The Spy: Condensed for use in schools

CHAPTER XXIV.

Chapter 243,222 wordsPublic domain

DEATH OF THE SPY.--A REVELATION.

It was thirty-three years after the interview which we have just related that an American army was once more arrayed against the troops of England; but the scene was transferred from the banks of the Hudson to those of the Niagara.[135]

[Footnote 135: name of river and falls between New York and Canada.]

It was the evening of the 25th of July of that bloody year, when two young officers were seen standing on the table-rock, contemplating the great cataract with an interest that seemed to betray that they were gazing for the first time at the wonder of the western world. A profound silence was observed by each, until the companion of the officer suddenly started, and pointing eagerly with his sword into the abyss[136] beneath, exclaimed:

[Footnote 136: bottomless depth.]

"See, Wharton, there is a man crossing in the very eddies of the cataract, and in a skiff no bigger than an egg-shell."

"He has a knapsack--it is probably a soldier," returned the other. "Let us meet him at the ladder, Mason, and learn his tidings."

Some time was expended in reaching the spot where the adventurer was intercepted. Contrary to the expectations of the young soldiers, he proved to be a man far advanced in life, and evidently no follower of the camp.

A few words of salutation, and, on the part of the young men, of surprise that one so aged should venture so near the whirlpools of the cataract, were exchanged, when the old man inquired, with a voice that began to manifest the tremor of age, the news from the contending armies.

"We whipped the red-coats here the other day, among the grass on the Chippewa[137] plains," said the one who was called Mason.

[Footnote 137: a village in Canada, twenty-one miles northwest of Buffalo.]

"Perhaps you have a son among the soldiers," said his companion, with a milder demeanor,[138] and an air of kindness; "if so, tell me his name and regiment, and I will take you to him."

[Footnote 138: manner.]

The old man shook his head, and answered:

"No; I am alone in the world!"

"You should have added, Captain Dunwoodie," cried his careless comrade, "if you could find either; for nearly half our army has marched down the road, and may be, by this time, under the walls of Fort George,[139] for anything that we know to the contrary."

[Footnote 139: a fort on the Canada side of the Niagara River, where it flows into Lake Ontario.]

The old man stopped suddenly, and looked earnestly from one of his companions to the other; the action being observed by the soldiers, they paused also.

"Did I hear right?" the stranger uttered, raising his hand to screen his eyes from the rays of the setting sun. "What did he call you?"

"My name is Wharton Dunwoodie," replied the youth, smiling.

The stranger motioned silently for him to remove his hat, which the youth did accordingly, and his fair hair blew aside like curls of silk, and opened the whole of his ingenuous countenance to the inspection of the other.

"'Tis like our native land!" exclaimed the old man with vehemence; "improving with time. God has blessed both."

"Why do you stare thus, Lieutenant Mason?" cried Captain Dunwoodie, laughing a little; "you show more astonishment than when you saw the falls."

"Oh, the falls! they are a thing to be looked at on a moon-shiny night, by your aunt Sarah and that gay old bachelor, Colonel Singleton."

"Come, come, Tom, no jokes about my good aunt, I beg; she is kindness itself; and I have heard it whispered that her youth was not altogether happy."

"Why, as to rumor," said Mason, "there goes one in Accomac, that Colonel Singleton offers himself to her regularly every Valentine's Day; and there are some who add that your old great-aunt helps his suit."

"Aunt Jeanette!" said Dunwoodie, laughing; "dear, good soul, she thinks but little of marriage in any shape, I believe, since the death of Dr. Sitgreaves."

"The last time I was at General Dunwoodie's plantation, that yellow, sharp-nosed housekeeper of your mother's took me into the pantry, and said that the colonel was no despicable match, as she called it."

"Quite likely," returned the captain; "Katy Haynes is no bad calculator."

The old man listened to each word as it was uttered, with the most intense interest; but, toward the conclusion of the dialogue, the earnest attention of his countenance changed to a kind of inward smile. Mason paid but little attention to the expression of his features, and continued:

"To me she is selfishness embodied."

"Her selfishness does but little harm," returned Dunwoodie. "One of her greatest difficulties is her aversion to the blacks. She says that she never saw but one that she liked."

"And who was he?"

"His name was Cæsar; he was a house-servant of my late grandfather Wharton. My mother always speaks of him with great affection. Both Cæsar and Katy came to Virginia with my mother when she married. My mother was----"

"An angel!" interrupted the old man, in a voice that startled the young soldiers by its abruptness and energy.

"Did you know her?" cried the son, with a glow of pleasure on his cheek.

The reply of the stranger was interrupted by sudden and heavy explosions of artillery, which were immediately followed by continued volleys of small-arms, and in a few minutes the air was filled with the tumult of a warm and well-contested battle.

