th a force of about nine hundred redcoats and militia, made a circuitous march through the village of St. David's, and thus gained the crest of the he
outly stood their ground; but, soon perceiving the hopelessness of resistance, they everywhere gave way, and retreated precipitately down the hill to their place of landing. The Indians, like sleuth hounds that had broken leash, unhappily could not be restrained, and, shrieking their blood- curdling war-whoops, pursued with tomahawk and reeki
Some were impaled upon the jagged pines, others reached the bottom bruised and bleeding, and others, attempting to swim the rapid stream, were drowned in its whirling eddies. One wh
erced the lungs of the younger, a boy of seventeen, with a fair, innocent face. His brother bore hi
id to die," and as the blood gushed from
those dying words, and in his ear there rang a wild refrain, which nerved his ar
e drum bea
ide me in
ther says, '
annon's a
loud hallo
the
the
so l
happier times we look back upon the stern experiences of those iron days, they inspire a blended feeling of pity and regret, not unmingled with a vague remorse, shot through and through our patriotic pride and exultation,
ow the infinit
agony, the
he ages that hav
rberations r
with such disc
ursed instrum
ature's sweet a
the celestia
*
uture, through l
nds grow fainte
, with solemn,
the voice of Ch
longer from its
's great organ s
as songs of
lodies of l
y officers and privates as prisoners of war. But this victory, brilliant as it was, was dearly bought with the death of the lo
hout in whelming
self unwilling
the cloud of
triumph died on
guns of both the British and American forts attested the honour and esteem in which the dead soldiers were held by friends and foes alike. Amid the tears of war-bronzed soldiers and even of stoical Indians they were laid in one common grave in a bastion of Fort George. A gratefu
way from the solemn pageant of which they ha
t chief. As he couldn't come, he wrote these verses, which he wished me to post to the York Gazette. He said I might read them to
g o'er the
drops the mo
parted, val
e field of de
all fondly t
on the scro
ht laurels, wh
row of one
sh vernal o'
graceful tribute wit
rema
ways, I suppose so. He read them himself to Kate this
e squire. "I fear it will be long
"He said Kate would be his Elaine, to nurse the
try fellows, I'll be bound," s
Sir Thomas Mallory's book of King Arthur; but he did not seem to relish the compar