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+Project Gutenberg's The Hudson And Its Hills, by Charles M. Skinner
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The Hudson And Its Hills
+ Myths And Legends Of Our Own Land, Volume 1.
+
+Author: Charles M. Skinner
+
+Release Date: October 22, 2006 [EBook #6606]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE HUDSON AND ITS HILLS ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by David Widger
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ MYTHS AND LEGENDS
+ OF
+ OUR OWN LAND
+
+ By
+ Charles M. Skinner
+
+ Vol. 1.
+
+
+ THE HUDSON AND ITS HILLS
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS OF ALL VOLUMES:
+
+THE HUDSON AND ITS HILLS
+
+Rip Van Winkle
+Catskill Gnomes
+The Catskill Witch
+The Revenge of Shandaken
+Condemned to the Noose
+Big Indian
+The Baker's Dozen
+The Devil's Dance-Chamber
+The Culprit Fay
+Pokepsie
+Dunderberg
+Anthony's Nose
+Moodua Creek
+A Trapper's Ghastly Vengeance
+The Vanderdecken of Tappan Zee
+The Galloping Hessian
+Storm Ship on the Hudson
+Why Spuyten Duyvil is so Named
+The Ramapo Salamander
+Chief Croton
+The Retreat from Mahopac
+Niagara
+The Deformed of Zoar
+Horseheads
+Kayuta and Waneta
+The Drop Star
+The Prophet of Palmyra
+A Villain's Cremation
+The Monster Mosquito
+The Green Picture
+The Nuns of Carthage
+The Skull in the Wall
+The Haunted Mill
+Old Indian Face
+The Division of the Saranacs
+An Event in Indian Park
+The Indian Plume
+Birth of the Water-Lily
+Rogers's Slide
+The Falls at Cohoes
+Francis Woolcott's Night-Riders
+Polly's Lover
+Crosby, the Patriot Spy
+The Lost Grave of Paine
+The Rising of Gouverneur Morris
+
+
+THE ISLE OF MANHATTOES AND NEARBY
+
+Dolph Heyliger
+The Knell at the Wedding
+Roistering Dirck Van Dara
+The Party from Gibbet Island
+Miss Britton's Poker
+The Devil's Stepping-Stones
+The Springs of Blood and Water
+The Crumbling Silver
+The Cortelyou Elopement
+Van Wempel's Goose
+The Weary Watcher
+The Rival Fiddlers
+Wyandank
+Mark of the Spirit Hand
+The First Liberal Church
+
+
+ON AND NEAR THE DELAWARE
+
+The Phantom Dragoon
+Delaware Water Gap
+The Phantom Drummer
+The Missing Soldier of Valley Forge
+The Last Shot at Germantown
+A Blow in the Dark
+The Tory's Conversion
+Lord Percy's Dream
+Saved by the Bible
+Parricide of the Wissahickon
+The Blacksmith at Brandywine
+Father and Son
+The Envy of Manitou
+The Last Revel in Printz Hall
+The Two Rings
+Flame Scalps of the Chartiers
+The Consecration of Washington
+Marion
+
+
+TALES OF PURITAN LAND
+
+Evangeline
+The Snoring of Swunksus
+The Lewiston Hermit
+The Dead Ship of Harpswell
+The Schoolmaster had not reached Orrington
+Jack Welch's Death Light
+Mogg Megone
+The Lady Ursula
+Father Moody's Black Veil
+The Home of Thunder
+The Partridge Witch
+The Marriage of Mount Katahdin
+The Moose of Mount Kineo
+The Owl Tree
+A Chestnut Log
+The Watcher on White Island
+Chocorua
+Passaconaway's Ride to Heaven
+The Ball Game by the Saco
+The White Mountains
+The Vision on Mount Adams
+The Great Carbuncle
+Skinner's Cave
+Yet they call it Lover's Leap
+Salem and other Witchcraft
+The Gloucester Leaguers
+Satan and his Burial-Place
+Peter Rugg, the Missing Man
+The Loss of Weetamoo
+The Fatal Forget-me-not
+The Old Mill at Somerville
+Edward Randolph's Portrait
+Lady Eleanore's Mantle
+Howe's Masquerade
+Old Esther Dudley
+The Loss of Jacob Hurd
+The Hobomak
+Berkshire Tories
+The Revenge of Josiah Breeze
+The May-Pole of Merrymount
+The Devil and Tom Walker
+The Gray Champion
+The Forest Smithy
+Wahconah Falls
+Knocking at the Tomb
+The White Deer of Onota
+Wizard's Glen
+Balanced Rock
+Shonkeek-Moonkeek
+The Salem Alchemist
+Eliza Wharton
+Sale of the Southwicks
+The Courtship of Myles Standish
+Mother Crewe
+Aunt Rachel's Curse
+Nix's Mate
+The Wild Man of Cape Cod
+Newbury's Old Elm
+Samuel Sewall's Prophecy
+The Shrieking Woman
+Agnes Surriage
+Skipper Ireson's Ride
+Heartbreak Hill
+Harry Main: The Treasure and the Cats
+The Wessaguscus Hanging
+The Unknown Champion
+Goody Cole
+General Moulton and the Devil
+The Skeleton in Armor
+Martha's Vineyard and Nantucket
+Love and Treason
+The Headless Skeleton of Swamptown
+The Crow and Cat of Hopkins Hill
+The Old Stone Mill
+Origin of a Name
+Micah Rood Apples
+A Dinner and its Consequences
+The New Haven Storm Ship
+The Windham Frogs
+The Lamb of Sacrifice
+Moodus Noises
+Haddam Enchantments
+Block Island and the Palatine
+The Buccaneer
+Robert Lockwood's Fate
+Love and Rum
+
+
+
+LIGHTS AND SHADOWS OF THE SOUTH
+
+The Swim at Indian Head
+The Moaning Sisters
+A Ride for a Bride
+Spooks of the Hiawassee
+Lake of the Dismal Swamp
+The Barge of Defeat
+Natural Bridge
+The Silence Broken
+Siren of the French Broad
+The Hunter of Calawassee
+Revenge of the Accabee
+Toccoa Falls
+Two Lives for One
+A Ghostly Avenger
+The Wraith Ringer of Atlanta
+The Swallowing Earthquake
+The Last Stand of the Biloxi
+The Sacred Fire of Natchez
+Pass Christian
+The Under Land
+
+
+THE CENTRAL STATES AND GREAT LAKES
+
+An Averted Peril
+The Obstinacy of Saint Clair
+The Hundredth Skull
+The Crime of Black Swamp
+The House Accursed
+Marquette's Man-Eater
+Michel de Coucy's Troubles
+Wallen's Ridge
+The Sky Walker of Huron
+The Coffin of Snakes
+Mackinack
+Lake Superior Water Gods
+The Witch of Pictured Rocks
+The Origin of White Fish
+The Spirit of Cloudy
+The Sun Fire at Sault Sainte Marie
+The Snake God of Belle Isle
+Were-Wolves of Detroit
+The Escape of Francois Navarre
+The Old Lodger
+The Nain Rouge
+Two Revenges
+Hiawatha
+The Indian Messiah
+The Vision of Rescue
+Devil's Lake
+The Keusca Elopement
+Pipestone
+The Virgins' Feast
+Falls of St. Anthony
+Flying Shadow and Track Maker
+Saved by a Lightning-Stroke
+The Killing of Cloudy Sky
+Providence Hole
+The Scare Cure
+Twelfth Night at Cahokia
+The Spell of Creve Coeur Lake
+How the Crime was Revealed
+Banshee of the Bad Lands
+Standing Rock
+The Salt Witch
+
+
+ALONG THE ROCKY RANGE
+
+Over the Divide
+The Phantom Train of Marshall Pass
+The River of Lost Souls
+Riders of the Desert
+The Division of Two Tribes
+Besieged by Starvation
+A Yellowstone Tragedy
+The Broad House
+The Death Waltz
+The Flood at Santa Fe
+Goddess of Salt
+The Coming of the Navajos
+The Ark on Superstition Mountains
+The Pale Faced Lightning
+The Weird Sentinel at Squaw Peak
+Sacrifice of the Toltecs
+Ta-Vwots Conquers the Sun
+The Comanche Rider
+Horned Toad and Giants
+The Spider Tower
+The Lost Trail
+A Battle in the Air
+
+
+ON THE PACIFIC SLOPE
+
+The Voyager of the Whulge
+Tamanous of Tacoma
+The Devil and the Dalles
+Cascades of the Columbia
+The Death of Umatilla
+Hunger Valley
+The Wrath of Manitou
+The Spook of Misery Hill
+The Queen of Death Valley
+Bridal Veil Fall
+The Governor's Right Eye
+The Prisoner in American Shaft
+
+
+AS TO BURIED TREASURE
+
+Kidd's Treasure
+Other Buried Wealth
+
+
+STORIED WATERS, CLIFFS AND MOUNTAINS
+
+
+
+
+
+PREFACE
+
+It is unthinkingly said and often, that America is not old enough to have
+developed a legendary era, for such an era grows backward as a nation
+grows forward. No little of the charm of European travel is ascribed to
+the glamour that history and fable have flung around old churches,
+castles, and the favored haunts of tourists, and the Rhine and Hudson are
+frequently compared, to the prejudice of the latter, not because its
+scenery lacks in loveliness or grandeur, but that its beauty has not been
+humanized by love of chivalry or faerie, as that of the older stream has
+been. Yet the record of our country's progress is of deep import, and as
+time goes on the figures seen against the morning twilight of our history
+will rise to more commanding stature, and the mists of legend will invest
+them with a softness or glory that shall make reverence for them
+spontaneous and deep. Washington hurling the stone across the Potomac may
+live as the Siegfried of some Western saga, and Franklin invoking the
+lightnings may be the Loki of our mythology. The bibliography of American
+legends is slight, and these tales have been gathered from sources the
+most diverse: records, histories, newspapers, magazines, oral
+narrative--in every case reconstructed. The pursuit of them has been so
+long that a claim may be set forth for some measure of completeness.
+
+But, whatever the episodes of our four historic centuries may furnish to
+the poet, painter, dramatist, or legend-building idealist of the future,
+it is certain that we are not devoid of myth and folk-lore. Some
+characters, prosaic enough, perhaps, in daily life, have impinged so
+lightly on society before and after perpetrating their one or two great
+deeds, that they have already become shadowy and their achievements have
+acquired a color of the supernatural. It is where myth and history
+combine that legend is most interesting and appeals to our fancy or our
+sympathy most strongly; and it is not too early for us to begin the
+collation of those quaint happenings and those spoken reports that gain
+in picturesqueness with each transmission. An attempt has been made in
+this instance to assemble only legends, for, doubtful as some historians
+profess to find them, certain occurrences, like the story of Captain
+Smith and Pocahontas, and the ride of General Putnam down Breakneck
+Stairs, are taught as history; while as to folk-lore, that of the Indian
+tribes and of the Southern negro is too copious to be recounted in this
+work. It will be noted that traditions do not thrive in brick and
+brownstone, and that the stories once rife in the colonial cities have
+almost as effectually disappeared as the architectural landmarks of last
+century. The field entered by the writer is not untrodden. Hawthorne and
+Irving have made paths across it, and it is hoped that others may deem
+its farther exploration worthy of their efforts.
+
+
+
+
+THE HUDSON AND ITS HILLS
+
+
+
+
+RIP VAN WINKLE
+
+The story of Rip Van Winkle, told by Irving, dramatized by Boucicault,
+acted by Jefferson, pictured by Darley, set to music by Bristow, is the
+best known of American legends. Rip was a real personage, and the Van
+Winkles are a considerable family at this day. An idle, good-natured,
+happy-go-lucky fellow, he lived, presumably, in the village of Catskill,
+and began his long sleep in 1769. His wife was a shrew, and to escape her
+abuse Rip often took his dog and gun and roamed away to the Catskills,
+nine miles westward, where he lounged or hunted, as the humor seized him.
+It was on a September evening, during a jaunt on South Mountain, that he
+met a stubby, silent man, of goodly girth, his round head topped with a
+steeple hat, the skirts of his belted coat and flaps of his petticoat
+trousers meeting at the tops of heavy boots, and the face--ugh!--green
+and ghastly, with unmoving eyes that glimmered in the twilight like
+phosphorus. The dwarf carried a keg, and on receiving an intimation, in a
+sign, that he would like Rip to relieve him of it, that cheerful vagabond
+shouldered it and marched on up the mountain.
+
+At nightfall they emerged on a little plateau where a score of men in the
+garb of long ago, with faces like that of Rip's guide, and equally still
+and speechless, were playing bowls with great solemnity, the balls
+sometimes rolling over the plateau's edge and rumbling down the rocks
+with a boom like thunder. A cloaked and snowy-bearded figure, watching
+aloof, turned like the others, and gazed uncomfortably at the visitor who
+now came blundering in among them. Rip was at first for making off, but
+the sinister glare in the circle of eyes took the run out of his legs,
+and he was not displeased when they signed to him to tap the keg and join
+in a draught of the ripest schnapps that ever he had tasted,--and he knew
+the flavor of every brand in Catskill. While these strange men grew no
+more genial with passing of the flagons, Rip was pervaded by a satisfying
+glow; then, overcome by sleepiness and resting his head on a stone, he
+stretched his tired legs out and fell to dreaming.
+
+Morning. Sunlight and leaf shadow were dappled over the earth when he
+awoke, and rising stiffly from his bed, with compunctions in his bones,
+he reached for his gun. The already venerable implement was so far gone
+with rot and rust that it fell to pieces in his hand, and looking down at
+the fragments of it, he saw that his clothes were dropping from his body
+in rags and mould, while a white beard flowed over his breast. Puzzled
+and alarmed, shaking his head ruefully as he recalled the carouse of the
+silent, he hobbled down the mountain as fast as he might for the grip of
+the rheumatism on his knees and elbows, and entered his native village.
+What! Was this Catskill? Was this the place that he left yesterday? Had
+all these houses sprung up overnight, and these streets been pushed
+across the meadows in a day? The people, too: where were his friends? The
+children who had romped with him, the rotund topers whom he had left
+cooling their hot noses in pewter pots at the tavern door, the dogs that
+used to bark a welcome, recognizing in him a kindred spirit of vagrancy:
+where were they?
+
+And his wife, whose athletic arm and agile tongue had half disposed him
+to linger in the mountains how happened it that she was not awaiting him
+at the gate? But gate there was none in the familiar place: an unfenced
+yard of weeds and ruined foundation wall were there. Rip's home was gone.
+The idlers jeered at his bent, lean form, his snarl of beard and hair,
+his disreputable dress, his look of grieved astonishment. He stopped,
+instinctively, at the tavern, for he knew that place in spite of its new
+sign: an officer in blue regimentals and a cocked hat replacing the
+crimson George III. of his recollection, and labelled "General
+Washington." There was a quick gathering of ne'er-do-weels, of
+tavern-haunters and gaping 'prentices, about him, and though their faces
+were strange and their manners rude, he made bold to ask if they knew
+such and such of his friends.
+
+"Nick Vedder? He's dead and gone these eighteen years." "Brom Dutcher? He
+joined the army and was killed at Stony Point." "Van Brummel? He, too,
+went to the war, and is in Congress now."
+
+"And Rip Van Winkle?"
+
+"Yes, he's here. That's him yonder."
+
+And to Rip's utter confusion he saw before him a counterpart of himself,
+as young, lazy, ragged, and easy-natured as he remembered himself to be,
+yesterday--or, was it yesterday?
+
+"That's young Rip," continued his informer. "His father was Rip Van
+Winkle, too, but he went to the mountains twenty years ago and never came
+back. He probably fell over a cliff, or was carried off by Indians, or
+eaten by bears."
+
+Twenty years ago! Truly, it was so. Rip had slept for twenty years
+without awaking. He had left a peaceful colonial village; he returned to
+a bustling republican town. How he eventually found, among the oldest
+inhabitants, some who admitted that they knew him; how he found a
+comfortable home with his married daughter and the son who took after him
+so kindly; how he recovered from the effect of the tidings that his wife
+had died of apoplexy, in a quarrel; how he resumed his seat at the tavern
+tap and smoked long pipes and told long yarns for the rest of his days,
+were matters of record up to the beginning of this century.
+
+And a strange story Rip had to tell, for he had served as cup-bearer to
+the dead crew of the Half Moon. He had quaffed a cup of Hollands with no
+other than Henry Hudson himself. Some say that Hudson's spirit has made
+its home amid these hills, that it may look into the lovely valley that
+he discovered; but others hold that every twenty years he and his men
+assemble for a revel in the mountains that so charmed them when first
+seen swelling against the western heavens, and the liquor they drink on
+this night has the bane of throwing any mortal who lips it into a slumber
+whence nothing can arouse him until the day dawns when the crew shall
+meet again. As you climb the east front of the mountains by the old
+carriage road, you pass, half-way up the height, the stone that Rip Van
+Winkle slept on, and may see that it is slightly hollowed by his form.
+The ghostly revellers are due in the Catskills in 1909, and let all
+tourists who are among the mountains in September of that year beware of
+accepting liquor from strangers.
+
+
+
+
+CATSKILL GNOMES
+
+Behind the New Grand Hotel, in the Catskills, is an amphitheatre of
+mountain that is held to be the place of which the Mohicans spoke when
+they told of people there who worked in metals, and had bushy beards and
+eyes like pigs. From the smoke of their forges, in autumn, came the haze
+of Indian summer; and when the moon was full, it was their custom to
+assemble on the edge of a precipice above the hollow and dance and caper
+until the night was nigh worn away. They brewed a liquor that had the
+effect of shortening the bodies and swelling the heads of all who drank
+it, and when Hudson and his crew visited the mountains, the pygmies held
+a carouse in his honor and invited him to drink their liquor. The crew
+went away, shrunken and distorted by the magic distillation, and thus it
+was that Rip Van Winkle found them on the eve of his famous sleep.
+
+
+
+
+THE CATSKILL WITCH
+
+When the Dutch gave the name of Katzbergs to the mountains west of the
+Hudson, by reason of the wild-cats and panthers that ranged there, they
+obliterated the beautiful Indian Ontiora, "mountains of the sky." In one
+tradition of the red men these hills were bones of a monster that fed on
+human beings until the Great Spirit turned it into stone as it was
+floundering toward the ocean to bathe. The two lakes near the summit were
+its eyes. These peaks were the home of an Indian witch, who adjusted the
+weather for the Hudson Valley with the certainty of a signal service
+bureau. It was she who let out the day and night in blessed alternation,
+holding back the one when the other was at large, for fear of conflict.
+Old moons she cut into stars as soon as she had hung new ones in the sky,
+and she was often seen perched on Round Top and North Mountain, spinning
+clouds and flinging them to the winds. Woe betide the valley residents if
+they showed irreverence, for then the clouds were black and heavy, and
+through them she poured floods of rain and launched the lightnings,
+causing disastrous freshets in the streams and blasting the wigwams of
+the mockers. In a frolic humor she would take the form of a bear or deer
+and lead the Indian hunters anything but a merry dance, exposing them to
+tire and peril, and vanishing or assuming some terrible shape when they
+had overtaken her. Sometimes she would lead them to the cloves and would
+leap into the air with a mocking "Ho, ho!" just as they stopped with a
+shudder at the brink of an abyss. Garden Rock was a spot where she was
+often found, and at its foot a lake once spread. This was held in such
+awe that an Indian would never wittingly pursue his quarry there; but
+once a hunter lost his way and emerged from the forest at the edge of the
+pond. Seeing a number of gourds in crotches of the trees he took one, but
+fearing the spirit he turned to leave so quickly that he stumbled and it
+fell. As it broke, a spring welled from it in such volume that the
+unhappy man was gulfed in its waters, swept to the edge of Kaaterskill
+clove and dashed on the rocks two hundred and sixty feet below. Nor did
+the water ever cease to run, and in these times the stream born of the
+witch's revenge is known as Catskill Creek.
