THE
HUDSON AND ITS HILLS
RIP
VAN WINKLE
The
story of Rip Van
Winkle, told by Irving, dramatized by Boucicault, acted by Jefferson,
pictured by Darley, set to music by Bristow, is the best known of
American legends. Rip was a real personage, and the Van Winkles are a
considerable family at this day. An idle, good-natured,
happy-go-lucky fellow, he lived, presumably, in the village of
Catskill, and began his long sleep in 1769. His wife was a shrew, and
to escape her abuse Rip often took his dog and gun and roamed away to
the Catskills, nine miles westward, where he lounged or hunted, as
the humor seized him. It was on a September evening, during a jaunt
on South Mountain, that he met a stubby, silent man, of goodly girth,
his round head topped with a steeple hat, the skirts of his belted
coat and flaps of his petticoat trousers meeting at the tops of heavy
boots, and the face—ugh!—green and ghastly, with
unmoving eyes
that glimmered in the twilight like phosphorus. The dwarf carried a
keg, and on receiving an intimation, in a sign, that he would like
Rip to relieve him of it, that cheerful vagabond shouldered it and
marched on up the mountain.
At
nightfall they emerged
on a little plateau where a score of men in the garb of long ago,
with faces like that of Rip's guide, and equally still and
speechless, were playing bowls with great solemnity, the balls
sometimes rolling over the plateau's edge and rumbling down the rocks
with a boom like thunder. A cloaked and snowy-bearded figure,
watching aloof, turned like the others, and gazed uncomfortably at
the visitor who now came blundering in among them. Rip was at first
for making off, but the sinister glare in the circle of eyes took the
run out of his legs, and he was not displeased when they signed to
him to tap the keg and join in a draught of the ripest schnapps that
ever he had tasted,—and he knew the flavor of every brand in
Catskill. While these strange men grew no more genial with passing of
the flagons, Rip was pervaded by a satisfying glow; then, overcome by
sleepiness and resting his head on a stone, he stretched his tired
legs out and fell to dreaming.
Morning.
Sunlight and
leaf shadow were dappled over the earth when he awoke, and rising
stiffly from his bed, with compunctions in his bones, he reached for
his gun. The already venerable implement was so far gone with rot and
rust that it fell to pieces in his hand, and looking down at the
fragments of it, he saw that his clothes were dropping from his body
in rags and mould, while a white beard flowed over his breast.
Puzzled and alarmed, shaking his head ruefully as he recalled the
carouse of the silent, he hobbled down the mountain as fast as he
might for the grip of the rheumatism on his knees and elbows, and
entered his native village. What! Was this Catskill? Was this the
place that he left yesterday? Had all these houses sprung up
overnight, and these streets been pushed across the meadows in a day?
The people, too: where were his friends? The children who had romped
with him, the rotund topers whom he had left cooling their hot noses
in pewter pots at the tavern door, the dogs that used to bark a
welcome, recognizing in him a kindred spirit of vagrancy: where were
they?
And
his wife, whose
athletic arm and agile tongue had half disposed him to linger in the
mountains how happened it that she was not awaiting him at the gate?
But gate there was none in the familiar place: an unfenced yard of
weeds and ruined foundation wall were there. Rip's home was gone. The
idlers jeered at his bent, lean form, his snarl of beard and hair,
his disreputable dress, his look of grieved astonishment. He stopped,
instinctively, at the tavern, for he knew that place in spite of its
new sign: an officer in blue regimentals and a cocked hat replacing
the crimson George III. of his recollection, and labelled "General
Washington." There was a quick gathering of ne'er-do-weels, of
tavern-haunters and gaping 'prentices, about him, and though their
faces were strange and their manners rude, he made bold to ask if
they knew such and such of his friends.
"Nick
Vedder? He's
dead and gone these eighteen years." "Brom Dutcher? He
joined the army and was killed at Stony Point." "Van
Brummel? He, too, went to the war, and is in Congress now."
"And
Rip Van
Winkle?"
"Yes,
he's here.
That's him yonder."
And
to Rip's utter
confusion he saw before him a counterpart of himself, as young, lazy,
ragged, and easy-natured as he remembered himself to be,
yesterday—or, was it yesterday?
"That's
young Rip,"
continued his informer. "His father was Rip Van Winkle, too, but
he went to the mountains twenty years ago and never came back. He
probably fell over a cliff, or was carried off by Indians, or eaten
by bears."
Twenty
years ago! Truly,
it was so. Rip had slept for twenty years without awaking. He had
left a peaceful colonial village; he returned to a bustling
republican town. How he eventually found, among the oldest
inhabitants, some who admitted that they knew him; how he found a
comfortable home with his married daughter and the son who took after
him so kindly; how he recovered from the effect of the tidings that
his wife had died of apoplexy, in a quarrel; how he resumed his seat
at the tavern tap and smoked long pipes and told long yarns for the
rest of his days, were matters of record up to the beginning of this
century.
And
a strange story Rip
had to tell, for he had served as cup-bearer to the dead crew of the
Half Moon. He had quaffed a cup of Hollands with no other than Henry
Hudson himself. Some say that Hudson's spirit has made its home amid
these hills, that it may look into the lovely valley that he
discovered; but others hold that every twenty years he and his men
assemble for a revel in the mountains that so charmed them when first
seen swelling against the western heavens, and the liquor they drink
on this night has the bane of throwing any mortal who lips it into a
slumber whence nothing can arouse him until the day dawns when the
crew shall meet again. As you climb the east front of the mountains
by the old carriage road, you pass, half-way up the height, the stone
that Rip Van Winkle slept on, and may see that it is slightly
hollowed by his form. The ghostly revellers are due in the Catskills
in 1909, and let all tourists who are among the mountains in
September of that year beware of accepting liquor from strangers.
Behind
the New Grand
Hotel, in the Catskills, is an amphitheatre of mountain that is held
to be the place of which the Mohicans spoke when they told of people
there who worked in metals, and had bushy beards and eyes like pigs.
From the smoke of their forges, in autumn, came the haze of Indian
summer; and when the moon was full, it was their custom to assemble
on the edge of a precipice above the hollow and dance and caper until
the night was nigh worn away. They brewed a liquor that had the
effect of shortening the bodies and swelling the heads of all who
drank it, and when Hudson and his crew visited the mountains, the
pygmies held a carouse in his honor and invited him to drink their
liquor. The crew went away, shrunken and distorted by the magic
distillation, and thus it was that Rip Van Winkle found them on the
eve of his famous sleep.
When
the Dutch gave the
name of Katzbergs to the mountains west of the Hudson, by reason of
the wild-cats and panthers that ranged there, they obliterated the
beautiful Indian Ontiora, "mountains of the sky." In one
tradition of the red men these hills were bones of a monster that fed
on human beings until the Great Spirit turned it into stone as it was
floundering toward the ocean to bathe. The two lakes near the summit
were its eyes. These peaks were the home of an Indian witch, who
adjusted the weather for the Hudson Valley with the certainty of a
signal service bureau. It was she who let out the day and night in
blessed alternation, holding back the one when the other was at
large, for fear of conflict. Old moons she cut into stars as soon as
she had hung new ones in the sky, and she was often seen perched on
Round Top and North Mountain, spinning clouds and flinging them to
the winds. Woe betide the valley residents if they showed
irreverence, for then the clouds were black and heavy, and through
them she poured floods of rain and launched the lightnings, causing
disastrous freshets in the streams and blasting the wigwams of the
mockers. In a frolic humor she would take the form of a bear or deer
and lead the Indian hunters anything but a merry dance, exposing them
to tire and peril, and vanishing or assuming some terrible shape when
they had overtaken her. Sometimes she would lead them to the cloves
and would leap into the air with a mocking "Ho, ho!" just
as they stopped with a shudder at the brink of an abyss. Garden Rock
was a spot where she was often found, and at its foot a lake once
spread. This was held in such awe that an Indian would never
wittingly pursue his quarry there; but once a hunter lost his way and
emerged from the forest at the edge of the pond. Seeing a number of
gourds in crotches of the trees he took one, but fearing the spirit
he turned to leave so quickly that he stumbled and it fell. As it
broke, a spring welled from it in such volume that the unhappy man
was gulfed in its waters, swept to the edge of Kaaterskill clove and
dashed on the rocks two hundred and sixty feet below. Nor did the
water ever cease to run, and in these times the stream born of the
witch's revenge is known as Catskill Creek.
On
the rock platform
where the Catskill Mountain House now stands, commanding one of the
fairest views in the world, old chief Shandaken set his
wigwam,—for
it is a mistake to suppose that barbarians are indifferent to
beauty,—and there his daughter, Lotowana, was sought in
marriage by
his braves. She, however, kept faith to an early vow exchanged with a
young chief of the Mohawks. A suitor who was particularly troublesome
was Norsereddin, proud, morose, dark-featured, a stranger to the red
man, a descendant, so he claimed, from Egyptian kings, and who lived
by himself on Kaaterskill Creek, appearing among white settlements
but rarely.
On
one of his visits to
Catskill, a tavern-lounging Dutchman wagered him a thousand golden
crowns that he could not win Lotowana, and, stung by avarice as well
as inflamed by passion, Norsereddin laid new siege to her heart.
Still the girl refused to listen, and Shandaken counselled him to be
content with the smiles of others, thereby so angering the Egyptian
that he assailed the chief and was driven from the camp with blows;
but on the day of Lotowana's wedding with the Mohawk he returned, and
in a honeyed speech asked leave to give a jewel to the bride to show
that he had stifled jealousy and ill will. The girl took the handsome
box he gave her and drew the cover, when a spring flew forward,
driving into her hand the poisoned tooth of a snake that had been
affixed to it. The venom was strong, and in a few minutes Lotowana
lay dead at her husband's feet.
Though
the Egyptian had
disappeared into the forest directly on the acceptance of his
treacherous gift, twenty braves set off in pursuit, and overtaking
him on the Kalkberg, they dragged him back to the rock where father
and husband were bewailing the maid's untimely fate. A pile of fagots
was heaped within a few feet of the precipice edge, and tying their
captive on them, they applied the torch, dancing about with cries of
exultation as the shrieks of the wretch echoed from the cliffs. The
dead girl was buried by the mourning tribe, while the ashes of
Norsereddin were left to be blown abroad. On the day of his revenge
Shandaken left his ancient dwelling-place, and his camp-fires never
glimmered afterward on the front of Ontiora.
Ralph
Sutherland, who,
early in the last century, occupied a stone house a mile from Leeds,
in the Catskills, was a man of morose and violent disposition, whose
servant, a Scotch girl, was virtually a slave, inasmuch as she was
bound to work for him without pay until she had refunded to him her
passage-money to this country. Becoming weary of bondage and of the
tempers of her master, the girl ran away. The man set off in a raging
chase, and she had not gone far before Sutherland overtook her, tied
her by the wrists to his horse's tail, and began the homeward
journey. Afterward, he swore that the girl stumbled against the
horse's legs, so frightening the animal that it rushed off madly,
pitching him out of the saddle and dashing the servant to death on
rocks and trees; yet, knowing how ugly-tempered he could be, his
neighbors were better inclined to believe that he had driven the
horse into a gallop, intending to drag the girl for a short distance,
as a punishment, and to rein up before he had done serious mischief.
On this supposition he was arrested, tried, and sentenced to die on
the scaffold.
The
tricks of
circumstantial evidence, together with pleas advanced by influential
relatives of the prisoner, induced the court to delay sentence until
the culprit should be ninety-nine years old, but it was ordered that,
while released on his own recognizance, in the interim, he should
keep a hangman's noose about his neck and show himself before the
judges in Catskill once every year, to prove that he wore his badge
of infamy and kept his crime in mind. This sentence he obeyed, and
there were people living recently who claimed to remember him as he
went about with a silken cord knotted at his throat. He was always
alone, he seldom spoke, his rough, imperious manner had departed.
Only when children asked him what the rope was for were his lips seen
to quiver, and then he would hurry away. After dark his house was
avoided, for gossips said that a shrieking woman passed it nightly,
tied at the tail of a giant horse with fiery eyes and smoking
nostrils; that a skeleton in a winding sheet had been found there;
that a curious thing, somewhat like a woman, had been known to sit on
his garden wall, with lights shining from her finger-tips, uttering
unearthly laughter; and that domestic animals reproached the man by
groaning and howling beneath his windows.
These
beliefs he knew,
yet he neither grieved, nor scorned, nor answered when he was told of
them. Years sped on. Every year deepened his reserve and loneliness,
and some began to whisper that he would take his own way out of the
world, though others answered that men who were born to be hanged
would never be drowned; but a new republic was created; new laws were
made; new judges sat to minister them; so, on Ralph Sutherland's
ninety-ninth birthday anniversary, there were none who would accuse
him or execute sentence. He lived yet another year, dying in 1801.
But was it from habit, or was it in self-punishment and remorse, that
he never took off the cord? for, when he drew his last breath, though
it was in his own house, his throat was still encircled by the
hangman's rope.
