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Chapter 7 THE MAJOR RE-ENTERS ACTIVE SERVICE

Word Count: 1815    |    Released on: 06/12/2017

uld render Tawtry House an unsafe place of residence. This he did the more readily on account of his wife's health, which was so precarious that, while the major was confident he c

to wholly protect the invalid from it, and in less than a week thereafter the noisy bustle of Johnson Hall was silenced for an hour by her funeral. So deeply did the rugged soldier feel his loss, that he vowed he woul

est lore, which he had eagerly imbibed from the tuition of that master of woodcraft, Truman Flagg. At the same time he was sadly deficient in a knowledge of books and many other things that go to

claring that his sole ambition was to become a soldier, and t

knight of olden time, he must needs be a gentleman, and an uneducated gentleman would be as sorry a spectacle as an unarmed soldier in battle. So, my dear boy, accept thy fate kindly and make a soldier's fight against the enemy named ignorance. Upon the day of thy graduation from King's College, if my influence can compass it, which I doubt not it c

is dear ones, the lonely man proceeded to fulfil the destiny he had planned by joining as a volunteer aid the army which, under General Johnson, was charged with the capture of Crown Point on Lake Champlain. In this campaign it was largely owing to Major Hester's sold

aham, and in the fall of Quebec witnessed the fatal blow to French power in America. In all this time he had never returned to the forest house that he had last looked upon in company with his beloved wife. Whether his resolution not to

ding, then just completed, and doing well in his studies, but keenly regretting that the war was ended without his participation. The white-haired soldier also found his daughter,

ief, Sir Jeffry Amherst, who finally begged him to accompany the expedition which he was about to send into the far

our ability and knowledge of Indian affairs to take command of Detroit, the principal settlement and most important trading-post in th

s offer, and set forth on his long journey, joining Rogers at Fort Niagara, where, with the aid of cranes and ox-team

ed in dense forest coverts, and reported in detail to the chief of that country; for never before had a body of British troops ventured so far into the interior. Finally, in

enly his eye rested upon Major Hester, who had just left his tent to attend the council. The speech of the Indian came to an abrupt pause, and gazin

lied the major, greatly

wish to journey through the country o

I do," was

war?" queried the

nd we do but journey to take peaceable possession of tho

peace, for Pontiac knows that his tongue is str

l Detroit was reached, though, as was afterwards learned, a strong body of Pontiac's warriors had awaited them at th

er he assumed command of Fort Detroit, Pontiac paid him frequent visits, and always evinced a strong friendship for the honest soldier, who invariably treated him and his people with consideration and fairness. Frequently, too, Pontiac complained to the major of the o

sted but a short time, however, and within a year the aggressions of the whites had become more pronounced, and the situation of the Indians more desperate than ever. Pontiac had disappeared from the vicinity of Detroit, and for many months Major Hester had not seen him. At the same time he was well informed of the cruelties practised upon the natives, and foresaw that they could not much longer be restrained from retaliating in their own bloody fashion. Being unwilling to fight on the side of

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Contents

Chapter 1 TAWTRY HOUSE Chapter 2 THE MAJOR GAINS A FRIEND AND MAKES AN ENEMY Chapter 3 TRUMAN FLAGG'S STORY Chapter 4 ESCAPE OF THE PRISONERS Chapter 5 A BABY LOST AND RECOVERED Chapter 6 THE WILDERNESS Chapter 7 THE MAJOR RE-ENTERS ACTIVE SERVICE Chapter 8 DONALD SETS FORTH ON A PERILOUS MISSION Chapter 9 ST. AUBIN'S STARTLING INFORMATION Chapter 10 PONTIAC DECLARES WAR Chapter 11 MAJOR HESTER IS TAKEN PRISONER
Chapter 12 DONALD AT JOHNSON CASTLE
Chapter 13 PAYMASTER BULLEN AND HIS WONDERFUL TUB
Chapter 14 A WHITE MEDICINE MAN
Chapter 15 DONALD AND CHRISTIE CEMENT A FRIENDSHIP
Chapter 16 QUICKEYE AND THE ZEBRA
Chapter 17 A BRAVE GIRL CAPTIVE
Chapter 18 SURPRISE AND DESTRUCTION OF THE BOAT BRIGADE
Chapter 19 THE TOTEM SAVES DONALD'S LIFE
Chapter 20 BITTER DISAPPOINTMENT AT FORT DETROIT
Chapter 21 IN SEARCH OF A LOST SISTER
Chapter 22 AMID THE RUINS OF FORT SANDUSKY
Chapter 23 DISCOVERED AND PURSUED BY SAVAGES
Chapter 24 CHRISTIE'S BRAVE DEFENCE OF HIS POST
Chapter 25 DONALD FIRES THE MINE AND SAVES THE BLOCKHOUSE
Chapter 26 FRIENDS IN CAPTIVITY
Chapter 27 HOW THE PAYMASTER NAVIGATED LAKE ERIE IN A TUB
Chapter 28 THE PAYMASTER IN WAR-PAINT AND FEATHERS
Chapter 29 DONALD AND THE PAYMASTER ESCAPE
Chapter 30 IMMINENT DANGER OF THE SCHOONER GLADWYN
Chapter 31 PONTIAC RECOGNIZES THE TOTEM
Chapter 32 LAST CRUISE OF THE PAYMASTER'S TUB
Chapter 33 FORT DETROIT IS REINFORCED
Chapter 34 AH-MO, THE DAUGHTER OF PONTIAC
Chapter 35 A NIGHT OF FIGHTING AND TERROR
Chapter 36 BRAVE DEATH OF THE OLD MAJOR
Chapter 37 THE CURSE OF THE MAGIC CIRCLE
Chapter 38 A WINTER IN THE WILDERNESS
Chapter 39 AN ADOPTED DAUGHTER OF THE FOREST
Chapter 40 THE PRINCESS ANSWERS DONALD'S QUESTION
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