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In the Days of Poor Richard by Irving Bacheller

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IN THE DAYS OF POOR RICHARD

by

IRVING BACHELLER

Author of _The Light in The Clearing_, _A Man for the Ages_, etc.

Illustrated by John Wolcott Adams

Indianapolis
The Bobbs-Merrill Company
Publishers
Press Of Braunworth & Co
Book Manufacturers
Brooklyn, N. Y.

1922







[Frontispiece: A young John Irons and Margaret Hare in the forest.]





TO MY FRIEND

ALBERT J. BEVERIDGE

Discerning Student and Interpreter of the Spirit of the Prophets, the
Struggle of the Heroes and the Wisdom of the Founders of Democracy, I
Dedicate This Volume.




FOREWORD

Much of the color of the love-tale of Jack and Margaret, which is a
part of the greater love-story of man and liberty, is derived from old
letters, diaries, and newspaper clippings in the possession of a
well-known American family.




CONTENTS


CHAPTER

BOOK ONE

I The Horse Valley Adventure
II Sowing the Dragon's Teeth
III The Journey to Philadelphia
IV The Crossing
V Jack Sees London and the Great Philosopher
VI The Lovers
VII The Dawn
VIII An Appointment and a Challenge
IX The Encounter
X The Lady of the Hidden Face
XI The Departure
XII The Friend and the Girl He Left Behind Him


BOOK TWO

XIII The Ferment
XIV Adventures in the Service of the Commander-in-Chief
XV In Boston Jail
XVI Jack and Solomon Meet the Great Ally
XVII With the Army and in the Bush
XVIII How Solomon Shifted the Skeer
XIX The Voice of a Woman Sobbing
XX The First Fourth of July
XXI The Ambush
XXII The Binkussing of Colonel Burley
XXIII The Greatest Trait of a Great Commander


BOOK THREE

XXIV In France with Franklin
XXV The Pageant
XXVI In Which Appears the Horse of Destiny and
the Judas of Washington's Army
XXVII Which Contains the Adventures of Solomon
in the Timber Sack and on the "Hand-made River"
XXVIII In Which Arnold and Henry Thornhill Arrive
in the Highlands
XXIX Love and Treason
XXX "Who Is She that Looketh Forth as the
Morning, Fair as the Moon, Clear as the Sun,
and Terrible as an Army with Banners?"
XXXI The Lovers and Solomon's Last Fight





BOOK ONE

CHAPTER I

THE HORSE VALLEY ADVENTURE

"The first time I saw the boy, Jack Irons, he was about nine years old.
I was in Sir William Johnson's camp of magnificent Mohawk warriors at
Albany. Jack was so active and successful in the games, between the
red boys and the white, that the Indians called him 'Boiling Water.'
His laugh and tireless spirit reminded me of a mountain brook. There
was no lad, near his age, who could run so fast, or jump so far, or
shoot so well with the bow or the rifle. I carried him on my back to
his home, he urging me on as if I had been a battle horse and when we
were come to the house, he ran about doing his chores. I helped him,
and, our work accomplished, we went down to the river for a swim, and
to my surprise, I found him a well taught fish. We became friends and
always when I have thought of him, the words Happy Face have come to
me. It was, I think, a better nickname than 'Boiling Water,' although
there was much propriety in the latter. I knew that his energy given
to labor would accomplish much and when I left him, I repeated the
words which my father had often quoted in my hearing:

"'Seest thou a man diligent in his calling? He shall stand before
kings.'"

This glimpse of John Irons, Jr.--familiarly known as Jack Irons--is
from a letter of Benjamin Franklin to his wife.