Intermarriages
between
white people and red ones in this country were not uncommon in the
days when our ancestors led as rude a life as the natives, and
several places in the Catskills commemorate this fact. Mount
Utsayantha, for example, is named for an Indian woman whose life,
with that of her baby and her white husband, was lost there. For the
white men early found friends among these mountains. As far back as
1663 they spared Catherine Dubois and her three children, after some
rash spirits had abducted them and carried them to a place on the
upper Walkill, to do them to death; for the captives raised a
Huguenot hymn and the hearts of their captors were softened.
In
Esopus Valley lived
Winnisook, whose height was seven feet, and who was known among the
white settlers as "the big Indian." He loved a white girl
of the neighborhood, one Gertrude Molyneux, and had asked for her
hand; but while she was willing, the objections of her family were
too strong to be overcome, and she was teased into marriage with
Joseph Bundy, of her own race, instead. She liked the Indian all the
better after that, however, because Bundy proved to be a bad fellow,
and believing that she could be happier among barbarians than among a
people that approved such marriages, she eloped with Winnisook. For a
long time all trace of the runaway couple was lost, but one day the
man having gone down to the plain to steal cattle, it was alleged,
was discovered by some farmers who knew him, and who gave hot chase,
coming up with him at the place now called Big Indian.
Foremost
in the chase was
Bundy. As he came near to the enemy of his peace he exclaimed, "I
think the best way to civilize that yellow serpent is to let daylight
into his heart," and, drawing his rifle to his shoulder, he
fired. Mortally wounded, yet instinctively seeking refuge, the giant
staggered into the hollow of a pine-tree, where the farmers lost
sight of him. There, however, he was found by Gertrude, bolt upright,
yet dead. The unwedded widow brought her dusky children to the place
and spent the remainder of her days near his grave. Until a few years
ago the tree was still pointed out, but a railroad company has now
covered it with an embankment.
Baas
[Boss] Volckert Jan
Pietersen Van Amsterdam kept a bake-shop in Albany, and lives in
history as the man who invented New Year cakes and made gingerbread
babies in the likeness of his own fat offspring. Good churchman
though he was, the bane of his life was a fear of being bewitched,
and perhaps it was to keep out evil spirits, who might make one last
effort to gain the mastery over him, ere he turned the customary leaf
with the incoming year, that he had primed himself with an extra
glass of spirits on the last night of 1654. His sales had been brisk,
and as he sat in his little shop, meditating comfortably on the gains
he would make when his harmless rivals—the knikkerbakkers
(bakers
of marbles)—sent for their usual supply of olie-koeks and
mince-pies on the morrow, he was startled by a sharp rap, and an ugly
old woman entered. "Give me a dozen New Year's cookies!"
she cried, in a shrill voice.
"Vell,
den, you
needn' sbeak so loud. I aind teaf, den."
"A
dozen!" she
screamed. "Give me a dozen. Here are only twelve."
"Vell,
den, dwalf is
a dozen."
"One
more! I want a
dozen."
"Vell,
den, if you
vant anodder, go to de duyvil and ged it."
Did
the hag take him at
his word? She left the shop, and from that time it seemed as if poor
Volckert was bewitched, indeed, for his cakes were stolen; his bread
was so light that it went up the chimney, when it was not so heavy
that it fell through the oven; invisible hands plucked bricks from
that same oven and pelted him until he was blue; his wife became
deaf, his children went unkempt, and his trade went elsewhere. Thrice
the old woman reappeared, and each time was sent anew to the devil;
but at last, in despair, the baker called on Saint Nicolaus to come
and advise him. His call was answered with startling quickness, for,
almost while he was making it, the venerable patron of Dutch feasts
stood before him. The good soul advised the trembling man to be more
generous in his dealings with his fellows, and after a lecture on
charity he vanished, when, lo! the old woman was there in his place.
She
repeated her demand
for one more cake, and Volckert Jan Pietersen, etc., gave it,
whereupon she exclaimed, "The spell is broken, and from this
time a dozen is thirteen!" Taking from the counter a gingerbread
effigy of Saint Nicolaus, she made the astonished Dutchman lay his
hand upon it and swear to give more liberal measure in the future.
So, until thirteen new States arose from the ruins of the
colonies,—when the shrewd Yankees restored the original
measure,—thirteen made a baker's dozen.
THE DEVIL'S
DANCE-CHAMBER
Most
storied of our New
World rivers is the Hudson. Historic scenes have been enacted on its
shores, and Indian, Dutchman, Briton, and American have invested it
with romance. It had its source, in the red man's fancy, in a spring
of eternal youth; giants and spirits dwelt in its woods and hills,
and before the river-Shatemuc, king of streams, the red men called
it—had broken through the highlands, those mountains were a
pent
for spirits who had rebelled against the Manitou. After the waters
had forced a passage to the sea these evil ones sought shelter in the
glens and valleys that open to right and left along its course, but
in time of tempest, when they hear Manitou riding down the ravine on
wings of storm, dashing thunderbolts against the cliffs, it is the
fear that he will recapture them and force them into lightless
caverns to expiate their revolt, that sends them huddling among the
rocks and makes the hills resound with roars and howls.
At
the Devil's
Dance-Chamber, a slight plateau on the west bank, between Newburg and
Crom Elbow, the red men performed semi-religious rites as a preface
to their hunting and fishing trips or ventures on the war-path. They
built a fire, painted themselves, and in that frenzy into which
savages are so readily lashed, and that is so like to the action of
mobs in trousers, they tumbled, leaped, danced, yelled, sang,
grimaced, and gesticulated until the Manitou disclosed himself,
either as a harmless animal or a beast of prey. If he came in the
former shape the augury was favorable, but if he showed himself as a
bear or panther, it was a warning of evil that they seldom dared to
disregard.
The
crew of Hudson's
ship, the Half Moon, having chanced on one of these orgies, were so
impressed by the fantastic spectacle that they gave the name Duyvels
Dans-Kamer to the spot. Years afterwards, when Stuyvesant ascended
the river, his doughty retainers were horrified, on landing below the
Dans-Kamer, to discover hundreds of painted figures frisking there in
the fire-light. A few surmised that they were but a new generation of
savages holding a powwow, but most of the sailors fancied that the
assemblage was demoniac, and that the figures were spirits of bad
Indians repeating a scalp-dance and revelling in the mysterious
fire-water that they had brought down from the river source in jars
and skins. The spot was at least once profaned with blood, for a
young Dutchman and his wife, of Albany, were captured here by an
angry Indian, and although the young man succeeded in stabbing his
captor to death, he was burned alive on the rock by the friends of
the Indian whose wrath he had provoked. The wife, after being kept in
captivity for a time, was ransomed.
The
wood-tick's drum
convokes the elves at the noon of night on Cro' Nest top, and,
clambering out of their flower-cup beds and hammocks of cobweb, they
fly to the meeting, not to freak about the grass or banquet at the
mushroom table, but to hear sentence passed on the fay who,
forgetting his vestal vow, has loved an earthly maid. From his throne
under a canopy of tulip petals, borne on pillars of shell, the king
commands silence, and with severe eye but softened voice he tells the
culprit that while he has scorned the royal decree he has saved
himself from the extreme penalty, of imprisonment in walnut shells
and cobweb dungeons, by loving a maid who is gentle and pure. So it
shall be enough if he will go down to the Hudson and seize a drop
from the bow of mist that a sturgeon leaves when he makes his leap;
and after, to kindle his darkened flame-wood lamp at a meteor spark.
The fairy bows, and without a word slowly descends the rocky steep,
for his wing is soiled and has lost its power; but once at the river,
he tugs amain at a mussel shell till he has it afloat; then, leaping
in, he paddles out with a strong grass blade till he comes to the
spot where the sturgeon swims, though the watersprites plague him and
toss his boat, and the fish and the leeches bunt and drag; but,
suddenly, the sturgeon shoots from the water, and ere the arch of
mist that he tracks through the air has vanished, the sprite has
caught a drop of the spray in a tiny blossom, and in this he washes
clean his wings.
The
water-goblins torment
him no longer. They push his boat to the shore, where, alighting, he
kisses his hand, then, even as a bubble, he flies back to the
mountain top, dons his acorn helmet, his corselet of bee-hide, his
shield of lady-bug shell, and grasping his lance, tipped with wasp
sting, he bestrides his fire-fly steed and off he goes like a flash.
The world spreads out and then grows small, but he flies straight on.
The ice-ghosts leer from the topmost clouds, and the mists surge
round, but he shakes his lance and pipes his call, and at last he
comes to the Milky Way, where the sky-sylphs lead him to their queen,
who lies couched in a palace ceiled with stars, its dome held up by
northern lights and the curtains made of the morning's flush. Her
mantle is twilight purple, tied with threads of gold from the eastern
dawn, and her face is as fair as the silver moon.
She
begs the fay to stay
with her and taste forever the joys of heaven, but the knightly elf
keeps down the beating of his heart, for he remembers a face on earth
that is fairer than hers, and he begs to go. With a sigh she fits him
a car of cloud, with the fire-fly steed chained on behind, and he
hurries away to the northern sky whence the meteor comes, with roar
and whirl, and as it passes it bursts to flame. He lights his lamp at
a glowing spark, then wheels away to the fairy-land. His king and his
brothers hail him stoutly, with song and shout, and feast and dance,
and the revel is kept till the eastern sky has a ruddy streak. Then
the cock crows shrill and the fays are gone.
The
name of this town has
forty-two spellings in old records, and with singular pertinacity in
ill-doing, the inhabitants have fastened on it the longest and
clumsiest of all. It comes from the Mohegan words Apo-keep-sink,
meaning a safe, pleasant harbor. Harbor it might be for canoes, but
for nothing bigger, for it was only the little cove that was so
called between Call Rock and Adder Cliff,—the former
indicating
where settlers awaiting passage hailed the masters of vessels from
its top, and the latter taking its name from the snakes that abounded
there.
Hither
came a band of
Delawares with Pequot captives, among them a young chief to whom had
been offered not only life but leadership if he would renounce his
tribe, receive the mark of the turtle on his breast, and become a
Delaware. On his refusal, he was bound to a tree, and was about to
undergo the torture, when a girl among the listeners sprang to his
side. She, too, was a Pequot, but the turtle totem was on her bosom,
and when she begged his life, because they had been betrothed, the
captors paused to talk of it. She had chosen well the time to
interfere, for a band of Hurons was approaching, and even as the talk
went on their yell was heard in the wood. Instant measures for
defence were taken, and in the fight that followed both chief and
maiden were forgotten; but though she cut the cords that bound him,
they were separated in the confusion, he disappearing, she falling
captive to the Hurons, who, sated with blood, retired from the field.
In the fantastic disguise of a wizard the young Pequot entered their
camp soon after, and on being asked to try his enchantments for the
cure of a young woman, he entered her tent, showing no surprise at
finding her to be the maiden of his choice, who was suffering from
nothing worse than nerves, due to the excitement of the battle. Left
alone with his patient, he disclosed his identity, and planned a way
of escape that proved effective on that very night, for, though
pursued by the angry Hurons, the couple reached "safe harbor,"
thence making a way to their own country in the east, where they were
married.
Dunderberg,
"Thunder
Mountain," at the southern gate of the Hudson Highlands, is a
wooded eminence, chiefly populated by a crew of imps of stout
circumference, whose leader, the Heer, is a bulbous goblin clad in
the dress worn by Dutch colonists two centuries ago, and carrying a
speaking-trumpet, through which he bawls his orders for the blowing
of winds and the touching off of lightnings. These orders are given
in Low Dutch, and are put into execution by the imps aforesaid, who
troop into the air and tumble about in the mist, sometimes smiting
the flag or topsail of a ship to ribbons, or laying the vessel over
before the wind until she is in peril of going on beam ends. At one
time a sloop passing the Dunderberg had nearly foundered, when the
crew discovered the sugar-loaf hat of the Heer at the mast-head. None
dared to climb for it, and it was not until she had driven past
Pollopel's Island—the limit of the Heer's
jurisdiction—that she
righted. As she did so the little hat spun into the air like a top,
creating a vortex that drew up the storm-clouds, and the sloop kept
her way prosperously for the rest of the voyage. The captain had
nailed a horse-shoe to the mast. The "Hat Rogue" of the
Devil's Bridge in Switzerland must be a relative of this gamesome
sprite, for his mischief is usually of a harmless sort; but, to be on
the safe side, the Dutchmen who plied along the river lowered their
peaks in homage to the keeper of the mountain, and for years this was
a common practice. Mariners who paid this courtesy to the Heer of the
Donder Berg were never molested by his imps, though skipper
Ouselsticker, of Fishkill,—for all he had a parson on
board,—was
once beset by a heavy squall, and the goblin came out of the mist and
sat astraddle of his bowsprit, seeming to guide his schooner straight
toward the rocks. The dominie chanted the song of Saint Nicolaus, and
the goblin, unable to endure either its spiritual potency or the
worthy parson's singing, shot upward like a ball and rode off on the
gale, carrying with him the nightcap of the parson's wife, which he
hung on the weathercock of Esopus steeple, forty miles away.
The
Hudson Highlands are
suggestively named Bear Mountain, Sugar Loaf, Cro' Nest, Storm King,
called by the Dutch Boterberg, or Butter Hill, from its likeness to a
pat of butter; Beacon Hill, where the fires blazed to tell the
country that the Revolutionary war was over; Dunderberg, Mount
Taurus, so called because a wild bull that had terrorized the
Highlands was chased out of his haunts on this height, and was killed
by falling from a cliff on an eminence to the northward, known, in
consequence, as Breakneck Hill. These, with Anthony's Nose, are the
principal points of interest in the lovely and impressive panorama
that unfolds before the view as the boats fly onward.
