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- Roger Malvin's Burial
-
- ONE Of the few incidents of Indian warfare, naturally susceptible of the
- moonlight of romance, was that expedition, undertaken, for the defence of
- the frontiers, in the year 1725, which resulted in the well-remembered
- 'Lovell's Fight.' Imagination, by casting certain circumstances judiciously
- into the shade, may see much to admire in the heroism of a little band,
- who gave battle to twice their number in the heart of the enemy's country.
- The open bravery displayed by both parties was in accordance with
- civilized ideas of valor, and chivalry itself might not blush to record the
- deeds of one or two individuals. The battle, though so fatal to those who
- fought, was not unfortunate in its consequences to the country; for it broke
- the strength of a tribe, and conduced to the peace which subsisted during
- several ensuing years. History and tradition are unusually minute in their
- memorials of this affair; and the captain of a scouting party of frontier-
- men has acquired as actual a military renown, as many a victorious leader
- of thousands. Some of the incidents contained in the following pages will
- be recognized, notwithstanding the substitution of fictitious names, by
- such as have heard, from old men's lips, the fate of the few combatants
- who were in a condition to retreat, after 'Lovell's Fight.'
-
- The early sunbeams hovered cheerfully upon the tree-tops, beneath
- which two weary and wounded men had stretched their limbs the night
- before. Their bed of withered oak-leaves was strewn upon the small level
- space, at the foot of a rock, situated near the summit of one of the gentle
- swells, by which the face of the country is there diversified. The mass of
- Roger Malvin's Burial 2
-
- granite, rearing its smooth, flat surface, fifteen or twenty feet above their
- heads, was not unlike a gigantic grave-stone, upon which the veins seemed
- to form an inscription in forgotten characters. On a tract of several acres
- around this rock, oaks and other hard-wood trees had supplied the place of
- the pines, which were the usual growth of the land; and a young and
- vigorous sapling stood close beside the travellers.
- The severe wound of the elder man had probably deprived him of
- sleep; for, so soon as the first ray of sunshine rested on the top of the
- highest tree, he reared himself painfully from his recumbent posture, and
- sat erect. The deep lines of his countenance, and the scattered grey of his
- hair, marked him as past the middle age; but his muscular frame would,
- but for the effects of his wound, have been as capable of sustaining
- fatigue, as in the early vigor of life. Languor and exhaustion now sat upon
- his haggard features, and the despairing glance which he sent forward
- through the depths of the forest, proved his own conviction that his
- pilgrimage was at an end. He next turned his eyes to the companion, who
- reclined by his side. The youth, for he had scarcely attained the years of
- manhood, lay, with his head upon his arm, in the embrace of an unquiet
- sleep, which a thrill of pain from his wounds seemed each moment on the
- point of breaking. His right hand grasped a musket, and, to judge from the
- violent action of his features, his slumbers were bringing back a vision of
- the conflict, of which he was one of the few survivors. A shout,--deep and
- loud to his dreaming fancy,--found its way in an imperfect murmur to his
- lips, and, starting even at the slight sound of his own voice, he suddenly
- Roger Malvin's Burial 3
-
- awoke. The first act of reviving recollection, was to make anxious
- inquiries respecting the condition of his wounded fellow traveller. The
- latter shook his head.
- 'Reuben, my boy,' said he, 'this rock, beneath which we sit, will serve
- for an old hunter's grave-stone. There is many and many a long mile of
- howling wilderness before us yet; nor would it avail me anything, if the
- smoke of my own chimney were but on the other side of that swell of land.
- The Indian bullet was deadlier than I thought.'
- 'You are weary with our three days' travel,' replied the youth, 'and a
- little longer rest will recruit you. Sit you here, while I search the woods for
- the herbs and roots, that must be our sustenance; and having eaten, you
- shall lean on me, and we will turn our faces homeward. I doubt not, that,
- with my help, you can attain to some one of the frontier garrisons.'
- 'There is not two days' life in me, Reuben,' said the other, calmly, 'and
- I will no longer burthen you with my useless body, when you can scarcely
- support your own. Your wounds are deep, and your strength is failing fast;
- yet, if you hasten onward alone, you may be preserved. For me there is no
- hope; and I will await death here.'
- 'If it must be so, I will remain and watch by you,' said Reuben,
- resolutely.
- 'No, my son, no,' rejoined his companion. 'Let the wish of a dying man
- have weight with you; give me one grasp of your hand, and get you hence.
- Think you that my last moments will be eased by the thought, that I leave
- you to die a more lingering death? I have loved you like a father, Reuben,
- Roger Malvin's Burial 4
-
- and, at a time like this, I should have something of a father's authority. I
- charge you to be gone, that I may die in peace.'
- 'And because you have been a father to me, should I therefore leave
- you to perish, and to lie unburied in the wilderness?' exclaimed the youth.
- 'No; if your end be in truth approaching, I will watch by you, and receive
- your parting words. I will dig a grave here by the rock, in which, if my
- weakness overcome me, we will rest together; or, if Heaven gives me
- strength, I will seek my way home.'