Everything in the American camp announced an approaching struggle. The troops were in motion, and a movement made to support the division of the army which was already engaged. Night had set in before the reserve and irregulars reached the foot of Lundy's Lane,[140] a road that diverged from the river and crossed a conical eminence at no great distance from the Niagara highway. The summit of the hill was crowned with the cannon of the British, and in the flat beneath was the remnant of Scott's[141] gallant brigade, which for a long time had held an unequal contest with distinguished bravery. A new line was interposed, and one column of the Americans directed to charge the hill, parallel to the road. This column took the English in flank, and bayoneting their artillerists, gained possession of the cannon. They were immediately joined by their comrades, and the enemy was swept from the hill.

[Footnote 140: a road leading west from Niagara River, near Niagara Falls.]

[Footnote 141: General Winfield Scott, commander of the American forces.]

But large reënforcements were joining the English general momentarily, and their troops were too brave to rest easy under defeat. Repeated and bloody charges were made to recover the guns, but in all they were repulsed with slaughter. During the last of these struggles, the ardor of the youthful captain whom we have mentioned urged him to lead his men some distance in advance, to scatter a daring party of the enemy. He succeeded, but in returning to the line missed his lieutenant from the station that he ought to have occupied. Soon after this repulse, which was the last, orders were given to the shattered troops to return to the camp. The British were nowhere to be seen, and preparations were made to take in such of the wounded as could be moved.

At this moment Wharton Dunwoodie, impelled by affection for his friend, seized a lighted fusee,[142] and taking two of his men, went himself in quest of his body, where he was supposed to have fallen.

[Footnote 142: torch.]

Mason was found on the side of the hill, seated with great composure, but unable to walk from a fractured leg. Dunwoodie saw and flew to the side of his comrade, exclaiming:

"Ah! dear Tom, I knew I should find you the nearest man to the enemy."

"Softly, softly; handle me tenderly," replied the lieutenant. "No; there is a brave fellow still nearer than myself, and who he can be I know not. He rushed out of our smoke, near my platoon, to make a prisoner or some such thing, but, poor fellow, he never came back; there he lies just over the hillock. I have spoken to him several times, but I fancy he is past answering."

Dunwoodie went to the spot, and to his astonishment beheld the stranger.

"It is the old man who knew my father and mother," cried the youth; "for their sake he shall have honorable burial. Lift him, and let him be carried in; his bones shall rest on native soil."

The men approached to obey. He was lying on his back, with his face exposed to the glaring light of the fusee; his eyes were closed, as if in slumber; his lips, sunken with years, were slightly moved from their position, but it seemed more like a smile than a convulsion which had caused the change. A soldier's musket lay near him; his hands were pressed upon his breast, and one of them contained a substance that glittered like silver. Dunwoodie stooped, and moving the limbs, perceived the place where the bullet had found a passage to his heart. The subject of his last care was a tin box, through which the fatal lead had gone; and the dying moments of the old man must have been passed in drawing it from his bosom. Dunwoodie opened it, and found a paper in which, to his astonishment, he read the following:

"Circumstances of political importance, which involve the lives and fortunes of many, have hitherto kept secret what this paper now reveals. Harvey Birch has for years been a faithful and unrequited[143] servant of his country. Though man does not, may God reward him for his conduct!

"GEO. WASHINGTON."

[Footnote 143: unrewarded.]

It was the SPY OF THE NEUTRAL GROUND, who died as he had lived, devoted to his country, and a martyr to her liberties.

Standard Literature Series

Works of standard authors for supplementary reading in schools--complete selections or abridgments--with introductions and explanatory notes. Single numbers, 64 to 128 pages, stiff paper sides 12-1/2 cents, cloth 20 cents; double numbers, 160 to 224 pages, stiff paper sides 20 cents, cloth 30 cents.

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Starred numbers are DOUBLE. All the works are complete, or contain complete selections, except those marked "abr."

American Authors

=COOPER--The Spy=, No. 1, single (abr.), 128 pp.; *=The Pilot=, No. 2 (abr.), 181 pp.; *=The Deerslayer=, No. 8 (abr.), 160 pp.

=DANA, R. H., Jr.--*Two Years Before the Mast=, No. 19 (abr.), 173 pp.

=HAWTHORNE--Twice-Told Tales=, No. 15, single, complete selections, 128 pp.: The Village Uncle; The Ambitious Guest; Mr. Higginbotham's Catastrophe; A Rill from the Town Pump; The Great Carbuncle; David Swan; Dr. Heidegger's Experiment; Peter Goldthwaite's Treasure; The Threefold Destiny; Old Esther Dudley.

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=The Snow-Image= and other Twice-Told Tales, No. 20, single, complete selections, 121 pp.: The Snow-Image; The Great Stone Face; Little Daffydowndilly; The Vision of the Fountain; The Seven Vagabonds; Little Annie's Ramble; The Prophetic Pictures.

=IRVING--The Alhambra=, No. 4, single, complete selections, 128 pp.: Palace of the Alhambra; Alhamar, the Founder of the Alhambra; Yusef Abul Hagig, the Finisher of the Alhambra; Panorama from the Tower of Comares; Legend of the Moor's Legacy; Legend of the Rose of the Alhambra; The Governor and the Notary; Governor Manco and the Soldier; Legend of Two Discreet Statues; Legend of Don Munio Sancho de Hinojosa; The Legend of the Enchanted Soldier.