Concerning
the last-named
elevation, the aquiline promontory that abuts on the Hudson opposite
Dunderberg, it takes title from no resemblance to the human feature,
but is so named because Anthony Van Corlaer, the trumpeter, who
afterwards left a reason for calling the upper boundary of Manhattan
Island Spuyten Duyvil Creek, killed the first sturgeon ever eaten at
the foot of this mountain. It happened in this wise: By assiduous
devotion to keg and flagon Anthony had begotten a nose that was the
wonder and admiration of all who knew it, for its size was
prodigious; in color it rivalled the carbuncle, and it shone like
polished copper. As Anthony was lounging over the quarter of Peter
Stuyvesant's galley one summer morning this nose caught a ray from
the sun and reflected it hissing into the water, where it killed a
sturgeon that was rising beside the vessel. The fish was pulled
aboard, eaten, and declared good, though the singed place savored of
brimstone, and in commemoration of the event Stuyvesant dubbed the
mountain that rose above his vessel Anthony's Nose.
Moodua
is an evolution,
through Murdy's and Moodna, from Murderer's Creek, its present
inexpressive name having been given to it by N. P. Willis. One
Murdock lived on its shore with his wife, two sons, and a daughter;
and often in the evening Naoman, a warrior of a neighboring tribe,
came to the cabin, caressed the children, and shared the woodman's
hospitality. One day the little girl found in the forest an arrow
wrapped in snake-skin and tipped with crow's feather; then the boy
found a hatchet hanging by a hair from a bough above the door; then a
glare of evil eyes was caught for an instant in a thicket. Naoman,
when he came, was reserved and stern, finding voice only to warn the
family to fly that night; so, when all was still, the threatened
family made its way softly, but quickly, to the Hudson shore, and
embarked for Fisher's Kill, across the river.
The
wind lagged and their
boat drew heavily, and when, from the shade of Pollopel's Island, a
canoe swept out, propelled by twelve men, the hearts of the people in
the boat sank in despair. The wife was about to leap over, but
Murdock drew her back; then, loading and firing as fast as possible,
he laid six of his pursuers low; but the canoe was savagely urged
forward, and in another minute every member of the family was a
helpless captive. When the skiff had been dragged back, the prisoners
were marched through the wood to an open spot where the principal
members of the tribe sat in council.
The
sachem arose, twisted
his hands in the woman's golden hair, bared his knife, and cried,
"Tell us what Indian warned you and betrayed his tribe, or you
shall see husband and children bleed before your eyes." The
woman answered never a word, but after a little Naoman arose and
said, "'Twas I;" then drew his blanket about him and knelt
for execution. An axe cleft his skull. Drunk with the sight of blood,
the Indians rushed upon the captives and slew them, one by one. The
prisoners neither shrank nor cried for mercy, but met their end with
hymns upon their lips, and, seeing that they could so meet death, one
member of the band let fall his arm and straight became a Christian.
The cabin was burned, the bodies flung into the stream, and the stain
of blood was seen for many a year in Murderer's Creek.
A TRAPPER'S
GHASTLY VENGEANCE
About
a mile back from
the Hudson, at Coxsackie, stood the cabin of Nick Wolsey, who, in the
last century, was known to the river settlements as a hunter and
trapper of correct aim, shrewdness, endurance, and taciturn habit.
For many years he lived in this cabin alone, except for the company
of his dog; but while visiting a camp of Indians in the wilderness he
was struck with the engaging manner of one of the girls of the tribe;
he repeated the visit; he found cause to go to the camp frequently;
he made presents to the father of the maid, and at length won her
consent to be his wife. The simple marriage ceremony of the tribe was
performed, and Wolsey led Minamee to his home; but the wedding was
interrupted in an almost tragic manner, for a surly fellow who had
loved the girl, yet who never had found courage to declare himself,
was wrought to such a jealous fury at the discovery of Wolsey's good
fortune that he sprang at him with a knife, and would have despatched
him on the spot had not the white man's faithful hound leaped at his
throat and borne him to the ground.
Wolsey
disarmed the
fellow and kicked and cuffed him to the edge of the wood, while the
whole company shouted with laughter at this ignominious punishment,
and approved it. A year or more passed. Wolsey and his Indian wife
were happy in their free and simple life; happy, too, in their little
babe. Wolsey was seldom absent from his cabin for any considerable
length of time, and usually returned to it before the night set in.
One evening he noticed that the grass and twigs were bent near his
house by some passing foot that, with the keen eye of the woodman, he
saw was not his wife's.
"Some
hunter,"
he said, "saw the house when he passed here, and as, belike, he
never saw one before, he stopped to look in." For the trail led
to his window, and diverged thence to the forest again. A few days
later, as he was returning, he came on the footprints that were
freshly made, and a shadow crossed his face. On nearing the door he
stumbled on the body of his dog, lying rigid on the ground. "How
did this happen, Minamee?" he cried, as he flung open the door.
The wife answered, in a low voice, "O Hush! you'll wake the
child."
Nick
Wolsey entered the
cabin and stood as one turned to marble. Minamee, his wife, sat on
the gold hearth, her face and hands cut and blackened, her dress
torn, her eyes glassy, a meaningless smile on her lips. In her arms
she pressed the body of her infant, its dress soaked with blood, and
the head of the little creature lay on the floor beside her. She
crooned softly over the cold clay as if hushing it to sleep, and when
Wolsey at length found words, she only whispered, "Hush! you
will wake him." The night went heavily on; day dawned, and the
crooning became lower and lower; still, through all that day the
bereft woman rocked to and fro upon the floor, and the agonized
husband hung about her, trying in vain to give comfort, to bind her
wounds, to get some explanation of the mystery that confronted him.
The second night set in, and it was evident that it would be the last
for Minamee. Her strength failed until she allowed herself to be
placed on a couch of skins, while the body of her child was gently
lifted from her arms. Then, for a few brief minutes, her reason was
restored, and she found words to tell her husband how the Indian
whose murderous attack he had thwarted at the wedding had come to the
cabin, shot the dog that had rushed out to defend the place, beat the
woman back from the door, tore the baby from its bed, slashed its
head off with a knife, and, flinging the little body into her lap,
departed with the words, "This is my revenge. I am satisfied."
Before the sun was in the east again Minamee was with her baby.
Wolsey
sat for hours in
the ruin of his happiness, his breathing alone proving that he was
alive, and when at last he arose and went out of the house, there
were neither tears nor outcry; he saddled his horse and rode off to
the westward. At nightfall he came to the Indian village where he had
won his wife, and relating to the assembled tribe what had happened,
he demanded that the murderer be given up to him. His demand was
readily granted, whereupon the white man advanced on the cowering
wretch, who had confidently expected the protection of his people,
and with the quick fling and jerk of a raw-hide rope bound his arms
to his side. Then casting a noose about his neck and tying the end of
it to his saddle-bow, he set off for the Hudson. All that night he
rode, the Indian walking and running at the horse's heels, and next
day he reached his cabin. Tying his prisoner to a tree, the trapper
cut a quantity of young willows, from which he fashioned a large
cradle-like receptacle; in this he placed the culprit, face upward,
and tied so stoutly that he could not move a finger; then going into
his house, he emerged with the body of Minamee, and laid it, face
downward, on the wretch, who could not repress a groan of horror as
the awful burden sank on his breast. Wolsey bound together the living
and the dead, and with a swing of his powerful arms he flung them on
his horse's back, securing them there with so many turns of rope that
nothing could displace them. Now he began to lash his horse until the
poor beast trembled with anger and pain, when, flinging off the
halter, he gave it a final lash, and the animal plunged, foaming and
snorting, into the wilderness. When it had vanished and the
hoof-beats were no longer heard, Nick Wolsey took his rifle on his
arm and left his home forever. And tradition says that the horse
never stopped in its mad career, but that on still nights it can be
heard sweeping through the woods along the Hudson and along the
Mohawk like a whirlwind, and that as the sound goes by a smothered
voice breaks out in cursing, in appeal, then in harsh and dreadful
laughter.
THE
VANDERDECKEN OF TAPPAN ZEE
It
is Saturday night; the
swell of the Hudson lazily heaves against the shores of Tappan Zee,
the cliff above Tarrytown where the white lady cries on winter nights
is pale in starlight, and crickets chirp in the boskage. It is so
still that the lap of oars can be heard coming across the water at
least a mile away. Some small boat, evidently, but of heavy build,
for it takes a vigorous hand to propel it, and now there is a
grinding of oars on thole-pins. Strange that it is not yet seen, for
the sound is near. Look! Is that a shadow crossing that wrinkle of
starlight in the water? The oars have stopped, and there is no wind
to make that sound of a sigh.
Ho,
Rambout Van Dam! Is
it you? Are you still expiating your oath to pull from Kakiat to
Spuyten Duyvil before the dawn of Sabbath, if it takes you a month of
Sundays? Better for you had you passed the night with your roistering
friends at Kakiat, or started homeward earlier, for Sabbath-breaking
is no sin now, and you, poor ghost, will find little sympathy for
your plight. Grant that your month of Sundays, or your cycle of
months of Sundays, be soon up, for it is sad to be reminded that we
may be punished for offences many years forgotten. When the sun is
high to-morrow a score of barges will vex the sea of Tappan, each
crowded with men and maids from New Amsterdam, jigging to profane
music and refreshing themselves with such liquors as you, Rambout,
never even smelled—be thankful for that much. If your shade
sits
blinking at them from the wooded buttresses of the Palisades, you
must repine, indeed, at the hardness of your fate.
In
the flower-gemmed
cemetery of Tarrytown, where gentle Irving sleeps, a Hessian soldier
was interred after sustaining misfortune in the loss of his head in
one of the Revolutionary battles. For a long time after he was buried
it was the habit of this gentleman to crawl from his grave at
unseemly hours and gallop about the country, sending shivers through
the frames of many worthy people, who shrank under their blankets
when they heard the rush of hoofs along the unlighted roads.
In
later times there
lived in Tarrytown—so named because of the tarrying habits of
Dutch
gossips on market days, though some hard-minded people insist that
Tarwe-town means Wheat-towna gaunt schoolmaster, one Ichabod Crane,
who cherished sweet sentiments for Katrina Van Tassell, the buxom
daughter of a farmer, also a famous maker of pies and doughnuts.
Ichabod had been calling late one evening, and, his way home being
long, Katrina's father lent him a horse to make the journey; but even
with this advantage the youth set out with misgivings, for he had to
pass the graveyard.
As
it was near the hour
when the Hessian was to ride, he whistled feebly to keep his courage
up, but when he came to the dreaded spot the whistle died in a gasp,
for he heard the tread of a horse. On looking around, his hair
bristled and his heart came up like a plug in his throat to hinder
his breathing, for he saw a headless horseman coming over the ridge
behind him, blackly defined against the starry sky. Setting spurs to
his nag with a hope of being first to reach Sleepy Hollow bridge,
which the spectre never passed, the unhappy man made the best
possible time in that direction, for his follower was surely
overtaking him. Another minute and the bridge would be reached; but,
to Ichabod's horror, the Hessian dashed alongside and, rising in his
stirrups, flung his head full at the fugitive's back. With a squeal
of fright the schoolmaster rolled into a mass of weeds by the
wayside, and for some minutes he remained there, knowing and
remembering nothing.
Next
morning farmer Van
Tassell's horse was found grazing in a field near Sleepy Hollow, and
a man who lived some miles southward reported that he had seen Mr.
Crane striding as rapidly along the road to New York as his lean legs
could take him, and wearing a pale and serious face as he kept his
march. There were yellow stains on the back of his coat, and the man
who restored the horse found a smashed pumpkin in the broken bushes
beside the road. Ichabod never returned to Tarrytown, and when Brom
Bones, a stout young ploughman and taphaunter, married Katrina,
people made bold to say that he knew more about the galloping Hessian
than any one else, though they believed that he never had reason to
be jealous of Ichabod Crane.
STORM
SHIP OF THE HUDSON
It
was noised about New
Amsterdam, two hundred years ago, that a round and bulky ship flying
Dutch colors from her lofty quarter was careering up the harbor in
the teeth of a north wind, through the swift waters of an ebbing
tide, and making for the Hudson. A signal from the Battery to heave
to and account for herself being disregarded, a cannon was trained
upon her, and a ball went whistling through her cloudy and
imponderable mass, for timbers she had none. Some of the sailor-folk
talked of mirages that rose into the air of northern coasts and seas,
but the wise ones put their fingers beside their noses and called to
memory the Flying Dutchman, that wanderer of the seas whose captain,
having sworn that he would round Cape Horn in spite of heaven and
hell, has been beating to and fro along the bleak Fuegian coast and
elsewhere for centuries, being allowed to land but once in seven
years, when he can break the curse if he finds a girl who will love
him. Perhaps Captain Vanderdecken found this maiden of his hopes in
some Dutch settlement on the Hudson, or perhaps he expiated his
rashness by prayer and penitence; howbeit, he never came down again,
unless he slipped away to sea in snow or fog so dense that watchers
and boatmen saw nothing of his passing. A few old settlers declared
the vessel to be the Half Moon, and there were some who testified to
seeing that identical ship with Hudson and his spectre crew on board
making for the Catskills to hold carouse.