- 'In the cities, and wherever men dwell,' replied the other, 'they bury
- their dead in the earth; they hide them from the sight of the living; but
- here, where no step may pass, perhaps for a hundred years, wherefore
- should I not rest beneath the open sky, covered only by the oak-leaves,
- when the autumn winds shall strew them? And for a monument, here is
- this grey rock, on which my dying hand shall carve the name of Roger
- Malvin; and the traveller in days to come will know, that here sleeps a
- hunter and a warrior. Tarry not, then, for a folly like this, but hasten away,
- if not for your own sake, for hers who will else be desolate.'
- Malvin spoke the last few words in a faultering voice, and their effect
- upon his companion was strongly visible. They reminded him that there
- were other, and less questionable duties, than that of sharing the fate of a
- man whom his death could not benefit. Nor can it be affirmed that no
- selfish feeling strove to enter Reuben's heart, though the consciousness
- made him more earnestly resist his companion's entreaties.
- 'How terrible, to wait the slow approach of death, in this solitude!'
- Roger Malvin's Burial 5
-
- exclaimed he. 'A brave man does not shrink in the battle, and, when
- friends stand round the bed, even women may die composedly; but here--'
- 'I shall not shrink, even here, Reuben Bourne,' interrupted Malvin. 'I
- am a man of no weak heart; and, if I were, there is a surer support than that
- of earthly friends. You are young, and life is dear to you. Your last
- moments will need comfort far more than mine; and when you have laid
- me in the earth, and are alone, and night is settling on the forest, you will
- feel all the bitterness of the death that may now be escaped. But I will urge
- no selfish motive to your generous nature. Leave me for my sake; that,
- having said a prayer for your safety, I may have space to settle my
- account, undisturbed by worldly sorrows.'
- 'And your daughter! How shall I dare to meet her eye?' exclaimed
- Reuben. 'She will ask the fate of her father, whose life I vowed to defend
- with my own. Must I tell her, that he travelled three days' march with me
- from the field of battle, and that then I left him to perish in the wilderness?
- Were it not better to lie down and die by your side, than to return safe, and
- say this to Dorcas?'
- 'Tell my daughter,' said Roger Malvin, 'that, though yourself sore
- wounded, and weak, and weary, you led my tottering footsteps many a
- mile, and left me only at my earnest entreaty, because I would not have
- your blood upon my soul. Tell her, that through pain and danger you were
- faithful, and that, if your life-blood could have saved me, it would have
- flowed to its last drop. And tell her, that you will be something dearer than
- a father, and that my blessing is with you both, and that my dying eyes can
- Roger Malvin's Burial 6
-
- see a long and pleasant path, in which you will journey together.'
- As Malvin spoke, he almost raised himself from the ground, and the
- energy of his concluding words seemed to fill the wild and lonely forest
- with a vision of happiness. But when he sank exhausted upon his bed of
- oak-leaves, the light, which had kindled in Reuben's eye, was quenched.
- He felt as if it were both sin and folly to think of happiness at such a
- moment. His companion watched his changing countenance, and sought,
- with generous art, to wile him to his own good.
- 'Perhaps I deceive myself in regard to the time I have to live,' he
- resumed. 'It may be, that, with speedy assistance, I might recover of my
- wound. The foremost fugitives must, ere this, have carried tidings of our
- fatal battle to the frontiers, and parties will be out to succour those in like
- condition with ourselves. Should you meet one of these, and guide them
- hither, who can tell but that I may sit by my own fireside again?'
- A mournful smile strayed across the features of the dying man, as he
- insinuated that unfounded hope; which, however, was not without its
- effect on Reuben. No merely selfish motive, nor even the desolate
- condition of Dorcas, could have induced him to desert his companion, at
- such a moment. But his wishes seized upon the thought, that Malvin's life
- might be preserved, and his sanguine nature heightened, almost to
- certainty, the remote possibility of procuring human aid.
- 'Surely there is reason, weighty reason, to hope that friends are not far
- distant,' he said, half aloud. 'There fled one coward, unwounded, in the
- beginning of the fight, and most probably he made good speed. Every true
- Roger Malvin's Burial 7
-
- man on the frontier would shoulder his musket, at the news; and though no
- party may range so far into the woods as this, I shall perhaps encounter
- them in one day's march. Counsel me faithfully,' he added, turning to
- Malvin, in distrust of his own motives. 'Were your situation mine, would
- you desert me while life remained?'
- 'It is now twenty years,' replied Roger Malvin, sighing, however, as he
- secretly acknowledged the wide dissimilarity between the two cases,--'it is
- now twenty years, since I escaped, with one dear friend, from Indian
- captivity, near Montreal. We journeyed many days through the woods, till
- at length, overcome with hunger and weariness, my friend lay down, and
- besought me to leave him; for he knew, that, if I remained, we both must
- perish. And, with but little hope of obtaining succour, I heaped a pillow of
- dry leaves beneath his head, and hastened on.'
- 'And did you return in time to save him?' asked Reuben, hanging on
- Malvin's words, as if they were to be prophetic of his own success.
- 'I did,' answered the other. 'I came upon the camp of a hunting party,
- before sunset of the same day. I guided them to the spot where my
- comrade was expecting death; and he is now a hale and hearty man, upon
- his own farm, far within the frontiers, while I lie wounded here, in the
- depths of the wilderness.'