+
+
+
+
+THE REVENGE OF SHANDAKEN
+
+On the rock platform where the Catskill Mountain House now stands,
+commanding one of the fairest views in the world, old chief Shandaken set
+his wigwam,--for it is a mistake to suppose that barbarians are
+indifferent to beauty,--and there his daughter, Lotowana, was sought in
+marriage by his braves. She, however, kept faith to an early vow
+exchanged with a young chief of the Mohawks. A suitor who was
+particularly troublesome was Norsereddin, proud, morose, dark-featured, a
+stranger to the red man, a descendant, so he claimed, from Egyptian
+kings, and who lived by himself on Kaaterskill Creek, appearing among
+white settlements but rarely.
+
+On one of his visits to Catskill, a tavern-lounging Dutchman wagered him
+a thousand golden crowns that he could not win Lotowana, and, stung by
+avarice as well as inflamed by passion, Norsereddin laid new siege to her
+heart. Still the girl refused to listen, and Shandaken counselled him to
+be content with the smiles of others, thereby so angering the Egyptian
+that he assailed the chief and was driven from the camp with blows; but
+on the day of Lotowana's wedding with the Mohawk he returned, and in a
+honeyed speech asked leave to give a jewel to the bride to show that he
+had stifled jealousy and ill will. The girl took the handsome box he gave
+her and drew the cover, when a spring flew forward, driving into her hand
+the poisoned tooth of a snake that had been affixed to it. The venom was
+strong, and in a few minutes Lotowana lay dead at her husband's feet.
+
+Though the Egyptian had disappeared into the forest directly on the
+acceptance of his treacherous gift, twenty braves set off in pursuit, and
+overtaking him on the Kalkberg, they dragged him back to the rock where
+father and husband were bewailing the maid's untimely fate. A pile of
+fagots was heaped within a few feet of the precipice edge, and tying
+their captive on them, they applied the torch, dancing about with cries
+of exultation as the shrieks of the wretch echoed from the cliffs. The
+dead girl was buried by the mourning tribe, while the ashes of
+Norsereddin were left to be blown abroad. On the day of his revenge
+Shandaken left his ancient dwelling-place, and his camp-fires never
+glimmered afterward on the front of Ontiora.
+
+
+
+
+CONDEMNED TO THE NOOSE
+
+Ralph Sutherland, who, early in the last century, occupied a stone house
+a mile from Leeds, in the Catskills, was a man of morose and violent
+disposition, whose servant, a Scotch girl, was virtually a slave,
+inasmuch as she was bound to work for him without pay until she had
+refunded to him her passage-money to this country. Becoming weary of
+bondage and of the tempers of her master, the girl ran away. The man set
+off in a raging chase, and she had not gone far before Sutherland
+overtook her, tied her by the wrists to his horse's tail, and began the
+homeward journey. Afterward, he swore that the girl stumbled against the
+horse's legs, so frightening the animal that it rushed off madly,
+pitching him out of the saddle and dashing the servant to death on rocks
+and trees; yet, knowing how ugly-tempered he could be, his neighbors were
+better inclined to believe that he had driven the horse into a gallop,
+intending to drag the girl for a short distance, as a punishment, and to
+rein up before he had done serious mischief. On this supposition he was
+arrested, tried, and sentenced to die on the scaffold.
+
+The tricks of circumstantial evidence, together with pleas advanced by
+influential relatives of the prisoner, induced the court to delay
+sentence until the culprit should be ninety-nine years old, but it was
+ordered that, while released on his own recognizance, in the interim, he
+should keep a hangman's noose about his neck and show himself before the
+judges in Catskill once every year, to prove that he wore his badge of
+infamy and kept his crime in mind. This sentence he obeyed, and there
+were people living recently who claimed to remember him as he went about
+with a silken cord knotted at his throat. He was always alone, he seldom
+spoke, his rough, imperious manner had departed. Only when children asked
+him what the rope was for were his lips seen to quiver, and then he would
+hurry away. After dark his house was avoided, for gossips said that a
+shrieking woman passed it nightly, tied at the tail of a giant horse with
+fiery eyes and smoking nostrils; that a skeleton in a winding sheet had
+been found there; that a curious thing, somewhat like a woman, had been
+known to sit on his garden wall, with lights shining from her
+finger-tips, uttering unearthly laughter; and that domestic animals
+reproached the man by groaning and howling beneath his windows.
+
+These beliefs he knew, yet he neither grieved, nor scorned, nor answered
+when he was told of them. Years sped on. Every year deepened his reserve
+and loneliness, and some began to whisper that he would take his own way
+out of the world, though others answered that men who were born to be
+hanged would never be drowned; but a new republic was created; new laws
+were made; new judges sat to minister them; so, on Ralph Sutherland's
+ninety-ninth birthday anniversary, there were none who would accuse him
+or execute sentence. He lived yet another year, dying in 1801. But was it
+from habit, or was it in self-punishment and remorse, that he never took
+off the cord? for, when he drew his last breath, though it was in his own
+house, his throat was still encircled by the hangman's rope.
+
+
+
+
+BIG INDIAN
+
+Intermarriages between white people and red ones in this country were not
+uncommon in the days when our ancestors led as rude a life as the
+natives, and several places in the Catskills commemorate this fact. Mount
+Utsayantha, for example, is named for an Indian woman whose life, with
+that of her baby and her white husband, was lost there. For the white men
+early found friends among these mountains. As far back as 1663 they
+spared Catherine Dubois and her three children, after some rash spirits
+had abducted them and carried them to a place on the upper Walkill, to do
+them to death; for the captives raised a Huguenot hymn and the hearts of
+their captors were softened.
+
+In Esopus Valley lived Winnisook, whose height was seven feet, and who
+was known among the white settlers as "the big Indian." He loved a white
+girl of the neighborhood, one Gertrude Molyneux, and had asked for her
+hand; but while she was willing, the objections of her family were too
+strong to be overcome, and she was teased into marriage with Joseph
+Bundy, of her own race, instead. She liked the Indian all the better
+after that, however, because Bundy proved to be a bad fellow, and
+believing that she could be happier among barbarians than among a people
+that approved such marriages, she eloped with Winnisook. For a long time
+all trace of the runaway couple was lost, but one day the man having gone
+down to the plain to steal cattle, it was alleged, was discovered by some
+farmers who knew him, and who gave hot chase, coming up with him at the
+place now called Big Indian.
+
+Foremost in the chase was Bundy. As he came near to the enemy of his
+peace he exclaimed, "I think the best way to civilize that yellow serpent
+is to let daylight into his heart," and, drawing his rifle to his
+shoulder, he fired. Mortally wounded, yet instinctively seeking refuge,
+the giant staggered into the hollow of a pine-tree, where the farmers
+lost sight of him. There, however, he was found by Gertrude, bolt
+upright, yet dead. The unwedded widow brought her dusky children to the
+place and spent the remainder of her days near his grave. Until a few
+years ago the tree was still pointed out, but a railroad company has now
+covered it with an embankment.
+
+
+
+
+THE BAKER'S DOZEN
+
+Baas [Boss] Volckert Jan Pietersen Van Amsterdam kept a bake-shop in
+Albany, and lives in history as the man who invented New Year cakes and
+made gingerbread babies in the likeness of his own fat offspring. Good
+churchman though he was, the bane of his life was a fear of being
+bewitched, and perhaps it was to keep out evil spirits, who might make
+one last effort to gain the mastery over him, ere he turned the customary
+leaf with the incoming year, that he had primed himself with an extra
+glass of spirits on the last night of 1654. His sales had been brisk, and
+as he sat in his little shop, meditating comfortably on the gains he
+would make when his harmless rivals--the knikkerbakkers (bakers of
+marbles)--sent for their usual supply of olie-koeks and mince-pies on the
+morrow, he was startled by a sharp rap, and an ugly old woman entered.
+"Give me a dozen New Year's cookies!" she cried, in a shrill voice.
+
+"Vell, den, you needn' sbeak so loud. I aind teaf, den."
+
+"A dozen!" she screamed. "Give me a dozen. Here are only twelve."
+
+"Vell, den, dwalf is a dozen."
+
+"One more! I want a dozen."
+
+"Vell, den, if you vant anodder, go to de duyvil and ged it."
+
+Did the hag take him at his word? She left the shop, and from that time
+it seemed as if poor Volckert was bewitched, indeed, for his cakes were
+stolen; his bread was so light that it went up the chimney, when it was
+not so heavy that it fell through the oven; invisible hands plucked
+bricks from that same oven and pelted him until he was blue; his wife
+became deaf, his children went unkempt, and his trade went elsewhere.
+Thrice the old woman reappeared, and each time was sent anew to the
+devil; but at last, in despair, the baker called on Saint Nicolaus to
+come and advise him. His call was answered with startling quickness, for,
+almost while he was making it, the venerable patron of Dutch feasts stood
+before him. The good soul advised the trembling man to be more generous
+in his dealings with his fellows, and after a lecture on charity he
+vanished, when, lo! the old woman was there in his place.
+
+She repeated her demand for one more cake, and Volckert Jan Pietersen,
+etc., gave it, whereupon she exclaimed, "The spell is broken, and from
+this time a dozen is thirteen!" Taking from the counter a gingerbread
+effigy of Saint Nicolaus, she made the astonished Dutchman lay his hand
+upon it and swear to give more liberal measure in the future. So, until
+thirteen new States arose from the ruins of the colonies,--when the
+shrewd Yankees restored the original measure,--thirteen made a baker's
+dozen.
+
+
+
+
+THE DEVIL'S DANCE-CHAMBER.
+
+Most storied of our New World rivers is the Hudson. Historic scenes have
+been enacted on its shores, and Indian, Dutchman, Briton, and American
+have invested it with romance. It had its source, in the red man's fancy,
+in a spring of eternal youth; giants and spirits dwelt in its woods and
+hills, and before the river-Shatemuc, king of streams, the red men called
+it--had broken through the highlands, those mountains were a pent for
+spirits who had rebelled against the Manitou. After the waters had forced
+a passage to the sea these evil ones sought shelter in the glens and
+valleys that open to right and left along its course, but in time of
+tempest, when they hear Manitou riding down the ravine on wings of storm,
+dashing thunderbolts against the cliffs, it is the fear that he will
+recapture them and force them into lightless caverns to expiate their
+revolt, that sends them huddling among the rocks and makes the hills
+resound with roars and howls.
+
+At the Devil's Dance-Chamber, a slight plateau on the west bank, between
+Newburg and Crom Elbow, the red men performed semi-religious rites as a
+preface to their hunting and fishing trips or ventures on the war-path.
+They built a fire, painted themselves, and in that frenzy into which
+savages are so readily lashed, and that is so like to the action of mobs
+in trousers, they tumbled, leaped, danced, yelled, sang, grimaced, and
+gesticulated until the Manitou disclosed himself, either as a harmless
+animal or a beast of prey. If he came in the former shape the augury was
+favorable, but if he showed himself as a bear or panther, it was a
+warning of evil that they seldom dared to disregard.
+
+The crew of Hudson's ship, the Half Moon, having chanced on one of these
+orgies, were so impressed by the fantastic spectacle that they gave the
+name Duyvels Dans-Kamer to the spot. Years afterwards, when Stuyvesant
+ascended the river, his doughty retainers were horrified, on landing
+below the Dans-Kamer, to discover hundreds of painted figures frisking
+there in the fire-light. A few surmised that they were but a new
+generation of savages holding a powwow, but most of the sailors fancied
+that the assemblage was demoniac, and that the figures were spirits of
+bad Indians repeating a scalp-dance and revelling in the mysterious
+fire-water that they had brought down from the river source in jars and
+skins. The spot was at least once profaned with blood, for a young
+Dutchman and his wife, of Albany, were captured here by an angry Indian,
+and although the young man succeeded in stabbing his captor to death, he
+was burned alive on the rock by the friends of the Indian whose wrath he
+had provoked. The wife, after being kept in captivity for a time, was
+ransomed.
+
+
+
+
+THE CULPRIT FAY
+
+The wood-tick's drum convokes the elves at the noon of night on Cro' Nest
+top, and, clambering out of their flower-cup beds and hammocks of cobweb,
+they fly to the meeting, not to freak about the grass or banquet at the
+mushroom table, but to hear sentence passed on the fay who, forgetting
+his vestal vow, has loved an earthly maid. From his throne under a canopy
+of tulip petals, borne on pillars of shell, the king commands silence,
+and with severe eye but softened voice he tells the culprit that while he
+has scorned the royal decree he has saved himself from the extreme
+penalty, of imprisonment in walnut shells and cobweb dungeons, by loving
+a maid who is gentle and pure. So it shall be enough if he will go down
+to the Hudson and seize a drop from the bow of mist that a sturgeon
+leaves when he makes his leap; and after, to kindle his darkened
+flame-wood lamp at a meteor spark. The fairy bows, and without a word
+slowly descends the rocky steep, for his wing is soiled and has lost its
+power; but once at the river, he tugs amain at a mussel shell till he has
+it afloat; then, leaping in, he paddles out with a strong grass blade
+till he comes to the spot where the sturgeon swims, though the
+watersprites plague him and toss his boat, and the fish and the leeches
+bunt and drag; but, suddenly, the sturgeon shoots from the water, and ere
+the arch of mist that he tracks through the air has vanished, the sprite
+has caught a drop of the spray in a tiny blossom, and in this he washes
+clean his wings.
+
+The water-goblins torment him no longer. They push his boat to the shore,
+where, alighting, he kisses his hand, then, even as a bubble, he flies
+back to the mountain top, dons his acorn helmet, his corselet of
+bee-hide, his shield of lady-bug shell, and grasping his lance, tipped
+with wasp sting, he bestrides his fire-fly steed and off he goes like a
+flash. The world spreads out and then grows small, but he flies straight
+on. The ice-ghosts leer from the topmost clouds, and the mists surge
+round, but he shakes his lance and pipes his call, and at last he comes
+to the Milky Way, where the sky-sylphs lead him to their queen, who lies
+couched in a palace ceiled with stars, its dome held up by northern
+lights and the curtains made of the morning's flush. Her mantle is
+twilight purple, tied with threads of gold from the eastern dawn, and her
+face is as fair as the silver moon.
+
+She begs the fay to stay with her and taste forever the joys of heaven,
+but the knightly elf keeps down the beating of his heart, for he
+remembers a face on earth that is fairer than hers, and he begs to go.
+With a sigh she fits him a car of cloud, with the fire-fly steed chained
+on behind, and he hurries away to the northern sky whence the meteor
+comes, with roar and whirl, and as it passes it bursts to flame. He
+lights his lamp at a glowing spark, then wheels away to the fairy-land.
+His king and his brothers hail him stoutly, with song and shout, and
+feast and dance, and the revel is kept till the eastern sky has a ruddy
+streak. Then the cock crows shrill and the fays are gone.
+
+
+
+
+POKEPSIE
+
+The name of this town has forty-two spellings in old records, and with
+singular pertinacity in ill-doing, the inhabitants have fastened on it
+the longest and clumsiest of all. It comes from the Mohegan words
+Apo-keep-sink, meaning a safe, pleasant harbor. Harbor it might be for
+canoes, but for nothing bigger, for it was only the little cove that was
+so called between Call Rock and Adder Cliff,--the former indicating where
+settlers awaiting passage hailed the masters of vessels from its top, and
+the latter taking its name from the snakes that abounded there.
+
+Hither came a band of Delawares with Pequot captives, among them a young
+chief to whom had been offered not only life but leadership if he would
+renounce his tribe, receive the mark of the turtle on his breast, and
+become a Delaware. On his refusal, he was bound to a tree, and was about
+to undergo the torture, when a girl among the listeners sprang to his
+side. She, too, was a Pequot, but the turtle totem was on her bosom, and
+when she begged his life, because they had been betrothed, the captors
+paused to talk of it. She had chosen well the time to interfere, for a
+band of Hurons was approaching, and even as the talk went on their yell
+was heard in the wood. Instant measures for defence were taken, and in
+the fight that followed both chief and maiden were forgotten; but though
+she cut the cords that bound him, they were separated in the confusion,
+he disappearing, she falling captive to the Hurons, who, sated with
+blood, retired from the field. In the fantastic disguise of a wizard the
+young Pequot entered their camp soon after, and on being asked to try his
+enchantments for the cure of a young woman, he entered her tent, showing
+no surprise at finding her to be the maiden of his choice, who was
+suffering from nothing worse than nerves, due to the excitement of the
+battle. Left alone with his patient, he disclosed his identity, and
+planned a way of escape that proved effective on that very night, for,
+though pursued by the angry Hurons, the couple reached "safe harbor,"
+thence making a way to their own country in the east, where they were
+married.
+
+
+
+
+DUNDERBERG
+
+Dunderberg, "Thunder Mountain," at the southern gate of the Hudson
+Highlands, is a wooded eminence, chiefly populated by a crew of imps of
+stout circumference, whose leader, the Heer, is a bulbous goblin clad in
+the dress worn by Dutch colonists two centuries ago, and carrying a
+speaking-trumpet, through which he bawls his orders for the blowing of
+winds and the touching off of lightnings. These orders are given in Low
+Dutch, and are put into execution by the imps aforesaid, who troop into
+the air and tumble about in the mist, sometimes smiting the flag or
+topsail of a ship to ribbons, or laying the vessel over before the wind
+until she is in peril of going on beam ends. At one time a sloop passing
+the Dunderberg had nearly foundered, when the crew discovered the
+sugar-loaf hat of the Heer at the mast-head. None dared to climb for it,
+and it was not until she had driven past Pollopel's Island--the limit of
+the Heer's jurisdiction--that she righted. As she did so the little hat
+spun into the air like a top, creating a vortex that drew up the
+storm-clouds, and the sloop kept her way prosperously for the rest of the
+voyage. The captain had nailed a horse-shoe to the mast. The "Hat Rogue"
+of the Devil's Bridge in Switzerland must be a relative of this gamesome
+sprite, for his mischief is usually of a harmless sort; but, to be on the
+safe side, the Dutchmen who plied along the river lowered their peaks in
+homage to the keeper of the mountain, and for years this was a common
+practice. Mariners who paid this courtesy to the Heer of the Donder Berg
+were never molested by his imps, though skipper Ouselsticker, of
+Fishkill,--for all he had a parson on board,--was once beset by a heavy
+squall, and the goblin came out of the mist and sat astraddle of his
+bowsprit, seeming to guide his schooner straight toward the rocks. The
+dominie chanted the song of Saint Nicolaus, and the goblin, unable to
+endure either its spiritual potency or the worthy parson's singing, shot
+upward like a ball and rode off on the gale, carrying with him the
+nightcap of the parson's wife, which he hung on the weathercock of Esopus
+steeple, forty miles away.
+
+
+
+
+ANTHONY'S NOSE
+
+The Hudson Highlands are suggestively named Bear Mountain, Sugar Loaf,
+Cro' Nest, Storm King, called by the Dutch Boterberg, or Butter Hill,
+from its likeness to a pat of butter; Beacon Hill, where the fires blazed
+to tell the country that the Revolutionary war was over; Dunderberg,
+Mount Taurus, so called because a wild bull that had terrorized the
+Highlands was chased out of his haunts on this height, and was killed by
+falling from a cliff on an eminence to the northward, known, in
+consequence, as Breakneck Hill. These, with Anthony's Nose, are the
+principal points of interest in the lovely and impressive panorama that
+unfolds before the view as the boats fly onward.
+
+Concerning the last-named elevation, the aquiline promontory that abuts
+on the Hudson opposite Dunderberg, it takes title from no resemblance to
+the human feature, but is so named because Anthony Van Corlaer, the
+trumpeter, who afterwards left a reason for calling the upper boundary of
+Manhattan Island Spuyten Duyvil Creek, killed the first sturgeon ever
+eaten at the foot of this mountain. It happened in this wise: By
+assiduous devotion to keg and flagon Anthony had begotten a nose that was
+the wonder and admiration of all who knew it, for its size was
+prodigious; in color it rivalled the carbuncle, and it shone like
+polished copper. As Anthony was lounging over the quarter of Peter
+Stuyvesant's galley one summer morning this nose caught a ray from the
+sun and reflected it hissing into the water, where it killed a sturgeon
+that was rising beside the vessel. The fish was pulled aboard, eaten, and
+declared good, though the singed place savored of brimstone, and in
+commemoration of the event Stuyvesant dubbed the mountain that rose above
+his vessel Anthony's Nose.