This
fleeting vision has
been confounded with the storm ship that lurks about the foot of the
Palisades and Point-no-Point, cruising through Tappan Zee at night
when a gale is coming up. The Hudson is four miles wide at Tappan,
and squalls have space enough to gather force; hence, when old
skippers saw the misty form of a ship steal out from the shadows of
the western hills, then fly like a gull from shore to shore, catching
the moonlight on her topsails, but showing no lanterns, they made to
windward and dropped anchor, unless their craft were stanch and their
pilot's brains unvexed with liquor. On summer nights, when falls that
curious silence which is ominous of tempest, the storm ship is not
only seen spinning across the mirror surface of the river, but the
voices of the crew are heard as they chant at the braces and halyards
in words devoid of meaning to the listeners.
WHY
SPUYTEN DUYVIL IS SO NAMED
The
tide-water creek that
forms the upper boundary of Manhattan Island is known to dwellers in
tenements round about as "Spittin' Divvle." The proper name
of it is Spuyten Duyvil, and this, in turn, is the compression of a
celebrated boast by Anthony Van Corlaer. This redoubtable gentleman,
famous for fat, long wind, and long whiskers, was trumpeter for the
garrison at New Amsterdam, which his countrymen had just bought for
twenty-four dollars, and he sounded the brass so sturdily that in the
fight between the Dutch and Indians at the Dey Street peach orchard
his blasts struck more terror into the red men's hearts than did the
matchlocks of his comrades. William the Testy vowed that Anthony and
his trumpet were garrison enough for all Manhattan Island, for he
argued that no regiment of Yankees would approach near enough to be
struck with lasting deafness, as must have happened if they came when
Anthony was awake.
Peter
Stuyvesant-Peter
the Headstrong—showed his appreciation of Anthony's worth by
making
him his esquire, and when he got news of an English expedition on its
way to seize his unoffending colony, he at once ordered Anthony to
rouse the villages along the Hudson with a trumpet call to war. The
esquire took a hurried leave of six or eight ladies, each of whom
delighted to believe that his affections were lavished on her alone,
and bravely started northward, his trumpet hanging on one side, a
stone bottle, much heavier, depending from the other. It was a stormy
evening when he arrived at the upper end of the island, and there was
no ferryman in sight, so, after fuming up and down the shore, he
swallowed a mighty draught of Dutch courage,—for he was as
accomplished a performer on the horn as on the trumpet,—and
swore
with ornate and voluminous oaths that he would swim the stream "in
spite of the devil" [En spuyt den Duyvil].
He
plunged in, and had
gone half-way across when the Evil One, not to be spited, appeared as
a huge moss-bunker, vomiting boiling water and lashing a fiery tail.
This dreadful fish seized Anthony by the leg; but the trumpeter was
game, for, raising his instrument to his lips, he exhaled his last
breath through it in a defiant blast that rang through the woods for
miles and made the devil himself let go for a moment. Then he was
dragged below, his nose shining through the water more and more
faintly, until, at last, all sight of him was lost. The failure of
his mission resulted in the downfall of the Dutch in America, for,
soon after, the English won a bloodless victory, and St. George's
cross flaunted from the ramparts where Anthony had so often saluted
the setting sun. But it was years, even then, before he was hushed,
for in stormy weather it was claimed that the shrill of his trumpet
could be heard near the creek that he had named, sounding above the
deeper roar of the blast.
A
curious tale of the
Rosicrucians runs to the effect that more than two centuries ago a
band of German colonists entered the Ramapo valley and put up houses
of stone, like those they had left in the Hartz Mountains, and when
the Indians saw how they made knives and other wonderful things out
of metal, which they extracted from the rocks by fire, they believed
them to be manitous and went away, not wishing to resist their
possession of the land. There was treasure here, for High Tor, or
Torn Mountain, had been the home of Amasis, youngest of the magi who
had followed the star of Bethlehem. He had found his way, through
Asia and Alaska, to this country, had taken to wife a native woman,
by whom he had a child, and here on the summit he had built a temple.
Having refused the sun worship, when the Indians demanded that he
should take their faith, he was set upon, and would have been killed
had not an earthquake torn the ground at his feet, opening a new
channel for the Hudson and precipitating into it every one but the
magus and his daughter. To him had been revealed in magic vision the
secrets of wealth in the rocks.
The
leader in the German
colony, one Hugo, was a man of noble origin, who had a wife and two
children: a boy, named after himself; a girl,—Mary. Though it
had
been the custom in the other country to let out the forge fires once
in seven years, Hugo opposed that practice in the forge he had built
as needless. But his men murmured and talked of the salamander that
once in seven years attains its growth in unquenched flame and goes
forth doing mischief. On the day when that period was ended the
master entered his works and saw the men gazing into the furnace at a
pale form that seemed made from flame, that was nodding and turning
in the fire, occasionally darting its tongue at them or allowing its
tail to fall out and lie along the stone floor. As he came to the
door he, too, was transfixed, and the fire seemed burning his vitals,
until he felt water sprinkled on his face, and saw that his wife,
whom he had left at home too ill to move, stood behind him and was
casting holy water into the furnace, speaking an incantation as she
did so. At that moment a storm arose, and a rain fell that put out
the fire; but as the last glow faded the lady fell dead.
When
her children were to
be consecrated, seven years later, those who stood outside of the
church during the ceremony saw a vivid flash, and the nurse turned
from the boy in her fright. She took her hands from her eyes. The
child was gone. Twice seven years had passed and the daughter
remained unspotted by the world, for, on the night when her father
had led her to the top of High Torn Mountain and shown her what
Amasis had seen,—the earth spirits in their caves heaping
jewels
and offering to give them if Hugo would speak the word that binds the
free to the earth forces and bars his future for a thousand
years,—it
was her prayer that brought him to his senses and made the scene
below grow dim, though the baleful light of the salamander clinging
to the rocks at the bottom of the cave sent a glow into the sky.
Many
nights after that
the glow was seen on the height and Hugo was missing from his home,
but for lack of a pure soul to stand as interpreter he failed to read
the words that burned in the triangle on the salamander's back, and
returned in rage and jealousy. A knightly man had of late appeared in
the settlement, and between him and Mary a tender feeling had arisen,
that, however, was unexpressed until, after saving her from the
attack of a panther, he had allowed her to fall into his arms. She
would willingly then have declared her love for him, but he placed
her gently and regretfully from him and said, "When you slept I
came to you and put a crown of gems on your head: that was because I
was in the power of the earth spirit. Then I had power only over the
element of fire, that either consumes or hardens to stone; but now
water and life are mine. Behold! Wear these, for thou art worthy."
And touching the tears that had fallen from her eyes, they turned
into lilies in his hands, and he put them on her brow.
"Shall
we meet
again?" asked the girl.
"I
do not know,"
said he. "I tread the darkness of the universe alone, and I
peril my redemption by yielding to this love of earth. Thou art
redeemed already, but I must make my way back to God through
obedience tested in trial. Know that I am one of those that left
heaven for love of man. We were of that subtle element which is
flame, burning and glowing with love,—and when thy mother
came to
me with the power of purity to cast me out of the furnace, I lost my
shape of fire and took that of a human being,—a child. I have
been
with thee often, and was rushing to annihilation, because I could not
withstand the ordeal of the senses. Had I yielded, or found thee
other than thou art, I should have become again an earth spirit. I
have been led away by wish for power, such as I have in my grasp, and
forgot the mission to the suffering. I became a wanderer over the
earth until I reached this land, the land that you call new. Here was
to be my last trial and here I am to pass the gate of fire."
As
he spoke voices arose
from the settlement.
"They
are coming,"
said he. The stout form of Hugo was in advance. With a fierce oath he
sprang on the young man. "He has ruined my household," he
cried. "Fling him into the furnace!" The young man stood
waiting, but his brow was serene. He was seized, and in a few moments
had disappeared through the mouth of the burning pit. But Mary,
looking up, saw a shape in robes of silvery light, and it drifted
upward until it vanished in the darkness. The look of horror on her
face died away, and a peace came to it that endured until the end.
Between
the island of
Manhattoes and the Catskills the Hudson shores were plagued with
spooks, and even as late as the nineteenth century Hans Anderson, a
man who tilled a farm back of Peekskill, was worried into his grave
by the leaden-face likeness of a British spy whom he had hanged on
General Putnam's orders. "Old Put" doubtless enjoyed
immunity from this vexatious creature, because he was born with few
nerves. A region especially afflicted was the confluence of the
Croton and the Hudson, for the Kitchawan burying-ground was here, and
the red people being disturbed by the tramping of white men over
their graves, "the walking sachems of Teller's Point" were
nightly to be met on their errands of protest.
These
Indians had built a
palisade on Croton Point, and here they made their last stand against
their enemies from the north. Throughout the fight old chief Croton
stood on the wall with arrows showering around him, and directed the
resistance with the utmost calm. Not until every one of his men was
dead and the fort was going up in flame about him did he confess
defeat. Then standing amid the charring timbers, he used his last
breath in calling down the curse of the Great Spirit against the foe.
As the victorious enemy rushed into the enclosure to secure the
scalps of the dead he fell lifeless into the fire, and their jubilant
yell was lost upon his ears. Yet, he could not rest nor bear to leave
his ancient home, even after death, and often his form, in musing
attitude, was seen moving through the woods. When a manor was built
on the ruins of his fort, he appeared to the master of it, to urge
him into the Continental army, and having seen this behest obeyed and
laid a solemn injointure to keep the freedom of the land forever, he
vanished, and never appeared again.
After
the English had
secured the city of New Amsterdam and had begun to extend their
settlements along the Hudson, the Indians congregated in large
numbers about Lake Mahopac, and rejected all overtures for the
purchase of that region. In their resolution they were sustained by
their young chief Omoyao, who refused to abandon on on any terms the
country where his fathers had solong hunted, fished, and built their
lodges. A half-breed, one Joliper, a member of this tribe, was
secretly in the pay of the English, but the allurements and
insinuations that he put forth on their behalf were as futile as the
breathing of wind in the leaves. At last the white men grew angry.
Have the land they would, by evil course if good ways were refused,
and commissioning Joliper to act for them in a decisive manner, they
guaranteed to supply him with forces if his negotiations fell
through. This man never thought it needful to negotiate. He knew the
temper of his tribe and he was too jealous of his chief to go to him
for favors, because he loved Maya, the chosen one of Omoyao.
At
the door of Maya's
tent he entreated her to go with him to the white settlements, and on
her refusal he broke into angry threats, declaring, in the
self-forgetfulness of passion, that he would kill her lover and lead
the English against the tribe. Unknown to both Omoyao had overheard
this interview, and he immediately sent runners to tell all warriors
of his people to meet him at once on the island in the lake. Though
the runners were cautioned to keep their errand secret, it is
probable that Joliper suspected that the alarm had gone forth, and he
resolved to strike at once; so he summoned his renegades, stole into
camp next evening and made toward Maya's wigwam, intending to take
her to a place of safety. Seeing the chief at the door, he shot an
arrow at him, but the shaft went wide and slew the girl's father.
Realizing, upon this assault, that he was outwitted and that his
people were outnumbered, the chief called to Maya to meet him at the
island, and plunged into the brush, after seeing that she had taken
flight in an opposite direction. The vengeful Joliper was close
behind him with his renegades, and the chief was captured; then, that
he might not communicate with his people or delay the operations
against them, it was resolved to put him to death.
He
was tied to a tree,
the surrounding wood was set on fire, and he was abandoned to his
fate, his enemies leaving him to destruction in their haste to reach
the place of the council and slay or capture all who were there.
Hardly were they out of hearing ere the plash of a paddle sounded
through the roar of flame and Maya sprang upon the bank, cut her
lover's bonds, and with him made toward the island, which they
reached by a protected way before the assailants had arrived. They
told the story of Joliper's cruelty and treason, and when his boats
were seen coming in to shore they had eyes and hands only for
Joliper. He was the first to land. Hardly had he touched the strand
before he was surrounded by a frenzied crowd and had fallen bleeding
from a hundred gashes.
The
Indians were
overpowered after a brief and bloody resistance. They took safety in
flight. Omoyao and Maya, climbing upon the rock above their "council
chamber," found that while most of their people had escaped
their own retreat was cut off, and that it would be impossible to
reach any of the canoes. They preferred death to torture and
captivity, so, hand in hand, they leaped together down the cliff, and
the English claimed the land next day.
The
cataract of Niagara
(properly pronounced Nee-ah-gah-rah), or Oniahgarah, is as fatal as
it is fascinating, beautiful, sublime, and the casualties occurring
there justify the tradition that "the Thundering Water asks two
victims every year." It was reputed, before white men looked for
the first time on these falls—and what thumping yarns they
told
about them!—that two lives were lost here annually, and this
average has been kept up by men and women who fall into the flood
through accident, recklessness or despair, while bloody battles have
been fought on the shores, and vessels have been hurled over the
brink, to be dashed to splinters on the rocks.