- This example, powerful in effecting Reuben's decision, was aided,
- unconsciously to himself, by the hidden strength of many another motive.
- Roger Malvin perceived that the victory was nearly won.
- 'Now go, my son, and Heaven prosper you!' he said. 'Turn not back
- Roger Malvin's Burial 8
-
- with our friends, when you meet them, lest your wounds and weariness
- overcome you; but send hitherward two or three, that may be spared, to
- search for me. And believe me, Reuben, my heart will be lighter with
- every step you take towards home.' Yet there was perhaps a change, both
- in his countenance and voice, as he spoke thus; for, after all, it was a
- ghastly fate, to be left expiring in the wilderness.
- Reuben Bourne, but half convinced that he was acting rightly, at length
- raised himself from the ground, and prepared himself for his departure.
- And first, though contrary to Malvin's wishes, he collected a stock of roots
- and herbs, which had been their only food during the last two days. This
- useless supply he placed within reach of the dying man, for whom, also,
- he swept together a fresh bed of dry oak-leaves. Then, climbing to the
- summit of the rock, which on one side was rough and broken, he bent the
- oak-sapling downward, and bound his handkerchief to the topmost branch.
- This precaution was not unnecessary, to direct any who might come in
- search of Malvin; for every part of the rock, except its broad, smooth
- front, was concealed, at a little distance, by the dense undergrowth of the
- forest. The handkerchief had been the bandage of a wound upon Reuben's
- arm; and, as he bound it to the tree, he vowed, by the blood that stained it,
- that he would return, either to save his companion's life, or to lay his body
- in the grave. He then descended, and stood, with downcast eyes, to receive
- Roger Malvin's parting words.
- The experience of the latter suggested much and minute advice,
- respecting the youth's journey through the trackless forest. Upon this
- Roger Malvin's Burial 9
-
- subject he spoke with calm earnestness, as if he were sending Reuben to
- the battle or the chase, while he himself remained secure at home; and not
- as if the human countenance, that was about to leave him, were the last he
- would ever behold. But his firmness was shaken, before he concluded.
- 'Carry my blessing to Dorcas, and say that my last prayer shall be for
- her and you. Bid her have no hard thoughts because you left me here'--
- Reuben's heart smote him--'for that your life would not have weighed with
- you, if its sacrifice could have done me good. She will marry you, after
- she has mourned a little while for her father; and Heaven grant you long
- and happy days! and may your children's children stand round your death-
- bed! And, Reuben,' added he, as the weakness of mortality made its way at
- last, 'return, when your wounds are healed and your weariness refreshed,
- return to this wild rock, and lay my bones in the grave, and say a prayer
- over them.'
- An almost superstitious regard, arising perhaps from the customs of the
- Indians, whose war was with the dead, as well as the living, was paid by
- the frontier inhabitants to the rites of sepulture; and there are many
- instances of the sacrifice of life, in the attempt to bury those who had
- fallen by the 'sword of the wilderness.' Reuben, therefore, felt the full
- importance of the promise, which he most solemnly made, to return, and
- perform Roger Malvin's obsequies. It was remarkable, that the latter,
- speaking his whole heart in his parting words, no longer endeavored to
- persuade the youth, that even the speediest succour might avail to the
- preservation of his life. Reuben was internally convinced, that he should
- Roger Malvin's Burial 10
-
- see Malvin's living face no more. His generous nature would fain have
- delayed him, at whatever risk, till the dying scene were past; but the desire
- of existence, and the hope of happiness had strengthened in his heart, and
- he was unable to resist them.
- 'It is enough,' said Roger Malvin, having listened to Reuben's promise.
- 'Go, and God speed you!'
- The youth pressed his hand in silence, turned, and was departing. His
- slow and faultering steps, however, had borne him but a little way, before
- Malvin's voice recalled him.
- 'Reuben, Reuben,' said he, faintly; and Reuben returned and knelt down
- by the dying man.
- 'Raise me, and let me lean against the rock,' was his last request. 'My
- face will be turned towards home, and I shall see you a moment longer, as
- you pass among the trees.'
- Reuben, having made the desired alteration in his companion's posture,
- again began his solitary pilgrimage. He walked more hastily at first, than
- was consistent with his strength; for a sort of guilty feeling, which
- sometimes torments men in their most justifiable acts, caused him to seek
- concealment from Malvin's eyes. But, after he had trodden far upon the
- rustling forest-leaves, he crept back, impelled by a wild and painful
- curiosity, and, sheltered by the earthy roots of an up-torn tree, gazed
- earnestly at the desolate man. The morning sun was unclouded, and the
- trees and shrubs imbibed the sweet air of the month of May; yet there
- seemed a gloom on Nature's face, as if she sympathized with mortal pain
- Roger Malvin's Burial 11
-
- and sorrow. Roger Malvin's hands were uplifted in a fervent prayer, some
- of the words of which stole through the stillness of the woods, and entered
- Reuben's heart, torturing it with an unutterable pang. They were the
- broken accents of a petition for his own happiness and that of Dorcas; and,
- as the youth listened, conscience, or something in its similitude, pleaded
- strongly with him to return, and lie down again by the rock. He felt how
- hard was the doom of the kind and generous being whom he had deserted
- in his extremity. Death would come, like the slow approach of a corpse,
- stealing gradually towards him through the forest, and showing its ghastly
- and motionless features from behind a nearer, and yet a nearer tree. But
- such must have been Reuben's own fate, had he tarried another sunset; and
- who shall impute blame to him, if he shrank from so useless a sacrifice?