=The Sketch-Book=, No. 17, single, complete selections, 121 pp.: The Author's Account of Himself; The Broken Heart; The Spectre Bridegroom; Rural Life in England; The Angler; John Bull; The Christmas Dinner; Stratford-on-Avon.

=Knickerbocker Stories=, No. 23, single, complete selections, 140 pp.: I. Broek, or the Dutch Paradise; II. From Knickerbocker's New York, (a) New Amsterdam under Van Twiller, (b) How William the Testy Defended the City, (c) Peter Stuyvesant's Voyage up the Hudson; III. Wolfert's Roost; IV. The Storm Ship; V. Rip Van Winkle; VI. A Legend of Sleepy Hollow.

=KENNEDY, J. P.--*Horse-Shoe Robinson,= a Tale of the Revolution, No. 10 (abr.), 192 pp.

=LONGFELLOW--Evangeline=, a Tale of Acadie, No. 21, single, complete, 102 pp.

English Authors

=BULWER-LYTTON--*Harold=, the Last of the Saxon Kings, No. 12 (abr.), 160 pp.

=BYRON--The Prisoner of Chillon= and Other Poems, No. 11, single, complete selections, 128 pp.: The Prisoner of Chillon; Mazeppa; Childe Harold.

=DICKENS--Christmas Stories=, No. 5, single (abr.), 142 pp.: A Christmas Carol; The Cricket on the Hearth; The Child's Dream of a Star. =Little Nell= (from Old Curiosity Shop), No. 22, single (abr.), 123 pp. =Paul Dombey= (from Dombey and Son), No. 14, single (abr.), 128 pp.

=SCOTT--*Ivanhoe=, No. 24 (abr.), 180 pp. *Kenilworth, No. 7 (abr.), 164 pp.; *Lady of the Lake, No. 9, complete, 192 pp.; Rob Roy, No. 3, single (abr.), 130 pp.

=SWIFT--Gulliver's Travels=, Voyages to Lilliput and Brobdingnag, No. 13, single (abr.), 128 pp.

=TENNYSON--Enoch Arden= and Other Poems, No. 6, single, complete selections, 110 pp.: Enoch Arden; The Coming of Arthur; The Passing of Arthur; Columbus; The May Queen; New Year's Eve; Conclusion; Dora; The Charge of the Light Brigade; The Defence of Lucknow; Lady Clare; Break, Break, Break; The Brook; Bugle Song; Widow and Child; The Days That Are No More; I Envy Not; Oh, Yet We Trust; Ring Out, Wild Bells; Crossing the Bar (Tennyson's last poem).

French Authors

=HUGO, VICTOR--*Ninety-Three=, No. 18 (abr.), 157 pp.

=Grading.=--=For History Classes=: Spy, Pilot, Deerslayer, Horse-Shoe Robinson, Knickerbocker Stories, Harold, Kenilworth, Rob Roy, Ivanhoe, Ninety-Three, Alhambra. =Geography=: Two Years Before the Mast. =English Literature=: Evangeline, Lady of the Lake, Enoch Arden, Prisoner of Chillon, Sketch-Book. =Lower Grammar Grades=: Christmas Stories, Little Nell, Paul Dombey, Gulliver's Travels, Twice-Told Tales. =Primary Grades=: Wonder-Book, Snow-Image.

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=*26. POEMS OF KNIGHTLY ADVENTURE.= =Tennyson=, =Arnold=, =Macaulay=, =Lowell=. Four Complete Selections.

=*27. THE WATER WITCH. Cooper.= With Map. =28. TALES OF A GRANDFATHER. Scott.= Complete Selections. =*29. THE LAST OF THE MOHICANS. Cooper.= With Map. =30. THE PILGRIM'S PROGRESS. Bunyan.= For Young Readers. =*31. BLACK BEAUTY. Sewell.= Complete. =*32. THE YEMASSEE. Cooper.= With Map. =*33. WESTWARD HO! Kingsley.= With Map. =*34. 'ROUND THE WORLD IN EIGHTY DAYS.= Verne. =35. SWISS FAMILY ROBINSON. Wyss.= Illustrated. =*36. THE CHILDHOOD OF DAVID COPPERFIELD. Dickens.= =*37. THE SONG OF HIAWATHA. Longfellow.= Complete. =*38. THE LAST DAYS OF POMPEII. Bulwer-Lytton.= =39. FAIRY TALES.= Second School Year. Selected Tales. =*40. THE LAY OF THE LAST MINSTREL. Scott.= Complete.

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TRANSCRIBER'S NOTES:

1. Minor changes have been made to correct typesetters' errors; otherwise, every effort has been made to remain true to the author's words and intent.

2. The author and title names in the original book were typeset as bold; this has been indicated in this e-text by the = sign preceding and following the bolded text.