The
sound of the cataract
was declared to be the voice of a mighty spirit that dwelt in the
waters, and in former centuries the Indians offered to it a yearly
sacrifice. This sacrifice was a maiden of the tribe, who was sent
over in a white canoe, decorated with fruit and flowers, and the
girls contended for this honor, for the brides of Manitou were
objects of a special grace in the happy hunting-grounds. The last
recorded sacrifice was in 1679, when Lelawala, the daughter of chief
Eagle Eye, was chosen, in spite of the urgings and protests of the
chevalier La Salle, who had been trying to restrain the people from
their idolatries by an exposition of the Christian dogma. To his
protests he received the unexpected answer, "Your words witness
against you. Christ, you say, set us an example. We will follow it.
Why should one death be great, while our sacrifice is horrible?"
So the tribe gathered at the bank to watch the sailing of the white
canoe. The chief watched the embarkation with the stoicism usual to
the Indian when he is observed by others, but when the little bark
swung out into the current his affection mastered him, and he leaped
into his own canoe and tried to overtake his daughter. In a moment
both were beyond the power of rescue. After their death they were
changed into spirits of pure strength and goodness, and live in a
crystal heaven so far beneath the fall that its roaring is a music to
them: she, the maid of the mist; he, the ruler of the cataract.
Another version of the legend makes a lover and his mistress the
chief actors. Some years later a patriarch of the tribe and all his
sons went over the fall when the white men had seized their lands,
preferring death to flight or war.
In
about the year 200 the
Stone Giants waded across the river below the falls on their
northward march. These beings were descended from an ancient family,
and being separated from their stock in the year 150 by the breaking
of a vine bridge across the Mississippi, they left that region.
Indian Pass, in the Adirondacks, bore the names of Otneyarheh, Stony
Giants; Ganosgwah, Giants Clothed in Stone; and Dayohjegago, Place
Where the Storm Clouds Fight the Great Serpent. Giants and serpents
were held to be harmful inventions of the Evil Spirit, and the
Lightning god, catching up clouds as he stood on the crags, broke
them open, tore their lightnings out and hurled them against the
monsters. These cannibals had almost exterminated the Iroquois, for
they were of immense size and had made themselves almost invincible
by rolling daily in the sand until their flesh was like stone. The
Holder of the Heavens, viewing their evil actions from on high, came
down disguised as one of their number—he used often to
meditate on
Manitou Rock, at the Whirlpool—and leading them to a valley
near
Onondaga, on pretence of guiding them to a fairer country, he stood
on a hill above them and hurled rocks upon their heads until all,
save one, who fled into the north, were dead. Yet, in the fulness of
time, new children of the Stone Giants (mail-clad Europeans?) entered
the region again and were destroyed by the Great
Spirit,—oddly
enough where the famous fraud known as the Cardiff giant was alleged
to have been found. The Onondagas believed this statue to be one of
their ancient foes.
The
valley of Zoar, in
western New York, is so surrounded by hills that its
discoverers—a
religious people, who gave it a name from Scripture said, "This
is Zoar; it is impregnable. From her we will never go." And
truly, for lack of roads, they found it so hard to get out, having
got in, that they did not leave it. Among the early settlers here
were people of a family named Wright, whose house became a sort of
inn for the infrequent traveller, inasmuch as they were not troubled
with piety, and had no scruples against the selling of drink and the
playing of cards at late hours. A peddler passed through the valley
on his way to Buffalo and stopped at the Wright house for a lodging,
but before he went to bed he incautiously showed a number of golden
trinkets from his pack and drew a considerable quantity of money out
of his pocket when he paid the fee for his lodging. Hardly had he
fallen asleep before his greedy hosts were in the room, searching for
his money. Their lack of caution caused him to awake, and as he found
them rifling his pockets and his pack he sprang up and showed fight.
A
blow sent him to the
bottom of the stairs, where his attempt to escape was intercepted,
and the family closed around him and bound his arms and legs. They
showed him the money they had taken and asked where he had concealed
the rest. He vowed that it was all he had. They insisted that he had
more, and seizing a knife from the table the elder Wright slashed off
one of his toes "to make him confess." No result came from
this, and six toes were cut off,—three from each foot; then,
in
disgust, the unhappy peddler was knocked on the head and flung
through a trap-door into a shallow cellar. Presently he arose and
tried to draw himself out, but with hatchet and knife they chopped
away his fingers and he fell back. Even the women shared in this
work, and leaned forward to gaze into the cellar to see if he might
yet be dead. While listening, they heard the man invoke the curse of
heaven on them: he asked that they should wear the mark of crime even
to the fourth generation, by coming into the world deformed and
mutilated as he was then. And it was so. The next child born in that
house had round, hoof-like feet, with only two toes, and hands that
tapered from the wrist into a single long finger. And in time there
were twenty people so deformed in the valley: The "crab-clawed
Zoarites" they were called.
The
feeling recently
created by an attempt to fasten the stupid names of Fairport or of
North Elmira on the village in central New York that, off and on for
fifty years, had been called Horseheads, caused an inquiry as to how
that singular name chanced to be adopted for a settlement. In 1779,
when General Sullivan was retiring toward the base of his supplies
after a destructive campaign against the Indians in Genesee County,
he stopped near this place and rested his troops. The country was
then rude, unbroken, and still beset with enemies, however, and when
the march was resumed it was thought best to gain time over a part of
the way by descending the Chemung River on rafts.
As
there were no
appliances for building large floats, and the depth of the water was
not known, the general ordered a destruction of all impedimenta that
could be got rid of, and commanded that the poor and superfluous
horses should be killed. His order was obeyed. As soon as the troops
had gone, the wolves, that were then abundant, came forth and
devoured the carcasses of the steeds, so that the clean-picked bones
were strewn widely over the camp-ground. When the Indians ventured
back into this region, some of them piled the skulls of the horses
into heaps, and these curious monuments were found by white settlers
who came into the valley some years later, and who named their
village Horseheads, in commemoration of these relics. The Indians
were especially loth to leave this region, for their tradition was
that it had been the land of the Senecas from immemorial time, the
tribe being descended from a couple that had a home on a hill near
Horseheads.
The
Indians loved our
lakes. They had eyes for their beauty, and to them they were abodes
of gracious spirits. They used to say of Oneida Lake, that when the
Great Spirit formed the world "his smile rested on its waters
and Frenchman's Island rose to greet it; he laughed and Lotus Island
came up to listen." So they built lodges on their shores and
skimmed their waters in canoes. Much of their history relates to
them, and this is a tale of the Senecas that was revived a few years
ago by the discovery of a deer-skin near Lakes Waneta and Keuka, New
York, on which some facts of the history were rudely drawn, for all
Indians are artists.
Waneta,
daughter of a
chief, had plighted her troth to Kayuta, a hunter of a neighboring
tribe with which her people were at war. Their tryst was held at
twilight on the farther shore of the lake from her village, and it
was her gayety and happiness, after these meetings had taken place,
that roused the suspicion and jealousy of Weutha, who had marked her
for his bride against the time when he should have won her father's
consent by some act of bravery. Shadowing the girl as she stole into
the forest one evening, he saw her enter her canoe and row to a
densely wooded spot; he heard a call like the note of a quail, then
an answer; then Kayuta emerged on the shore, lifted the maiden from
her little bark, and the twain sat down beside the water to listen to
the lap of its waves and watch the stars come out.
Hurrying
back to camp,
the spy reported that an enemy was near them, and although Waneta had
regained her wigwam by another route before the company of warriors
had reached the lake, Kayuta was seen, pursued, and only escaped with
difficulty. Next evening, not knowing what had happened after her
homeward departure on the previous night—for the braves
deemed it
best to keep the knowledge of their military operations from the
women—the girl crept away to the lake again and rowed to the
accustomed place, but while waiting for the quail call a twig dropped
on the water beside her. With a quick instinct that civilization has
spoiled she realized this to be a warning, and remaining perfectly
still, she allowed her boat to drift toward shore, presently
discovering that her lover was standing waist-deep in the water. In a
whisper he told her that they were watched, and bade her row to a
dead pine that towered at the foot of the lake, where he would soon
meet her. At that instant an arrow grazed his side and flew quivering
into the canoe.
Pushing
the boat on its
course and telling her to hasten, Kayuta sprang ashore, sounded the
warwhoop, and as Weutha rose into sight he clove his skull with a
tomahawk. Two other braves now leaped forward, but, after a struggle,
Kayuta left them dead or senseless, too. He would have stayed to tear
their scalps off had he not heard his name uttered in a shriek of
agony from the end of the lake, and, tired and bleeding though he
was, he bounded along its margin like a deer, for the voice that he
heard was Waneta's. He reached the blasted pine, gave one look, and
sank to the earth. Presently other Indians came, who had heard the
noise of fighting, and burst upon him with yells and brandished
weapons, but something in his look restrained them from a close
advance. His eyes were fixed on a string of beads that lay on the
bottom of the lake, just off shore, and when the meaning of it came
to them, the savages thought no more of killing, but moaned their
grief; for Waneta, in stepping from her canoe to wade ashore, had
been caught and swallowed by a quagmire. All night and all next day
Kayuta sat there like a man of stone. Then, just as the hour fell
when he was used to meet his love, his heart broke, and he joined her
in the spiritland.
A
little maid of three
years was missing from her home on the Genesee. She had gone to
gather water-lilies and did not return. Her mother, almost crazed
with grief, searched for days, weeks, months, before she could resign
herself to the thought that her little one—Kayutah, the Drop
Star,
the Indians called her—had indeed been drowned. Years went
by. The
woman's home was secure against pillage, for it was no longer the one
house of a white family in that region, and the Indians had retired
farther and farther into the wilderness. One day a hunter came to the
woman and said, "I have seen old Skenandoh,—the last of his
tribe, thank God! who bade me say this to you: that the ice is
broken, and he knows of a hill of snow where a red berry grows that
shall be yours if you will claim it." When the meaning of this
message came upon her the woman fainted, but on recovering speech she
despatched her nephew to the hut of the aged chief and passed that
night in prayer.
The
young man set off at
sunset, and by hard riding, over dim trails, with only stars for
light, he came in the gray of dawn to an upright timber, colored red
and hung with scalps, that had been cut from white men's heads at the
massacre of Wyoming. The place they still call Painted Post. Without
drawing rein he sped along the hills that hem Lake Seneca, then,
striking deeper into the wilds, he reached a smaller lake, and almost
fell from his saddle before a rude tent near the shore. A new grave
had been dug close by, and he shuddered to think that perhaps he had
come too late, but a wrinkled Indian stepped forth at that moment and
waited his word.
"I
come," cried
the youth,—"to see the berry that springs from snow."
"You
come in time,"
answered Skenandoh. "No, 'tis not in that grave. It is my own
child that is buried there. She was as a sister to the one you seek,
and she bade me restore the Drop Star to her mother,—the
squaw that
we know as the New Moon's Light."
Stepping
into the wigwam,
he emerged again, clasping the wrist of a girl of eighteen, whose
robe he tore asunder at the throat, showing the white breast, and on
it a red birth-mark; then, leading her to the young man, he
said,—"And now I must go to the setting sun." He slung a
pouch about him, loaded, not with arms and food, but stones, stepped
into his canoe, and paddled out upon the water, singing as he went a
melancholy chant—his deathsong. On gaining the middle of the
lake
he swung his tomahawk and clove the bottom of the frail boat, so that
it filled in a moment and the chief sank from sight. The young man
took his cousin to her overjoyed mother, helped to win her back to
the ways of civilized life, and eventually married her. She took her
Christian name again, but left to the lake on whose banks she had
lived so long her Indian name of Drop Star—Kayutah.
It
was at Palmyra, New
York, that the principles of Mormonism were first enunciated by
Joseph Smith, who claimed to have found the golden plates of the Book
of Mormon in a hill-side in neighboring Manchester,—the "Hill
of Cumorah,"—to which he was led by angels. The plates were
written in characters similar to the masonic cabala, and he
translated them by divine aid, giving to the world the result of his
discovery. The Hebrew prophet Mormon was the alleged author of the
record, and his son Moroni buried it. The basis of Mormonism was,
however, an unpublished novel, called "The Manuscript Found,"
that was read to Sidney Rigdon (afterwards a Mormon elder) by its
author, a clergyman, and that formulated a creed for a hypothetical
church. Smith had a slight local celebrity, for he and his father
were operators with the divining-rod, and when he appropriated this
creed a harmless and beneficent one, for polygamy was a later
"inspiration" of Brigham Young—and began to preach it, in
1844, it gained many converts. His arrogation of the presidency of
the "Church of Latter Day Saints" and other rash
performances won for him the enmity of the Gentiles, who imprisoned
and killed him at Carthage, Missouri, leaving Brigham Young to lead
the people across the deserts to Salt Lake, where they prospered
through thrift and industry.
It
was claimed that in
the van of this army, on the march to Utah, was often seen a
venerable man with silver beard, who never spoke, but who would point
the way whenever the pilgrims were faint or discouraged. When they
reached the spot where the temple was afterwards built, he struck his
staff into the earth and vanished.