- As he gave a parting look, a breeze waved the little banner upon the
- sapling-oak, and reminded Reuben of his vow.
-
- Many circumstances contributed to retard the wounded traveller, in his
- way to the frontiers. On the second day, the clouds, gathering densely over
- the sky, precluded the possibility of regulating his course by the position
- of the sun; and he knew not but that every effort of his almost exhausted
- strength, was removing him farther from the home he sought. His scanty
- sustenance was supplied by the berries, and other spontaneous products of
- the forest. Herds of deer, it is true, sometimes bounded past him, and
- partridges frequently whirred up before his footsteps; but his ammunition
- had been expended in the fight, and he had no means of slaying them. His
- Roger Malvin's Burial 12
-
- wounds, irritated by the constant exertion in which lay the only hope of
- life, wore away his strength, and at intervals confused his reason. But,
- even in the wanderings of intellect, Reuben's young heart clung strongly to
- existence, and it was only through absolute incapacity of motion, that he at
- last sank down beneath a tree, compelled there to await death. In this
- situation he was discovered by a party, who, upon the first intelligence of
- the fight, had been despatched to the relief of the survivors. They
- conveyed him to the nearest settlement, which chanced to be that of his
- own residence.
- Dorcas, in the simplicity of the olden time, watched by the bed-side of
- her wounded lover, and administered all those comforts, that are in the
- sole gift of woman's heart and hand. During several days, Reuben's
- recollection strayed drowsily among the perils and hardships through
- which he had passed, and he was incapable of returning definite answers
- to the inquiries, with which many were eager to harass him. No authentic
- particulars of the battle had yet been circulated; nor could mothers, wives,
- and children tell, whether their loved ones were detained by captivity, or
- by the stronger chain of death. Dorcas nourished her apprehensions in
- silence, till one afternoon, when Reuben awoke from an unquiet sleep, and
- seemed to recognize her more perfectly than at any previous time. She saw
- that his intellect had become composed, and she could no longer restrain
- her filial anxiety.
- 'My father, Reuben?' she began; but the change in her lover's
- countenance made her pause.
- Roger Malvin's Burial 13
-
- The youth shrank, as if with a bitter pain, and the blood gushed vividly
- into his wan and hollow cheeks. His first impulse was to cover his face;
- but, apparently with a desperate effort, he half raised himself, and spoke
- vehemently, defending himself against an imaginary accusation.
- 'Your father was sore wounded in the battle, Dorcas, and he bade me
- not burthen myself with him, but only to lead him to the lake-side, that he
- might quench his thirst and die. But I would not desert the old man in his
- extremity, and, though bleeding myself, I supported him; I gave him half
- my strength, and led him away with me. For three days we journeyed on
- together, and your father was sustained beyond my hopes; but, awaking at
- sunrise on the fourth day, I found him faint and exhausted,--he was unable
- to proceed,--his life had ebbed away fast,--and--'
- 'He died!' exclaimed Dorcas, faintly.
- Reuben felt it impossible to acknowledge, that his selfish love of life
- had hurried him away, before her father's fate was decided. He spoke not;
- he only bowed his head; and, between shame and exhaustion, sank back
- and hid his face in the pillow. Dorcas wept, when her fears were thus
- confirmed; but the shock, as it had been long anticipated, was on that
- account the less violent.
- 'You dug a grave for my poor father, in the wilderness, Reuben?' was
- the question by which her filial piety manifested itself.
- 'My hands were weak, but I did what I could,' replied the youth in a
- smothered tone. 'There stands a noble tomb-stone above his head, and I
- would to Heaven I slept as soundly as he!'
- Roger Malvin's Burial 14
-
- Dorcas, perceiving the wildness of his latter words, inquired no further
- at the time; but her heart found ease in the thought, that Roger Malvin had
- not lacked such funeral rites as it was possible to bestow. The tale of
- Reuben's courage and fidelity lost nothing, when she communicated it to
- her friends; and the poor youth, tottering from his sick chamber to breathe
- the sunny air, experienced from every tongue the miserable and
- humiliating torture of unmerited praise. All acknowledged that he might
- worthily demand the hand of the fair maiden, to whose father he had been
- 'faithful unto death'; and, as my tale is not of love, it shall suffice to say,
- that, in the space of a few months, Reuben became the husband of Dorcas
- Malvin. During the marriage ceremony, the bride was covered with
- blushes, but the bridegroom's face was pale.
