And Dragging My Legs In The Dark Among The Briers. But She Is
Not Here, And So I Will E'en Take Up With Master Arundel, And Suck His
Wits A Bit."
"What Think You," He Whispered To His Companion In Captivity, "Of
Making A Rush, And Showing Our Heels To The Philistines?"
"It Were Madness," Answered The Young Man, In The Same Manner. "Thou
Wert Sure To Be Retaken, Perhaps Shot."
"I Have No Fancy For Either; But Cannot Your Wit Devise Some Mode To
Save Me From Yon Lock-Up? My Bones Ache When I Think Of It."
"I Have No Desire To Get Away," Answered Arundel; "Nor Understand I
How It Can Advantage Thee, Seeing That, Sooner Or Later, Thou Art
Tolerably Certain Of Being Made Prisoner Again."
"Nevertheless, There Is A Chance Of Better Things; And I Say Once More
I Like Not The Thoughts Of The Close Quarters They Intend For Us. An'
You Will Not Run For It Yourself, At Least Help A Poor Fellow, Whose
Ideas Are Like A Skein Of Tangled Silk, To Avoid The Bilboes."
"Assuredly, If You Wish, What I Can I Will Do To Facilitate Thy
Escape. Only Tell Me How."
"You Have Me There In A Cornish Hug," Said Philip. "An' I Knew, I Had
Not Asked."
"You Would Not Have Us Fight For Our Liberty?"
"I Am Not So Crazy As That. Ten To One Is Odds That Any One, Except
Sampson, Might Avoid Without Disgrace, And Even He Would Not Stand
Much Chance, For All His Bushy Head, When Bullets Were Flying."
"We Must Out-Manoeuvre Them By Some Stratagem."
"If Sassacus Were Here," Said Philip, "He Could Show Us The Way. There
Is Not A Tree Or A Rock But Would Have Something To Say To Him About A
Contrivance."
"What Would You Think, Philip," Asked Arundel, (The Direction Of
Sassacus To Sound The Notes Of The Robin, Whenever He Desired To See
Him, Occurring To His Mind,) "Were I To Conjure Up The Chief?"
"I Would Think Thee More Cunning Than Any Powah Of Them All, And,
Moreover, Advise Thee To Keep Out Of The Way Of The Elders And
Magistrates."
"Keep Quiet A Moment, And I Will Try My Powahing."
So Saying, The Young Man Whistled The Peculiar Notes Of The Bird,
Which, In The Dewy Silence Of Night, Rung Wide Through The Woods.
"Halt!" Cried Spikeman, Who Instantly Suspected Some Treachery. "Close
Up Around The Prisoners. Who Dared Make Those Sounds?"
No Answer Was Returned; And, After A Vain Attempt To Discover Their
Author, The Party Resumed Its March.
"If Your Powahing Has Done No Other Good, Master Arundel," Said
Philip, "It At Least Frightened The General."
"I Am A Beginner," Answered The Young Man, Jestingly, "And It Would
Not Be Surprising Should I Fail At First. If It Raise Not The Sagamore
Or One Of His Men Before We Reach The Open Space, I Will Try The Spell
Again."
But The Notes Had Struck The Quick Ears Of The Pequot Chief, And At
Their Sound He Bounded Forward At A Pace Which His Companions Vainly
Endeavored To Equal, And Which Shortly Left Them Out Of Sight; But
They Could Hear The Rustling He Made Tearing Through The Bushes, And,
Guided By It, Followed. The Noise Occasioned By The Movements Of So
Large A Party, And The Conversation Among Them, Prevented The Approach
Of The Sagamore Being Heard, Especially As When He Drew Nearer He
Proceeded With More Caution. Gliding From Tree To Tree, He Was Able To
Advance Quite Close Without Being Discovered. What Was The Rage Of The
Chief, When, At The Head Of The Band, He Beheld His Enemy, The
Assistant Spikeman, Leading As Prisoners His Friends And The Little
Indian Girl. Not Waiting For The Knight And The Paniese To Come Up,
Fitting An Arrow, He Drew The Deer's Sinew Till The Head Of The
Missile Touched The Hand That Held The Bow, And Sent It Whizzing
Through The Air. The Cavalcade Had Passed On, So That The Front Ranks
Were In Advance Of Sassacus, When He Discharged The Shaft, And The
Back Of The Assistant Was Turned To Him. It Entered Just Below The
Right Shoulder, And Was Sent With Such Vigor, That, Passing Between
The Ribs, It Stopped Not Until Arrested On The Other Side By The Steel
Corselet Which Spikeman Wore On His Breast. Shouting Then His
War-Whoop, And Drawing His Tomahawk From His Girdle, The Pequot Leaped
Among The Band. Like Lightning It Sunk Into The Head Of One Man, Who
Fell To The Ground. The Chief Raised It Again, But Before It Could
Descend, A Blow Prostrated Him, And, In An Instant, He Was Overpowered
And Disarmed. So Rapidly Followed These Occurrences, That Before The
Knight And Towanquattick Came Up, The Chief Was A Prisoner, And Every
Man On His Guard Was Prepared And Watching For An Enemy. To Attack
Would Have Been Certain Death Or Captivity; They, Therefore, Bitterly
Lamenting The Passionate Impetuosity Of The Sagamore, Kept Themselves
Concealed In Order To Take Advantage Of Circumstances.