At
Hydesville, near
Palmyra, spiritualism, as it is commonly called, came into being on
March 31, 1849, when certain of the departed announced themselves by
thumping on doors and tables in the house of the Fox family, the
survivors of which confessed the fraud nearly forty years after. It
is of interest to note that the ground whence these new religions
sprang was peopled by the Onondagas, the sacerdotal class of the
Algonquin tribe, who have preserved the ancient religious rites of
that great family until this day.
Bramley's
Mountain, near
the present village of Bloomfield, New York, on the edge of the
Catskill group, was the home of a young couple that had married with
rejoicing and had taken up the duties and pleasures of housekeeping
with enthusiasm. To be sure, in those days housekeeping was not a
thing to be much afraid of, and the servant question had not come up
for discussion. The housewives did the work themselves, and the
husband had no valets. The domicile of this particular pair was
merely a tent of skins stretched around a frame of poles, and their
furniture consisted principally of furs strewn over the earth floor;
but they loved each other truly. The girl was thankful to be taken
from her home to live, because, up to the time of her marriage, she
had been persecuted by a morose and ill-looking fellow of her tribe,
who laid siege to her affection with such vehemence that the more he
pleaded the greater was her dislike; and now she hoped that she had
seen the last of him. But that was not to be. He lurked about the
wigwam of the pair, torturing himself with the sight of their
felicity, and awaiting his chance to prove his hate. This chance came
when the husband had gone to Lake Delaware to fish, for he rowed
after and gave battle in the middle of the pond. Taken by surprise,
and being insufficiently armed, the husband was killed and his body
flung into the water. Then, casting an affectionate leer at the wife
who had watched this act of treachery and malice with speechless
horror from the mountain-side, he drove his canoe ashore and set off
in pursuit of her. She retreated so slowly as to allow him to keep
her in sight, and when she entered a cave he pressed forward eagerly,
believing that now her escape was impossible; but she had purposely
trapped him there, for she had already explored a tortuous passage
that led to the upper air, and by this she had left the cavern in
safety while he was groping and calling in the dark. Returning to the
entrance, she loosened, by a jar, a ledge that overhung it, so that
the door was almost blocked; then, gathering light wood from the dry
trees around her, she made a fire and hurled the burning sticks into
the prison where the wretch was howling, until he was dead in smoke
and flame. When his yells and curses had been silenced she told a
friend what she had done, then going back to the lake, she sang her
death-song and cast herself into the water, hoping thus to rejoin her
husband.
They
have some pretty big
mosquitoes in New Jersey and on Long Island, but, if report of their
ancestry is true, they have degenerated in size and voracity; for the
grandfather of all mosquitoes used to live in the neighborhood of
Fort Onondaga, New York, and sallying out whenever he was hungry,
would eat an Indian or two and pick his teeth with their ribs. The
red men had no arms that could prevail against it, but at last the
Holder of the Heavens, hearing their cry for aid, came down and
attacked the insect. Finding that it had met its match, the mosquito
flew away so rapidly that its assailant could hardly keep it in
sight. It flew around the great lake, then turned eastward again. It
sought help vainly of the witches that brooded in the sink-holes, or
Green Lakes (near Janesville, New York), and had reached the salt
lake of Onondaga when its pursuer came up and killed it, the creature
piling the sand into hills in its dying struggles.
As
its blood poured upon
the earth it became small mosquitoes, that gathered about the Holder
of the Heavens and stung him so sorely that he half repented the
service that he had done to men. The Tuscaroras say that this was one
of two monsters that stood on opposite banks of the Seneca River and
slew all men that passed. Hiawatha killed the other one. On their
reservation is a stone, marked by the form of the Sky Holder, that
shows where he rested during the chase, while his tracks were until
lately seen south of Syracuse, alternating with footprints of the
mosquito, which were shaped like those of a bird, and twenty inches
long. At Brighton, New York, where these marks appeared, they were
reverentially renewed by the Indians for many years.
In
a cellar in Green
Street, Schenectady, there appeared, some years ago, the silhouette
of a human form, painted on the floor in mould. It was swept and
scrubbed away, but presently it was there again, and month by month,
after each removal, it returned: a mass of fluffy mould, always in
the shape of a recumbent man. When it was found that the house stood
on the site of the old Dutch burial ground, the gossips fitted this
and that together and concluded that the mould was planted by a
spirit whose mortal part was put to rest a century and more ago, on
the spot covered by the house, and that the spirit took this way of
apprising people that they were trespassing on its grave. Others held
that foul play had been done, and that a corpse, hastily and
shallowly buried, was yielding itself back to the damp cellar in
vegetable form, before its resolution into simpler elements. But a
darker meaning was that it was the outline of a vampire that vainly
strove to leave its grave, and could not because a virtuous spell had
been worked about the place.
A
vampire is a dead man
who walks about seeking for those whose blood he can suck, for only
by supplying new life to its cold limbs can he keep the privilege of
moving about the earth. He fights his way from his coffin, and those
who meet his gray and stiffened shape, with fishy eyes and blackened
mouth, lurking by open windows, biding his time to steal in and drink
up a human life, fly from him in terror and disgust. In northern
Rhode Island those who die of consumption are believed to be victims
of vampires who work by charm, draining the blood by slow draughts as
they lie in their graves. To lay this monster he must be taken up and
burned; at least, his heart must be; and he must be disinterred in
the daytime when he is asleep and unaware. If he died with blood in
his heart he has this power of nightly resurrection. As late as 1892
the ceremony of heart-burning was performed at Exeter, Rhode Island,
to save the family of a dead woman that was threatened with the same
disease that removed her, namely, consumption. But the Schenectady
vampire has yielded up all his substance, and the green picture is no
more.
At
Carthage, New York,
where the Black River bends gracefully about a point, there was a
stanch old house, built in the colonial fashion and designed for the
occupancy of some family of hospitality and wealth, but the family
died out or moved away, and for some years it remained deserted.
During the war of 1812 the village gossips were excited by the
appearance of carpenters, painters and upholsterers, and it was
evident that the place was to be restored to its manorial dignities;
but their curiosity was deepened instead of satisfied when, after the
house had been put in order and high walls built around it, the
occupants presented themselves as four young women in the garb of
nuns. Were they daughters of the family? Were they English
sympathizers in disguise, seeking asylum in the days of trouble? Had
they registered a vow of celibacy until their lovers should return
from the war? Were they on a secret and diplomatic errand? None ever
knew, at least in Carthage. The nuns lived in great privacy, but in a
luxury before unequalled in that part of the country. They kept a
gardener, they received from New York wines and delicacies that
others could not afford, and when they took the air, still veiled, it
was behind a splendid pair of bays.
One
afternoon, just after
the close of the war, a couple of young American officers went to the
convent, and, contrary to all precedent, were admitted. They remained
within all that day, and no one saw them leave, but a sound of wheels
passed through the street that evening. Next day there were no signs
of life about the place, nor the day following, nor the next. The
savage dog was quiet and the garden walks had gone unswept. Some
neighbors climbed over the wall and reported that the place had been
deserted. Why and by whom no one ever knew, but a cloud remained upon
its title until a recent day, for it was thought that at some time
the nuns might return.
A
skull is built into the
wall above the door of the court-house at Goshen, New York. It was
taken from a coffin unearthed in 1842, when the foundation of the
building was laid. People said there was no doubt about it, only
Claudius Smith could have worn that skull, and he deserved to be
publicly pilloried in that manner. Before the Revolutionary war Smith
was a farmer in Monroe, New York, and being prosperous enough to feel
the king's taxes no burden, to say nothing of his jealousy of the
advantage that an independent government would be to the hopes of his
poorer neighbors, he declared for the king. After the declaration of
independence had been published, his sympathies were illustrated in
an unpleasantly practical manner by gathering a troop of other Tories
about him, and, emboldened by the absence of most of the men of his
vicinage in the colonial army, he began to harass the country as
grievously in foray as the red-coats were doing in open field.
He
pillaged houses and
barns, then burned them; he insulted women, he drove away cattle and
horses, he killed several persons who had undertaken to defend their
property. His "campaigns" were managed with such secrecy
that nobody knew when or whence to look for him. His murder of Major
Nathaniel Strong, of Blooming Grove, roused indignation to such a
point that a united effort was made to catch him, a money reward for
success acting as a stimulus to the vigilance of the hunters, and at
last he was captured on Long Island. He was sent back to Goshen,
tried, convicted, and on January 22, 1779, was hanged, with five of
his band. The bodies of the culprits were buried in the jail-yard, on
the spot where the court-house stands, and old residents identified
Smith's skeleton, when it was accidentally exhumed, by its uncommon
size. A farmer from an adjacent town made off with a thigh bone, and
a mason clapped mortar into the empty skull and cemented it into the
wall, where it long remained.
Among
the settlers in the
Adirondacks, forty or fifty years ago, was Henry Clymer, from
Brooklyn, who went up to Little Black Creek and tried to make a farm
out of the gnarly, stumpy land; but being a green hand at that sort
of thing, he soon gave it up and put up the place near Northwood,
that is locally referred to as the haunted mill. When the first slab
was cut, a big party was on hand to cheer and eat pie in honor of the
Clymers, for Mr. Clymer, who was a dark, hearty, handsome fellow, and
his bright young wife had been liberal in their hospitality. The
couple had made some talk, they were so loving before
folks—too
loving to last; and, besides, it was evident that Mrs. Clymer was
used to a better station in life than her husband. It was while the
crowd was laughing and chattering at the picnic-table of new boards
from the mill that Mrs. Clymer stole away to her modest little house,
and a neighbor who had followed her was an accidental witness to a
singular episode. Mrs. Clymer was kneeling beside her bed, crying
over the picture of a child, when Clymer entered unexpectedly and
attempted to take the picture from her.
She
faced him defiantly.
"You kept that because it looked like him, I reckon," he
said. "You might run back to him. You know what he'd call you
and where you'd stand with your aristocracy."
The
woman pointed to the
door, and the man left without another word, and so did the listener.
Next morning the body of Mrs. Clymer was found hanging to a beam in
the mill. At the inquest the husband owned that he had "had a
few words" with her on the previous day, and thought that she
must have suddenly become insane. The jury took this view. News of
the suicide was printed in some of the city papers, and soon after
that the gossips had another sensation, for a fair-haired man, also
from Brooklyn, arrived at the place and asked where the woman was
buried. When he found the grave he sat beside it for some time, his
head resting on his hand; then he inquired for Clymer, but Clymer,
deadly pale, had gone into the woods as soon as he heard that a
stranger had arrived. The new-comer went to Trenton, where he ordered
a gravestone bearing the single word "Estella" to be placed
where the woman's body had been interred. Clymer quickly sold out and
disappeared. The mill never prospered, and has long been in a ruinous
condition. People of the neighborhood think that the ghost of Mrs.
Clymer—was that her name?—still troubles it, and
they pass the
place with quickened steps.
On
Lower Ausable Pond is
a large, ruddy rock showing a huge profile, with another, resembling
a pappoose, below it. When the Tahawi ruled this region their sachem
lived here at "the Dark Cup," as they called this lake, a
man renowned for virtue and remarkable, in his age, for gentleness.
When his children had died and his manly grandson, who was the old
man's hope, had followed them to the land of the cloud mountains,
Adota's heart withered within him, and standing beneath this rock, he
addressed his people, recounting what he had done for them, how he
had swept their enemies from the Lakes of the Clustered Stars (the
Lower Saranac) and Silver Sky (Upper Saranac) to the Lake of Wandah,
gaining a land where they might hunt and fish in peace. The little
one, the Star, had been ravished away to crown the brow of the
thunder god, who, even now, was advancing across the peaks, bending
the woods and lighting the valleys with his jagged torches.
Life
was nothing to him
longer; he resigned it.
As
he spoke these words
he fell back, and the breath passed out of him. Then came the thunder
god, and with an appalling burst of fire sent the people cowering.
The roar that followed seemed to shake the earth, but the
medicine-man of the tribe stood still, listening to the speech of the
god in the clouds. "Tribe of the Tahawi," he translated,
"Adota treads the star-path to the happy hunting-grounds, and
the sun is shining on his heart. He will never walk among you again,
but the god loves both him and you, and he will set his face on the
mountains. Look!" And, raising their eyes, they beheld the
likeness of Adota and of his beloved child, the Star, graven by
lightning-stroke on the cliff. There they buried the body of Adota
and held their solemn festivals until the white men drove them out of
the country.
THE DIVISION
OF THE SARANACS
In
the middle of the last
century a large body of Saranac Indians occupied the forests of the
Upper Saranac through which ran the Indian carrying-place, called by
them the Eagle Nest Trail. Whenever they raided the Tahawi on the
slopes of Mount Tahawus (Sky-splitter), there was a pleasing rivalry
between two young athletes, called the Wolf and the Eagle, as to
which would carry off the more scalps, and the tribe was divided in
admiration of them. There was one who did not share this liking: an
old sachem, one of the wizards who had escaped when the Great Spirit
locked these workers of evil in the hollow trees that stood beside
the trail. In their struggles to escape the less fortunate ones
thrust their arms through the closing bark, and they are seen there,
as withered trunks and branches, to this day. Oquarah had not been
softened by this exhibition of danger nor the qualification of mercy
that allowed him still to exist. Rather he was more bitter when he
saw, as he fancied, that the tribe thought more of the daring and
powerful warriors than it did of the bent and malignant-minded
counsellor.