+
+
+
+
+MOODUA CREEK
+
+Moodua is an evolution, through Murdy's and Moodna, from Murderer's
+Creek, its present inexpressive name having been given to it by N. P.
+Willis. One Murdock lived on its shore with his wife, two sons, and a
+daughter; and often in the evening Naoman, a warrior of a neighboring
+tribe, came to the cabin, caressed the children, and shared the woodman's
+hospitality. One day the little girl found in the forest an arrow wrapped
+in snake-skin and tipped with crow's feather; then the boy found a
+hatchet hanging by a hair from a bough above the door; then a glare of
+evil eyes was caught for an instant in a thicket. Naoman, when he came,
+was reserved and stern, finding voice only to warn the family to fly that
+night; so, when all was still, the threatened family made its way softly,
+but quickly, to the Hudson shore, and embarked for Fisher's Kill, across
+the river.
+
+The wind lagged and their boat drew heavily, and when, from the shade of
+Pollopel's Island, a canoe swept out, propelled by twelve men, the hearts
+of the people in the boat sank in despair. The wife was about to leap
+over, but Murdock drew her back; then, loading and firing as fast as
+possible, he laid six of his pursuers low; but the canoe was savagely
+urged forward, and in another minute every member of the family was a
+helpless captive. When the skiff had been dragged back, the prisoners
+were marched through the wood to an open spot where the principal members
+of the tribe sat in council.
+
+The sachem arose, twisted his hands in the woman's golden hair, bared his
+knife, and cried, "Tell us what Indian warned you and betrayed his tribe,
+or you shall see husband and children bleed before your eyes." The woman
+answered never a word, but after a little Naoman arose and said, "'Twas
+I;" then drew his blanket about him and knelt for execution. An axe cleft
+his skull. Drunk with the sight of blood, the Indians rushed upon the
+captives and slew them, one by one. The prisoners neither shrank nor
+cried for mercy, but met their end with hymns upon their lips, and,
+seeing that they could so meet death, one member of the band let fall his
+arm and straight became a Christian. The cabin was burned, the bodies
+flung into the stream, and the stain of blood was seen for many a year in
+Murderer's Creek.
+
+
+
+
+A TRAPPER'S GHASTLY VENGEANCE
+
+About a mile back from the Hudson, at Coxsackie, stood the cabin of Nick
+Wolsey, who, in the last century, was known to the river settlements as a
+hunter and trapper of correct aim, shrewdness, endurance, and taciturn
+habit. For many years he lived in this cabin alone, except for the
+company of his dog; but while visiting a camp of Indians in the
+wilderness he was struck with the engaging manner of one of the girls of
+the tribe; he repeated the visit; he found cause to go to the camp
+frequently; he made presents to the father of the maid, and at length won
+her consent to be his wife. The simple marriage ceremony of the tribe was
+performed, and Wolsey led Minamee to his home; but the wedding was
+interrupted in an almost tragic manner, for a surly fellow who had loved
+the girl, yet who never had found courage to declare himself, was wrought
+to such a jealous fury at the discovery of Wolsey's good fortune that he
+sprang at him with a knife, and would have despatched him on the spot had
+not the white man's faithful hound leaped at his throat and borne him to
+the ground.
+
+Wolsey disarmed the fellow and kicked and cuffed him to the edge of the
+wood, while the whole company shouted with laughter at this ignominious
+punishment, and approved it. A year or more passed. Wolsey and his Indian
+wife were happy in their free and simple life; happy, too, in their
+little babe. Wolsey was seldom absent from his cabin for any considerable
+length of time, and usually returned to it before the night set in. One
+evening he noticed that the grass and twigs were bent near his house by
+some passing foot that, with the keen eye of the woodman, he saw was not
+his wife's.
+
+"Some hunter," he said, "saw the house when he passed here, and as,
+belike, he never saw one before, he stopped to look in." For the trail
+led to his window, and diverged thence to the forest again. A few days
+later, as he was returning, he came on the footprints that were freshly
+made, and a shadow crossed his face. On nearing the door he stumbled on
+the body of his dog, lying rigid on the ground. "How did this happen,
+Minamee?" he cried, as he flung open the door. The wife answered, in a
+low voice, "O Hush! you'll wake the child."
+
+Nick Wolsey entered the cabin and stood as one turned to marble. Minamee,
+his wife, sat on the gold hearth, her face and hands cut and blackened,
+her dress torn, her eyes glassy, a meaningless smile on her lips. In her
+arms she pressed the body of her infant, its dress soaked with blood, and
+the head of the little creature lay on the floor beside her. She crooned
+softly over the cold clay as if hushing it to sleep, and when Wolsey at
+length found words, she only whispered, "Hush! you will wake him." The
+night went heavily on; day dawned, and the crooning became lower and
+lower; still, through all that day the bereft woman rocked to and fro
+upon the floor, and the agonized husband hung about her, trying in vain
+to give comfort, to bind her wounds, to get some explanation of the
+mystery that confronted him. The second night set in, and it was evident
+that it would be the last for Minamee. Her strength failed until she
+allowed herself to be placed on a couch of skins, while the body of her
+child was gently lifted from her arms. Then, for a few brief minutes, her
+reason was restored, and she found words to tell her husband how the
+Indian whose murderous attack he had thwarted at the wedding had come to
+the cabin, shot the dog that had rushed out to defend the place, beat the
+woman back from the door, tore the baby from its bed, slashed its head
+off with a knife, and, flinging the little body into her lap, departed
+with the words, "This is my revenge. I am satisfied." Before the sun was
+in the east again Minamee was with her baby.
+
+Wolsey sat for hours in the ruin of his happiness, his breathing alone
+proving that he was alive, and when at last he arose and went out of the
+house, there were neither tears nor outcry; he saddled his horse and rode
+off to the westward. At nightfall he came to the Indian village where he
+had won his wife, and relating to the assembled tribe what had happened,
+he demanded that the murderer be given up to him. His demand was readily
+granted, whereupon the white man advanced on the cowering wretch, who had
+confidently expected the protection of his people, and with the quick
+fling and jerk of a raw-hide rope bound his arms to his side. Then
+casting a noose about his neck and tying the end of it to his saddle-bow,
+he set off for the Hudson. All that night he rode, the Indian walking and
+running at the horse's heels, and next day he reached his cabin. Tying
+his prisoner to a tree, the trapper cut a quantity of young willows, from
+which he fashioned a large cradle-like receptacle; in this he placed the
+culprit, face upward, and tied so stoutly that he could not move a
+finger; then going into his house, he emerged with the body of Minamee,
+and laid it, face downward, on the wretch, who could not repress a groan
+of horror as the awful burden sank on his breast. Wolsey bound together
+the living and the dead, and with a swing of his powerful arms he flung
+them on his horse's back, securing them there with so many turns of rope
+that nothing could displace them. Now he began to lash his horse until
+the poor beast trembled with anger and pain, when, flinging off the
+halter, he gave it a final lash, and the animal plunged, foaming and
+snorting, into the wilderness. When it had vanished and the hoof-beats
+were no longer heard, Nick Wolsey took his rifle on his arm and left his
+home forever. And tradition says that the horse never stopped in its mad
+career, but that on still nights it can be heard sweeping through the
+woods along the Hudson and along the Mohawk like a whirlwind, and that as
+the sound goes by a smothered voice breaks out in cursing, in appeal,
+then in harsh and dreadful laughter.
+
+
+
+
+THE VANDERDECKEN OF TAPPAN ZEE
+
+It is Saturday night; the swell of the Hudson lazily heaves against the
+shores of Tappan Zee, the cliff above Tarrytown where the white lady
+cries on winter nights is pale in starlight, and crickets chirp in the
+boskage. It is so still that the lap of oars can be heard coming across
+the water at least a mile away. Some small boat, evidently, but of heavy
+build, for it takes a vigorous hand to propel it, and now there is a
+grinding of oars on thole-pins. Strange that it is not yet seen, for the
+sound is near. Look! Is that a shadow crossing that wrinkle of starlight
+in the water? The oars have stopped, and there is no wind to make that
+sound of a sigh.
+
+Ho, Rambout Van Dam! Is it you? Are you still expiating your oath to pull
+from Kakiat to Spuyten Duyvil before the dawn of Sabbath, if it takes you
+a month of Sundays? Better for you had you passed the night with your
+roistering friends at Kakiat, or started homeward earlier, for
+Sabbath-breaking is no sin now, and you, poor ghost, will find little
+sympathy for your plight. Grant that your month of Sundays, or your cycle
+of months of Sundays, be soon up, for it is sad to be reminded that we
+may be punished for offences many years forgotten. When the sun is high
+to-morrow a score of barges will vex the sea of Tappan, each crowded with
+men and maids from New Amsterdam, jigging to profane music and refreshing
+themselves with such liquors as you, Rambout, never even smelled--be
+thankful for that much. If your shade sits blinking at them from the
+wooded buttresses of the Palisades, you must repine, indeed, at the
+hardness of your fate.
+
+
+
+
+THE GALLOPING HESSIAN
+
+In the flower-gemmed cemetery of Tarrytown, where gentle Irving sleeps, a
+Hessian soldier was interred after sustaining misfortune in the loss of
+his head in one of the Revolutionary battles. For a long time after he
+was buried it was the habit of this gentleman to crawl from his grave at
+unseemly hours and gallop about the country, sending shivers through the
+frames of many worthy people, who shrank under their blankets when they
+heard the rush of hoofs along the unlighted roads.
+
+In later times there lived in Tarrytown--so named because of the tarrying
+habits of Dutch gossips on market days, though some hard-minded people
+insist that Tarwe-town means Wheat-towna gaunt schoolmaster, one Ichabod
+Crane, who cherished sweet sentiments for Katrina Van Tassell, the buxom
+daughter of a farmer, also a famous maker of pies and doughnuts. Ichabod
+had been calling late one evening, and, his way home being long,
+Katrina's father lent him a horse to make the journey; but even with this
+advantage the youth set out with misgivings, for he had to pass the
+graveyard.
+
+As it was near the hour when the Hessian was to ride, he whistled feebly
+to keep his courage up, but when he came to the dreaded spot the whistle
+died in a gasp, for he heard the tread of a horse. On looking around, his
+hair bristled and his heart came up like a plug in his throat to hinder
+his breathing, for he saw a headless horseman coming over the ridge
+behind him, blackly defined against the starry sky. Setting spurs to his
+nag with a hope of being first to reach Sleepy Hollow bridge, which the
+spectre never passed, the unhappy man made the best possible time in that
+direction, for his follower was surely overtaking him. Another minute and
+the bridge would be reached; but, to Ichabod's horror, the Hessian dashed
+alongside and, rising in his stirrups, flung his head full at the
+fugitive's back. With a squeal of fright the schoolmaster rolled into a
+mass of weeds by the wayside, and for some minutes he remained there,
+knowing and remembering nothing.
+
+Next morning farmer Van Tassell's horse was found grazing in a field near
+Sleepy Hollow, and a man who lived some miles southward reported that he
+had seen Mr. Crane striding as rapidly along the road to New York as his
+lean legs could take him, and wearing a pale and serious face as he kept
+his march. There were yellow stains on the back of his coat, and the man
+who restored the horse found a smashed pumpkin in the broken bushes
+beside the road. Ichabod never returned to Tarrytown, and when Brom
+Bones, a stout young ploughman and taphaunter, married Katrina, people
+made bold to say that he knew more about the galloping Hessian than any
+one else, though they believed that he never had reason to be jealous of
+Ichabod Crane.
+
+
+
+
+STORM SHIP OF THE HUDSON
+
+It was noised about New Amsterdam, two hundred years ago, that a round
+and bulky ship flying Dutch colors from her lofty quarter was careering
+up the harbor in the teeth of a north wind, through the swift waters of
+an ebbing tide, and making for the Hudson. A signal from the Battery to
+heave to and account for herself being disregarded, a cannon was trained
+upon her, and a ball went whistling through her cloudy and imponderable
+mass, for timbers she had none. Some of the sailor-folk talked of mirages
+that rose into the air of northern coasts and seas, but the wise ones put
+their fingers beside their noses and called to memory the Flying
+Dutchman, that wanderer of the seas whose captain, having sworn that he
+would round Cape Horn in spite of heaven and hell, has been beating to
+and fro along the bleak Fuegian coast and elsewhere for centuries, being
+allowed to land but once in seven years, when he can break the curse if
+he finds a girl who will love him. Perhaps Captain Vanderdecken found
+this maiden of his hopes in some Dutch settlement on the Hudson, or
+perhaps he expiated his rashness by prayer and penitence; howbeit, he
+never came down again, unless he slipped away to sea in snow or fog so
+dense that watchers and boatmen saw nothing of his passing. A few old
+settlers declared the vessel to be the Half Moon, and there were some who
+testified to seeing that identical ship with Hudson and his spectre crew
+on board making for the Catskills to hold carouse.
+
+This fleeting vision has been confounded with the storm ship that lurks
+about the foot of the Palisades and Point-no-Point, cruising through
+Tappan Zee at night when a gale is coming up. The Hudson is four miles
+wide at Tappan, and squalls have space enough to gather force; hence,
+when old skippers saw the misty form of a ship steal out from the shadows
+of the western hills, then fly like a gull from shore to shore, catching
+the moonlight on her topsails, but showing no lanterns, they made to
+windward and dropped anchor, unless their craft were stanch and their
+pilot's brains unvexed with liquor. On summer nights, when falls that
+curious silence which is ominous of tempest, the storm ship is not only
+seen spinning across the mirror surface of the river, but the voices of
+the crew are heard as they chant at the braces and halyards in words
+devoid of meaning to the listeners.
+
+
+
+
+WHY SPUYTEN DUYVIL IS SO NAMED
+
+The tide-water creek that forms the upper boundary of Manhattan Island is
+known to dwellers in tenements round about as "Spittin' Divvle." The
+proper name of it is Spuyten Duyvil, and this, in turn, is the
+compression of a celebrated boast by Anthony Van Corlaer. This
+redoubtable gentleman, famous for fat, long wind, and long whiskers, was
+trumpeter for the garrison at New Amsterdam, which his countrymen had
+just bought for twenty-four dollars, and he sounded the brass so sturdily
+that in the fight between the Dutch and Indians at the Dey Street peach
+orchard his blasts struck more terror into the red men's hearts than did
+the matchlocks of his comrades. William the Testy vowed that Anthony and
+his trumpet were garrison enough for all Manhattan Island, for he argued
+that no regiment of Yankees would approach near enough to be struck with
+lasting deafness, as must have happened if they came when Anthony was
+awake.
+
+Peter Stuyvesant-Peter the Headstrong--showed his appreciation of
+Anthony's worth by making him his esquire, and when he got news of an
+English expedition on its way to seize his unoffending colony, he at once
+ordered Anthony to rouse the villages along the Hudson with a trumpet
+call to war. The esquire took a hurried leave of six or eight ladies,
+each of whom delighted to believe that his affections were lavished on
+her alone, and bravely started northward, his trumpet hanging on one
+side, a stone bottle, much heavier, depending from the other. It was a
+stormy evening when he arrived at the upper end of the island, and there
+was no ferryman in sight, so, after fuming up and down the shore, he
+swallowed a mighty draught of Dutch courage,--for he was as accomplished
+a performer on the horn as on the trumpet,--and swore with ornate and
+voluminous oaths that he would swim the stream "in spite of the devil"
+[En spuyt den Duyvil].
+
+He plunged in, and had gone half-way across when the Evil One, not to be
+spited, appeared as a huge moss-bunker, vomiting boiling water and
+lashing a fiery tail. This dreadful fish seized Anthony by the leg; but
+the trumpeter was game, for, raising his instrument to his lips, he
+exhaled his last breath through it in a defiant blast that rang through
+the woods for miles and made the devil himself let go for a moment. Then
+he was dragged below, his nose shining through the water more and more
+faintly, until, at last, all sight of him was lost. The failure of his
+mission resulted in the downfall of the Dutch in America, for, soon
+after, the English won a bloodless victory, and St. George's cross
+flaunted from the ramparts where Anthony had so often saluted the setting
+sun. But it was years, even then, before he was hushed, for in stormy
+weather it was claimed that the shrill of his trumpet could be heard near
+the creek that he had named, sounding above the deeper roar of the blast.
+
+
+
+
+THE RAMAPO SALAMANDER
+
+A curious tale of the Rosicrucians runs to the effect that more than two
+centuries ago a band of German colonists entered the Ramapo valley and
+put up houses of stone, like those they had left in the Hartz Mountains,
+and when the Indians saw how they made knives and other wonderful things
+out of metal, which they extracted from the rocks by fire, they believed
+them to be manitous and went away, not wishing to resist their possession
+of the land. There was treasure here, for High Tor, or Torn Mountain, had
+been the home of Amasis, youngest of the magi who had followed the star
+of Bethlehem. He had found his way, through Asia and Alaska, to this
+country, had taken to wife a native woman, by whom he had a child, and
+here on the summit he had built a temple. Having refused the sun worship,
+when the Indians demanded that he should take their faith, he was set
+upon, and would have been killed had not an earthquake torn the ground at
+his feet, opening a new channel for the Hudson and precipitating into it
+every one but the magus and his daughter. To him had been revealed in
+magic vision the secrets of wealth in the rocks.
+
+The leader in the German colony, one Hugo, was a man of noble origin, who
+had a wife and two children: a boy, named after himself; a girl,--Mary.
+Though it had been the custom in the other country to let out the forge
+fires once in seven years, Hugo opposed that practice in the forge he had
+built as needless. But his men murmured and talked of the salamander that
+once in seven years attains its growth in unquenched flame and goes forth
+doing mischief. On the day when that period was ended the master entered
+his works and saw the men gazing into the furnace at a pale form that
+seemed made from flame, that was nodding and turning in the fire,
+occasionally darting its tongue at them or allowing its tail to fall out
+and lie along the stone floor. As he came to the door he, too, was
+transfixed, and the fire seemed burning his vitals, until he felt water
+sprinkled on his face, and saw that his wife, whom he had left at home
+too ill to move, stood behind him and was casting holy water into the
+furnace, speaking an incantation as she did so. At that moment a storm
+arose, and a rain fell that put out the fire; but as the last glow faded
+the lady fell dead.
+
+When her children were to be consecrated, seven years later, those who
+stood outside of the church during the ceremony saw a vivid flash, and
+the nurse turned from the boy in her fright. She took her hands from her
+eyes. The child was gone. Twice seven years had passed and the daughter
+remained unspotted by the world, for, on the night when her father had
+led her to the top of High Torn Mountain and shown her what Amasis had
+seen,--the earth spirits in their caves heaping jewels and offering to
+give them if Hugo would speak the word that binds the free to the earth
+forces and bars his future for a thousand years,--it was her prayer that
+brought him to his senses and made the scene below grow dim, though the
+baleful light of the salamander clinging to the rocks at the bottom of
+the cave sent a glow into the sky.
+
+Many nights after that the glow was seen on the height and Hugo was
+missing from his home, but for lack of a pure soul to stand as
+interpreter he failed to read the words that burned in the triangle on
+the salamander's back, and returned in rage and jealousy. A knightly man
+had of late appeared in the settlement, and between him and Mary a tender
+feeling had arisen, that, however, was unexpressed until, after saving
+her from the attack of a panther, he had allowed her to fall into his
+arms. She would willingly then have declared her love for him, but he
+placed her gently and regretfully from him and said, "When you slept I
+came to you and put a crown of gems on your head: that was because I was
+in the power of the earth spirit. Then I had power only over the element
+of fire, that either consumes or hardens to stone; but now water and life
+are mine. Behold! Wear these, for thou art worthy." And touching the
+tears that had fallen from her eyes, they turned into lilies in his
+hands, and he put them on her brow.
+
+"Shall we meet again?" asked the girl.
+
+"I do not know," said he. "I tread the darkness of the universe alone,
+and I peril my redemption by yielding to this love of earth. Thou art
+redeemed already, but I must make my way back to God through obedience
+tested in trial. Know that I am one of those that left heaven for love of
+man. We were of that subtle element which is flame, burning and glowing
+with love,--and when thy mother came to me with the power of purity to
+cast me out of the furnace, I lost my shape of fire and took that of a
+human being,--a child. I have been with thee often, and was rushing to
+annihilation, because I could not withstand the ordeal of the senses. Had
+I yielded, or found thee other than thou art, I should have become again
+an earth spirit. I have been led away by wish for power, such as I have
+in my grasp, and forgot the mission to the suffering. I became a wanderer
+over the earth until I reached this land, the land that you call new.