- There was now in the breast of Reuben Bourne an incommunicable
- thought; something which he was to conceal most heedfully from her
- whom he most loved and trusted. He regretted, deeply and bitterly, the
- moral cowardice that had restrained his words, when he was about to
- disclose the truth to Dorcas; but pride, the fear of losing her affection, the
- dread of universal scorn, forbade him to rectify this falsehood. He felt,
- that, for leaving Roger Malvin, he deserved no censure. His presence, the
- gratuitous sacrifice of his own life, would have added only another, and a
- needless agony to the last moments of the dying man. But concealment
- had imparted to a justifiable act, much of the secret effect of guilt; and
- Reuben, while reason told him that he had done right, experienced, in no
- small degree, the mental horrors, which punish the perpetrator of
- Roger Malvin's Burial 15
-
- undiscovered crime. By a certain association of ideas, he at times almost
- imagined himself a murderer. For years, also, a thought would
- occasionally recur, which, though he perceived all its folly and
- extravagance, he had not power to banish from his mind; it was a haunting
- and torturing fancy, that his father-in-law was yet sitting at the foot of the
- rock, on the withered forest-leaves, alive, and awaiting his pledged
- assistance. These mental deceptions, however, came and went, nor did he
- ever mistake them for realities; but in the calmest and clearest moods of
- his mind, he was conscious that he had a deep vow unredeemed, and that
- an unburied corpse was calling to him, out of the wilderness. Yet, such
- was the consequence of his prevarication, that he could not obey the call.
- It was now too late to require the assistance of Roger Malvin's friends, in
- performing his long-deferred sepulture; and superstitious fears, of which
- none were more susceptible than the people of the outward settlements,
- forbade Reuben to go alone. Neither did he know where, in the pathless
- and illimitable forest, to seek that smooth and lettered rock, at the base of
- which the body lay; his remembrance of every portion of his travel thence
- was indistinct, and the latter part had left no impression upon his mind.
- There was, however, a continual impulse, a voice audible only to himself,
- commanding him to go forth and redeem his vow; and he had a strange
- impression, that, were he to make the trial, he would be led straight to
- Malvin's bones. But, year after year, that summons, unheard but felt, was
- disobeyed. His one secret thought, became like a chain, binding down his
- spirit, and, like a serpent, gnawing into his heart; and he was transformed
- Roger Malvin's Burial 16
-
- into a sad and downcast, yet irritable man.
- In the course of a few years after their marriage, changes began to be
- visible in the external prosperity of Reuben and Dorcas. The only riches of
- the former had been his stout heart and strong arm; but the latter, her
- father's sole heiress, had made her husband master of a farm, under older
- cultivation, larger, and better stocked than most of the frontier
- establishments. Reuben Bourne, however, was a neglectful husbandman;
- and while the lands of the other settlers became annually more fruitful, his
- deteriorated in the same proportion. The discouragements to agriculture
- were greatly lessened by the cessation of Indian war, during which men
- held the plough in one hand, and the musket in the other; and were
- fortunate if the products of their dangerous labor were not destroyed,
- either in the field or in the barn, by the savage enemy. But Reuben did not
- profit by the altered condition of the country; nor can it be denied, that his
- intervals of industrious attention to his affairs were but scantily rewarded
- with success. The irritability, by which he had recently become
- distinguished, was another cause of his declining prosperity, as it
- occasioned frequent quarrels, in his unavoidable intercourse with the
- neighboring settlers. The results of these were innumerable law-suits; for
- the people of New England, in the earliest stages and wildest
- circumstances of the country, adopted, whenever attainable, the legal
- mode of deciding their differences. To be brief, the world did not go well
- with Reuben Bourne, and, though not till many years after his marriage, he
- was finally a ruined man, with but one remaining expedient against the
- Roger Malvin's Burial 17
-
- evil fate that had pursued him. He was to throw sunlight into some deep
- recess of the forest, and seek subsistence from the virgin bosom of the
- wilderness.
- The only child of Reuben and Dorcas was a son, now arrived at the age
- of fifteen years, beautiful in youth, and giving promise of a glorious
- manhood. He was peculiarly qualified for, and already began to excel in,
- the wild accomplishments of frontier life. His foot was fleet, his aim true,
- his apprehension quick, his heart glad and high; and all, who anticipated
- the return of Indian war, spoke of Cyrus Bourne as a future leader in the
- land. The boy was loved by his father, with a deep and silent strength, as if
- whatever was good and happy in his own nature had been transferred to
- his child, carrying his affections with it. Even Dorcas, though loving and
- beloved, was far less dear to him; for Reuben's secret thoughts and
- insulated emotions had gradually made him a selfish man; and he could no
- longer love deeply, except where he saw, or imagined, some reflection or
- likeness of his own mind. In Cyrus he recognized what he had himself
- been in other days; and at intervals he seemed to partake of the boy's spirit,
- and to be revived with a fresh and happy life. Reuben was accompanied by
- his son in the expedition, for the purpose of selecting a tract of land, and
- felling and burning the timber, which necessarily preceded the removal of
- the household gods. Two months of autumn were thus occupied; after
- which Reuben Bourne and his young hunter returned, to spend their last
- winter in the settlements.