It
was in the moon of
green leaves that the two young men set off to hunt the moose, and on
the next day the Wolf returned alone. He explained that in the hunt
they had been separated; he had called for hours for his friend, and
had searched so long that he concluded he must have returned ahead of
him. But he was not at the camp. Up rose the sachem with visage dark.
"I hear a forked tongue," he cried. "The Wolf was
jealous of the Eagle and his teeth have cut into his heart."
"The
Wolf cannot
lie," answered the young man.
"Where
is the
Eagle?" angrily shouted the sachem, clutching his hatchet.
"The
Wolf has said,"
replied the other.
The
old sachem advanced
upon him, but as he raised his axe to strike, the wife of the Wolf
threw herself before her husband, and the steel sank into her brain.
The sachem fell an instant later with the Wolf's knife in his heart,
and instantly the camp was in turmoil. Before the day had passed it
had been broken up, and the people were divided into factions, for it
was no longer possible to hold it together in peace. The Wolf, with
half of the people, went down the Sounding River to new
hunting-grounds, and the earth that separated the families was
reddened whenever one side met the other.
Years
had passed when,
one morning, the upper tribe saw a canoe advancing across the Lake of
the Silver Sky. An old man stepped from it: he was the Eagle. After
the Wolf had left him he had fallen into a cleft in a rock, and had
lain helpless until found by hunters who were on their way to Canada.
He had joined the British against the French, had married a northern
squaw, but had returned to die among the people of his early love.
Deep was his sorrow that his friend should have been accused of doing
him an injury, and that the once happy tribe should have been divided
by that allegation. The warriors and sachems of both branches were
summoned to a council, and in his presence they swore a peace, so
that in the fulness of time he was able to die content. That peace
was always kept.
It
was during the years
when the Saranacs were divided that Howling Wind, one of the young
men of Indian Carry, saw and fell in love with a girl of the family
on Tupper Lake. He quickly found a way to tell his liking, and the
couple met often in the woods and on the shore. He made bold to row
her around the quieter bays, and one moonlight evening he took her to
Devil's Rock, or Devil's Pulpit, where he told her the story of the
place. This was to the effect that the fiend had paddled, on timbers,
by means of his tail, to that rock, and had assembled fish and game
about him in large numbers by telling them that he was going to
preach to them, instead of which moral procedure he pounced upon and
ate all that were within his grasp.
As
so often happened in
Indian history, the return of these lovers was seen by a disappointed
rival, who had hurried back to camp and secured the aid of half a
dozen men to arrest the favored one as soon as he should land. The
capture was made after a struggle, and Howling Wind was dragged to
the chief's tent for sentence. That sentence was death, and with a
refinement of cruelty that was rare even among the Indians, the girl
was ordered to execute it. She begged and wept to no avail. An axe
was put into her hands, and she was ordered to despatch the prisoner.
She took the weapon; her face grew stern and the tears dried on her
cheeks; her lover, bound to a tree, gazed at her in amazement; his
rival watched, almost in glee. Slowly the girl crossed the open space
to her lover. She raised the tomahawk and at a blow severed the
thongs that held him, then, like a flash, she leaped upon his rival,
who had sprung forward to interfere, and clove his skull with a
single stroke. The lovers fled as only those can fly who run for
life. Happily for them, they met a party from the Carry coming to
rescue Howling Wind from the danger to which his courtship had
exposed him, and it was even said that this party entered the village
and by presenting knives and arrows at the breast of the chief
obtained his now superfluous consent to the union of the fugitives.
The pair reached the Carry in safety and lived a long and happy life
together.
Brightest
flower that
grows beside the brooks is the scarlet blossom of the Indian plume:
the blood of Lenawee. Hundreds of years ago she lived happily among
her brother and sister Saranacs beside Stony Creek, the Stream of the
Snake, and was soon to marry the comely youth who, for the speed of
his foot, was called the Arrow. But one summer the Quick Death came
on the people, and as the viewless devil stalked through the village
young and old fell before him. The Arrow was the first to die. In
vain the Prophet smoked the Great Calumet: its smoke ascending took
no shape that he could read. In vain was the white dog killed to take
aloft the people's sins. But at last the Great Spirit himself came
down to the mountain called the Storm Darer, splendid in lightning,
awful in his thunder voice and robe of cloud. "My wrath is
against you for your sins," he cried, "and naught but human
blood will appease it."
In
the morning the
Prophet told his message, and all sat silent for a time. Then Lenawee
entered the circle. "Lenawee is a blighted flower," she
sobbed. "Let her blood flow for her people." And catching a
knife from the Prophet's belt, she ran with it to the stream on which
she and the Arrow had so often floated in their canoe. In another
moment her blood had bedewed the earth. "Lay me with the Arrow,"
she murmured, and, smiling in their sad faces, breathed her last. The
demon of the quick death shrank from the spot, and the Great Spirit
smiled once more on the tribe that could produce such heroism.
Lenawee's body was placed beside her lover's, and next morning, where
her blood had spilt, the ground was pure, and on it grew in slender
spires a new flower,—the Indian plume: the transformed blood
of
sacrifice. The people loved that flower in all years after. They
decked their hair and dresses with it and made a feast in its honor.
When parents taught their children the beauty of unselfishness they
used as its emblem a stalk of Indian plume.
Back
from his war against
the Tahawi comes the Sun, chief of the Lower Saranacs,—back
to the
Lake of the Clustered Stars, afterward called, by dullards, Tupper's
Lake. Tall and invincible he comes among his people, boasting of his
victories, Indian fashion, and stirring the scalps that hang at his
breast. "The Eagle screams," he cries. "He greets the
chief, the Blazing Sun. Wayotah has made the Tahawi tremble. They fly
from him. Hooh, hooh! He is the chief." Standing apart with
wistful glance stands Oseetah, the Bird. She loves the strong young
chief, but she knows that another has his promise, and she dares not
hope; yet the chief loves her, and when the feasting is over he
follows her footprints to the shore, where he sees her canoe turning
the point of an island. He silently pursues and comes upon her as she
sits waving and moaning. He tries to embrace her, but she draws
apart. He asks her to sing to him; she bids him begone.
He
takes a more imperious
tone and orders her to listen to her chief. She moves away. He darts
toward her. Turning on him a face of sorrow, she runs to the edge of
a steep rock and waves him back. He hastens after. Then she springs
and disappears in the deep water. The Sun plunges after her and swims
with mad strength here and there. He calls. There is no answer.
Slowly he returns to the village and tells the people what has
happened. The Bird's parents are stricken and the Sun moans in his
sleep. At noon a hunter comes in with strange tidings: flowers are
growing on the water! The people go to their canoes and row to the
Island of Elms. There, in a cove, the still water is enamelled with
flowers, some as white as snow, filling the air with perfume, others
strong and yellow, like the lake at sunset.
"Explain
to us,"
they cry, turning to the old Medicine of his tribe, "for this
was not so yesterday."
"It
is our
daughter," he answered. "These flowers are the form she
takes. The white is her purity, the yellow her love. You shall see
that her heart will close when the sun sets, and will reopen at his
coming." And the young chief went apart and bowed his head.
The
shores of Lakes
George and Champlain were ravaged by war. Up and down those lovely
waters swept the barges of French and English, and the green hills
rang to the shrill of bugles, the boom of cannon, and the yell of
savages. Fiction and history have been weft across the woods and the
memory of deeds still echoes among the heights. It was at Glen's
Falls, in the cave on the rock in the middle of the river, that the
brave Uncas held the watch with Hawkeye. Bloody Defile and Bloody
Pond, between there and Lake George, take their names from the
"Bloody morning scout" sent out by Sir William Johnson on a
September day in 1755 to check Dieskau until Fort William Henry could
be completed. In the action that ensued, Colonel Williams, founder of
Williams College, and Captain Grant, of the Connecticut line,
great-grandfather of the President who bore that name, were killed.
The victims, dead and wounded alike, having been flung into Bloody
Pond, it was thick and red for days, and tradition said that in after
years it resumed its hue of crimson at sunset and held it until dawn.
The captured, who were delivered to the Indians, had little to hope,
for their white allies could not stay their savagery. Blind Rock was
so called because the Indians brought a white man there, and tearing
his eyes out, flung them into embers at the foot of the stone.
Captives were habitually tortured, blazing splinters of pine being
thrust into their flesh, their nails torn out, and their bodies
slashed with knives before they went to the stake. An English
prisoner was allowed to run the gauntlet here. They had already begun
to strike at him as he sped between the lines, when he seized a
pappoose, flung it on a fire, and, in the instant of confusion that
followed, snatched an axe, cut the bonds of a comrade who had been
doomed to die, and both escaped.
But
the best-known
history of this region is that of Rogers's Rock, or Rogers's Slide, a
lofty precipice at the lower end of Lake George. Major Rogers did not
toboggan down this rock in leather trousers, but his escape was no
less remarkable than if he had. On March 13, 1758, while
reconnoitring near Ticonderoga with two hundred rangers, he was
surprised by a force of French and Indians. But seventeen of his men
escaped death or capture, and he was pursued nearly to the brink of
this cliff. During a brief delay among the red men, arising from the
loss of his trail, he had time to throw his pack down the slide,
reverse his snow-shoes, and go back over his own track to the head of
a ravine before they emerged from the woods, and, seeing that his
shoe-marks led to the rock, while none pointed back, they concluded
that he had flung himself off and committed suicide to avoid capture.
Great was their disappointment when they saw the major on the frozen
surface of the lake beneath going at a lively rate toward Fort
William Henry. He had gained the ice by way of the cleft in the
rocks, but the savages, believing that he had leaped over the
precipice, attributed his preservation to the Great Spirit and
forbore to fire on him. Unconsciously, he had chosen the best
possible place to disappear from, for the Indians held it in
superstitious regard, believing that spirits haunted the wood and
hurled bad souls down the cliff, drowning them in the lake, instead
of allowing them to go to the happy hunting grounds. The major
reached his quarters in safety, and lived to take up arms against the
land of his birth when the colonies revolted, seventeen years later.
When
Occuna, a young
Seneca, fell in love with a girl whose cabin was near the present
town of Cohoes, he behaved very much as Americans of a later date
have done. He picked wild flowers for her; he played on the bone pipe
and sang sentimental songs in the twilight; he roamed the hills with
her, gathering the loose quartz crystals that the Indians believed to
be the tears of stricken deer, save on Diamond Rock, in Lansingburgh,
where they are the tears of Moneta, a bereaved mother and wife; and
in fine weather they went boating on the Mohawk above the rapids.
They liked to drift idly on the current, because it gave them time to
gaze into each other's eyes, and to build air castles that they would
live in in the future. They were suddenly called to a realization of
danger one evening, for the stream had been subtly drawing them on
and on until it had them in its power. The stroke of the paddle
failed and the air castles fell in dismal ruin. Sitting erect they
began their death-song in this wise:
Occuna:
"Daughter of
a mighty warrior, the Manitou calls me hence. I hear the roaring of
his voice; I see the lightning of his glance along the river; he
walks in clouds and spray upon the waters."
The
Maiden: "Thou
art thyself a warrior, O Occuna. Hath not thine axe been often bathed
in blood? Hath the deer ever escaped thine arrow or the beaver
avoided thy chase? Thou wilt not fear to go into the presence of
Manitou."
Occuna:
"Manitou,
indeed, respects the strong. When I chose thee from the women of our
tribe I promised that we should live and die together. The Thunderer
calls us now. Welcome, O ghost of Oriska, chief of the invincible
Senecas! A warrior and the daughter of a warrior come to join you in
the feast of the blessed!"
The
boat leaped over the
falls, and Occuna, striking on the rocks below, was killed at once;
but, as by a miracle, the girl fell clear of them and was whirled on
the seething current to shoal water, where she made her escape. For
his strength and his virtues the dead man was canonized. His tribe
raised him above the regions of the moon, whence he looked down on
the scenes of his youth with pleasure, and in times of war gave
pleasant dreams and promises to his friends, while he confused the
enemy with evil omens. Whenever his tribe passed the falls they
halted and with brief ceremonials commemorated the death of Occuna.
FRANCIS
WOOLCOTT'S NIGHT-RIDERS
In
Copake, New York,
among the Berkshire Hills, less than a century ago, lived Francis
Woolcott, a dark, tall man, with protruding teeth, whose sinister
laugh used to give his neighbors a creep along their spines. He had
no obvious trade or calling, but the farmers feared him so that he
had no trouble in making levies: pork, flour, meal, cider, he could
have what he chose for the asking, for had he not halted horses at
the plow so that neither blows nor commands could move them for two
hours? Had he not set farmer Raught's pigs to walking on their hind
legs and trying to talk? When he shouted "Hup! hup! hup!"
to farmer Williams's children, had they not leaped to the moulding of
the parlor wainscot,—a yard above the floor and only an inch
wide,—and walked around it, afterward skipping like birds
from
chair-back to chair-back, while the furniture stood as if nailed to
the floor? And was he not the chief of thirteen night-riders, whose
faces no man had seen, nor wanted to see, and whom he sent about the
country on errands of mischief every night when the moon was growing
old? As to moons, had he not found a mystic message from our
satellite on Mount Riga, graven on a meteor?
