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"An admirable suggestion! So it shall be done."
"Ay, Forest, and shoot anyone who attempts to leave the fort, whether friend or foe."
"You are very stern, Arnold."
"These times demand sternness."
CHAPTER XVII.
CROWN POINT.
"Colonel, an army is approaching."
Ethan Allen at once thought that a regiment of English was about to try and wrest the fort from him.
He was agreeably disappointed when he saw that the men were his own Green Mountain Boys, led by Seth Warner.
Warner had been doing good work in Vermont, and, finding it advantageous to join his chief, he had marched his men to Ticonderoga.
A warm welcome was accorded the captain and his men, and Allen at once gave the command of the operations against Crown Point to Seth Warner.
The fortifications at Crown Point were erected at a cost of ten million dollars, and up to that time had never a shot been fired from them.
Trusting to the strength of the stone barracks and the extensive earthworks, England had kept only a small force at the fort, and at the time of the capture of Ticonderoga only a sergeant and twelve men composed the garrison.
Seth Warner was delighted at the honor conferred upon him by his chief.
Ethan Allen had a reason for keeping as strong a garrison at Ticonderoga as possible, for he feared that Delaplace might try to escape and perhaps recapture the fort.
Arnold was surly. He thought that Allen had lost confidence in him, but Allen reasoned the matter with his Connecticut hero, and satisfied him that no insult was intended.
Crown Point is about eleven miles north of Ticonderoga. The town itself lies six miles away from the fort.
Seth Warner started on his march, his men highly elated at the prospect of winning renown.
When about halfway they were met by a man dressed in the garb of a monk.
He carried a crucifix and a long staff.
His hair was white, and a long beard, which reached nearly to his waist, was as white as driven snow.
Waving his staff above his head, he called to the soldiers to stop.
Warner had no great liking for monks, though he was honest enough to respect every man's religion.
"What is it you would have, good father?" asked Warner.
"In the name of the ever true and good, I crave your a.s.sistance, and, if you will grant it, I will give you my blessing, which is better than rubies and more valuable than gold."
"In what way can we a.s.sist you, good father?"
"You are soldiers of liberty. Heaven will bless your swords, and you will live to see the flag of the tyrant go down in the dust, and a flag of a free nation will float over a free people. I am not allowed to fight, or I would gird on a sword and smite me right and left until the friends of the tyrant were all beneath the sod!"
"We thank you for your patriotic exhortation, but we have a mission to fulfill and we must not loiter."
"The mission is one which will not fail; I know that you have captured the strong fort at Ticonderoga, and that you will enter within the fortifications of Crown Point, but will you a.s.sist me?"
"What would you have us do?"
"To the east of you, one mile and one hundred yards, stands a house.
It is a farmhouse. Its owner is no friend of the Provincials, and has a captive whom he holds for ransom."
"A captive? Held for ransom? Explain yourself!"
"This farmer, fearing that the English might be driven out of the country and that he would lose his possessions, because he is a great worker for the enemy, did find a young girl, who was related to one of the leaders of your holy cause, and he lured her into his house and holds her as a hostage. Should the Provincials take possession of his farm, he will kill the girl, so he says, and a man's word should be believed, and therefore I did make a vow to rescue this maiden from the grasp of the unG.o.dly and restore her to her friends."
"Where did you say the farm was?"
"Tarry not, I beseech you, but travel to the east one mile and one hundred yards, and you will come to a snake fence; cross the field and you will see a house with a number of vines growing up its sides. Then ask for Farmer Mervale, and you have the man who dares to imprison one of the maidens the Lord loves."
Warner consulted with his friends, and they agreed that it would be well to rescue the maiden.
"You will go with us?" asked Warner.
"Nay, my duty lies in another direction."
The monk started away in an opposite direction to that which he had directed the army to take, and was soon lost to sight.
Then the men began to discuss his appearance and story.
"I do not believe him," said one.
"Yet he is a religious man, and therefore his word should be believed."
"He may be a spy."
"But why should he direct us to the farm?"
"The English may be in ambush."
"Then we must go, for, being forewarned we are forearmed, and shall gain a victory."
This idea prevailed, and the Mountain Boys commenced their march to the east.
When a mile had been traversed, as near as they could guess, Warner sent a scout forward to reconnoiter.