-
- Roger Malvin's Burial 18
-
- It was early in the month of May, that the little family snapped asunder
- whatever tendrils of affection had clung to inanimate objects, and bade
- farewell to the few, who, in the blight of fortune, called themselves their
- friends. The sadness of the parting moment had, to each of the pilgrims, its
- peculiar alleviations. Reuben, a moody man, and misanthropic because
- unhappy, strode onward, with his usual stern brow and downcast eye,
- feeling few regrets, and disdaining to acknowledge any. Dorcas, while she
- wept abundantly over the broken ties by which her simple and affectionate
- nature had bound itself to everything, felt that the inhabitants of her inmost
- heart moved on with her, and that all else would be supplied wherever she
- might go. And the boy dashed one tear-drop from his eye, and thought of
- the adventurous pleasures of the untrodden forest. Oh! who, in the
- enthusiasm of a day-dream, has not wished that he were a wanderer in a
- world of summer wilderness, with one fair and gentle being hanging
- lightly on his arm? In youth, his free and exulting step would know no
- barrier but the rolling ocean or the snow-topt mountains; calmer manhood
- would choose a home, where Nature had strewn a double wealth, in the
- vale of some transparent stream; and when hoary age, after long, long
- years of that pure life, stole on and found him there, it would find him the
- father of a race, the patriarch of a people, the founder of a mighty nation
- yet to be. When death, like the sweet sleep which we welcome after a day
- of happiness, came over him, his far descendants would mourn over the
- venerated dust. Enveloped by tradition in mysterious attributes, the men of
- future generations would call him godlike; and remote posterity would see
- Roger Malvin's Burial 19
-
- him standing, dimly glorious, far up the valley of a hundred centuries!
- The tangled and gloomy forest, through which the personages of my
- tale were wandering, differed widely from the dreamer's Land of Fantasie;
- yet there was something in their way of life that Nature asserted as her
- own; and the gnawing cares, which went with them from the world, were
- all that now obstructed their happiness. One stout and shaggy steed, the
- bearer of all their wealth, did not shrink from the added weight of Dorcas;
- although her hardy breeding sustained her, during the latter part of each
- day's journey, by her husband's side. Reuben and his son, their muskets
- on
- their shoulders, and their axes slung behind them, kept an unwearied pace,
- each watching with a hunter's eye for the game that supplied their food.
- When hunger bade, they halted and prepared their meal on the bank of
- some unpolluted forest-brook, which, as they knelt down with thirsty lips
- to drink, murmured a sweet unwillingness, like a maiden, at 1ove's first
- kiss. They slept beneath a hut of branches, and awoke at peep of light,
- refreshed for the toils of another day. Dorcas and the boy went on
- joyously, and even Reuben's spirit shone at intervals with an outward
- gladness; but inwardly there was a cold, cold sorrow, which he compared
- to the snow-drifts, lying deep in the glens and hollows of the rivulets,
- while the leaves were brightly green above.
- Cyrus Bourne was sufficiently skilled in the travel of the woods, to
- observe, that his father did not adhere to the course they had pursued, in
- their expedition of the preceding autumn. They were now keeping farther
- to the north, striking out more directly from the settlements, and into a
- Roger Malvin's Burial 20
-
- region, of which savage beasts and savage men were as yet the sole
- possessors. The boy sometimes hinted his opinions upon the subject, and
- Reuben listened attentively, and once or twice altered the direction of their
- march in accordance with his son's counsel. But having so done, he
- seemed ill at ease. His quick and wandering glances were sent forward,
- apparently in search of enemies lurking behind the tree-trunks; and seeing
- nothing there, he would cast his eyes backward, as if in fear of some
- pursuer. Cyrus, perceiving that his father gradually resumed the old
- direction, forbore to interfere; nor, though something began to weigh upon
- his heart, did his adventurous nature permit him to regret the increased
- length and the mystery of their way.
- On the afternoon of the fifth day, they halted and made their simple
- encampment, nearly an hour before sunset. The face of the country, for the
- last few miles, had been diversified by swells of land, resembling huge
- waves of a petrified sea; and in one of the corresponding hollows, a wild
- and romantic spot, had the family reared their hut, and kindled their fire.
- There is something chilling, and yet heart-warming, in the thought of these
- three, united by strong bands of love, and insulated from all that breathe
- beside. The dark and gloomy pines looked down upon them, and, as the
- wind swept through their tops, a pitying sound was heard in the forest; or
- did those old trees groan, in fear that men were come to lay the axe to their
- roots at last? Reuben and his son, while Dorcas made ready their meal,
- proposed to wander out in search of game, of which that day's march had
- afforded no supply. The boy, promising not to quit the vicinity of the
- Roger Malvin's Burial 21
-
- encampment, bounded off with a step as light and elastic as that of the
- deer he hoped to slay; while his father, feeling a transient happiness as he
- gazed after him, was about to pursue an opposite direction. Dorcas, in the
- meanwhile, had seated herself near their fire of fallen branches, upon the
- moss-grown and mouldering trunk of a tree, uprooted years before. Her
- employment, diversified by an occasional glance at the pot, now beginning
- to simmer over the blaze, was the perusal of the current year's
- Massachusetts Almanac, which, with the exception of an old black-letter
- Bible, comprised all the literary wealth of the family. None pay a greater
- regard to arbitrary divisions of time, than those who are excluded from
- society; and Dorcas mentioned, as if the information were of importance,
- that it was now the twelfth of May. Her husband started.
