BUNKER HILL.
If the British regarded Charlestown
Heights of such importance, why should not the provincials
seize them? It must be done. Twilight was
still lingering on the western horizon when the troops
selected for the expedition paraded on Cambridge Common.
Colonel William Prescott was to command them.
He had fought at Louisburg, and was cool and brave.
With uncovered heads the regiments stood in front of
the meetinghouse while Reverend Mr. Langdon, president
of the college, offered prayer. Lieutenant Walden,
having been upon Bunker Hill, led the way, followed
by soldiers from Connecticut and Massachusetts, and
two carts loaded with picks and shovels. They
marched in silence. Lieutenant Walden conducted
them across the Neck and up the slope of the Hill.
It was nearly midnight before it was decided just where
Colonel Gridley should mark out the contemplated fortifications.
Lieutenant Walden conducted Captain Nutting and ten
sentinels to the ferry landing. They were but
a little distance from the frigate Somerset at anchor
in the stream. Farther up, towards Lechmere’s
Point, were the Glasgow, Cerberus, and Symetry.
Down the river, off Moulton’s Point, lay the
Lively and Falcon.
Leaving the sentinels to guard the
shore, he rode to the summit of the hill, where the
men were hard at work, delving in silence with pick
and spade. There were not sufficient implements
for all, but when one was out of breath, another took
his place, and before the first glimmer of dawn appeared,
the trench had been made breast deep.
“Four o’clock and all’s
well!” came from the sentinel on the Somerset,
but a moment later a sheet of flame and a white cloud
burst from the side of the Lively, and the roar of
a gun broke the stillness of the morning.
The thunder rolled far away, arousing
the British army, the people of Boston, General Gage,
and Lord Howe from their slumbers. Berinthia
Brandon, from her chamber window, beheld the warship
Lively shrouded in smoke. Upon the green hill,
where, the day before, the farmers had been swinging
their scythes, and where the partially cured hay was
lying in windrows, she could see a bank of yellow earth.
Again the thunder of the guns jarred her window, but
at a signal from the Somerset the firing ceased.
Before sunrise all Boston was astir,
moving towards Copp’s Hill, gazing from windows
and roofs upon the growing fortifications. Generals
Gage and Howe ascended the steeple of Christ Church
and looked at the embankment with their telescopes.
A little later officers were hurrying along the streets
with orders to the several regiments to be ready to
march at a moment’s notice. Drums were
beating; battalions moving towards Long Wharf, the
selected rendezvous, from whence the troops were to
be transported in boats to Moulton’s Point,
ascend the hill, and send the provincials flying
from their chosen position.
Such was the information brought to
the Brandon home by Abraham Duncan.
“You will have a splendid chance
to see the battle from the housetop,” he said
to Captain Brandon.
Cannon carriages were rumbling through
the street, passing the Brandon home, wheeling into
the burial ground, and coming into position. The
gunners loaded the pieces and lighted their port fires,
waved their lint-stocks, and touched them to the priming.
Flames and smoke belched from the muzzle of the guns
with deafening roar, sending the missiles upon the
fortification.
While the cannoneers were reloading
the guns, Berinthia, upon the housetop with a telescope,
saw a man leap up from the intrenchment and stand
in full view upon the bank of earth, swinging his hat
and shaking his fist.
“Oh father! mother! it is Tom!
He’s swinging his hat! Just see him!”
she cried.
Again the cannon flamed, but with
the flashing Tom leaped back into the trench and was
safe from the shot.
“I’m glad he’s there.
He’s got the true stuff in him,” said Mr.
Brandon.
“I’m afraid he’ll
be killed!” exclaimed Mrs. Brandon, manifesting
the mother’s solicitude and love.
“I glory in his pluck,” said Berinthia.
People came from other sections of
the town to behold the impending battle.
“May we presume to trespass
upon your hospitality, Captain Brandon,” asked
Mr. Newville, “and, if you have room, see this
approaching contest from your housetop?”
“Certainly. We give you
and your family hearty welcome. We doubtless
shall see it from different political standpoints;
you are truly loyal to the king; my sympathies, as
you know, are with the provincials, but that
shall not diminish our personal friendship or my hospitality,”
Captain Brandon replied, escorting Mr. and Mrs. Newville
and Miss Newville to the top of the house and providing
them seats.
The forenoon wore away; Mrs. Brandon
was busy preparing a lunch, and Chloe soon had the
table elaborately supplied with ham, tongue, the whitest
bread, appetizing cheese, doughnuts, and crumpets.