+Here was to be my last trial and here I am to pass the gate of fire."
+
+As he spoke voices arose from the settlement.
+
+"They are coming," said he. The stout form of Hugo was in advance. With a
+fierce oath he sprang on the young man. "He has ruined my household," he
+cried. "Fling him into the furnace!" The young man stood waiting, but his
+brow was serene. He was seized, and in a few moments had disappeared
+through the mouth of the burning pit. But Mary, looking up, saw a shape
+in robes of silvery light, and it drifted upward until it vanished in the
+darkness. The look of horror on her face died away, and a peace came to
+it that endured until the end.
+
+
+
+
+CHIEF CROTON
+
+Between the island of Manhattoes and the Catskills the Hudson shores were
+plagued with spooks, and even as late as the nineteenth century Hans
+Anderson, a man who tilled a farm back of Peekskill, was worried into his
+grave by the leaden-face likeness of a British spy whom he had hanged on
+General Putnam's orders. "Old Put" doubtless enjoyed immunity from this
+vexatious creature, because he was born with few nerves. A region
+especially afflicted was the confluence of the Croton and the Hudson, for
+the Kitchawan burying-ground was here, and the red people being disturbed
+by the tramping of white men over their graves, "the walking sachems of
+Teller's Point" were nightly to be met on their errands of protest.
+
+These Indians had built a palisade on Croton Point, and here they made
+their last stand against their enemies from the north. Throughout the
+fight old chief Croton stood on the wall with arrows showering around
+him, and directed the resistance with the utmost calm. Not until every
+one of his men was dead and the fort was going up in flame about him did
+he confess defeat. Then standing amid the charring timbers, he used his
+last breath in calling down the curse of the Great Spirit against the
+foe. As the victorious enemy rushed into the enclosure to secure the
+scalps of the dead he fell lifeless into the fire, and their jubilant
+yell was lost upon his ears. Yet, he could not rest nor bear to leave his
+ancient home, even after death, and often his form, in musing attitude,
+was seen moving through the woods. When a manor was built on the ruins of
+his fort, he appeared to the master of it, to urge him into the
+Continental army, and having seen this behest obeyed and laid a solemn
+injointure to keep the freedom of the land forever, he vanished, and
+never appeared again.
+
+
+
+
+THE RETREAT FROM MAHOPAC
+
+After the English had secured the city of New Amsterdam and had begun to
+extend their settlements along the Hudson, the Indians congregated in
+large numbers about Lake Mahopac, and rejected all overtures for the
+purchase of that region. In their resolution they were sustained by their
+young chief Omoyao, who refused to abandon on on any terms the country
+where his fathers had solong hunted, fished, and built their lodges. A
+half-breed, one Joliper, a member of this tribe, was secretly in the pay
+of the English, but the allurements and insinuations that he put forth on
+their behalf were as futile as the breathing of wind in the leaves. At
+last the white men grew angry. Have the land they would, by evil course
+if good ways were refused, and commissioning Joliper to act for them in a
+decisive manner, they guaranteed to supply him with forces if his
+negotiations fell through. This man never thought it needful to
+negotiate. He knew the temper of his tribe and he was too jealous of his
+chief to go to him for favors, because he loved Maya, the chosen one of
+Omoyao.
+
+At the door of Maya's tent he entreated her to go with him to the white
+settlements, and on her refusal he broke into angry threats, declaring,
+in the self-forgetfulness of passion, that he would kill her lover and
+lead the English against the tribe. Unknown to both Omoyao had overheard
+this interview, and he immediately sent runners to tell all warriors of
+his people to meet him at once on the island in the lake. Though the
+runners were cautioned to keep their errand secret, it is probable that
+Joliper suspected that the alarm had gone forth, and he resolved to
+strike at once; so he summoned his renegades, stole into camp next
+evening and made toward Maya's wigwam, intending to take her to a place
+of safety. Seeing the chief at the door, he shot an arrow at him, but the
+shaft went wide and slew the girl's father. Realizing, upon this assault,
+that he was outwitted and that his people were outnumbered, the chief
+called to Maya to meet him at the island, and plunged into the brush,
+after seeing that she had taken flight in an opposite direction. The
+vengeful Joliper was close behind him with his renegades, and the chief
+was captured; then, that he might not communicate with his people or
+delay the operations against them, it was resolved to put him to death.
+
+He was tied to a tree, the surrounding wood was set on fire, and he was
+abandoned to his fate, his enemies leaving him to destruction in their
+haste to reach the place of the council and slay or capture all who were
+there. Hardly were they out of hearing ere the plash of a paddle sounded
+through the roar of flame and Maya sprang upon the bank, cut her lover's
+bonds, and with him made toward the island, which they reached by a
+protected way before the assailants had arrived. They told the story of
+Joliper's cruelty and treason, and when his boats were seen coming in to
+shore they had eyes and hands only for Joliper. He was the first to land.
+Hardly had he touched the strand before he was surrounded by a frenzied
+crowd and had fallen bleeding from a hundred gashes.
+
+The Indians were overpowered after a brief and bloody resistance. They
+took safety in flight. Omoyao and Maya, climbing upon the rock above
+their "council chamber," found that while most of their people had
+escaped their own retreat was cut off, and that it would be impossible to
+reach any of the canoes. They preferred death to torture and captivity,
+so, hand in hand, they leaped together down the cliff, and the English
+claimed the land next day.
+
+
+
+
+NIAGARA
+
+The cataract of Niagara (properly pronounced Nee-ah-gah-rah), or
+Oniahgarah, is as fatal as it is fascinating, beautiful, sublime, and the
+casualties occurring there justify the tradition that "the Thundering
+Water asks two victims every year." It was reputed, before white men
+looked for the first time on these falls--and what thumping yarns they
+told about them!--that two lives were lost here annually, and this
+average has been kept up by men and women who fall into the flood through
+accident, recklessness or despair, while bloody battles have been fought
+on the shores, and vessels have been hurled over the brink, to be dashed
+to splinters on the rocks.
+
+The sound of the cataract was declared to be the voice of a mighty spirit
+that dwelt in the waters, and in former centuries the Indians offered to
+it a yearly sacrifice. This sacrifice was a maiden of the tribe, who was
+sent over in a white canoe, decorated with fruit and flowers, and the
+girls contended for this honor, for the brides of Manitou were objects of
+a special grace in the happy hunting-grounds. The last recorded sacrifice
+was in 1679, when Lelawala, the daughter of chief Eagle Eye, was chosen,
+in spite of the urgings and protests of the chevalier La Salle, who had
+been trying to restrain the people from their idolatries by an exposition
+of the Christian dogma. To his protests he received the unexpected
+answer, "Your words witness against you. Christ, you say, set us an
+example. We will follow it. Why should one death be great, while our
+sacrifice is horrible?" So the tribe gathered at the bank to watch the
+sailing of the white canoe. The chief watched the embarkation with the
+stoicism usual to the Indian when he is observed by others, but when the
+little bark swung out into the current his affection mastered him, and he
+leaped into his own canoe and tried to overtake his daughter. In a moment
+both were beyond the power of rescue. After their death they were changed
+into spirits of pure strength and goodness, and live in a crystal heaven
+so far beneath the fall that its roaring is a music to them: she, the
+maid of the mist; he, the ruler of the cataract. Another version of the
+legend makes a lover and his mistress the chief actors. Some years later
+a patriarch of the tribe and all his sons went over the fall when the
+white men had seized their lands, preferring death to flight or war.
+
+In about the year 200 the Stone Giants waded across the river below the
+falls on their northward march. These beings were descended from an
+ancient family, and being separated from their stock in the year 150 by
+the breaking of a vine bridge across the Mississippi, they left that
+region. Indian Pass, in the Adirondacks, bore the names of Otneyarheh,
+Stony Giants; Ganosgwah, Giants Clothed in Stone; and Dayohjegago, Place
+Where the Storm Clouds Fight the Great Serpent. Giants and serpents were
+held to be harmful inventions of the Evil Spirit, and the Lightning god,
+catching up clouds as he stood on the crags, broke them open, tore their
+lightnings out and hurled them against the monsters. These cannibals had
+almost exterminated the Iroquois, for they were of immense size and had
+made themselves almost invincible by rolling daily in the sand until
+their flesh was like stone. The Holder of the Heavens, viewing their evil
+actions from on high, came down disguised as one of their number--he used
+often to meditate on Manitou Rock, at the Whirlpool--and leading them to
+a valley near Onondaga, on pretence of guiding them to a fairer country,
+he stood on a hill above them and hurled rocks upon their heads until
+all, save one, who fled into the north, were dead. Yet, in the fulness of
+time, new children of the Stone Giants (mail-clad Europeans?) entered the
+region again and were destroyed by the Great Spirit,--oddly enough where
+the famous fraud known as the Cardiff giant was alleged to have been
+found. The Onondagas believed this statue to be one of their ancient
+foes.
+
+
+
+
+THE DEFORMED OF ZOAR
+
+The valley of Zoar, in western New York, is so surrounded by hills that
+its discoverers--a religious people, who gave it a name from Scripture
+said, "This is Zoar; it is impregnable. From her we will never go." And
+truly, for lack of roads, they found it so hard to get out, having got
+in, that they did not leave it. Among the early settlers here were people
+of a family named Wright, whose house became a sort of inn for the
+infrequent traveller, inasmuch as they were not troubled with piety, and
+had no scruples against the selling of drink and the playing of cards at
+late hours. A peddler passed through the valley on his way to Buffalo and
+stopped at the Wright house for a lodging, but before he went to bed he
+incautiously showed a number of golden trinkets from his pack and drew a
+considerable quantity of money out of his pocket when he paid the fee for
+his lodging. Hardly had he fallen asleep before his greedy hosts were in
+the room, searching for his money. Their lack of caution caused him to
+awake, and as he found them rifling his pockets and his pack he sprang up
+and showed fight.
+
+A blow sent him to the bottom of the stairs, where his attempt to escape
+was intercepted, and the family closed around him and bound his arms and
+legs. They showed him the money they had taken and asked where he had
+concealed the rest. He vowed that it was all he had. They insisted that
+he had more, and seizing a knife from the table the elder Wright slashed
+off one of his toes "to make him confess." No result came from this, and
+six toes were cut off,--three from each foot; then, in disgust, the
+unhappy peddler was knocked on the head and flung through a trap-door
+into a shallow cellar. Presently he arose and tried to draw himself out,
+but with hatchet and knife they chopped away his fingers and he fell
+back. Even the women shared in this work, and leaned forward to gaze into
+the cellar to see if he might yet be dead. While listening, they heard
+the man invoke the curse of heaven on them: he asked that they should
+wear the mark of crime even to the fourth generation, by coming into the
+world deformed and mutilated as he was then. And it was so. The next
+child born in that house had round, hoof-like feet, with only two toes,
+and hands that tapered from the wrist into a single long finger. And in
+time there were twenty people so deformed in the valley: The "crab-clawed
+Zoarites" they were called.
+
+
+
+
+HORSEHEADS
+
+The feeling recently created by an attempt to fasten the stupid names of
+Fairport or of North Elmira on the village in central New York that, off
+and on for fifty years, had been called Horseheads, caused an inquiry as
+to how that singular name chanced to be adopted for a settlement. In
+1779, when General Sullivan was retiring toward the base of his supplies
+after a destructive campaign against the Indians in Genesee County, he
+stopped near this place and rested his troops. The country was then rude,
+unbroken, and still beset with enemies, however, and when the march was
+resumed it was thought best to gain time over a part of the way by
+descending the Chemung River on rafts.
+
+As there were no appliances for building large floats, and the depth of
+the water was not known, the general ordered a destruction of all
+impedimenta that could be got rid of, and commanded that the poor and
+superfluous horses should be killed. His order was obeyed. As soon as the
+troops had gone, the wolves, that were then abundant, came forth and
+devoured the carcasses of the steeds, so that the clean-picked bones were
+strewn widely over the camp-ground. When the Indians ventured back into
+this region, some of them piled the skulls of the horses into heaps, and
+these curious monuments were found by white settlers who came into the
+valley some years later, and who named their village Horseheads, in
+commemoration of these relics. The Indians were especially loth to leave
+this region, for their tradition was that it had been the land of the
+Senecas from immemorial time, the tribe being descended from a couple
+that had a home on a hill near Horseheads.
+
+
+
+
+KAYUTA AND WANETA
+
+The Indians loved our lakes. They had eyes for their beauty, and to them
+they were abodes of gracious spirits. They used to say of Oneida Lake,
+that when the Great Spirit formed the world "his smile rested on its
+waters and Frenchman's Island rose to greet it; he laughed and Lotus
+Island came up to listen." So they built lodges on their shores and
+skimmed their waters in canoes. Much of their history relates to them,
+and this is a tale of the Senecas that was revived a few years ago by the
+discovery of a deer-skin near Lakes Waneta and Keuka, New York, on which
+some facts of the history were rudely drawn, for all Indians are artists.
+
+Waneta, daughter of a chief, had plighted her troth to Kayuta, a hunter
+of a neighboring tribe with which her people were at war. Their tryst was
+held at twilight on the farther shore of the lake from her village, and
+it was her gayety and happiness, after these meetings had taken place,
+that roused the suspicion and jealousy of Weutha, who had marked her for
+his bride against the time when he should have won her father's consent
+by some act of bravery. Shadowing the girl as she stole into the forest
+one evening, he saw her enter her canoe and row to a densely wooded spot;
+he heard a call like the note of a quail, then an answer; then Kayuta
+emerged on the shore, lifted the maiden from her little bark, and the
+twain sat down beside the water to listen to the lap of its waves and
+watch the stars come out.
+
+Hurrying back to camp, the spy reported that an enemy was near them, and
+although Waneta had regained her wigwam by another route before the
+company of warriors had reached the lake, Kayuta was seen, pursued, and
+only escaped with difficulty. Next evening, not knowing what had happened
+after her homeward departure on the previous night--for the braves deemed
+it best to keep the knowledge of their military operations from the
+women--the girl crept away to the lake again and rowed to the accustomed
+place, but while waiting for the quail call a twig dropped on the water
+beside her. With a quick instinct that civilization has spoiled she
+realized this to be a warning, and remaining perfectly still, she allowed
+her boat to drift toward shore, presently discovering that her lover was
+standing waist-deep in the water. In a whisper he told her that they were
+watched, and bade her row to a dead pine that towered at the foot of the
+lake, where he would soon meet her. At that instant an arrow grazed his
+side and flew quivering into the canoe.
+
+Pushing the boat on its course and telling her to hasten, Kayuta sprang
+ashore, sounded the warwhoop, and as Weutha rose into sight he clove his
+skull with a tomahawk. Two other braves now leaped forward, but, after a
+struggle, Kayuta left them dead or senseless, too. He would have stayed
+to tear their scalps off had he not heard his name uttered in a shriek of
+agony from the end of the lake, and, tired and bleeding though he was, he
+bounded along its margin like a deer, for the voice that he heard was
+Waneta's. He reached the blasted pine, gave one look, and sank to the
+earth. Presently other Indians came, who had heard the noise of fighting,
+and burst upon him with yells and brandished weapons, but something in
+his look restrained them from a close advance. His eyes were fixed on a
+string of beads that lay on the bottom of the lake, just off shore, and
+when the meaning of it came to them, the savages thought no more of
+killing, but moaned their grief; for Waneta, in stepping from her canoe
+to wade ashore, had been caught and swallowed by a quagmire. All night
+and all next day Kayuta sat there like a man of stone. Then, just as the
+hour fell when he was used to meet his love, his heart broke, and he
+joined her in the spiritland.
+
+
+
+
+THE DROP STAR
+
+A little maid of three years was missing from her home on the Genesee.
+She had gone to gather water-lilies and did not return. Her mother,
+almost crazed with grief, searched for days, weeks, months, before she
+could resign herself to the thought that her little one--Kayutah, the
+Drop Star, the Indians called her--had indeed been drowned. Years went
+by. The woman's home was secure against pillage, for it was no longer the
+one house of a white family in that region, and the Indians had retired
+farther and farther into the wilderness. One day a hunter came to the
+woman and said, "I have seen old Skenandoh,--the last of his tribe, thank
+God! who bade me say this to you: that the ice is broken, and he knows of
+a hill of snow where a red berry grows that shall be yours if you will
+claim it." When the meaning of this message came upon her the woman
+fainted, but on recovering speech she despatched her nephew to the hut of
+the aged chief and passed that night in prayer.
+
+The young man set off at sunset, and by hard riding, over dim trails,
+with only stars for light, he came in the gray of dawn to an upright
+timber, colored red and hung with scalps, that had been cut from white
+men's heads at the massacre of Wyoming. The place they still call Painted
+Post. Without drawing rein he sped along the hills that hem Lake Seneca,
+then, striking deeper into the wilds, he reached a smaller lake, and
+almost fell from his saddle before a rude tent near the shore. A new
+grave had been dug close by, and he shuddered to think that perhaps he
+had come too late, but a wrinkled Indian stepped forth at that moment and
+waited his word.
+
+"I come," cried the youth,--"to see the berry that springs from snow."
+
+"You come in time," answered Skenandoh. "No, 'tis not in that grave. It
+is my own child that is buried there. She was as a sister to the one you
+seek, and she bade me restore the Drop Star to her mother,--the squaw
+that we know as the New Moon's Light."
+
+Stepping into the wigwam, he emerged again, clasping the wrist of a girl
+of eighteen, whose robe he tore asunder at the throat, showing the white
+breast, and on it a red birth-mark; then, leading her to the young man,
+he said,--"And now I must go to the setting sun." He slung a pouch about
+him, loaded, not with arms and food, but stones, stepped into his canoe,
+and paddled out upon the water, singing as he went a melancholy
+chant--his deathsong. On gaining the middle of the lake he swung his
+tomahawk and clove the bottom of the frail boat, so that it filled in a
+moment and the chief sank from sight. The young man took his cousin to
+her overjoyed mother, helped to win her back to the ways of civilized
+life, and eventually married her. She took her Christian name again, but
+left to the lake on whose banks she had lived so long her Indian name of
+Drop Star--Kayutah.
+
+
+
+
+THE PROPHET OF PALMYRA
+
+It was at Palmyra, New York, that the principles of Mormonism were first
+enunciated by Joseph Smith, who claimed to have found the golden plates
+of the Book of Mormon in a hill-side in neighboring Manchester,--the
+"Hill of Cumorah,"--to which he was led by angels. The plates were
+written in characters similar to the masonic cabala, and he translated
+them by divine aid, giving to the world the result of his discovery. The
+Hebrew prophet Mormon was the alleged author of the record, and his son
+Moroni buried it. The basis of Mormonism was, however, an unpublished
+novel, called "The Manuscript Found," that was read to Sidney Rigdon
+(afterwards a Mormon elder) by its author, a clergyman, and that
+formulated a creed for a hypothetical church. Smith had a slight local
+celebrity, for he and his father were operators with the divining-rod,
+and when he appropriated this creed a harmless and beneficent one, for
+polygamy was a later "inspiration" of Brigham Young--and began to preach
+it, in 1844, it gained many converts. His arrogation of the presidency of
+the "Church of Latter Day Saints" and other rash performances won for him
+the enmity of the Gentiles, who imprisoned and killed him at Carthage,
+Missouri, leaving Brigham Young to lead the people across the deserts to
+Salt Lake, where they prospered through thrift and industry.
+
+It was claimed that in the van of this army, on the march to Utah, was
+often seen a venerable man with silver beard, who never spoke, but who
+would point the way whenever the pilgrims were faint or discouraged. When
+they reached the spot where the temple was afterwards built, he struck
+his staff into the earth and vanished.
+
+At Hydesville, near Palmyra, spiritualism, as it is commonly called, came
+into being on March 31, 1849, when certain of the departed announced
+themselves by thumping on doors and tables in the house of the Fox
+family, the survivors of which confessed the fraud nearly forty years
+after. It is of interest to note that the ground whence these new
+religions sprang was peopled by the Onondagas, the sacerdotal class of
+the Algonquin tribe, who have preserved the ancient religious rites of
+that great family until this day.
