Hugh Wynne, Free Quaker Part 49
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"Yes. I used to say no to men, and think no more of the thing or of them, but I am troubled; and this awful war! I am grown older, and to hurt a man--a man like you--gives me pain as it did not use to do."
"But you have not said no," said I; "and I am an obstinate man."
"Why will you force me to say no? Why should I? You know well enough what I think and feel. Why insist that I put it in words? It were kinder--not to urge me."
It seemed a strange speech. I said I did not understand her.
"Then you had better go. I am engaged to Mr. Arthur Wynne, sir. I have had no word of him for a year, and can get no letter to him."
I might have given her Miss Franks's letter, and poured out to her the story of his treachery and baseness. I may have been wrong, but something in me forbade it, and I preferred to wait yet longer.
"Shall I get you a letter through the lines? I can."
"You are a strange man, Mr. Wynne, and an honest gentleman. No, you cannot do me this service. I thank you."
"Then good-by; and it is love to the end, Darthea."
"I wish you would go," she said faintly.
"Good-by," I repeated, and rose.
"Come and see me some day when you can,--not now, not this time,--and do not think ill of me."
"Think ill of you! Why should I?"
"Yes! yes!"
I did not understand her, but I saw that she was shaken by some great emotion. Then she spoke:
"I have given my word, Mr. Wynne, and _I_ do not lightly break it.
Perhaps, like some men, you may think that women have no such sense of honour as men believe to be theirs."
"But do you love him, Darthea?"
"He is not here to answer you?" she cried, looking up at me steadily, her eyes ablaze. "Nor will I. You have no right to question me--none!"
"I have every right," I said.
"Oh, will you never go away?" And she stamped one little foot impatiently. "If you don't go I shall hate you, and I--I don't want to hate you, Hugh Wynne."
I stood a moment, and once more the temptation to tell her all I knew was strong upon me, but, as she said, Arthur was not here; first I must tell him face to face, and after that G.o.d alone knew what might come. I must tell him, too, with such proof as neither her love nor his subtlety could gainsay. And when this hour came--what then? If I killed him,--and I meant to,--what of Darthea? That would end my slender chance, and yet I knew myself so surely as to be certain that, when the hour came, no human consideration would be listened to for a moment. I could hate in those days, and I did. If I had had the a.s.sured love of Darthea, I should perhaps have hesitated; but not having it, I only longed once to have that man at the point of the sword. It is all very savage and brutal, but in those my young days men loved and hated as I do not think they do of late. It was a strong and a choleric generation, but we did some things for which the world should thank us.
XXVII
By the 7th of September Marquis Lafayette was holding the neck of the peninsula of York. A more daring man than Cornwallis would have tried a fall with this army, but he waited for a fleet to relieve him, and behold! none came save that of De Gra.s.se. By September 26 sixteen thousand men were added to those of the marquis, and lay about Williamsburg. Our quiet old hawk had my lord in his clutches, and meant no long delay.
Not to be in advance of the army, his Excellency, who left Philadelphia before us, lingered a few days on the way to visit the home he had not seen for six long years, and we of the staff followed him the day after.
Both in town and on the march through Delaware I was occupied as I had never been in my life. The French marched with us, and to keep things straight duplicate orders in both tongues were needed, and there were notes, letters, and despatches to be done into French or English. An aide who spoke French fluently was apt to be in the saddle whenever his pen was not in use.
The life was to me of advantage, because I came daily into contact with officers, young and old, who had seen the finest company in Europe, and from whom there was much to learn. It is Chastellux, I think, who has said that Mr. Was.h.i.+ngton possessed the charm of such manners as were rare among our officers. With these gentlemen, our allies, the way of doing every little act of the life of society seemed to have been studied and taught, until these gracious and amiable forms were become, as one may say, a part of the man.
No wonder they found us clumsy fellows. Too many of our gentry were not in the war, or were opposed to it. Many regiments were strangely officered, and this, as Graydon says in his memoirs, was especially the case as to the New England troops. But a man with no manners and with brutal habits may fight as well as a marquis.