Having Disposed His Company So As To Face In Every Direction, To Repel
Attack, Lieutenant Venn Approached To Examine The Fallen Men. A Corpse
Was All That Remained Of Ephraim Pike, Who Must Have Instantly Expired
On Receiving The Blow. His Head Was Cleft To The Neck, And Portions Of
The Brain Were Lying On The Leaves. He Had Probably Been Selected By
The Sagamore (From His Neighborhood To The Assistant, By Whose Side He
Marched) As Second In Command, And Thus Expiated With His Life His
Evil Devotion To His Master. Spikeman Lay Upon His Face, Groaning,
While The Blood Slowly Oozed From His Wound. The Lieutenant, With One
Of The Men, Raised Him Up, While Lady Geraldine Strove To Stanch The
Bleeding. An Attempt Was Made To Withdraw The Arrow, But The Pain It
Occasioned And The Amount Of Blood Which Followed Were So Great, That
It Was Abandoned. All That Could Be Done Was To Carry The Wounded Man
As Gently As Possible Home. Venn, Now At The Head Of Half A Dozen Men,
Scoured The Woods In The Immediate Vicinity All Around; And, Finding
No Enemy, Returned, And Ordered A Couple Of Trestles To Be Made, On
One Of Which Was To Be Placed The Body Of Pike, And On The Other The
Groaning Spikeman. Upon Mustering The Company, It Was Found That All
Were Present, With The Exception Of Philip Joy, Who Had Escaped In The
Confusion. Four Men Being Assigned To Each Of The Trestles, To Be
Relieved As Occasion Should Require, The Remainder Having Charge Of
The Prisoners, And Composing The Van And Rear, Lieutenant Venn
Re-Commenced His March--Arundel Walking By The Side Of The Pequot
Chief, To Whom He Expressed Regret At His Capture.
"It Is A Summer Cloud," Said The Sagamore.
As For Philip, On Effecting His Escape, He Felt Some Embarrassment
What To Do With Himself. There He Was, Alone And Without Arms, In The
Forest, Wandering Helplessly About, And, If Unable To Find Sir
Christopher, In A Worse Condition Than Before. He Had Half A Mind To
Pursue The Band And Surrender Himself, When, Remembering The Powahing,
As He Called It, Of Arundel, He Determined To Try It Himself.
Imitating, Therefore, To The Best Of His Ability, The Sounds Made By
The Young Man, He Sat Down And Waited For The Effect. Presently The
Figure Of Towanquattick, Followed By That Of The Knight, Stole Out Of
A Thicket And Stood Before Him.
Chapter XXVII (But, Gasping, Heaved The Breath That Lara Drew, And Dull The Film Along His Dim Eye Grew.)
Byron.
On The Arrival Of The Party At The Settlement, Lieutenant Venn Divided
It Into Two Detachments; At The Head Of One Of Which He Carried The
Assistant To His Own House, While The Other, Under The Command Of An
Inferior Officer, Was Charged With The Security Of The Prisoners. Only
The Sagamore Was Strictly Confined, Being Ironed And Placed In The
Same Dungeon Which Joy Had Occupied. Sassacus Made No Resistance, But
Submitted With A Stoical Impassivity As To An Irresistible Fate. The
Lady And Indian Girl, As Those From Whom Flight Was Less To Be Feared,
And With Whom It Would Be More Difficult To Effect, And Also Out Of
Deference To The Weakness Of Their Sex, Were Committed To The Care Of
Dame Bars, By Whom They Were To Be Closely Watched. As For Arundel, He
Was Permitted To Depart, The Lieutenant Informing Him That He Had Been
Arrested Only To Prevent The Carrying Of Information To The Knight. It
Is Doubtful, However, Whether, If Spikeman Had Still Been In Command,
He Would Have Escaped On As Easy Terms.
The Little Community Was Thrown Into Some Commotion By These Events.
The Dangerous Wound Of So Prominent A Person As The Assistant, And The
Capture Of The Renowned Indian Sachem--Not To Speak Of The Lady--Could
Not Fail To Occasion A Lively Interest. As Soon As The Results Of The
Night Expedition Were Known, (And The News Flew With Wonted Celerity,)
Every Body Was In The Streets, Giving And Receiving Information, Or
What Purported To Be Such, And Making And Listening To Comments
Thereupon. We Cannot, However, Remain To Hear The Conversation Of The
Grave Citizens At The Corners, But Must Follow Those Whose Particular
Fortunes We Have Undertaken To Portray.
The Unfortunate Spikeman, Unable To Suppress His Groans At The Pain
Occasioned By The Motions Of His Bearers--His Clothing Saturated With
Blood, Which Kept Oozing From The Orifices Of The Wound--Was Borne To
His Dwelling, And Delivered To The Weeping Household. It Would Be
Absurd To Suppose That Any Great Grief Was Felt By Dame Spikeman, And
Hers Was Partly The Feeling Arising From Early Associations And Long
Familiarity; But It Is Impossible For The Most Stoical To Contemplate,
Without Emotion, One In The Condition Of The Suffering Man, And The
Tears Of Eveline And Of Prudence Were Mingled With Those Of The
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