Horses'
tails were tied,
hogs foamed at the mouth and walked like men, cows gave blood for
milk. These night-riders met Woolcott in a grove of ash and chestnut
trees, each furnished with a stolen bundle of oat straw, and these
bundles Woolcott changed to black horses when the night had grown
dark enough not to let the way of the change be seen. These horses
could not cross streams of water, and on the stroke of midnight they
fell to pieces and were oaten sheaves once more, but during their
time of action they rushed through woods, bearing their riders
safely, and tore like hurricanes across the fields, leaping bushes,
fences, even trees, without effort. Never could traces be found of
them the next day. At last the devil came to claim his own. Woolcott,
who was ninety years old, lay sick and helpless in his cabin.
Clergymen refused to see him, but two or three of his neighbors
stifled their fears and went to the wizard's house to soothe his
dying moments. With the night came storm, and with its outbreak the
old man's face took on such a strange and horrible look that the
watchers fell back in alarm. There was a burst of purple flame at the
window, a frightful peal, a smell of sulphur, and Woolcott was dead.
When the watchers went out the roads were dry, and none in the
village had heard wind, rain, or thunder. It was the coming of the
fiend.
In
about the middle of
this century a withered woman of ninety was buried from a now
deserted house in White Plains, New York, Polly Carter the name of
her, but "Crazy Polly" was what the neighbors called her,
for she was eccentric and not fond of company. Among the belongings
of her house was a tall clock, such as relic hunters prize, that
ticked solemnly in a landing on the stairs.
For
a time, during the
Revolution, the house stood within the British lines, and as her
father was a colonel in Washington's army she was left almost alone
in it. The British officers respected her sex, but they had an
unpleasant way of running in unannounced and demanding entertainment,
in the king's name, which she felt forced to grant. One rainy
afternoon the door was flung open, then locked on the inside, and she
found herself in the arms of a stalwart, handsome lieutenant, who
wore the blue. It was her cousin and fiance. Their glad talk had not
been going long when there came a rousing summons at the door. Three
English officers were awaiting admittance.
Perhaps
they had seen
Lawrence Carter go into the house, and if caught he would be killed
as a spy. He must be hidden, but in some place where they would not
think of looking. The clock! That was the place. With a laugh and a
kiss the young man submitted to be shut in this narrow quarter, and
throwing his coat and hat behind some furniture the girl admitted the
officers, who were wet and surly and demanded dinner. They tramped
about the best room in their muddy boots, talking loudly, and in
order to break the effect of the chill weather they passed the brandy
bottle freely. Polly served them with a dinner as quickly as
possible, for she wanted to get them out of the house, but they were
in no mood to go, and the bottle passed so often that before the
dinner was over they were noisy and tipsy and were using language
that drove Polly from the room.
At
last, to her relief,
she heard them preparing to leave the house, but as they were about
to go the senior officer, looking up at the landing, now dim in the
paling light, said to one of the others, "See what time it is."
The officer addressed, who happened to be the drunkest of the party,
staggered up the stair and exclaimed, "The d—-d thing's
stopped." Then, as if he thought it a good joke, he added,
"It'll never go again." Drawing his sabre he gave the clock
a careless cut and ran the blade through the panel of the door; after
this the three passed out. When their voices had died in distant
brawling, Polly ran to release her lover. Something thick and dark
was creeping from beneath the clock-case. With trembling fingers she
pulled open the door, and Lawrence, her lover, fell heavily forward
into her arms, dead. The officer was right: the clock never went
again.
It
was at the Jay house,
in Westchester, New York, that Enoch Crosby met Washington and
offered his services to the patriot army. Crosby was a cobbler, and
not a very thriving one, but after the outbreak of hostilities he
took a peddler's outfit on his back and, as a non-combatant, of Tory
sympathies, he obtained admission through the British lines. After
his first visit to head quarters it is certain that he always carried
Sir Henry Clinton's passport in the middle of his pack, and so sure
were his neighbors that he was in the service of the British that
they captured him and took him to General Washington, but while his
case was up for debate he managed to slip his handcuffs, which were
not secure, and made off. Clinton, on the other hand, was puzzled by
the unaccountable foresight of the Americans, for every blow that he
prepared to strike was met, and he lost time and chance and temper.
As if the suspicion of both armies and the hatred of his neighbors
were not enough to contend against, Crosby now became an object of
interest to the Skinners and Cowboys, who were convinced that he was
making money, somehow, and resolved to have it.
The
Skinners were
camp-followers of the American troops and the Cowboys a band of
Tories and renegade British. Both factions were employed, ostensibly,
in foraging for their respective armies, but, in reality, for
themselves, and the farmers and citizens occupying the neutral belt
north of Manhattan Island had reason to curse them both impartially.
While these fellows were daring thieves, they occasionally got the
worst of it, even in the encounters with the farmers, as on the
Neperan, near Tarrytown, where the Cowboys chased a woman to death,
but were afterward cut to pieces by the enraged neighbors. Hers is
but one of the many ghosts that haunt the neutral ground, and the
croaking of the birds of ill luck that nest at Raven rock is blended
with the cries of her dim figure. Still, graceless as these fellows
were, they affected a loyalty to their respective sides, and were
usually willing to fight each other when they met, especially for the
plunder that was to be got by fighting.
In
October, 1780,
Claudius Smith, "king of the Cowboys," and three scalawag
sons came to the conclusion that it was time for Crosby's money to
revert to the crown, and they set off toward his little house one
evening, sure of finding him in, for his father was seriously ill.
The Smiths arrived there to find that the Skinners had preceded them
on the same errand, and they recognized through the windows, in the
leader of the band, a noted brigand on whose head a price was laid.
He was searching every crack and cranny of the room, while Crosby,
stripped to shirt and trousers, stood before the empty fireplace and
begged for that night to be left alone with his dying father.
"To
hell with the
old man!" roared the Skinner. "Give up your gold, or we'll
put you to the torture," and he significantly whirled the end of
a rope that he carried about his waist. At that moment the faint
voice of the old man was heard calling from another room.
"Take
all that I
have and let me go!" cried Crosby, and turning up a brick in the
fire-place he disclosed a handful of gold, his life savings. The
leader still tried to oppose his exit, but Crosby flung him to the
floor and rushed away to his father, while the brigand, deeming it
well to delay rising, dug his fingers into the hollow and began to
extract the sovereigns. At that instant four muskets were discharged
from without: there was a crash of glass, a yell of pain, and four of
the Skinners rolled bleeding on the floor; two others ran into the
darkness and escaped; their leader, trying to follow, was met at the
threshold by the Smiths, who clutched the gold out of his hand and
pinioned his elbows in a twinkling.
"I
thought ye'd like
to know who's got ye," said old Smith, peering into the face of
the astonished and crestfallen robber, "for I've told ye many a
time to keep out of my way, and now ye've got to swing for getting
into it."
Within
five minutes of
the time that he had got his clutch on Crosby's money the bandit was
choking to death at the end of his own rope, hung from the limb of an
apple-tree, and, having secured the gold, the Cowboys went their way
into the darkness. Crosby soon made his appearance in the ranks of
the Continentals, and, though they looked askant at him for a time,
they soon discovered the truth and hailed him as a hero, for the
information he had carried to Washington from Clinton's camp had
often saved them from disaster. He had survived attack in his own
house through the falling out of rogues, and he survived the work and
hazard of war through luck and a sturdy frame. Congress afterwards
gave him a sum of money larger than had been taken from him, for his
chief had commended him in these lines: "Circumstances of
political importance, which involved the lives and fortunes of many,
have hitherto kept secret what this paper now reveals. Enoch Crosby
has for years been a faithful and unrequited servant of his country.
Though man does not, God may reward him for his conduct. GEORGE
WASHINGTON."
Associated
with Crosby in
his work of getting information from the enemy was a man named
Gainos, who kept an inn on the neutral ground, that was often raided.
Being assailed by Cowboys once, Gainos, with his tenant and
stable-boys, fired at the bandits together, just as the latter had
forced his front door, then stepping quickly forward he slashed off
the head of the leader with a cutlass. The retreating crew dumped the
body into a well on the premises, and there it sits on the crumbling
curb o' nights looking disconsolately for its head.
It
may also be mentioned
that the Skinners had a chance to revenge themselves on the Cowboys
for their defeat at the Crosby house. They fell upon the latter at
the tent-shaped cave in Yonkers,—it is called Washington's
Cave,
because the general napped there on bivouac,—and not only
routed
them, but secured so much of their treasure that they were able to be
honest for several years after.
Failure
to mark the
resting-places of great men and to indicate the scenes of their deeds
has led to misunderstanding and confusion among those who discover a
regard for history and tradition in this practical age. Robert
Fulton, who made steam navigation possible, lies in an unmarked tomb
in the yard of Trinity Church—the richest church in America.
The
stone erected to show where Andre was hanged was destroyed by a cheap
patriot, who thought it represented a compliment to the spy. The spot
where Alexander Hamilton was shot in the duel by Aaron Burr is known
to few and will soon be forgotten. It was not until a century of
obloquy had been heaped on the memory of Thomas Paine that his once
enemies were brought to know him as a statesman of integrity, a
philanthropist, and philosopher. His deistic religion, proclaimed in
"The Age of Reason," is unfortunately no whit more
independent than is preached in dozens of pulpits to-day. He died
ripe in honors, despite his want of creed, and his mortal part was
buried in New Rochelle, New York, under a large walnut-tree in a
hay-field. Some years later his friends removed the body to a new
grave in higher ground, and placed over it a monument that the
opponents of his principles quickly hacked to pieces. Around the
original grave there still remains a part of the old inclosure, and
it was proposed to erect a suitable memorial—the Hudson and
its
Hills the spot, but the owner of the tract would neither give nor
sell an inch of his land for the purpose of doing honor to the man.
Some doubt has already been expressed as to whether the grave is
beneath the monument or in the inclosure; and it is also asserted
that Paine's ghost appears at intervals, hovering in the air between
the two burial-places, or flitting back and forth from one to the
other, lamenting the forgetfulness of men and wailing, "Where is
my grave? I have lost my grave!"
THE
RISING
OF GOUVERNEUR MORRIS
Gouverneur
Morris,
American minister to the court of Louis XVI, was considerably
enriched, at the close of the reign of terror, by plate, jewels,
furniture, paintings, coaches, and so on, left in his charge by
members of the French nobility, that they might not be confiscated in
the sack of the city by the sans culottes; for so
many of the
aristocracy were killed and so many went into exile or disguised
their names, that it was impossible to find heirs or owners for these
effects. Some of the people who found France a good country to be out
of came to America, where adventurers had found prosperity and
refugees found peace so many times before. Marshal Ney and Bernadotte
are alleged to have served in the American army during the
Revolution, and at Hogansburg, New York, the Reverend Eleazer
Williams, an Episcopal missionary, who lies buried in the church-yard
there, was declared to be the missing son of Louis XVI. The question,
"Have we a Bourbon among us?" was frequently canvassed; but
he avoided publicity and went quietly on with his pastoral work.
All
property left in Mr.
Morris's hands that had not been claimed was removed to his mansion
at Port Morris, when he returned from his ministry, and he gained in
the esteem and envy of his neighbors when the extent of these riches
was seen. Once, at the wine, he touched glasses with his wife, and
said that if she bore a male child that son should be heir to his
wealth. Two relatives who sat at the table exchanged looks at this
and cast a glance of no gentle regard on his lady. A year went by.
The son was born, but Gouverneur Morris was dead.
It
is the first night of
the year 1817, the servants are asleep, and the widow sits late
before the fire, her baby in her arms, listening betimes to the wind
in the chimney, the beat of hail on the shutters, the brawling of the
Bronx and the clash of moving ice upon it; yet thinking of her
husband and the sinister look his promise had brought to the faces of
his cousins, when a tramp of horses is heard without, and anon a
summons at the door. The panels are beaten by loaded riding-whips,
and a man's voice cries, "Anne Morris, fetch us our cousin's
will, or we'll break into the house and take it." The woman
clutches the infant to her breast, but makes no answer. Again the
clatter of the whips; but now a mist is gathering in the room, and a
strange enchantment comes over her, for are not the lions breathing
on the coat of arms above the door, and are not the portraits
stirring in their frames?
They
are, indeed. There
is a rustle of robes and clink of steel and one old warrior leaps
down, his armor sounding as he alights, and striking thrice his sword
and shield together he calls on Gouverneur Morris to come forth.
Somebody moves in the room where Morris died; there is a measured
footfall in the corridor, with the clank of a scabbard keeping time;
the door is opened, and on the blast that enters the widow hears a
cry, then a double gallop, passing swiftly into distance. As she
gazes, her husband appears, apparelled as in life, and with a smile
he takes a candelabrum from the mantel and, beckoning her to follow,
moves from room to room. Then, for the first time, the widow knows to
what wealth her baby has been born, for the ghost discloses secret
drawers in escritoires where money, title deeds, and gems are hidden,
turns pictures and wainscots on unsuspected hinges, revealing shelves
heaped with fabrics, plate, and lace; then, returning to the
fireside, he stoops as if to kiss his wife and boy, but a bell
strikes the first hour of morning and he vanishes into his portrait
on the wall.
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