+
+
+
+
+A VILLAIN'S CREMATION
+
+Bramley's Mountain, near the present village of Bloomfield, New York, on
+the edge of the Catskill group, was the home of a young couple that had
+married with rejoicing and had taken up the duties and pleasures of
+housekeeping with enthusiasm. To be sure, in those days housekeeping was
+not a thing to be much afraid of, and the servant question had not come
+up for discussion. The housewives did the work themselves, and the
+husband had no valets. The domicile of this particular pair was merely a
+tent of skins stretched around a frame of poles, and their furniture
+consisted principally of furs strewn over the earth floor; but they loved
+each other truly. The girl was thankful to be taken from her home to
+live, because, up to the time of her marriage, she had been persecuted by
+a morose and ill-looking fellow of her tribe, who laid siege to her
+affection with such vehemence that the more he pleaded the greater was
+her dislike; and now she hoped that she had seen the last of him. But
+that was not to be. He lurked about the wigwam of the pair, torturing
+himself with the sight of their felicity, and awaiting his chance to
+prove his hate. This chance came when the husband had gone to Lake
+Delaware to fish, for he rowed after and gave battle in the middle of the
+pond. Taken by surprise, and being insufficiently armed, the husband was
+killed and his body flung into the water. Then, casting an affectionate
+leer at the wife who had watched this act of treachery and malice with
+speechless horror from the mountain-side, he drove his canoe ashore and
+set off in pursuit of her. She retreated so slowly as to allow him to
+keep her in sight, and when she entered a cave he pressed forward
+eagerly, believing that now her escape was impossible; but she had
+purposely trapped him there, for she had already explored a tortuous
+passage that led to the upper air, and by this she had left the cavern in
+safety while he was groping and calling in the dark. Returning to the
+entrance, she loosened, by a jar, a ledge that overhung it, so that the
+door was almost blocked; then, gathering light wood from the dry trees
+around her, she made a fire and hurled the burning sticks into the prison
+where the wretch was howling, until he was dead in smoke and flame. When
+his yells and curses had been silenced she told a friend what she had
+done, then going back to the lake, she sang her death-song and cast
+herself into the water, hoping thus to rejoin her husband.
+
+
+
+
+THE MONSTER MOSQUITOE
+
+They have some pretty big mosquitoes in New Jersey and on Long Island,
+but, if report of their ancestry is true, they have degenerated in size
+and voracity; for the grandfather of all mosquitoes used to live in the
+neighborhood of Fort Onondaga, New York, and sallying out whenever he was
+hungry, would eat an Indian or two and pick his teeth with their ribs.
+The red men had no arms that could prevail against it, but at last the
+Holder of the Heavens, hearing their cry for aid, came down and attacked
+the insect. Finding that it had met its match, the mosquito flew away so
+rapidly that its assailant could hardly keep it in sight. It flew around
+the great lake, then turned eastward again. It sought help vainly of the
+witches that brooded in the sink-holes, or Green Lakes (near Janesville,
+New York), and had reached the salt lake of Onondaga when its pursuer
+came up and killed it, the creature piling the sand into hills in its
+dying struggles.
+
+As its blood poured upon the earth it became small mosquitoes, that
+gathered about the Holder of the Heavens and stung him so sorely that he
+half repented the service that he had done to men. The Tuscaroras say
+that this was one of two monsters that stood on opposite banks of the
+Seneca River and slew all men that passed. Hiawatha killed the other one.
+On their reservation is a stone, marked by the form of the Sky Holder,
+that shows where he rested during the chase, while his tracks were until
+lately seen south of Syracuse, alternating with footprints of the
+mosquito, which were shaped like those of a bird, and twenty inches long.
+At Brighton, New York, where these marks appeared, they were
+reverentially renewed by the Indians for many years.
+
+
+
+
+THE GREEN PICTURE
+
+In a cellar in Green Street, Schenectady, there appeared, some years ago,
+the silhouette of a human form, painted on the floor in mould. It was
+swept and scrubbed away, but presently it was there again, and month by
+month, after each removal, it returned: a mass of fluffy mould, always in
+the shape of a recumbent man. When it was found that the house stood on
+the site of the old Dutch burial ground, the gossips fitted this and that
+together and concluded that the mould was planted by a spirit whose
+mortal part was put to rest a century and more ago, on the spot covered
+by the house, and that the spirit took this way of apprising people that
+they were trespassing on its grave. Others held that foul play had been
+done, and that a corpse, hastily and shallowly buried, was yielding
+itself back to the damp cellar in vegetable form, before its resolution
+into simpler elements. But a darker meaning was that it was the outline
+of a vampire that vainly strove to leave its grave, and could not because
+a virtuous spell had been worked about the place.
+
+A vampire is a dead man who walks about seeking for those whose blood he
+can suck, for only by supplying new life to its cold limbs can he keep
+the privilege of moving about the earth. He fights his way from his
+coffin, and those who meet his gray and stiffened shape, with fishy eyes
+and blackened mouth, lurking by open windows, biding his time to steal in
+and drink up a human life, fly from him in terror and disgust. In
+northern Rhode Island those who die of consumption are believed to be
+victims of vampires who work by charm, draining the blood by slow
+draughts as they lie in their graves. To lay this monster he must be
+taken up and burned; at least, his heart must be; and he must be
+disinterred in the daytime when he is asleep and unaware. If he died with
+blood in his heart he has this power of nightly resurrection. As late as
+1892 the ceremony of heart-burning was performed at Exeter, Rhode Island,
+to save the family of a dead woman that was threatened with the same
+disease that removed her, namely, consumption. But the Schenectady
+vampire has yielded up all his substance, and the green picture is no
+more.
+
+
+
+
+THE NUNS OF CARTHAGE
+
+At Carthage, New York, where the Black River bends gracefully about a
+point, there was a stanch old house, built in the colonial fashion and
+designed for the occupancy of some family of hospitality and wealth, but
+the family died out or moved away, and for some years it remained
+deserted. During the war of 1812 the village gossips were excited by the
+appearance of carpenters, painters and upholsterers, and it was evident
+that the place was to be restored to its manorial dignities; but their
+curiosity was deepened instead of satisfied when, after the house had
+been put in order and high walls built around it, the occupants presented
+themselves as four young women in the garb of nuns. Were they daughters
+of the family? Were they English sympathizers in disguise, seeking asylum
+in the days of trouble? Had they registered a vow of celibacy until their
+lovers should return from the war? Were they on a secret and diplomatic
+errand? None ever knew, at least in Carthage. The nuns lived in great
+privacy, but in a luxury before unequalled in that part of the country.
+They kept a gardener, they received from New York wines and delicacies
+that others could not afford, and when they took the air, still veiled,
+it was behind a splendid pair of bays.
+
+One afternoon, just after the close of the war, a couple of young
+American officers went to the convent, and, contrary to all precedent,
+were admitted. They remained within all that day, and no one saw them
+leave, but a sound of wheels passed through the street that evening. Next
+day there were no signs of life about the place, nor the day following,
+nor the next. The savage dog was quiet and the garden walks had gone
+unswept. Some neighbors climbed over the wall and reported that the place
+had been deserted. Why and by whom no one ever knew, but a cloud remained
+upon its title until a recent day, for it was thought that at some time
+the nuns might return.
+
+
+
+
+THE SKULL IN THE WALL
+
+A skull is built into the wall above the door of the court-house at
+Goshen, New York. It was taken from a coffin unearthed in 1842, when the
+foundation of the building was laid. People said there was no doubt about
+it, only Claudius Smith could have worn that skull, and he deserved to be
+publicly pilloried in that manner. Before the Revolutionary war Smith was
+a farmer in Monroe, New York, and being prosperous enough to feel the
+king's taxes no burden, to say nothing of his jealousy of the advantage
+that an independent government would be to the hopes of his poorer
+neighbors, he declared for the king. After the declaration of
+independence had been published, his sympathies were illustrated in an
+unpleasantly practical manner by gathering a troop of other Tories about
+him, and, emboldened by the absence of most of the men of his vicinage in
+the colonial army, he began to harass the country as grievously in foray
+as the red-coats were doing in open field.
+
+He pillaged houses and barns, then burned them; he insulted women, he
+drove away cattle and horses, he killed several persons who had
+undertaken to defend their property. His "campaigns" were managed with
+such secrecy that nobody knew when or whence to look for him. His murder
+of Major Nathaniel Strong, of Blooming Grove, roused indignation to such
+a point that a united effort was made to catch him, a money reward for
+success acting as a stimulus to the vigilance of the hunters, and at last
+he was captured on Long Island. He was sent back to Goshen, tried,
+convicted, and on January 22, 1779, was hanged, with five of his band.
+The bodies of the culprits were buried in the jail-yard, on the spot
+where the court-house stands, and old residents identified Smith's
+skeleton, when it was accidentally exhumed, by its uncommon size. A
+farmer from an adjacent town made off with a thigh bone, and a mason
+clapped mortar into the empty skull and cemented it into the wall, where
+it long remained.
+
+
+
+
+THE HAUNTED MILL
+
+Among the settlers in the Adirondacks, forty or fifty years ago, was
+Henry Clymer, from Brooklyn, who went up to Little Black Creek and tried
+to make a farm out of the gnarly, stumpy land; but being a green hand at
+that sort of thing, he soon gave it up and put up the place near
+Northwood, that is locally referred to as the haunted mill. When the
+first slab was cut, a big party was on hand to cheer and eat pie in honor
+of the Clymers, for Mr. Clymer, who was a dark, hearty, handsome fellow,
+and his bright young wife had been liberal in their hospitality. The
+couple had made some talk, they were so loving before folks--too loving
+to last; and, besides, it was evident that Mrs. Clymer was used to a
+better station in life than her husband. It was while the crowd was
+laughing and chattering at the picnic-table of new boards from the mill
+that Mrs. Clymer stole away to her modest little house, and a neighbor
+who had followed her was an accidental witness to a singular episode.
+Mrs. Clymer was kneeling beside her bed, crying over the picture of a
+child, when Clymer entered unexpectedly and attempted to take the picture
+from her.
+
+She faced him defiantly. "You kept that because it looked like him, I
+reckon," he said. "You might run back to him. You know what he'd call you
+and where you'd stand with your aristocracy."
+
+The woman pointed to the door, and the man left without another word, and
+so did the listener. Next morning the body of Mrs. Clymer was found
+hanging to a beam in the mill. At the inquest the husband owned that he
+had "had a few words" with her on the previous day, and thought that she
+must have suddenly become insane. The jury took this view. News of the
+suicide was printed in some of the city papers, and soon after that the
+gossips had another sensation, for a fair-haired man, also from Brooklyn,
+arrived at the place and asked where the woman was buried. When he found
+the grave he sat beside it for some time, his head resting on his hand;
+then he inquired for Clymer, but Clymer, deadly pale, had gone into the
+woods as soon as he heard that a stranger had arrived. The new-comer went
+to Trenton, where he ordered a gravestone bearing the single word
+"Estella" to be placed where the woman's body had been interred. Clymer
+quickly sold out and disappeared. The mill never prospered, and has long
+been in a ruinous condition. People of the neighborhood think that the
+ghost of Mrs. Clymer--was that her name?--still troubles it, and they
+pass the place with quickened steps.
+
+
+
+
+OLD INDIAN FACE
+
+On Lower Ausable Pond is a large, ruddy rock showing a huge profile, with
+another, resembling a pappoose, below it. When the Tahawi ruled this
+region their sachem lived here at "the Dark Cup," as they called this
+lake, a man renowned for virtue and remarkable, in his age, for
+gentleness. When his children had died and his manly grandson, who was
+the old man's hope, had followed them to the land of the cloud mountains,
+Adota's heart withered within him, and standing beneath this rock, he
+addressed his people, recounting what he had done for them, how he had
+swept their enemies from the Lakes of the Clustered Stars (the Lower
+Saranac) and Silver Sky (Upper Saranac) to the Lake of Wandah, gaining a
+land where they might hunt and fish in peace. The little one, the Star,
+had been ravished away to crown the brow of the thunder god, who, even
+now, was advancing across the peaks, bending the woods and lighting the
+valleys with his jagged torches.
+
+Life was nothing to him longer; he resigned it.
+
+As he spoke these words he fell back, and the breath passed out of him.
+Then came the thunder god, and with an appalling burst of fire sent the
+people cowering. The roar that followed seemed to shake the earth, but
+the medicine-man of the tribe stood still, listening to the speech of the
+god in the clouds. "Tribe of the Tahawi," he translated, "Adota treads
+the star-path to the happy hunting-grounds, and the sun is shining on his
+heart. He will never walk among you again, but the god loves both him and
+you, and he will set his face on the mountains. Look!" And, raising their
+eyes, they beheld the likeness of Adota and of his beloved child, the
+Star, graven by lightning-stroke on the cliff. There they buried the body
+of Adota and held their solemn festivals until the white men drove them
+out of the country.
+
+
+
+
+THE DIVISION OF THE SARANACS
+
+In the middle of the last century a large body of Saranac Indians
+occupied the forests of the Upper Saranac through which ran the Indian
+carrying-place, called by them the Eagle Nest Trail. Whenever they raided
+the Tahawi on the slopes of Mount Tahawus (Sky-splitter), there was a
+pleasing rivalry between two young athletes, called the Wolf and the
+Eagle, as to which would carry off the more scalps, and the tribe was
+divided in admiration of them. There was one who did not share this
+liking: an old sachem, one of the wizards who had escaped when the Great
+Spirit locked these workers of evil in the hollow trees that stood beside
+the trail. In their struggles to escape the less fortunate ones thrust
+their arms through the closing bark, and they are seen there, as withered
+trunks and branches, to this day. Oquarah had not been softened by this
+exhibition of danger nor the qualification of mercy that allowed him
+still to exist. Rather he was more bitter when he saw, as he fancied,
+that the tribe thought more of the daring and powerful warriors than it
+did of the bent and malignant-minded counsellor.
+
+It was in the moon of green leaves that the two young men set off to hunt
+the moose, and on the next day the Wolf returned alone. He explained that
+in the hunt they had been separated; he had called for hours for his
+friend, and had searched so long that he concluded he must have returned
+ahead of him. But he was not at the camp. Up rose the sachem with visage
+dark. "I hear a forked tongue," he cried. "The Wolf was jealous of the
+Eagle and his teeth have cut into his heart."
+
+"The Wolf cannot lie," answered the young man.
+
+"Where is the Eagle?" angrily shouted the sachem, clutching his hatchet.
+
+"The Wolf has said," replied the other.
+
+The old sachem advanced upon him, but as he raised his axe to strike, the
+wife of the Wolf threw herself before her husband, and the steel sank
+into her brain. The sachem fell an instant later with the Wolf's knife in
+his heart, and instantly the camp was in turmoil. Before the day had
+passed it had been broken up, and the people were divided into factions,
+for it was no longer possible to hold it together in peace. The Wolf,
+with half of the people, went down the Sounding River to new
+hunting-grounds, and the earth that separated the families was reddened
+whenever one side met the other.
+
+Years had passed when, one morning, the upper tribe saw a canoe advancing
+across the Lake of the Silver Sky. An old man stepped from it: he was the
+Eagle. After the Wolf had left him he had fallen into a cleft in a rock,
+and had lain helpless until found by hunters who were on their way to
+Canada. He had joined the British against the French, had married a
+northern squaw, but had returned to die among the people of his early
+love. Deep was his sorrow that his friend should have been accused of
+doing him an injury, and that the once happy tribe should have been
+divided by that allegation. The warriors and sachems of both branches
+were summoned to a council, and in his presence they swore a peace, so
+that in the fulness of time he was able to die content. That peace was
+always kept.
+
+
+
+
+AN EVENT IN INDIAN PARK
+
+It was during the years when the Saranacs were divided that Howling Wind,
+one of the young men of Indian Carry, saw and fell in love with a girl of
+the family on Tupper Lake. He quickly found a way to tell his liking, and
+the couple met often in the woods and on the shore. He made bold to row
+her around the quieter bays, and one moonlight evening he took her to
+Devil's Rock, or Devil's Pulpit, where he told her the story of the
+place. This was to the effect that the fiend had paddled, on timbers, by
+means of his tail, to that rock, and had assembled fish and game about
+him in large numbers by telling them that he was going to preach to them,
+instead of which moral procedure he pounced upon and ate all that were
+within his grasp.
+
+As so often happened in Indian history, the return of these lovers was
+seen by a disappointed rival, who had hurried back to camp and secured
+the aid of half a dozen men to arrest the favored one as soon as he
+should land. The capture was made after a struggle, and Howling Wind was
+dragged to the chief's tent for sentence. That sentence was death, and
+with a refinement of cruelty that was rare even among the Indians, the
+girl was ordered to execute it. She begged and wept to no avail. An axe
+was put into her hands, and she was ordered to despatch the prisoner. She
+took the weapon; her face grew stern and the tears dried on her cheeks;
+her lover, bound to a tree, gazed at her in amazement; his rival watched,
+almost in glee. Slowly the girl crossed the open space to her lover. She
+raised the tomahawk and at a blow severed the thongs that held him, then,
+like a flash, she leaped upon his rival, who had sprung forward to
+interfere, and clove his skull with a single stroke. The lovers fled as
+only those can fly who run for life. Happily for them, they met a party
+from the Carry coming to rescue Howling Wind from the danger to which his
+courtship had exposed him, and it was even said that this party entered
+the village and by presenting knives and arrows at the breast of the
+chief obtained his now superfluous consent to the union of the fugitives.
+The pair reached the Carry in safety and lived a long and happy life
+together.
+
+
+
+
+THE INDIAN PLUME
+
+Brightest flower that grows beside the brooks is the scarlet blossom of
+the Indian plume: the blood of Lenawee. Hundreds of years ago she lived
+happily among her brother and sister Saranacs beside Stony Creek, the
+Stream of the Snake, and was soon to marry the comely youth who, for the
+speed of his foot, was called the Arrow. But one summer the Quick Death
+came on the people, and as the viewless devil stalked through the village
+young and old fell before him. The Arrow was the first to die. In vain
+the Prophet smoked the Great Calumet: its smoke ascending took no shape
+that he could read. In vain was the white dog killed to take aloft the
+people's sins. But at last the Great Spirit himself came down to the
+mountain called the Storm Darer, splendid in lightning, awful in his
+thunder voice and robe of cloud. "My wrath is against you for your sins,"
+he cried, "and naught but human blood will appease it."
+
+In the morning the Prophet told his message, and all sat silent for a
+time. Then Lenawee entered the circle. "Lenawee is a blighted flower,"
+she sobbed. "Let her blood flow for her people." And catching a knife
+from the Prophet's belt, she ran with it to the stream on which she and
+the Arrow had so often floated in their canoe. In another moment her
+blood had bedewed the earth. "Lay me with the Arrow," she murmured, and,
+smiling in their sad faces, breathed her last. The demon of the quick
+death shrank from the spot, and the Great Spirit smiled once more on the
+tribe that could produce such heroism. Lenawee's body was placed beside
+her lover's, and next morning, where her blood had spilt, the ground was
+pure, and on it grew in slender spires a new flower,--the Indian plume:
+the transformed blood of sacrifice. The people loved that flower in all
+years after. They decked their hair and dresses with it and made a feast
+in its honor. When parents taught their children the beauty of
+unselfishness they used as its emblem a stalk of Indian plume.
+
+
+
+
+BIRTH OF THE WATER-LILY
+
+Back from his war against the Tahawi comes the Sun, chief of the Lower
+Saranacs,--back to the Lake of the Clustered Stars, afterward called, by
+dullards, Tupper's Lake. Tall and invincible he comes among his people,
+boasting of his victories, Indian fashion, and stirring the scalps that
+hang at his breast. "The Eagle screams," he cries. "He greets the chief,
+the Blazing Sun. Wayotah has made the Tahawi tremble. They fly from him.
+Hooh, hooh! He is the chief." Standing apart with wistful glance stands
+Oseetah, the Bird. She loves the strong young chief, but she knows that
+another has his promise, and she dares not hope; yet the chief loves her,
+and when the feasting is over he follows her footprints to the shore,
+where he sees her canoe turning the point of an island. He silently
+pursues and comes upon her as she sits waving and moaning. He tries to
+embrace her, but she draws apart. He asks her to sing to him; she bids
+him begone.