The company partook of the collation, drank each a
glass of wine, and then ascended to the roof again.
Berinthia informed Ruth that Tom was
in the redoubt. She had seen him through the
telescope, standing on the embankment and waving his
hat.
Lieutenant Robert Walden, at the moment,
was five miles away, in Medford town, delivering a
message to Colonel John Stark to hasten with his regiment
to Bunker Hill.
The meetinghouse bell was ringing
the hour of noon when the drummer beat the long roll
for the parading of the regiment. The men filed
past the quarter-master’s tent and each received
a gill of powder in his horn. And then with quickened
step they crossed the Mystic and hastened along the
road.
With the shot from the Symetry screeching
around them, tossing the gravel in their faces, the
men from New Hampshire crossed the neck of land, ascended
the hill, and came into position by a low stone wall
surmounted by rails. Lieutenant Walden’s
company was nearest the Mystic River. Captain
Daniel Moore’s came next in line. The regiment
with Colonel Reed’s New Hampshire regiment extended
to the foot of the hill, in the direction of the redoubt.
“You will inform Colonel Prescott
that I have arrived with my regiment and am in position,”
said Colonel Stark.
Riding towards the redoubt, Robert
saluted General Putnam, who, mounted on a white horse,
was going along the lines, telling the men to keep
cool, save their powder, and aim at the cross-belts
of the British.
It was a pleasure once more to meet
Doctor Warren, who had been appointed general, but
who had come as a volunteer to take part in the battle.
Colonel Prescott thanked Lieutenant
Walden for the information sent by Colonel Stark.
He did not doubt the men from New Hampshire would be
as true as they were in the battles of Louisburg and
Ticonderoga.
Dismounting from his horse and giving
it in charge of a soldier, Lieutenant Walden walked
along the trench, looked over the embankment upon
the British troops landing at Moulton’s Point
and forming in two columns, one of which, he concluded,
was intending to march along the Mystic to gain the
rear of the redoubt and cut off the retreat of those
within it. If such were the contemplated movement
it would be mainly against the regiments of Stark
and Reed. The other body of troops seemed to
be forming to advance directly upon the redoubt.
While he was thus gazing, a hand clasped
his arm; turning, he beheld Tom Brandon.
“I’ve been wondering if
you wouldn’t be round here somewhere,”
said Tom.
“And I have been wondering where
you would be,” Robert replied.
“And so you are a lieutenant?”
queried Tom, looking at the epaulet on his shoulder.
“I congratulate you.
“The whole family are on the
roof to see the battle,” he continued.
“Perhaps you can bring them
a little nearer with my telescope,” said Robert,
handing him the instrument.
Tom rested it on the embankment and
looked towards the house.
“There’s a crowd of ’em
on the roof,” he said, “father, mother,
and Berinthia. There’s a man with a white
wig,-Mr. Newville, I guess; and there’s
a girl talking with Berinthia-Ruth Newville.”
With quickened pulse Robert adjusted
the glass to his vision. Others than those mentioned
by Tom were upon the roof, but one figure alone engaged
his attention. Oh, if he could but know how she
regarded the impending battle! Possibly since
the events on Lexington Green and at Concord bridge
her sympathies had been with the king. No, he
could not think it. The instincts of one so noble,
good, and large-hearted must ever be opposed to tyranny
and oppression. Whether favoring or opposing
the course of the Colonies, what matter to him?
What probability of their ever meeting again?
If meeting, would she ever be other than an old acquaintance?
Never had he opened his heart to her; never by word
or deed informed her that she was all the world to
him. To her he would be only a friend of other
days.
He could see a tall man in a general’s
uniform walking along the British lines. He halted,
took off his cocked hat, stood erect, and said something
to the soldiers. He concluded it was General Howe,
telling them they were a noble body of men, and he
did not doubt they would show themselves valiant soldiers.
He should not ask them to go any farther than he himself
was willing to go. Robert and Tom could hear
the cheer which the soldiers gave him.
The columns began to march,-that
commanded by General Howe along the bank of the Mystic;
that by General Pigot straight up the hill towards
the redoubt.
Robert ran to the spot where he had
left his horse, but it was not there. He hastened
down the slope, past the Connecticut troops under
Colonel Knowlton, and reported to Colonel Stark, who
was directing his soldiers to take up a rail fence
in front of his line and reset it by the low stone
wall, and fill the space between the fences with hay
from the windrows.