Nothing further is recorded of his boyhood until, about eight years
later, what was known as the "Horse Valley Adventure" occurred. A full
account of it follows with due regard for background and color:

"It was the season o' the great moon," said old Solomon Binkus, scout
and interpreter, as he leaned over the camp-fire and flicked a coal out
of the ashes with his forefinger and twiddled it up to his pipe bowl.
In the army he was known as "old Solomon Binkus," not by reason of his
age, for he was only about thirty-eight, but as a mark of deference.
Those who followed him in the bush had a faith in his wisdom that was
childlike. "I had had my feet in a pair o' sieves walkin' the white
sea a fortnight," he went on. "The dry water were six foot on the
level, er mebbe more, an' some o' the waves up to the tree-tops, an'
nobody with me but this 'ere ol' Marier Jane [his rifle] the hull trip
to the Swegache country. Gol' ding my pictur'! It seemed as if the
wind were a-tryin' fer to rub it off the slate. It were a pesky wind
that kep' a-cuffin' me an' whistlin' in the briers on my face an'
crackin' my coat-tails. I were lonesome--lonesomer'n a he-bear--an'
the cold grabbin' holt o' all ends o' me so as I had to stop an' argue
'bout whar my bound'ry-lines was located like I were York State. Cat's
blood an' gun-powder! I had to kick an' scratch to keep my nose an'
toes from gittin'--brittle."

At this point, Solomon Binkus paused to give his words a chance "to
sink in." The silence which followed was broken only by the crack of
burning faggots and the sound of the night wind in the tall pines above
the gorge. Before Mr. Binkus resumes his narrative, which, one might
know by the tilt of his head and the look of his wide open, right eye,
would soon happen, the historian seizes the opportunity of finishing
his introduction. He had been the best scout in the army of Sir
Jeffrey Amherst. As a small boy he had been captured by the Senecas
and held in the tribe a year and two months. Early in the French and
Indian War, he had been caught by Algonquins and tied to a tree and
tortured by hatchet throwers until rescued by a French captain. After
that his opinion of Indians had been, probably, a bit colored by
prejudice. Still later he had been a harpooner in a whale boat, and in
his young manhood, one of those who had escaped the infamous massacre
at Fort William Henry when English forces, having been captured and
disarmed, were turned loose and set upon by the savages. He was a
tall, brawny, broad-shouldered, homely-faced man of thirty-eight with a
Roman nose and a prominent chin underscored by a short sandy throat
beard. Some of the adventures had put their mark upon his weathered
face, shaven generally once a week above the chin. The top of his left
ear was missing. There was a long scar upon his forehead. These were
like the notches on the stock of his rifle. They were a sign of the
stories of adventure to be found in that wary, watchful brain of his.

Johnson enjoyed his reports on account of their humor and color and he
describes him in a letter to Putnam as a man who "when he is much
interested, looks as if he were taking aim with his rifle." To some it
seemed that one eye of Mr. Binkus was often drawing conclusions while
the other was engaged with the no less important function of discovery.

His companion was young Jack Irons--a big lad of seventeen, who lived
in a fertile valley some fifty miles northwest of Fort Stanwix, in
Tryon County, New York. Now, in September, 1768, they were traveling
ahead of a band of Indians bent on mischief. The latter, a few days
before, had come down Lake Ontario and were out in the bush somewhere
between the lake and the new settlement in Horse Valley. Solomon
thought that they were probably Hurons, since they, being discontented
with the treaty made by the French, had again taken the war-path. This
invasion, however, was a wholly unexpected bit of audacity. They had
two captives--the wife and daughter of Colonel Hare, who had been
spending a few weeks with Major Duncan and his Fifty-Fifth Regiment, at
Oswego. The colonel had taken these ladies of his family on a hunting
trip in the bush. They had had two guides with them, one of whom was
Solomon Binkus. The men had gone out in the early evening after moose
and imprudently left the ladies in camp, where the latter had been
captured. Having returned, the scout knew that the only possible
explanation for the absence of the ladies was Indians, although no
peril could have been more unexpected. He had discovered by "the sign"
that it was a large band traveling eastward. He had set out by night
to get ahead of them while Hare and his other guide started for the
fort. Binkus knew every mile of the wilderness and had canoes hidden
near its bigger waters. He had crossed the lake on which his party had
been camping, and the swamp at the east end of it and was soon far
ahead of the marauders. A little after daylight, he had picked up the
boy, Jack Irons, at a hunting camp on Big Deer Creek, as it was then
called, and the two had set out together to warn the people in Horse
Valley, where Jack lived, and to get help for a battle with the savages.