- 'The twelfth of May! I should remember it well,' muttered he, while
- many thoughts occasioned a momentary confusion in his mind. 'Where am
- I? Whither am I wandering? Where did I leave him?'
- Dorcas, too well accustomed to her husband's wayward moods to note
- any peculiarity of demeanor, now laid aside the Almanac, and addressed
- him in that mournful tone, which the tender-hearted appropriate to griefs
- long cold and dead.
- 'It was near this time of the month, eighteen years ago, that my poor
- father left this world for a better. He had a kind arm to hold his head, and a
- kind voice to cheer him, Reuben, in his last moments; and the thought of
- the faithful care you took of him, has comforted me, many a time since.
- Oh! death would have been awful to a solitary man, in a wild place like
- Roger Malvin's Burial 22
-
- this!'
- 'Pray Heaven, Dorcas,' said Reuben, in a broken voice, 'pray Heaven,
- that neither of us three die solitary, and lie unburied, in this howling
- wilderness!' And he hastened away, leaving her to watch the fire, beneath
- the gloomy pines.
- Reuben Bourne's rapid pace gradually slackened, as the pang,
- unintentionally inflicted by the words of Dorcas, became less acute. Many
- strange reflections, however, thronged upon him; and, straying onward,
- rather like a sleep-walker than a hunter, it was attributable to no care of his
- own, that his devious course kept him in the vicinity of the encampment.
- His steps were imperceptibly led almost in a circle, nor did he observe that
- he was on the verge of a tract of land heavily timbered, but not with pine-
- trees. The place of the latter was here supplied by oaks, and other of the
- harder woods; and around their roots clustered a dense and bushy
- undergrowth, leaving, however, barren spaces between the trees, thick-
- strewn with withered leaves. Whenever the rustling of the branches, or the
- creaking of the trunks made a sound, as if the forest were waking from
- slumber, Reuben instinctively raised the musket that rested on his arm, and
- cast a quick, sharp glance on every side; but, convinced by a partial
- observation that no animal was near, he would again give himself up to his
- thoughts. He was musing on the strange influence, that had led him away
- from his premeditated course, and so far into the depths of the wilderness.
- Unable to penetrate to the secret place of his soul, where his motives lay
- hidden, he believed that a supernatural voice had called him onward, and
- Roger Malvin's Burial 23
-
- that a supernatural power had obstructed his retreat. He trusted that it was
- Heaven's intent to afford him an opportunity of expiating his sin; he hoped
- that he might find the bones, so long unburied; and that, having laid the
- earth over them, peace would throw its sunlight into the sepulchre of his
- heart. From these thoughts he was aroused by a rustling in the forest, at
- some distance from the spot to which he had wandered. Perceiving the
- motion of some object behind a thick veil of undergrowth, he fired, with
- the instinct of a hunter, and the aim of a practised marksman. A low moan,
- which told his success, and by which even animals can express their dying
- agony, was unheeded by Reuben Bourne. What were the recollections now
- breaking upon him?
- The thicket, into which Reuben had fired, was near the summit of a
- swell of land, and was clustered around the base of a rock, which, in the
- shape and smoothness of one of its surfaces, was not unlike a gigantic
- grave-stone. As if reflected in a mirror, its likeness was in Reuben's
- memory. He even recognized the veins which seemed to form an
- inscription in forgotten characters; everything remained the same, except
- that a thick covert of bushes shrouded the lower part of the rock, and
- would have hidden Roger Malvin, had he still been sitting there. Yet, in
- the next moment, Reuben's eye was caught by another change, that time
- had effected, since he last stood, where he was now standing again, behind
- the earthy roots of the uptorn tree. The sapling, to which he had bound the
- blood-stained symbol of his vow, had increased and strengthened into an
- oak, far indeed from its maturity, but with no mean spread of shadowy
- Roger Malvin's Burial 24
-
- branches. There was one singularity, observable in this tree, which made
- Reuben tremble. The middle and lower branches were in luxuriant life,
- and an excess of vegetation had fringed the trunk, almost to the ground;
- but a blight had apparently stricken the upper part of the oak, and the very
- topmost bough was withered, sapless, and utterly dead. Reuben
- remembered how the little banner had fluttered on the topmost bough,
- when it was green and lovely, eighteen years before. Whose guilt had
- blasted it?