+
+He takes a more imperious tone and orders her to listen to her chief. She
+moves away. He darts toward her. Turning on him a face of sorrow, she
+runs to the edge of a steep rock and waves him back. He hastens after.
+Then she springs and disappears in the deep water. The Sun plunges after
+her and swims with mad strength here and there. He calls. There is no
+answer. Slowly he returns to the village and tells the people what has
+happened. The Bird's parents are stricken and the Sun moans in his sleep.
+At noon a hunter comes in with strange tidings: flowers are growing on
+the water! The people go to their canoes and row to the Island of Elms.
+There, in a cove, the still water is enamelled with flowers, some as
+white as snow, filling the air with perfume, others strong and yellow,
+like the lake at sunset.
+
+"Explain to us," they cry, turning to the old Medicine of his tribe, "for
+this was not so yesterday."
+
+"It is our daughter," he answered. "These flowers are the form she
+takes. The white is her purity, the yellow her love. You shall see that
+her heart will close when the sun sets, and will reopen at his coming."
+And the young chief went apart and bowed his head.
+
+
+
+
+ROGERS'S SLIDE
+
+The shores of Lakes George and Champlain were ravaged by war. Up and down
+those lovely waters swept the barges of French and English, and the green
+hills rang to the shrill of bugles, the boom of cannon, and the yell of
+savages. Fiction and history have been weft across the woods and the
+memory of deeds still echoes among the heights. It was at Glen's Falls,
+in the cave on the rock in the middle of the river, that the brave Uncas
+held the watch with Hawkeye. Bloody Defile and Bloody Pond, between there
+and Lake George, take their names from the "Bloody morning scout" sent
+out by Sir William Johnson on a September day in 1755 to check Dieskau
+until Fort William Henry could be completed. In the action that ensued,
+Colonel Williams, founder of Williams College, and Captain Grant, of the
+Connecticut line, great-grandfather of the President who bore that name,
+were killed. The victims, dead and wounded alike, having been flung into
+Bloody Pond, it was thick and red for days, and tradition said that in
+after years it resumed its hue of crimson at sunset and held it until
+dawn. The captured, who were delivered to the Indians, had little to
+hope, for their white allies could not stay their savagery. Blind Rock
+was so called because the Indians brought a white man there, and tearing
+his eyes out, flung them into embers at the foot of the stone. Captives
+were habitually tortured, blazing splinters of pine being thrust into
+their flesh, their nails torn out, and their bodies slashed with knives
+before they went to the stake. An English prisoner was allowed to run the
+gauntlet here. They had already begun to strike at him as he sped between
+the lines, when he seized a pappoose, flung it on a fire, and, in the
+instant of confusion that followed, snatched an axe, cut the bonds of a
+comrade who had been doomed to die, and both escaped.
+
+But the best-known history of this region is that of Rogers's Rock, or
+Rogers's Slide, a lofty precipice at the lower end of Lake George. Major
+Rogers did not toboggan down this rock in leather trousers, but his
+escape was no less remarkable than if he had. On March 13, 1758, while
+reconnoitring near Ticonderoga with two hundred rangers, he was surprised
+by a force of French and Indians. But seventeen of his men escaped death
+or capture, and he was pursued nearly to the brink of this cliff. During
+a brief delay among the red men, arising from the loss of his trail, he
+had time to throw his pack down the slide, reverse his snow-shoes, and go
+back over his own track to the head of a ravine before they emerged from
+the woods, and, seeing that his shoe-marks led to the rock, while none
+pointed back, they concluded that he had flung himself off and committed
+suicide to avoid capture. Great was their disappointment when they saw
+the major on the frozen surface of the lake beneath going at a lively
+rate toward Fort William Henry. He had gained the ice by way of the cleft
+in the rocks, but the savages, believing that he had leaped over the
+precipice, attributed his preservation to the Great Spirit and forbore to
+fire on him. Unconsciously, he had chosen the best possible place to
+disappear from, for the Indians held it in superstitious regard,
+believing that spirits haunted the wood and hurled bad souls down the
+cliff, drowning them in the lake, instead of allowing them to go to the
+happy hunting grounds. The major reached his quarters in safety, and
+lived to take up arms against the land of his birth when the colonies
+revolted, seventeen years later.
+
+
+
+
+THE FALLS AT COHOES
+
+When Occuna, a young Seneca, fell in love with a girl whose cabin was
+near the present town of Cohoes, he behaved very much as Americans of a
+later date have done. He picked wild flowers for her; he played on the
+bone pipe and sang sentimental songs in the twilight; he roamed the hills
+with her, gathering the loose quartz crystals that the Indians believed
+to be the tears of stricken deer, save on Diamond Rock, in Lansingburgh,
+where they are the tears of Moneta, a bereaved mother and wife; and in
+fine weather they went boating on the Mohawk above the rapids. They liked
+to drift idly on the current, because it gave them time to gaze into each
+other's eyes, and to build air castles that they would live in in the
+future. They were suddenly called to a realization of danger one evening,
+for the stream had been subtly drawing them on and on until it had them
+in its power. The stroke of the paddle failed and the air castles fell in
+dismal ruin. Sitting erect they began their death-song in this wise:
+
+Occuna: "Daughter of a mighty warrior, the Manitou calls me hence. I hear
+the roaring of his voice; I see the lightning of his glance along the
+river; he walks in clouds and spray upon the waters."
+
+The Maiden: "Thou art thyself a warrior, O Occuna. Hath not thine axe
+been often bathed in blood? Hath the deer ever escaped thine arrow or the
+beaver avoided thy chase? Thou wilt not fear to go into the presence of
+Manitou."
+
+Occuna: "Manitou, indeed, respects the strong. When I chose thee from the
+women of our tribe I promised that we should live and die together. The
+Thunderer calls us now. Welcome, O ghost of Oriska, chief of the
+invincible Senecas! A warrior and the daughter of a warrior come to join
+you in the feast of the blessed!"
+
+The boat leaped over the falls, and Occuna, striking on the rocks below,
+was killed at once; but, as by a miracle, the girl fell clear of them and
+was whirled on the seething current to shoal water, where she made her
+escape. For his strength and his virtues the dead man was canonized. His
+tribe raised him above the regions of the moon, whence he looked down on
+the scenes of his youth with pleasure, and in times of war gave pleasant
+dreams and promises to his friends, while he confused the enemy with evil
+omens. Whenever his tribe passed the falls they halted and with brief
+ceremonials commemorated the death of Occuna.
+
+
+
+
+FRANCIS WOOLCOTT'S NIGHT-RIDERS
+
+In Copake, New York, among the Berkshire Hills, less than a century ago,
+lived Francis Woolcott, a dark, tall man, with protruding teeth, whose
+sinister laugh used to give his neighbors a creep along their spines. He
+had no obvious trade or calling, but the farmers feared him so that he
+had no trouble in making levies: pork, flour, meal, cider, he could have
+what he chose for the asking, for had he not halted horses at the plow so
+that neither blows nor commands could move them for two hours? Had he not
+set farmer Raught's pigs to walking on their hind legs and trying to
+talk? When he shouted "Hup! hup! hup!" to farmer Williams's children, had
+they not leaped to the moulding of the parlor wainscot,--a yard above the
+floor and only an inch wide,--and walked around it, afterward skipping
+like birds from chair-back to chair-back, while the furniture stood as if
+nailed to the floor? And was he not the chief of thirteen night-riders,
+whose faces no man had seen, nor wanted to see, and whom he sent about
+the country on errands of mischief every night when the moon was growing
+old? As to moons, had he not found a mystic message from our satellite on
+Mount Riga, graven on a meteor?
+
+Horses' tails were tied, hogs foamed at the mouth and walked like men,
+cows gave blood for milk. These night-riders met Woolcott in a grove of
+ash and chestnut trees, each furnished with a stolen bundle of oat straw,
+and these bundles Woolcott changed to black horses when the night had
+grown dark enough not to let the way of the change be seen. These horses
+could not cross streams of water, and on the stroke of midnight they fell
+to pieces and were oaten sheaves once more, but during their time of
+action they rushed through woods, bearing their riders safely, and tore
+like hurricanes across the fields, leaping bushes, fences, even trees,
+without effort. Never could traces be found of them the next day. At last
+the devil came to claim his own. Woolcott, who was ninety years old, lay
+sick and helpless in his cabin. Clergymen refused to see him, but two or
+three of his neighbors stifled their fears and went to the wizard's house
+to soothe his dying moments. With the night came storm, and with its
+outbreak the old man's face took on such a strange and horrible look that
+the watchers fell back in alarm. There was a burst of purple flame at the
+window, a frightful peal, a smell of sulphur, and Woolcott was dead. When
+the watchers went out the roads were dry, and none in the village had
+heard wind, rain, or thunder. It was the coming of the fiend.
+
+
+
+
+POLLY'S LOVER
+
+In about the middle of this century a withered woman of ninety was buried
+from a now deserted house in White Plains, New York, Polly Carter the
+name of her, but "Crazy Polly" was what the neighbors called her, for she
+was eccentric and not fond of company. Among the belongings of her house
+was a tall clock, such as relic hunters prize, that ticked solemnly in a
+landing on the stairs.
+
+For a time, during the Revolution, the house stood within the British
+lines, and as her father was a colonel in Washington's army she was left
+almost alone in it. The British officers respected her sex, but they had
+an unpleasant way of running in unannounced and demanding entertainment,
+in the king's name, which she felt forced to grant. One rainy afternoon
+the door was flung open, then locked on the inside, and she found herself
+in the arms of a stalwart, handsome lieutenant, who wore the blue. It was
+her cousin and fiance. Their glad talk had not been going long when there
+came a rousing summons at the door. Three English officers were awaiting
+admittance.
+
+Perhaps they had seen Lawrence Carter go into the house, and if caught he
+would be killed as a spy. He must be hidden, but in some place where they
+would not think of looking. The clock! That was the place. With a laugh
+and a kiss the young man submitted to be shut in this narrow quarter, and
+throwing his coat and hat behind some furniture the girl admitted the
+officers, who were wet and surly and demanded dinner. They tramped about
+the best room in their muddy boots, talking loudly, and in order to break
+the effect of the chill weather they passed the brandy bottle freely.
+Polly served them with a dinner as quickly as possible, for she wanted to
+get them out of the house, but they were in no mood to go, and the bottle
+passed so often that before the dinner was over they were noisy and tipsy
+and were using language that drove Polly from the room.
+
+At last, to her relief, she heard them preparing to leave the house, but
+as they were about to go the senior officer, looking up at the landing,
+now dim in the paling light, said to one of the others, "See what time it
+is." The officer addressed, who happened to be the drunkest of the party,
+staggered up the stair and exclaimed, "The d---d thing's stopped." Then,
+as if he thought it a good joke, he added, "It'll never go again."
+Drawing his sabre he gave the clock a careless cut and ran the blade
+through the panel of the door; after this the three passed out. When
+their voices had died in distant brawling, Polly ran to release her
+lover. Something thick and dark was creeping from beneath the clock-case.
+With trembling fingers she pulled open the door, and Lawrence, her lover,
+fell heavily forward into her arms, dead. The officer was right: the
+clock never went again.
+
+
+
+
+CROSBY, THE PATRIOT SPY
+
+It was at the Jay house, in Westchester, New York, that Enoch Crosby met
+Washington and offered his services to the patriot army. Crosby was a
+cobbler, and not a very thriving one, but after the outbreak of
+hostilities he took a peddler's outfit on his back and, as a
+non-combatant, of Tory sympathies, he obtained admission through the
+British lines. After his first visit to head quarters it is certain that
+he always carried Sir Henry Clinton's passport in the middle of his pack,
+and so sure were his neighbors that he was in the service of the British
+that they captured him and took him to General Washington, but while his
+case was up for debate he managed to slip his handcuffs, which were not
+secure, and made off. Clinton, on the other hand, was puzzled by the
+unaccountable foresight of the Americans, for every blow that he prepared
+to strike was met, and he lost time and chance and temper. As if the
+suspicion of both armies and the hatred of his neighbors were not enough
+to contend against, Crosby now became an object of interest to the
+Skinners and Cowboys, who were convinced that he was making money,
+somehow, and resolved to have it.
+
+The Skinners were camp-followers of the American troops and the Cowboys a
+band of Tories and renegade British. Both factions were employed,
+ostensibly, in foraging for their respective armies, but, in reality, for
+themselves, and the farmers and citizens occupying the neutral belt north
+of Manhattan Island had reason to curse them both impartially. While
+these fellows were daring thieves, they occasionally got the worst of it,
+even in the encounters with the farmers, as on the Neperan, near
+Tarrytown, where the Cowboys chased a woman to death, but were afterward
+cut to pieces by the enraged neighbors. Hers is but one of the many
+ghosts that haunt the neutral ground, and the croaking of the birds of
+ill luck that nest at Raven rock is blended with the cries of her dim
+figure. Still, graceless as these fellows were, they affected a loyalty
+to their respective sides, and were usually willing to fight each other
+when they met, especially for the plunder that was to be got by fighting.
+
+In October, 1780, Claudius Smith, "king of the Cowboys," and three
+scalawag sons came to the conclusion that it was time for Crosby's money
+to revert to the crown, and they set off toward his little house one
+evening, sure of finding him in, for his father was seriously ill. The
+Smiths arrived there to find that the Skinners had preceded them on the
+same errand, and they recognized through the windows, in the leader of
+the band, a noted brigand on whose head a price was laid. He was
+searching every crack and cranny of the room, while Crosby, stripped to
+shirt and trousers, stood before the empty fireplace and begged for that
+night to be left alone with his dying father.
+
+"To hell with the old man!" roared the Skinner. "Give up your gold, or
+we'll put you to the torture," and he significantly whirled the end of a
+rope that he carried about his waist. At that moment the faint voice of
+the old man was heard calling from another room.
+
+"Take all that I have and let me go!" cried Crosby, and turning up a
+brick in the fire-place he disclosed a handful of gold, his life savings.
+The leader still tried to oppose his exit, but Crosby flung him to the
+floor and rushed away to his father, while the brigand, deeming it well
+to delay rising, dug his fingers into the hollow and began to extract the
+sovereigns. At that instant four muskets were discharged from without:
+there was a crash of glass, a yell of pain, and four of the Skinners
+rolled bleeding on the floor; two others ran into the darkness and
+escaped; their leader, trying to follow, was met at the threshold by the
+Smiths, who clutched the gold out of his hand and pinioned his elbows in
+a twinkling.
+
+"I thought ye'd like to know who's got ye," said old Smith, peering into
+the face of the astonished and crestfallen robber, "for I've told ye many
+a time to keep out of my way, and now ye've got to swing for getting into
+it."
+
+Within five minutes of the time that he had got his clutch on Crosby's
+money the bandit was choking to death at the end of his own rope, hung
+from the limb of an apple-tree, and, having secured the gold, the Cowboys
+went their way into the darkness. Crosby soon made his appearance in the
+ranks of the Continentals, and, though they looked askant at him for a
+time, they soon discovered the truth and hailed him as a hero, for the
+information he had carried to Washington from Clinton's camp had often
+saved them from disaster. He had survived attack in his own house through
+the falling out of rogues, and he survived the work and hazard of war
+through luck and a sturdy frame. Congress afterwards gave him a sum of
+money larger than had been taken from him, for his chief had commended
+him in these lines: "Circumstances of political importance, which
+involved the lives and fortunes of many, have hitherto kept secret what
+this paper now reveals. Enoch Crosby has for years been a faithful and
+unrequited servant of his country. Though man does not, God may reward
+him for his conduct. GEORGE WASHINGTON."
+
+Associated with Crosby in his work of getting information from the enemy
+was a man named Gainos, who kept an inn on the neutral ground, that was
+often raided. Being assailed by Cowboys once, Gainos, with his tenant and
+stable-boys, fired at the bandits together, just as the latter had forced
+his front door, then stepping quickly forward he slashed off the head of
+the leader with a cutlass. The retreating crew dumped the body into a
+well on the premises, and there it sits on the crumbling curb o' nights
+looking disconsolately for its head.
+
+It may also be mentioned that the Skinners had a chance to revenge
+themselves on the Cowboys for their defeat at the Crosby house. They fell
+upon the latter at the tent-shaped cave in Yonkers,--it is called
+Washington's Cave, because the general napped there on bivouac,--and not
+only routed them, but secured so much of their treasure that they were
+able to be honest for several years after.
+
+
+
+
+THE LOST GRAVE OF PAINE
+
+Failure to mark the resting-places of great men and to indicate the
+scenes of their deeds has led to misunderstanding and confusion among
+those who discover a regard for history and tradition in this practical
+age. Robert Fulton, who made steam navigation possible, lies in an
+unmarked tomb in the yard of Trinity Church--the richest church in
+America. The stone erected to show where Andre was hanged was destroyed
+by a cheap patriot, who thought it represented a compliment to the spy.
+The spot where Alexander Hamilton was shot in the duel by Aaron Burr is
+known to few and will soon be forgotten. It was not until a century of
+obloquy had been heaped on the memory of Thomas Paine that his once
+enemies were brought to know him as a statesman of integrity, a
+philanthropist, and philosopher. His deistic religion, proclaimed in "The
+Age of Reason," is unfortunately no whit more independent than is
+preached in dozens of pulpits to-day. He died ripe in honors, despite his
+want of creed, and his mortal part was buried in New Rochelle, New York,
+under a large walnut-tree in a hay-field. Some years later his friends
+removed the body to a new grave in higher ground, and placed over it a
+monument that the opponents of his principles quickly hacked to pieces.
+Around the original grave there still remains a part of the old
+inclosure, and it was proposed to erect a suitable memorial--the Hudson
+and its Hills the spot, but the owner of the tract would neither give nor
+sell an inch of his land for the purpose of doing honor to the man. Some
+doubt has already been expressed as to whether the grave is beneath the
+monument or in the inclosure; and it is also asserted that Paine's ghost
+appears at intervals, hovering in the air between the two burial-places,
+or flitting back and forth from one to the other, lamenting the
+forgetfulness of men and wailing, "Where is my grave? I have lost my
+grave!"
+
+
+
+
+THE RISING OF GOUVERNEUR MORRIS
+
+Gouverneur Morris, American minister to the court of Louis XVI, was
+considerably enriched, at the close of the reign of terror, by plate,
+jewels, furniture, paintings, coaches, and so on, left in his charge by
+members of the French nobility, that they might not be confiscated in the
+sack of the city by the _sans culottes_; for so many of the aristocracy
+were killed and so many went into exile or disguised their names, that it
+was impossible to find heirs or owners for these effects. Some of the
+people who found France a good country to be out of came to America,
+where adventurers had found prosperity and refugees found peace so many
+times before. Marshal Ney and Bernadotte are alleged to have served in
+the American army during the Revolution, and at Hogansburg, New York, the
+Reverend Eleazer Williams, an Episcopal missionary, who lies buried in
+the church-yard there, was declared to be the missing son of Louis XVI.
+The question, "Have we a Bourbon among us?" was frequently canvassed; but
+he avoided publicity and went quietly on with his pastoral work.
+
+All property left in Mr. Morris's hands that had not been claimed was
+removed to his mansion at Port Morris, when he returned from his
+ministry, and he gained in the esteem and envy of his neighbors when the
+extent of these riches was seen. Once, at the wine, he touched glasses
+with his wife, and said that if she bore a male child that son should be
+heir to his wealth. Two relatives who sat at the table exchanged looks at
+this and cast a glance of no gentle regard on his lady. A year went by.
+The son was born, but Gouverneur Morris was dead.
+
+It is the first night of the year 1817, the servants are asleep, and the
+widow sits late before the fire, her baby in her arms, listening betimes
+to the wind in the chimney, the beat of hail on the shutters, the
+brawling of the Bronx and the clash of moving ice upon it; yet thinking
+of her husband and the sinister look his promise had brought to the faces
+of his cousins, when a tramp of horses is heard without, and anon a
+summons at the door. The panels are beaten by loaded riding-whips, and a
+man's voice cries, "Anne Morris, fetch us our cousin's will, or we'll
+break into the house and take it." The woman clutches the infant to her
+breast, but makes no answer. Again the clatter of the whips; but now a
+mist is gathering in the room, and a strange enchantment comes over her,
+for are not the lions breathing on the coat of arms above the door, and
+are not the portraits stirring in their frames?