It will be seen by his words that Mr. Binkus was a man of imagination,
but--again he is talking.

"I were on my way to a big Injun Pow-wow at Swegache fer Sir Bill--ayes
it were in Feb'uary, the time o' the great moon o' the hard snow. Now
they be some good things 'bout Injuns but, like young brats, they take
natural to deviltry. Ye may have my hide fer sole luther if ye ketch
me in an Injun village with a load o' fire-water. Some Injuns is
smart, an' gol ding their pictur's! they kin talk like a cat-bird. A
skunk has a han'some coat an' acts as cute as a kitten but all the
same, which thar ain't no doubt o' it, his friendship ain't wuth a dam.
It's a kind o' p'ison. Injuns is like skunks, if ye trust 'em they'll
sp'ile ye. They eat like beasts an' think like beasts, an' live like
beasts, an' talk like angels. Paint an' bear's grease, an' squaw-fun,
an' fur, an' wampum, an' meat, an' rum, is all they think on. I've et
their vittles many a time an' I'm obleeged to tell ye it's hard work.
Too much hair in the stew! They stick their paws in the pot an' grab
out a chunk an' chaw it an' bolt it, like a dog, an' wipe their hands
on their long hair. They brag 'bout the power o' their jaws, which I
ain't denyin' is consid'able, havin' had an ol' buck bite off the top
o' my left ear when I were tied fast to a tree which--you hear to
me--is a good time to learn Injun language 'cause ye pay 'tention
clost. They ain't got no heart er no mercy. How they kin grind up a
captive, like wheat in the millstuns, an' laugh, an' whoop at the sight
o' his blood! Er turn him into smoke an' ashes while they look on an'
laugh--by mighty!--like he were singin' a funny song. They'd be men
an' women only they ain't got the works in 'em. Suthin' missin'. By
the hide an' horns o' the devil! I ain't got no kind o' patience with
them mush hearts who say that Ameriky belongs to the noble red man an'
that the whites have no right to bargain fer his land. Gol ding their
pictur's! Ye might as well say that we hain't no right in the woods
'cause a lot o' bears an' painters got there fust, which I ain't
a-sayin' but what bears an' painters has their rights."

Mr. Binkus paused again to put another coal on his pipe. Then he
listened a moment and looked up at the rocks above their heads, for
they were camped in a cave at the mouth of which they had built a small
fire, in a deep gorge. Presently he went on:

"I found a heap o' Injuns at Swegache--Mohawks, Senekys, Onandogs an'
Algonks. They had been swappin' presents an' speeches with the French.
Just a little while afore they had had a bellerin' match with us 'bout
love an' friendship. Then sudden-like they tuk it in their heads that
the French had a sharper hatchet than the English. I were skeered, but
when I see that they was nobody drunk, I pushed right into the big
village an' asked fer the old Senecky chief Bear Face--knowin' he were
thar--an' said I had a letter from the Big Father. They tuk me to him.

"I give him a chain o' wampum an' then read the letter from Sir Bill.
It offered the Six Nations more land an' a fort, an' a regiment to
defend 'em. Then he give me a lot o' hedge-hog quills sewed on to
buckskin an' says he:

"'You are like a lone star in the night, my brother. We have stretched
out our necks lookin' fer ye. We thought the Big Father had forgot us.
Now we are happy. To-morrer our faces will turn south an' shine with
bear's grease.'

"Sez I: 'You must wash no more in the same water with the French. You
must return to The Long House. The Big Father will throw his great arm
eround you.'