Now toward the close of the war, if we were still as to looks but a Falstaffian contingent, the material in men and officers had been notably sifted, and was in all essential ways fit for the perilous service to which we were about to address ourselves.
At Mount Vernon we camped--we of the staff--in and out of the house, and were bountifully fed, nor did I ever see his Excellency more to advantage than here. He personally looked after our wants, and lost for a time much of the official reserve with which he guarded himself elsewhere.
At table after dinner he was in the habit of asking one of his aides to propose toasts for him. The day before we left, as we were about to rise from table, Colonel Tilghman said, "One more toast, with your permission, Excellency," and cried out, "My Lord Cornwallis, and may he enjoy the hospitalities of our army."
Our host laughed as he rarely did, saying, "We must first catch our fish, Mr. Tilghman."
I ventured to say, "He is in the net already."
His Excellency, looking round at me, said gravely, "Pray G.o.d the net hold good!" After I had offered the toast of Lady Was.h.i.+ngton's health, and our thanks for the pleasant days of rest and good cheer, he left us, desiring Mr. Tilghman to see that we had wine enough.
On the 14th we reached Williamsburg. The army rapidly came in by divisions, French and American. Before the 25th we had from the fleet cannon and intrenching-tools, and all our available force was to hand.
I can make clear in a few words the situation of the enemy. The peninsula of York lies between the James and the York rivers. On the south bank of the latter sits the little town of York. Seven redoubts surrounded it. The town was flanked right and left by deep ravines and creeks falling into the York River. Intrenchments, field-works, and abatis, with felled trees, lay to landward.
Gloucester Point, on the opposite sh.o.r.e of the river, was well fortified, and before it lay a small force of British war-s.h.i.+ps, the channel being obstructed lower down by sunken vessels. The French fleet held the river below the town, and we the peninsula.
On the night of the 25th, after a brief visit to the fleet, our chief lay down in the open under a mulberry-tree with one of its roots for a pillow, and slept well, as was audible enough to us who lay at a distance.
That night his lords.h.i.+p abandoned his outworks and drew within the town.
We seized these lines next day, losing Colonel Scammel, formerly of the staff, in whose amusing songs and gay talk our chief had used to take much pleasure. On the 28th the armies marched twelve miles down the peninsula, and camped two miles from the town, driving in the pickets and some parties of horse.
By October 1, the weather being fine, we had completed a half-moon of intrenchments, resting at each wing on the river. Two advanced redoubts we threw up were severely cannonaded, so as to interrupt the men at work.
His Excellency, somewhat anxious, came out of his tent, and calling Mr.
Tilghman and me, who were writing, rode forth, followed by his faithful black Billy, whom we used to credit with knowing more of what went on than did we of the staff. Mr. Evans, a chaplain, was fain to see more of the war than concerned him, and came after us. As we approached, Billy, riding behind me, said as the cannon-shot went over us:
"Dem redcoats is p'intin' us mighty well."
Then a shot ricochetted, striking the ground in front and covering us with dust. Mr. Evans, who was standing by, and had now seen quite enough of it, said, "We shall all be killed," and then looked ruefully at his new beaver, well dusted and dirty.
"You had better carry that home to your wife and children," said the chief. "This is not the place for you, sir."
Neither was it much to my own liking, and I was not sorry when we rode back.
On the night of the 9th of October his Excellency put a match to the first gun, and for four days and nights a furious cannonade went on from both sides.
Late on the night of the 10th Jack came to my tent, and we walked out to see this terrible spectacle, climbing a little hill which lay well away from our lines. For a time we were quite alone.
A monstrous dome of smoke hung over the town. Now and then a gust of sea wind tore it apart, and through the rifts we saw the silver cup of the moon and the host of stars. We lay long on the hillock. I suppose the hour and the mighty fates involved made us serious and silent. Far away seventy cannon thundered from our works, and the enemy's batteries roared their incessant fury of reply.
Hugh Wynne, Free Quaker Part 49
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Hugh Wynne, Free Quaker Part 49 summary
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