“It will serve as a screen,” he said.
Stepping in front a short distance, he drove a stake
in the ground.
“Don’t fire till the redcoats are up to
it,” was his order.
The sun was shining from a cloudless
sky. They upon the roof of the Brandon home saw
the scarlet columns of the British moving along the
Mystic and towards the redoubt, the sunlight gleaming
from their muskets and bayonets, the flags waving
above them, the men keeping step to the drumbeat;
the great guns of the fleet and those on Copp’s
Hill flaming and thundering; white powder-clouds floating
away and dissolving in thin air. They saw puffs
of smoke burst from the heads of the advancing columns
and heard the rattle of muskets. Cannon-shot
plowed the ground and tossed up the gravel around the
redoubt. Only the six cannon of the provincials
were replying. Nearer moved the scarlet line.
Again a rattling volley, with no answering musket shot
from fence or embankment. What the meaning of
such silence? Suddenly a line of light streamed
from the river to the foot of the hill, and like the
lightning’s flash ran along the embankment and
round the redoubt. A rattle and roar like the
waves of the sea upon a rocky shore came to their
ears across the shining waters. Men were reeling
to the ground, whole ranks going down before the pitiless
storm. The front ranks had melted away.
For a few moments there was a rattling like scattered
raindrops, and then another lightning flash, and the
British were fleeing in confusion.
Mr. Newville clenched his hands.
“I fear the king’s troops are discomfited,”
he said.
Mrs. Newville with a long-drawn sigh
covered her face with her handkerchief as if to shut
out the unwelcome spectacle.
“The redcoats are beaten!” Berinthia exclaimed.
“It is too soon to say that,
daughter. The battle is not yet over; the king’s
troops would be cowardly were they to give up with
only one attempt.”
Like a statue, her hands tightly grasping
the balustrade, her bosom heaving with suppressed
emotion, Ruth gazed upon the spectacle, uttering no
exclamation. Taking the telescope, she turned
it upon the scene, beholding the prostrate forms dotting
the newly mown fields. It was not difficult to
distinguish Lord Howe, the centre of a group of officers.
He was evidently issuing orders to re-form the broken
lines. Colonels, majors, and captains were rallying
the disheartened men. In the intervals of the
cannonade from the fleet a confused hum of voices
could be heard, officers shouting their orders.
Beyond the prostrate forms, behind the low stone wall
and screen of hay were the provincials, biding
their time. Officers were walking to and fro,-one
middle-aged, with a colonel’s epaulets, evidently
commanding the troops nearest the Mystic River.
A subordinate officer of manly form was receiving
orders and transmitting them to others. Where
had she seen one like him? Long she gazed with
unwonted bloom upon her cheeks.
Again the scarlet lines advanced,-the
foremost platoons halting, firing, filing right and
left, that those in the rear might reach the front.
Unmindful of the bullets pattering around him, the
young officer walked composedly along the provincial
line, from which came no answering shot. Seemingly
he was telling the men to wait. Suddenly, as
before, the screen of hay became a sheet of flame,
and the scarlet ranks again dissolved like a straw
in a candle’s flame, whole ranks reeling and
falling, or fleeing to the place of landing.
Mr. Newville groaned aloud. Again
Mrs. Newville covered her face. Captain Brandon,
Mrs. Brandon, and Berinthia, out of respect to their
guests, gave no sign of exultation; but from windows,
roofs, doorways, and steeples, like the voice of many
waters, came the joyful murmur of the multitude, revealing
to General Gage, up in the tower of Christ Church,
the sympathy of the people with the provincials.
No exclamation of satisfaction or
disappointment fell from the lips of Ruth, still looking
with the telescope towards the provincial line by
the Mystic, and the manly figure of the officer receiving
instructions from his superior.
There was a commotion among the troops
in the burial ground before them.
“Fall in! Fall in!”
General Clinton shouted. They hastily formed in
column and marched down the steep descent to the ferry
landing. From the tower of Christ Church, together
with General Gage, Clinton had seen the discomfiture
of Lord Howe and General Pigot, and, with three hundred
men, was hastening to reinforce them, stepping into
boats and crossing the river.
The people on the housetops needed
no telescopes to see what was going on across the
stream. Slowly the lines re-formed, the men reluctantly
taking their places. They who had fought at Ticonderoga,
who had won the victory on the Plains of Abraham at
Quebec, never had faced so pitiless a storm.