"I strutted up an' down, like a turkey gobbler, an' bellered out a lot
o' that high-falutin' gab. I reckon I know how to shove an idee under
their hides. Ye got to raise yer voice an' look solemn an' point at
the stars. A powerful lot o' Injuns trailed back to Sir Bill, but they
was a few went over to the French. I kind o' mistrust thar's some o'
them runnygades behind us. They're 'spectin' to git a lot o' plunder
an' a horse apiece an' ride 'em back an' swim the river at the place o'
the many islands. We'll poke down to the trail on the edge o' the
drownded lands afore sunrise an' I kind o' mistrust we'll see sign."

Jack Irons was a son of the much respected John Irons from New
Hampshire who, in the fertile valley where he had settled some years
before, was breeding horses for the army and sending them down to Sir
William Johnson. Hence the site of his farm had been called Horse
Valley.

Mr. Binkus went to the near brook and repeatedly filled his old felt
hat with water and poured it on the fire. "Don't never keep no fire
a-goin' a'ter I'm dried out," he whispered, as he stepped back into the
dark cave, "'cause ye never kin tell."

The boy was asleep on the bed of boughs. Mr. Binkus covered him with
the blanket and lay down beside him and drew his coat over both.

"He'll learn that it ain't no fun to be a scout," he whispered with a
yawn and in a moment was snoring.

It was black dark when he roused his companion. Solomon had been up
for ten minutes and had got their rations of bread and dried venison
out of his pack and brought a canteen of fresh water.

"The night has been dark. A piece o' charcoal would 'a' made a white
mark on it," said Solomon.

"How do you know it's morning?" the boy asked as he rose, yawning.

"Don't ye hear that leetle bird up in the tree-top?" Solomon answered
in a whisper. "He says it's mornin' jest as plain as a clock in a
steeple an' that it's goin' to be cl'ar. If you'll shove this 'ere
meat an' bread into yer stummick, we'll begin fer to make tracks."

They ate in silence and as he ate Solomon was getting his pack ready
and strapping it on his back and adjusting his powder-horn.

"Ye see it's growin' light," he remarked presently in a whisper. "Keep
clost to me an' go as still as ye kin an' don't speak out loud
never--not if ye want to be sure to keep yer ha'r on yer head."

They started down the foot of the gorge then dim in the night shadows.
Binkus stopped, now and then, to listen for two or three seconds and
went on with long stealthy strides. His movements were panther-like,
and the boy imitated them. He was a tall, handsome, big-framed lad
with blond hair and blue eyes. They could soon see their way clearly.
At the edge of the valley the scout stopped and peered out upon it. A
deep mist lay on the meadows.

"I like day-dark in Injun country," he whispered. "Come on."

They hurried through sloppy footing in the wet grass that flung its dew
into their garments from the shoulder down. Suddenly Mr. Binkus
stopped. They could hear the sound of heavy feet splashing in the wet
meadow.

"Scairt moose, runnin' this way!" the scout whispered. "I'll bet ye a
pint o' powder an' a fish hook them Injuns is over east o' here."

It was his favorite wager--that of a pint of powder and a fish hook.

They came out upon high ground and reached the valley trail just as the
sun was rising. The fog had lifted. Mr. Binkus stopped well away from
the trail and listened for some minutes. He approached it slowly on
his tiptoes, the boy following in a like manner. For a moment the
scout stood at the edge of the trail in silence. Then, leaning low, he
examined it closely and quickly raised his hand.

"Hoofs o' the devil!" he whispered as he beckoned to the boy. "See
thar," he went on, pointing to the ground. "They've jest gone by. The
grass ain't riz yit. Wait here."

He followed the trail a few rods with eyes bent upon it. Near a little
run where there was soft dirt, he stopped again and looked intently at
the earth and then hurried back.

"It's a big band. At least forty Injuns in it an' some captives, an'
the devil an' Tom Walker. It's a mess which they ain't no mistake."