+
+They are, indeed. There is a rustle of robes and clink of steel and one
+old warrior leaps down, his armor sounding as he alights, and striking
+thrice his sword and shield together he calls on Gouverneur Morris to
+come forth. Somebody moves in the room where Morris died; there is a
+measured footfall in the corridor, with the clank of a scabbard keeping
+time; the door is opened, and on the blast that enters the widow hears a
+cry, then a double gallop, passing swiftly into distance. As she gazes,
+her husband appears, apparelled as in life, and with a smile he takes a
+candelabrum from the mantel and, beckoning her to follow, moves from room
+to room. Then, for the first time, the widow knows to what wealth her
+baby has been born, for the ghost discloses secret drawers in escritoires
+where money, title deeds, and gems are hidden, turns pictures and
+wainscots on unsuspected hinges, revealing shelves heaped with fabrics,
+plate, and lace; then, returning to the fireside, he stoops as if to kiss
+his wife and boy, but a bell strikes the first hour of morning and he
+vanishes into his portrait on the wall.
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's The Hudson And Its Hills, by Charles M. Skinner
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook Myths And Legends Of Our Own Land, v1
+#1 in our series by Charles M. Skinner
+
+Copyright laws are changing all over the world. Be sure to check the
+copyright laws for your country before downloading or redistributing
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+*****These EBooks Were Prepared By Thousands of Volunteers*****
+
+
+Title: Myths And Legends Of Our Own Land (The Hudson And Its Hills)
+
+Author: Charles M. Skinner
+
+Release Date: October, 2004 [EBook #6606]
+[Yes, we are more than one year ahead of schedule]
+[This file was first posted on December 31, 2003]
+
+Edition: 10
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+Language: English
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+Character set encoding: ASCII
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+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK MYTHS-LEGENDS, BY SKINNER, V1 ***
+
+
+
+This eBook was produced by David Widger <widger@cecomet.net>
+
+
+
+
+
+ MYTHS AND LEGENDS
+ OF
+ OUR OWN LAND
+
+ By
+ Charles M. Skinner
+
+ Vol. 1.
+
+
+ THE HUDSON AND ITS HILLS
+
+
+
+ PREFACE
+
+It is unthinkingly said and often, that America is not old enough to
+have developed a legendary era, for such an era grows backward as a
+nation grows forward. No little of the charm of European travel is
+ascribed to the glamour that history and fable have flung around old
+churches, castles, and the favored haunts of tourists, and the Rhine and
+Hudson are frequently compared, to the prejudice of the latter, not
+because its scenery lacks in loveliness or grandeur, but that its beauty
+has not been humanized by love of chivalry or faerie, as that of the
+older stream has been. Yet the record of our country's progress is of
+deep import, and as time goes on the figures seen against the morning
+twilight of our history will rise to more commanding stature, and the
+mists of legend will invest them with a softness or glory that shall
+make reverence for them spontaneous and deep. Washington hurling the
+stone across the Potomac may live as the Siegfried of some Western saga,
+and Franklin invoking the lightnings may be the Loki of our mythology.
+The bibliography of American legends is slight, and these tales have
+been gathered from sources the most diverse: records, histories,
+newspapers, magazines, oral narrative--in every case reconstructed. The
+pursuit of them has been so long that a claim may be set forth for some
+measure of completeness.
+
+But, whatever the episodes of our four historic centuries may furnish to
+the poet, painter, dramatist, or legend-building idealist of the future,
+it is certain that we are not devoid of myth and folk-lore. Some
+characters, prosaic enough, perhaps, in daily life, have impinged so
+lightly on society before and after perpetrating their one or two great
+deeds, that they have already become shadowy and their achievements have
+acquired a color of the supernatural. It is where myth and history
+combine that legend is most interesting and appeals to our fancy or our
+sympathy most strongly; and it is not too early for us to begin the
+collation of those quaint happenings and those spoken reports that gain
+in picturesqueness with each transmission. An attempt has been made in
+this instance to assemble only legends, for, doubtful as some historians
+profess to find them, certain occurrences, like the story of Captain
+Smith and Pocahontas, and the ride of General Putnam down Breakneck
+Stairs, are taught as history; while as to folk-lore, that of the Indian
+tribes and of the Southern negro is too copious to be recounted in this
+work. It will be noted that traditions do not thrive in brick and
+brownstone, and that the stories once rife in the colonial cities have
+almost as effectually disappeared as the architectural landmarks of last
+century. The field entered by the writer is not untrodden. Hawthorne
+and Irving have made paths across it, and it is hoped that others may
+deem its farther exploration worthy of their efforts.
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS:
+
+Rip Van Winkle
+Catskill Gnomes
+The Catskill Witch
+The Revenge of Shandaken
+Condemned to the Noose
+Big Indian
+The Baker's Dozen
+The Devil's Dance-Chamber
+The Culprit Fay
+Pokepsie
+Dunderberg
+Anthony's Nose
+Moodua Creek
+A Trapper's Ghastly Vengeance
+The Vanderdecken of Tappan Zee
+The Galloping Hessian
+Storm Ship on the Hudson
+Why Spuyten Duyvil is so Named
+The Ramapo Salamander
+Chief Croton
+The Retreat from Mahopac
+Niagara
+The Deformed of Zoar
+Horseheads
+Kayuta and Waneta
+The Drop Star
+The Prophet of Palmyra
+A Villain's Cremation
+The Monster Mosquito
+The Green Picture
+The Nuns of Carthage
+The Skull in the Wall
+The Haunted Mill
+Old Indian Face
+The Division of the Saranacs
+An Event in Indian Park
+The Indian Plume
+Birth of the Water-Lily
+Rogers's Slide
+The Falls at Cohoes
+Francis Woolcott's Night-Riders
+Polly's Lover
+Crosby, the Patriot Spy
+The Lost Grave of Paine
+The Rising of Gouverneur Morris
+
+
+
+
+ THE HUDSON AND ITS HILLS
+
+
+ RIP VAN WINKLE
+
+The story of Rip Van Winkle, told by Irving, dramatized by Boucicault,
+acted by Jefferson, pictured by Darley, set to music by Bristow, is the
+best known of American legends. Rip was a real personage, and the Van
+Winkles are a considerable family at this day. An idle, good-natured,
+happy-go-lucky fellow, he lived, presumably, in the village of Catskill,
+and began his long sleep in 1769. His wife was a shrew, and to escape
+her abuse Rip often took his dog and gun and roamed away to the
+Catskills, nine miles westward, where he lounged or hunted, as the humor
+seized him. It was on a September evening, during a jaunt on South
+Mountain, that he met a stubby, silent man, of goodly girth, his round
+head topped with a steeple hat, the skirts of his belted coat and flaps
+of his petticoat trousers meeting at the tops of heavy boots, and the
+face--ugh!--green and ghastly, with unmoving eyes that glimmered in the
+twilight like phosphorus. The dwarf carried a keg, and on receiving an
+intimation, in a sign, that he would like Rip to relieve him of it, that
+cheerful vagabond shouldered it and marched on up the mountain.
+
+At nightfall they emerged on a little plateau where a score of men in
+the garb of long ago, with faces like that of Rip's guide, and equally
+still and speechless, were playing bowls with great solemnity, the balls
+sometimes rolling over the plateau's edge and rumbling down the rocks
+with a boom like thunder. A cloaked and snowy-bearded figure, watching
+aloof, turned like the others, and gazed uncomfortably at the visitor
+who now came blundering in among them. Rip was at first for making off,
+but the sinister glare in the circle of eyes took the run out of his
+legs, and he was not displeased when they signed to him to tap the keg
+and join in a draught of the ripest schnapps that ever he had tasted,--
+and he knew the flavor of every brand in Catskill. While these strange
+men grew no more genial with passing of the flagons, Rip was pervaded by
+a satisfying glow; then, overcome by sleepiness and resting his head on
+a stone, he stretched his tired legs out and fell to dreaming.
+
+Morning. Sunlight and leaf shadow were dappled over the earth when he
+awoke, and rising stiffly from his bed, with compunctions in his bones,
+he reached for his gun. The already venerable implement was so far gone
+with rot and rust that it fell to pieces in his hand, and looking down
+at the fragments of it, he saw that his clothes were dropping from his
+body in rags and mould, while a white beard flowed over his breast.
+Puzzled and alarmed, shaking his head ruefully as he recalled the
+carouse of the silent, he hobbled down the mountain as fast as he might
+for the grip of the rheumatism on his knees and elbows, and entered his
+native village. What! Was this Catskill? Was this the place that he
+left yesterday? Had all these houses sprung up overnight, and these
+streets been pushed across the meadows in a day? The people, too: where
+were his friends? The children who had romped with him, the rotund
+topers whom he had left cooling their hot noses in pewter pots at the
+tavern door, the dogs that used to bark a welcome, recognizing in him a
+kindred spirit of vagrancy: where were they?
+
+And his wife, whose athletic arm and agile tongue had half disposed him
+to linger in the mountains how happened it that she was not awaiting him
+at the gate? But gate there was none in the familiar place: an unfenced
+yard of weeds and ruined foundation wall were there. Rip's home was
+gone. The idlers jeered at his bent, lean form, his snarl of beard and
+hair, his disreputable dress, his look of grieved astonishment. He
+stopped, instinctively, at the tavern, for he knew that place in spite
+of its new sign: an officer in blue regimentals and a cocked hat
+replacing the crimson George III. of his recollection, and labelled
+"General Washington." There was a quick gathering of ne'er-do-weels, of
+tavern-haunters and gaping 'prentices, about him, and though their faces
+were strange and their manners rude, he made bold to ask if they knew
+such and such of his friends.
+
+"Nick Vedder? He's dead and gone these eighteen years." "Brom Dutcher?
+He joined the army and was killed at Stony Point." "Van Brummel?
+He, too, went to the war, and is in Congress now."
+
+And Rip Van Winkle?"
+
+"Yes, he's here. That's him yonder."
+
+And to Rip's utter confusion he saw before him a counterpart of himself,
+as young, lazy, ragged, and easy-natured as he remembered himself to be,
+yesterday--or, was it yesterday?
+
+"That's young Rip," continued his informer. "His father was Rip Van
+Winkle, too, but he went to the mountains twenty years ago and never
+came back. He probably fell over a cliff, or was carried off by
+Indians, or eaten by bears."
+
+Twenty years ago! Truly, it was so. Rip had slept for twenty years
+without awaking. He had left a peaceful colonial village; he returned
+to a bustling republican town. How he eventually found, among the
+oldest inhabitants, some who admitted that they knew him; how he found a
+comfortable home with his married daughter and the son who took after
+him so kindly; how he recovered from the effect of the tidings that his
+wife had died of apoplexy, in a quarrel; how he resumed his seat at the
+tavern tap and smoked long pipes and told long yarns for the rest of his
+days, were matters of record up to the beginning of this century.
+
+And a strange story Rip had to tell, for he had served as cup-bearer to
+the dead crew of the Half Moon. He had quaffed a cup of Hollands with
+no other than Henry Hudson himself. Some say that Hudson's spirit has
+made its home amid these hills, that it may look into the lovely valley
+that he discovered; but others hold that every twenty years he and his
+men assemble for a revel in the mountains that so charmed them when
+first seen swelling against the western heavens, and the liquor they
+drink on this night has the bane of throwing any mortal who lips it into
+a slumber whence nothing can arouse him until the day dawns when the
+crew shall meet again. As you climb the east front of the mountains by
+the old carriage road, you pass, half-way up the height, the stone that
+Rip Van Winkle slept on, and may see that it is slightly hollowed by his
+form. The ghostly revellers are due in the Catskills in 1909, and let
+all tourists who are among the mountains in September of that year
+beware of accepting liquor from strangers.
+
+
+
+
+ CATSKILL GNOMES
+
+Behind the New Grand Hotel, in the Catskills, is an amphitheatre of
+mountain that is held to be the place of which the Mohicans spoke when
+they told of people there who worked in metals, and had bushy beards and
+eyes like pigs. From the smoke of their forges, in autumn, came the
+haze of Indian summer; and when the moon was full, it was their custom
+to assemble on the edge of a precipice above the hollow and dance and
+caper until the night was nigh worn away. They brewed a liquor that had
+the effect of shortening the bodies and swelling the heads of all who
+drank it, and when Hudson and his crew visited the mountains, the
+pygmies held a carouse in his honor and invited him to drink their
+liquor. The crew went away, shrunken and distorted by the magic
+distillation, and thus it was that Rip Van Winkle found them on the eve
+of his famous sleep.
+
+
+
+
+ THE CATSKILL WITCH
+
+When the Dutch gave the name of Katzbergs to the mountains west of the
+Hudson, by reason of the wild-cats and panthers that ranged there, they
+obliterated the beautiful Indian Ontiora, "mountains of the sky." In
+one tradition of the red men these hills were bones of a monster that
+fed on human beings until the Great Spirit turned it into stone as it
+was floundering toward the ocean to bathe. The two lakes near the
+summit were its eyes. These peaks were the home of an Indian witch, who
+adjusted the weather for the Hudson Valley with the certainty of a
+signal service bureau. It was she who let out the day and night in
+blessed alternation, holding back the one when the other was at large,
+for fear of conflict. Old moons she cut into stars as soon as she had
+hung new ones in the sky, and she was often seen perched on Round Top
+and North Mountain, spinning clouds and flinging them to the winds. Woe
+betide the valley residents if they showed irreverence, for then the
+clouds were black and heavy, and through them she poured floods of rain
+and launched the lightnings, causing disastrous freshets in the streams
+and blasting the wigwams of the mockers. In a frolic humor she would
+take the form of a bear or deer and lead the Indian hunters anything but
+a merry dance, exposing them to tire and peril, and vanishing or
+assuming some terrible shape when they had overtaken her. Sometimes she
+would lead them to the cloves and would leap into the air with a mocking
+"Ho, ho!" just as they stopped with a shudder at the brink of an abyss.
+Garden Rock was a spot where she was often found, and at its foot a lake
+once spread. This was held in such awe that an Indian would never
+wittingly pursue his quarry there; but once a hunter lost his way and
+emerged from the forest at the edge of the pond. Seeing a number of
+gourds in crotches of the trees he took one, but fearing the spirit he
+turned to leave so quickly that he stumbled and it fell. As it broke, a
+spring welled from it in such volume that the unhappy man was gulfed in
+its waters, swept to the edge of Kaaterskill clove and dashed on the
+rocks two hundred and sixty feet below. Nor did the water ever cease to
+run, and in these times the stream born of the witch's revenge is known
+as Catskill Creek.
+
+
+
+
+ THE REVENGE OF SHANDAKEN
+
+On the rock platform where the Catskill Mountain House now stands,
+commanding one of the fairest views in the world, old chief Shandaken
+set his wigwam,--for it is a mistake to suppose that barbarians are
+indifferent to beauty,--and there his daughter, Lotowana, was sought in
+marriage by his braves. She, however, kept faith to an early vow
+exchanged with a young chief of the Mohawks. A suitor who was
+particularly troublesome was Norsereddin, proud, morose, dark-featured,
+a stranger to the red man, a descendant, so he claimed, from Egyptian
+kings, and who lived by himself on Kaaterskill Creek, appearing among
+white settlements but rarely.
+
+On one of his visits to Catskill, a tavern-lounging Dutchman wagered him
+a thousand golden crowns that he could not win Lotowana, and, stung by
+avarice as well as inflamed by passion, Norsereddin laid new siege to
+her heart. Still the girl refused to listen, and Shandaken counselled
+him to be content with the smiles of others, thereby so angering the
+Egyptian that he assailed the chief and was driven from the camp with
+blows; but on the day of Lotowana's wedding with the Mohawk he returned,
+and in a honeyed speech asked leave to give a jewel to the bride to show
+that he had stifled jealousy and ill will. The girl took the handsome
+box he gave her and drew the cover, when a spring flew forward, driving
+into her hand the poisoned tooth of a snake that had been affixed to it.
+The venom was strong, and in a few minutes Lotowana lay dead at her
+husband's feet.
+
+Though the Egyptian had disappeared into the forest directly on the
+acceptance of his treacherous gift, twenty braves set off in pursuit,
+and overtaking him on the Kalkberg, they dragged him back to the rock
+where father and husband were bewailing the maid's untimely fate. A
+pile of fagots was heaped within a few feet of the precipice edge, and
+tying their captive on them, they applied the torch, dancing about with
+cries of exultation as the shrieks of the wretch echoed from the cliffs.
+The dead girl was buried by the mourning tribe, while the ashes of
+Norsereddin were left to be blown abroad. On the day of his revenge
+Shandaken left his ancient dwelling-place, and his camp-fires never
+glimmered afterward on the front of Ontiora.
+
+
+
+
+ CONDEMNED TO THE NOOSE
+
+Ralph Sutherland, who, early in the last century, occupied a stone house
+a mile from Leeds, in the Catskills, was a man of morose and violent
+disposition, whose servant, a Scotch girl, was virtually a slave,
+inasmuch as she was bound to work for him without pay until she had
+refunded to him her passage-money to this country. Becoming weary of
+bondage and of the tempers of her master, the girl ran away. The man
+set off in a raging chase, and she had not gone far before Sutherland
+overtook her, tied her by the wrists to his horse's tail, and began the
+homeward journey. Afterward, he swore that the girl stumbled against
+the horse's legs, so frightening the animal that it rushed off madly,
+pitching him out of the saddle and dashing the servant to death on rocks
+and trees; yet, knowing how ugly-tempered he could be, his neighbors
+were better inclined to believe that he had driven the horse into a
+gallop, intending to drag the girl for a short distance, as a
+punishment, and to rein up before he had done serious mischief. On this
+supposition he was arrested, tried, and sentenced to die on the
+scaffold.
+
+The tricks of circumstantial evidence, together with pleas advanced by
+influential relatives of the prisoner, induced the court to delay
+sentence until the culprit should be ninety-nine years old, but it was
+ordered that, while released on his own recognizance, in the interim, he
+should keep a hangman's noose about his neck and show himself before the
+judges in Catskill once every year, to prove that he wore his badge of
+infamy and kept his crime in mind. This sentence he obeyed, and there
+were people living recently who claimed to remember him as he went about
+with a silken cord knotted at his throat. He was always alone, he
+seldom spoke, his rough, imperious manner had departed. Only when
+children asked him what the rope was for were his lips seen to quiver,
+and then he would hurry away. After dark his house was avoided, for
+gossips said that a shrieking woman passed it nightly, tied at the tail
+of a giant horse with fiery eyes and smoking nostrils; that a skeleton
+in a winding sheet had been found there; that a curious thing, somewhat
+like a woman, had been known to sit on his garden wall, with lights
+shining from her finger-tips, uttering unearthly laughter; and that
+domestic animals reproached the man by groaning and howling beneath his
+windows.
+
+These beliefs he knew, yet he neither grieved, nor scorned, nor answered
+when he was told of them. Years sped on. Every year deepened his
+reserve and loneliness, and some began to whisper that he would take his
+own way out of the world, though others answered that men who were born
+to be hanged would never be drowned; but a new republic was created; new
+laws were made; new judges sat to minister them; so, on Ralph
+Sutherland's ninety-ninth birthday anniversary, there were none who
+would accuse him or execute sentence. He lived yet another year, dying
+in 1801. But was it from habit, or was it in self-punishment and
+remorse, that he never took off the cord? for, when he drew his last
+breath, though it was in his own house, his throat was still encircled
+by the hangman's rope.
+
+
+
+
+ BIG INDIAN
+
+Intermarriages between white people and red ones in this country were
+not uncommon in the days when our ancestors led as rude a life as the
+natives, and several places in the Catskills commemorate this fact.
+Mount Utsayantha, for example, is named for an Indian woman whose life,
+with that of her baby and her white husband, was lost there. For the
+white men early found friends among these mountains. As far back as
+1663 they spared Catherine Dubois and her three children, after some
+rash spirits had abducted them and carried them to a place on the upper
+Walkill, to do them to death; for the captives raised a Huguenot hymn
+and the hearts of their captors were softened.