“It is downright murder,” said the men.
They upon the housetops could see
the British officers flourishing their swords, gesticulating,
and even striking the disheartened soldiers, compelling
them to stand once more in the ranks. Twice they
had advanced, encumbered with their knapsacks, in accordance
with strict military rule; now they were laying them
aside. There were fewer men in the ranks than
at the beginning of the battle, but the honor of England
was at stake. The rabble of undisciplined country
bumpkins must be driven from their position, or the
troops of England would be forever disgraced.
General Howe had learned wisdom. He had thought
to sweep aside the line of provincials behind
the low stone wall, gain the rear, cut off the retreat
of those in the redoubt, capture them, and win a notable
victory. He had not expected such resistance,
such a destructive fire as had greeted the light infantry
along the banks of the stream. In the two attempts,
he had discovered the weak place in the provincial
line,-the space between the redoubt and
the low stone wall. In planning the third movement,
he resolved to make a feint of advancing once more
towards the wall, but would concentrate his attack
upon the redoubt, and especially upon that portion
of the line least defended.
The summer sun, shining from a cloudless
sky, was declining towards the western horizon.
It was past four o’clock before the lines were
ready. Once more the guns of the fleet hurled
solid shot and shells upon the redoubt. Captain
Brandon, looking from his housetop down upon the guns
almost beneath him, saw a gunner ramming an inflammable
shell into the cannon. The shell, with smoking
torch, screamed across the river, aimed not at the
bank of yellow earth on Bunker Hill, but at the houses
in Charlestown.
“They intend to burn the village,” he
said.
Soon flames were bursting from window,
doorway, and roof. The wind, blowing from the
south, carried sparks and cinders to the adjoining
houses, glowing in the summer heat. A wail of
horror from the people rent the air.
“That is mean, cruel, wicked,
dastardly!” exclaimed Ruth, with flashing eyes.
“It’s inhuman. I shall hate the man
who has ordered it."
Through the previous stages of the
conflict no word of approval or disapproval had escaped
her lips.
“Ruth! Ruth! Don’t
say that!” Mr. Newville cried, astonished by
such an outburst of indignation.
“If General Gage were here I
would say it to his face. What have those people
done that their homes should be destroyed? They
are not fighting the battle. Does he think that
by burning the town he will frighten those men in
the redoubt into submission? Were I one of them,
I would die before I would surrender.”
Her eyes were flashing. In her
earnestness she had removed her hat. The gentle
breeze was fanning her heated brow. She stood
erect, a queen in her dignity and beauty. Never
had Mr. and Mrs. Newville dreamed that there was such
pent-up fire in her soul, such energy, fearlessness,
and instinctive comprehension of justice and right.
Captain and Mrs. Brandon, Berinthia, and all around
gazed upon her wonderingly and with admiration.
The fire was sweeping on,-leaping
from building to building, licking up houses, stables,
and workshop, reaching the meetinghouse, kindling
the shingles on its roof, the clapboards upon its walls,
bursting from doors and windows, climbing the spire
to the gilded vane, burning till beams and timbers
gave way; then came the crash,-a single
stroke of the bell tolling as it were a requiem.
Under the cloud from the burning town
the scarlet lines once more advanced,-not
towards the screen of hay, but in the direction of
the redoubt. With the glass Ruth saw the manly
figure she had seen before, seemingly receiving instructions
from his superior officer, and running towards the
threatened point of attack. The scarlet lines
were mounting the breastwork. Men were firing
in each other’s faces; thrusting with the bayonet.
She could see a stalwart provincial in his shirt-sleeves
beat out the brains of a Britisher with the butt of
his musket, and the next moment go down with a bayonet
through his heart. The manly figure was in the
thick of the melee,-a half dozen redcoats
rushing upon him. His sword was flashing in the
sunlight as he parried their bayonets, keeping them
at bay. Guns flashed, and the white powder-cloud
shut out the scene. When it cleared, he had gone
down, and the redcoats were swinging their hats.
Their shout of victory came across the waters.
Those around saw Ruth clasp her hand upon her heart.
“They are beaten, and he is
shot!” she cried, sinking into Berinthia’s
arms.
“Who’s shot?” her
mother asked. There was no answer from the quivering
lips.
“The excitement is too much
for her,” said Mrs. Newville, as they bore her
to Berinthia’s chamber.