"I don't see why they want to be bothered with women," the boy remarked.

"Hostiges!" Solomon exclaimed. "Makes 'em feel safer. Grab 'em when
they kin. If overtook by a stouter force they're in shape fer a
dicker. The chief stands up an' sings like a bird--'bout the moon an'
the stars an' the brooks an' the rivers an' the wrongs o' the red man,
but it wouldn't be wuth the song o' a barn swaller less he can show ye
that the wimmen are all right. If they've been treated proper, it's
the same as proved. Ye let 'em out o' the bear trap which it has often
happened. But you hear to me, when they go off this way it's to kill
an' grab an' hustle back with the booty. They won't stop at
butcherin'!"

"I'm afraid my folks are in danger," said the boy as he changed color.

"Er mebbe Peter Boneses'--'cordin' to the way they go. We got to cut
eround 'em an' plow straight through the bush an' over Cobble Hill an'
swim the big creek an' we'll beat 'em easy."

It was a curious, long, loose stride, the knees never quite
straightened, with which the scout made his way through the forest. It
covered ground so swiftly that the boy had, now and then, to break into
a dog-trot in order to keep along with the old woodsman. They kept
their pace up the steep side of Cobble Hill and down its far slope and
the valley beyond to the shore of the Big Creek.

"I'm hot 'nough to sizzle an' smoke when I tech water," said the scout
as he waded in, holding his rifle and powder-horn in his left hand
above the creek's surface.

They had a few strokes of swimming at mid-stream but managed to keep
their powder dry.

"Now we've got jest 'nough hoppin' to keep us from gittin' foundered,"
said Solomon, as he stood on the farther shore and adjusted his pack.
"It ain't more'n a mile to your house."

They hurried on, reaching the rough valley road in a few minutes.

"Now I'll take the bee trail to your place," said the scout. "You cut
ercrost the medder to Peter Boneses' an' fetch 'em over with all their
grit an' guns an' ammunition."

Solomon found John Irons and five of his sons and three of his
daughters digging potatoes and pulling tops in a field near the house.
The sky was clear and the sun shining warm. Solomon called Irons aside
and told him of the approaching Indians.

"What are we to do?" Irons asked.

"Send the women an' the babies back to the sugar shanty," said Solomon.
"We'll stay here 'cause if we run erway the Boneses'll git their ha'r
lifted. I reckon we kin conquer 'em."

"How?"

"Shoot 'em full o' meat. They must 'a' traveled all night. Them
Injuns is tired an' hungry. Been three days on the trail. No time to
hunt! I'll hustle some wood together an' start a fire. You bring a
pair o' steers right here handy. We'll rip their hides off an' git the
reek o' vittles in the air soon as God'll let us."

"My wife can use a gun as well as I can and I'm afraid she won't go,"
said Irons.

"All right, let her hide somewhar nigh with the guns," said Solomon.
"The oldest gal kin go back with the young 'uns. Don't want no skirts
in sight when they git here."

Mrs. Irons hid in the shed with the loaded guns.

Ruth Irons and the children set out for the sugar bush. The steers
were quickly led up and slaughtered. As a hide ripper, Solomon was a
man of experience. The loins of one animal were cooking on turnspits
and a big pot of beef, onions and potatoes boiling over the fire when
Jack arrived with the Bones family.

"It smells good here," said Jack.

"Ayes! The air be gittin' the right scent on it," said Solomon, as he
was ripping the hide off the other steer. "I reckon it'll start the
sap in their mouths. You roll out the rum bar'l an' stave it in. Mis'
Bones knows how to shoot. Put her in the shed with yer mother an' the
guns, an' take her young 'uns to the sugar shanty 'cept Isr'el who's
big 'nough to help."

A little later Solomon left the fire. Both his eye and his ear had
caught "sign"--a clamor among the moose birds in the distant bush and a
flock of pigeons flying from the west.