-
- Dorcas, after the departure of the two hunters, continued her
- preparations for their evening repast. Her sylvan table was the moss-
- covered trunk of a large fallen tree, on the broadest part of which she had
- spread a snow-white cloth, and arranged what were left of the bright
- pewter vessels, that had been her pride in the settlements. It had a strange
- aspect--that one little spot of homely comfort, in the desolate heart of
- Nature. The sunshine yet lingered upon the higher branches of the trees
- that grew on rising ground; but the shades of evening had deepened into
- the hollow, where the encampment was made; and the fire-light began to
- redden as it gleamed up the tall trunks of the pines, or hovered on the
- dense and obscure mass of foliage, that circled round the spot. The heart of
- Dorcas was not sad; for she felt that it was better to journey in the
- wilderness, with two whom she loved, than to be a lonely woman in a
- crowd that cared not for her. As she busied herself in arranging seats of
- mouldering wood, covered with leaves, for Reuben and her son, her voice
- Roger Malvin's Burial 25
-
- danced through the gloomy forest, in the measure of a song that she had
- learned in youth. The rude melody, the production of a bard who won no
- name, was descriptive of a winter evening in a frontier-cottage, when,
- secured from savage inroad by the high-piled snow-drifts, the family
- rejoiced by their own fireside. The whole song possessed that nameless
- charm, peculiar to unborrowed thought; but four continually-recurring
- lines shone out from the rest, like the blaze of the hearth whose joys they
- celebrated. Into them, working magic with a few simple words, the poet
- had instilled the very essence of domestic love and household happiness,
- and they were poetry and picture joined in one. As Dorcas sang, the walls
- of her forsaken home seemed to encircle her; she no longer saw the
- gloomy pines, nor heard the wind, which still, as she began each verse,
- sent a heavy breath through the branches, and died away in a hollow
- moan, from the burthen of the song. She was aroused by the report of a
- gun, in the vicinity of the encampment; and either the sudden sound, or her
- loneliness by the glowing fire, caused her to tremble violently. The next
- moment, she laughed in the pride of a mother's heart.
- 'My beautiful young hunter! my boy has slain a deer!' she exclaimed,
- recollecting that, in the direction whence the shot proceeded, Cyrus had
- gone to the chase.
- She waited a reasonable time, to hear her son's light step bounding over
- the rustling leaves, to tell of his success. But he did not immediately
- appear, and she sent her cheerful voice among the trees, in search of him.
- 'Cyrus! Cyrus!'
- Roger Malvin's Burial 26
-
- His coming was still delayed, and she determined, as the report had
- apparently been very near, to seek for him in person. Her assistance, also,
- might be necessary in bringing home the venison, which she flattered
- herself he had obtained. She therefore set forward, directing her steps by
- the long-past sound, and singing as she went, in order that the boy might
- be aware of her approach, and run to meet her. From behind the trunk of
- every tree, and from every hiding place in the thick foliage of the
- undergrowth, she hoped to discover the countenance of her son, laughing
- with the sportive mischief that is born of affection. The sun was now
- beneath the horizon, and the light that came down among the trees was
- sufficiently dim to create many illusions in her expecting fancy. Several
- times she seemed indistinctly to see his face gazing out from among the
- leaves; and once she imagined that he stood beckoning to her, at the base
- of a craggy rock. Keeping her eyes on this object, however, it proved to be
- no more than the trunk of an oak, fringed to the very ground with little
- branches, one of which, thrust out farther than the rest, was shaken by the
- breeze. Making her way round the foot of the rock, she suddenly found
- herself close to her husband, who had approached in another direction.
- Leaning upon the butt of his gun, the muzzle of which rested upon the
- withered leaves, he was apparently absorbed in the contemplation of some
- object at his feet.
- 'How is this, Reuben? Have you slain the deer, and fallen asleep over
- him?' exclaimed Dorcas, laughing cheerfully, on her first slight
- observation of his posture and appearance.
- Roger Malvin's Burial 27
-
- He stirred not, neither did he turn his eyes towards her; and a cold,
- shuddering fear, indefinite in its source and object, began to creep into her
- blood. She now perceived that her husband's face was ghastly pale, and his
- features were rigid, as if incapable of assuming any other expression than
- the strong despair which had hardened upon them. He gave not the
- slightest evidence that he was aware of her approach.
- 'For the love of Heaven, Reuben, speak to me!' cried Dorcas, and the
- strange sound of her own voice affrighted her even more than the dead
- silence.
- Her husband started, stared into her face; drew her to the front of the
- rock, and pointed with his finger.
- Oh! there lay the boy, asleep, but dreamless, upon the fallen forest-
- leaves! his cheek rested upon his arm, his curled locks were thrown back
- from his brow, his limbs were slightly relaxed. Had a sudden weariness
- overcome the youthful hunter? Would his mother's voice arouse him? She
- knew that it was death.
- 'This broad rock is the grave-stone of your near kindred, Dorcas,' said
- her husband. 'Your tears will fall at once over your father and your son.'
- She heard him not. With one wild shriek, that seemed to force its way
- from the sufferer's inmost soul, she sank insensible by the side of her dead
- boy. At that moment, the withered topmost bough of the oak loosened
- itself, in the stilly air, and fell in soft, light fragments upon the rock, upon
- the leaves, upon Reuben, upon his wife and child, and upon Roger
- Malvin's bones. Then Reuben's heart was stricken, and the tears gushed
- Roger Malvin's Burial 28
-
- out like water from a rock. The vow that the wounded youth had made, the
- blighted man had come to redeem. His sin was expiated, the curse was
- gone from him; and, in the hour, when he had shed blood dearer to him
- than his own, a prayer, the first for years, went up to Heaven from the lips
- of Reuben Bourne.
-