"Don't none o' ye stir till I come back," he said, as he turned into
the trail. A few rods away he lay down with his ear to the ground and
could distinctly hear the tramp of many feet approaching in the
distance. He went on a little farther and presently concealed himself
in the bushes close to the trail. He had not long to wait, for soon a
red scout came on ahead of the party. He was a young Huron brave, his
face painted black and yellow. His head was encircled by a snake skin.
A fox's tail rose above his brow and dropped back on his crown. A
birch-bark horn hung over his shoulder.

Solomon stepped out of the bushes after he had passed and said in the
Huron tongue: "Welcome, my red brother, I hear that a large band o' yer
folks is comin' and we have got a feast ready."

The young brave had been startled by the sudden appearance of Solomon,
but the friendly words had reassured him.

"We are on a long journey," said the brave.

"And the flesh of a fat ox will help ye on yer way. Kin ye smell it?"

"Brother, it is like the smell of the great village in the Happy
Hunting-Grounds," said the brave. "We have traveled three sleeps from
the land of the long waters and have had only two porcupines and a
small deer to eat. We are hungry."

"And we would smoke the calumet of peace with you," said Solomon.

They walked on together and in a moment came in sight of the little
farm-house. The brave looked at the house and the three men who stood
by the fire.

"Come with me and you shall see that we are few," Solomon remarked.

They entered the house and barn and walked around them, and this, in
effect, is what Solomon said to him:

"I am the chief scout of the Great Father. My word is like that of old
Flame Tongue--your mighty chief. You and your people are on a bad
errand. No good can come of it. You are far from your own country. A
large force is now on your trail. If you rob or kill any one you will
be hung. We know your plans. A bad white chief has brought you here.
He has a wooden leg with an iron ring around the bottom of it. He come
down lake in a big boat with you. Night before last you stole two
white women."

A look of fear and astonishment came upon the face of the Indian.

"You are a son of the Great Spirit!" he exclaimed.

"And I would keep yer feet out o' the snare. Let me be yer chief. You
shall have a horse and fifty beaver skins and be taken to the border
and set free. I, the scout of the Great Father, have said it, and if
it be not as I say, may I never see the Happy Hunting-Grounds."

The brave answered:

"My white brother has spoken well and he shall be my chief. I like not
this journey. I shall bid them to the feast. They will eat and sleep
like the gray wolf for they are hungry and their feet are sore."

The brave put his horn to his mouth and uttered a wild cry that rang in
the distant hills. Then arose a great whooping and kintecawing back in
the bush. The young Huron went out to meet the band. Returning soon,
he said to Solomon that his chief, the great Splitnose, would have
words with him.

Turning to John Irons, Solomon said: "He's an outlaw chief. We must
treat him like a king. I'll bring 'em in. You keep the meat
a-sizzlin'!"

The scout went with the brave to his chief and made a speech of
welcome, after which the wily old Splitnose, in his wonderful
head-dress, of buckskin and eagle feathers, and his band in war-paint,
followed Solomon to the feast. Silently they filed out of the bush and
sat on the grass around the fire. There were no captives among
them--none at least of the white skin.

Solomon did not betray his disappointment. Not a word was spoken. He
and John Irons and his son began removing the spits from the fire and
putting more meat upon them and cutting the cooked roasts into large
pieces and passing it on a big earthen platter. The Indians eagerly
seized the hot meat and began to devour it. While waiting to be
served, some of the young braves danced at the fire's edge with short,
explosive, yelping, barking cries answered by dozens of guttural
protesting grunts from the older men, who sat eating or eagerly waiting
their turn to grab meat. It was a trying moment. Would the whole band
leap up and start a dance which might end in boiling blood and tiger
fury and a massacre? But the young Huron brave stopped them, aided no
doubt by the smell of the cooking flesh and the protest of the older
men. There would be no war-dance--at least not yet--too much hunger in
the band and the means of satisfying it were too close and tempting.
Solomon had foreseen the peril and his cunning had prevented it.

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