+
+In Esopus Valley lived Winnisook, whose height was seven feet, and who
+was known among the white settlers as "the big Indian." He loved a
+white girl of the neighborhood, one Gertrude Molyneux, and had asked for
+her hand; but while she was willing, the objections of her family were
+too strong to be overcome, and she was teased into marriage with Joseph
+Bundy, of her own race, instead. She liked the Indian all the better
+after that, however, because Bundy proved to be a bad fellow, and
+believing that she could be happier among barbarians than among a people
+that approved such marriages, she eloped with Winnisook. For a long
+time all trace of the runaway couple was lost, but one day the man
+having gone down to the plain to steal cattle, it was alleged, was
+discovered by some farmers who knew him, and who gave hot chase, coming
+up with him at the place now called Big Indian.
+
+Foremost in the chase was Bundy. As he came near to the enemy of his
+peace he exclaimed, "I think the best way to civilize that yellow
+serpent is to let daylight into his heart," and, drawing his rifle to
+his shoulder, he fired. Mortally wounded, yet instinctively seeking
+refuge, the giant staggered into the hollow of a pine-tree, where the
+farmers lost sight of him. There, however, he was found by Gertrude,
+bolt upright, yet dead. The unwedded widow brought her dusky children
+to the place and spent the remainder of her days near his grave. Until
+a few years ago the tree was still pointed out, but a railroad company
+has now covered it with an embankment.
+
+
+
+
+ THE BAKER'S DOZEN
+
+Baas [Boss] Volckert Jan Pietersen Van Amsterdam kept a bake-shop in
+Albany, and lives in history as the man who invented New Year cakes and
+made gingerbread babies in the likeness of his own fat offspring. Good
+churchman though he was, the bane of his life was a fear of being
+bewitched, and perhaps it was to keep out evil spirits, who might make
+one last effort to gain the mastery over him, ere he turned the
+customary leaf with the incoming year, that he had primed himself with
+an extra glass of spirits on the last night of 1654. His sales had been
+brisk, and as he sat in his little shop, meditating comfortably on the
+gains he would make when his harmless rivals--the knikkerbakkers (bakers
+of marbles)--sent for their usual supply of olie-koeks and mince-pies on
+the morrow, he was startled by a sharp rap, and an ugly old woman
+entered. "Give me a dozen New Year's cookies!" she cried, in a shrill
+voice.
+
+"Vell, den, you needn' sbeak so loud. I aind teaf, den."
+
+"A dozen!" she screamed. "Give me a dozen. Here are only twelve."
+
+"Vell, den, dwalf is a dozen."
+
+"One more! I want a dozen."
+
+"Vell, den, if you vant anodder, go to de duyvil and ged it."
+
+Did the hag take him at his word? She left the shop, and from that time
+it seemed as if poor Volckert was bewitched, indeed, for his cakes were
+stolen; his bread was so light that it went up the chimney, when it was
+not so heavy that it fell through the oven; invisible hands plucked
+bricks from that same oven and pelted him until he was blue; his wife
+became deaf, his children went unkempt, and his trade went elsewhere.
+Thrice the old woman reappeared, and each time was sent anew to the
+devil; but at last, in despair, the baker called on Saint Nicolaus to
+come and advise him. His call was answered with startling quickness,
+for, almost while he was making it, the venerable patron of Dutch feasts
+stood before him. The good soul advised the trembling man to be more
+generous in his dealings with his fellows, and after a lecture on
+charity he vanished, when, lo! the old woman was there in his place.
+
+She repeated her demand for one more cake, and Volckert Jan Pietersen,
+etc., gave it, whereupon she exclaimed, "The spell is broken, and from
+this time a dozen is thirteen!" Taking from the counter a gingerbread
+effigy of Saint Nicolaus, she made the astonished Dutchman lay his hand
+upon it and swear to give more liberal measure in the future. So, until
+thirteen new States arose from the ruins of the colonies,--when the
+shrewd Yankees restored the original measure,--thirteen made a baker's
+dozen.
+
+
+
+
+ THE DEVIL'S DANCE-CHAMBER.
+
+Most storied of our New World rivers is the Hudson. Historic scenes
+have been enacted on its shores, and Indian, Dutchman, Briton, and
+American have invested it with romance. It had its source, in the red
+man's fancy, in a spring of eternal youth; giants and spirits dwelt in
+its woods and hills, and before the river-Shatemuc, king of streams, the
+red men called it--had broken through the highlands, those mountains
+were a pent for spirits who had rebelled against the Manitou. After the
+waters had forced a passage to the sea these evil ones sought shelter in
+the glens and valleys that open to right and left along its course, but
+in time of tempest, when they hear Manitou riding down the ravine on
+wings of storm, dashing thunderbolts against the cliffs, it is the fear
+that he will recapture them and force them into lightless caverns to
+expiate their revolt, that sends them huddling among the rocks and makes
+the hills resound with roars and howls.
+
+At the Devil's Dance-Chamber, a slight plateau on the west bank, between
+Newburg and Crom Elbow, the red men performed semi-religious rites as a
+preface to their hunting and fishing trips or ventures on the war-path.
+They built a fire, painted themselves, and in that frenzy into which
+savages are so readily lashed, and that is so like to the action of mobs
+in trousers, they tumbled, leaped, danced, yelled, sang, grimaced, and
+gesticulated until the Manitou disclosed himself, either as a harmless
+animal or a beast of prey. If he came in the former shape the augury
+was favorable, but if he showed himself as a bear or panther, it was a
+warning of evil that they seldom dared to disregard.
+
+The crew of Hudson's ship, the Half Moon, having chanced on one of these
+orgies, were so impressed by the fantastic spectacle that they gave the
+name Duyvels Dans-Kamer to the spot. Years afterwards, when Stuyvesant
+ascended the river, his doughty retainers were horrified, on landing
+below the Dans-Kamer, to discover hundreds of painted figures frisking
+there in the fire-light. A few surmised that they were but a new
+generation of savages holding a powwow, but most of the sailors fancied
+that the assemblage was demoniac, and that the figures were spirits of
+bad Indians repeating a scalp-dance and revelling in the mysterious
+fire-water that they had brought down from the river source in jars and
+skins. The spot was at least once profaned with blood, for a young
+Dutchman and his wife, of Albany, were captured here by an angry Indian,
+and although the young man succeeded in stabbing his captor to death, he
+was burned alive on the rock by the friends of the Indian whose wrath he
+had provoked. The wife, after being kept in captivity for a time, was
+ransomed.
+
+
+
+
+ THE CULPRIT FAY
+
+The wood-tick's drum convokes the elves at the noon of night on Cro'
+Nest top, and, clambering out of their flower-cup beds and hammocks of
+cobweb, they fly to the meeting, not to freak about the grass or banquet
+at the mushroom table, but to hear sentence passed on the fay who,
+forgetting his vestal vow, has loved an earthly maid. From his throne
+under a canopy of tulip petals, borne on pillars of shell, the king
+commands silence, and with severe eye but softened voice he tells the
+culprit that while he has scorned the royal decree he has saved himself
+from the extreme penalty, of imprisonment in walnut shells and cobweb
+dungeons, by loving a maid who is gentle and pure. So it shall be
+enough if he will go down to the Hudson and seize a drop from the bow of
+mist that a sturgeon leaves when he makes his leap; and after, to kindle
+his darkened flame-wood lamp at a meteor spark. The fairy bows, and
+without a word slowly descends the rocky steep, for his wing is soiled
+and has lost its power; but once at the river, he tugs amain at a mussel
+shell till he has it afloat; then, leaping in, he paddles out with a
+strong grass blade till he comes to the spot where the sturgeon swims,
+though the watersprites plague him and toss his boat, and the fish and
+the leeches bunt and drag; but, suddenly, the sturgeon shoots from the
+water, and ere the arch of mist that he tracks through the air has
+vanished, the sprite has caught a drop of the spray in a tiny blossom,
+and in this he washes clean his wings.
+
+The water-goblins torment him no longer. They push his boat to the
+shore, where, alighting, he kisses his hand, then, even as a bubble, he
+flies back to the mountain top, dons his acorn helmet, his corselet of
+bee-hide, his shield of lady-bug shell, and grasping his lance, tipped
+with wasp sting, he bestrides his fire-fly steed and off he goes like a
+flash. The world spreads out and then grows small, but he flies
+straight on. The ice-ghosts leer from the topmost clouds, and the mists
+surge round, but he shakes his lance and pipes his call, and at last he
+comes to the Milky Way, where the sky-sylphs lead him to their queen,
+who lies couched in a palace ceiled with stars, its dome held up by
+northern lights and the curtains made of the morning's flush. Her
+mantle is twilight purple, tied with threads of gold from the eastern
+dawn, and her face is as fair as the silver moon.
+
+She begs the fay to stay with her and taste forever the joys of heaven,
+but the knightly elf keeps down the beating of his heart, for he
+remembers a face on earth that is fairer than hers, and he begs to go.
+With a sigh she fits him a car of cloud, with the fire-fly steed chained
+on behind, and he hurries away to the northern sky whence the meteor
+comes, with roar and whirl, and as it passes it bursts to flame. He
+lights his lamp at a glowing spark, then wheels away to the fairy-land.
+His king and his brothers hail him stoutly, with song and shout, and
+feast and dance, and the revel is kept till the eastern sky has a ruddy
+streak. Then the cock crows shrill and the fays are gone.
+
+
+
+
+ POKEPSIE
+
+The name of this town has forty-two spellings in old records, and with
+singular pertinacity in ill-doing, the inhabitants have fastened on it
+the longest and clumsiest of all. It comes from the Mohegan words Apo-
+keep-sink, meaning a safe, pleasant harbor. Harbor it might be for
+canoes, but for nothing bigger, for it was only the little cove that was
+so called between Call Rock and Adder Cliff,--the former indicating
+where settlers awaiting passage hailed the masters of vessels from its
+top, and the latter taking its name from the snakes that abounded there.
+
+Hither came a band of Delawares with Pequot captives, among them a young
+chief to whom had been offered not only life but leadership if he would
+renounce his tribe, receive the mark of the turtle on his breast, and
+become a Delaware. On his refusal, he was bound to a tree, and was
+about to undergo the torture, when a girl among the listeners sprang to
+his side. She, too, was a Pequot, but the turtle totem was on her
+bosom, and when she begged his life, because they had been betrothed,
+the captors paused to talk of it. She had chosen well the time to
+interfere, for a band of Hurons was approaching, and even as the talk
+went on their yell was heard in the wood. Instant measures for defence
+were taken, and in the fight that followed both chief and maiden were
+forgotten; but though she cut the cords that bound him, they were
+separated in the confusion, he disappearing, she falling captive to the
+Hurons, who, sated with blood, retired from the field. In the fantastic
+disguise of a wizard the young Pequot entered their camp soon after, and
+on being asked to try his enchantments for the cure of a young woman, he
+entered her tent, showing no surprise at finding her to be the maiden of
+his choice, who was suffering from nothing worse than nerves, due to the
+excitement of the battle. Left alone with his patient, he disclosed his
+identity, and planned a way of escape that proved effective on that very
+night, for, though pursued by the angry Hurons, the couple reached "safe
+harbor," thence making a way to their own country in the east, where
+they were married.
+
+
+
+
+ DUNDERBERG
+
+Dunderberg, "Thunder Mountain," at the southern gate of the Hudson
+Highlands, is a wooded eminence, chiefly populated by a crew of imps of
+stout circumference, whose leader, the Heer, is a bulbous goblin clad in
+the dress worn by Dutch colonists two centuries ago, and carrying a
+speaking-trumpet, through which he bawls his orders for the blowing of
+winds and the touching off of lightnings. These orders are given in Low
+Dutch, and are put into execution by the imps aforesaid, who troop into
+the air and tumble about in the mist, sometimes smiting the flag or
+topsail of a ship to ribbons, or laying the vessel over before the wind
+until she is in peril of going on beam ends. At one time a sloop
+passing the Dunderberg had nearly foundered, when the crew discovered
+the sugar-loaf hat of the Heer at the mast-head. None dared to climb
+for it, and it was not until she had driven past Pollopel's Island--the
+limit of the Heer's jurisdiction--that she righted. As she did so the
+little hat spun into the air like a top, creating a vortex that drew up
+the storm-clouds, and the sloop kept her way prosperously for the rest
+of the voyage. The captain had nailed a horse-shoe to the mast. The
+"Hat Rogue" of the Devil's Bridge in Switzerland must be a relative of
+this gamesome sprite, for his mischief is usually of a harmless sort;
+but, to be on the safe side, the Dutchmen who plied along the river
+lowered their peaks in homage to the keeper of the mountain, and for
+years this was a common practice. Mariners who paid this courtesy to
+the Heer of the Donder Berg were never molested by his imps, though
+skipper Ouselsticker, of Fishkill,--for all he had a parson on board,--
+was once beset by a heavy squall, and the goblin came out of the mist
+and sat astraddle of his bowsprit, seeming to guide his schooner
+straight toward the rocks. The dominie chanted the song of Saint
+Nicolaus, and the goblin, unable to endure either its spiritual potency
+or the worthy parson's singing, shot upward like a ball and rode off on
+the gale, carrying with him the nightcap of the parson's wife, which he
+hung on the weathercock of Esopus steeple, forty miles away.
+
+
+
+
+ ANTHONY'S NOSE
+
+The Hudson Highlands are suggestively named Bear Mountain, Sugar Loaf,
+Cro' Nest, Storm King, called by the Dutch Boterberg, or Butter Hill,
+from its likeness to a pat of butter; Beacon Hill, where the fires
+blazed to tell the country that the Revolutionary war was over;
+Dunderberg, Mount Taurus, so called because a wild bull that had
+terrorized the Highlands was chased out of his haunts on this height,
+and was killed by falling from a cliff on an eminence to the northward,
+known, in consequence, as Breakneck Hill. These, with Anthony's Nose,
+are the principal points of interest in the lovely and impressive
+panorama that unfolds before the view as the boats fly onward.
+
+Concerning the last-named elevation, the aquiline promontory that abuts
+on the Hudson opposite Dunderberg, it takes title from no resemblance to
+the human feature, but is so named because Anthony Van Corlaer, the
+trumpeter, who afterwards left a reason for calling the upper boundary
+of Manhattan Island Spuyten Duyvil Creek, killed the first sturgeon ever
+eaten at the foot of this mountain. It happened in this wise: By
+assiduous devotion to keg and flagon Anthony had begotten a nose that
+was the wonder and admiration of all who knew it, for its size was
+prodigious; in color it rivalled the carbuncle, and it shone like
+polished copper. As Anthony was lounging over the quarter of Peter
+Stuyvesant's galley one summer morning this nose caught a ray from the
+sun and reflected it hissing into the water, where it killed a sturgeon
+that was rising beside the vessel. The fish was pulled aboard, eaten,
+and declared good, though the singed place savored of brimstone, and in
+commemoration of the event Stuyvesant dubbed the mountain that rose
+above his vessel Anthony's Nose.
+
+
+
+
+ MOODUA CREEK
+
+Moodua is an evolution, through Murdy's and Moodna, from Murderer's
+Creek, its present inexpressive name having been given to it by N. P.
+Willis. One Murdock lived on its shore with his wife, two sons, and a
+daughter; and often in the evening Naoman, a warrior of a neighboring
+tribe, came to the cabin, caressed the children, and shared the
+woodman's hospitality. One day the little girl found in the forest an
+arrow wrapped in snake-skin and tipped with crow's feather; then the boy
+found a hatchet hanging by a hair from a bough above the door; then a
+glare of evil eyes was caught for an instant in a thicket. Naoman, when
+he came, was reserved and stern, finding voice only to warn the family
+to fly that night; so, when all was still, the threatened family made
+its way softly, but quickly, to the Hudson shore, and embarked for
+Fisher's Kill, across the river.
+
+The wind lagged and their boat drew heavily, and when, from the shade of
+Pollopel's Island, a canoe swept out, propelled by twelve men, the
+hearts of the people in the boat sank in despair. The wife was about to
+leap over, but Murdock drew her back; then, loading and firing as fast
+as possible, he laid six of his pursuers low; but the canoe was savagely
+urged forward, and in another minute every member of the family was a
+helpless captive. When the skiff had been dragged back, the prisoners
+were marched through the wood to an open spot where the principal
+members of the tribe sat in council.
+
+The sachem arose, twisted his hands in the woman's golden hair, bared
+his knife, and cried, "Tell us what Indian warned you and betrayed his
+tribe, or you shall see husband and children bleed before your eyes."
+The woman answered never a word, but after a little Naoman arose and
+said, "'Twas I;" then drew his blanket about him and knelt for
+execution. An axe cleft his skull. Drunk with the sight of blood, the
+Indians rushed upon the captives and slew them, one by one. The
+prisoners neither shrank nor cried for mercy, but met their end with
+hymns upon their lips, and, seeing that they could so meet death, one
+member of the band let fall his arm and straight became a Christian.
+The cabin was burned, the bodies flung into the stream, and the stain of
+blood was seen for many a year in Murderer's Creek.
+
+
+
+
+ A TRAPPER'S GHASTLY VENGEANCE
+
+About a mile back from the Hudson, at Coxsackie, stood the cabin of Nick
+Wolsey, who, in the last century, was known to the river settlements as
+a hunter and trapper of correct aim, shrewdness, endurance, and taciturn
+habit. For many years he lived in this cabin alone, except for the
+company of his dog; but while visiting a camp of Indians in the
+wilderness he was struck with the engaging manner of one of the girls of
+the tribe; he repeated the visit; he found cause to go to the camp
+frequently; he made presents to the father of the maid, and at length
+won her consent to be his wife. The simple marriage ceremony of the
+tribe was performed, and Wolsey led Minamee to his home; but the wedding
+was interrupted in an almost tragic manner, for a surly fellow who had
+loved the girl, yet who never had found courage to declare himself, was
+wrought to such a jealous fury at the discovery of Wolsey's good fortune
+that he sprang at him with a knife, and would have despatched him on the
+spot had not the white man's faithful hound leaped at his throat and
+borne him to the ground.
+
+Wolsey disarmed the fellow and kicked and cuffed him to the edge of the
+wood, while the whole company shouted with laughter at this ignominious
+punishment, and approved it. A year or more passed. Wolsey and his
+Indian wife were happy in their free and simple life; happy, too, in
+their little babe. Wolsey was seldom absent from his cabin for any
+considerable length of time, and usually returned to it before the night
+set in. One evening he noticed that the grass and twigs were bent near
+his house by some passing foot that, with the keen eye of the woodman,
+he saw was not his wife's.
+
+"Some hunter," he said, "saw the house when he passed here, and as,
+belike, he never saw one before, he stopped to look in." For the trail
+led to his window, and diverged thence to the forest again. A few days
+later, as he was returning, he came on the footprints that were freshly
+made, and a shadow crossed his face. On nearing the door he stumbled on
+the body of his dog, lying rigid on the ground. "How did this happen,
+Minamee?" he cried, as he flung open the door. The wife answered, in a
+low voice, "O Hush! you'll wake the child."
+
+Nick Wolsey entered the cabin and stood as one turned to marble.
+Minamee, his wife, sat on the gold hearth, her face and hands cut and
+blackened, her dress torn, her eyes glassy, a meaningless smile on her
+lips. In her arms she pressed the body of her infant, its dress soaked
+with blood, and the head of the little creature lay on the floor beside
+her. She crooned softly over the cold clay as if hushing it to sleep,
+and when Wolsey at length found words, she only whispered, "Hush! you
+will wake him." The night went heavily on; day dawned, and the crooning
+became lower and lower; still, through all that day the bereft woman
+rocked to and fro upon the floor, and the agonized husband hung about
+her, trying in vain to give comfort, to bind her wounds, to get some
+explanation of the mystery that confronted him. The second night set
+in, and it was evident that it would be the last for Minamee. Her
+strength failed until she allowed herself to be placed on a couch of
+skins, while the body of her child was gently lifted from her arms.
+Then, for a few brief minutes, her reason was restored, and she found
+words to tell her husband how the Indian whose murderous attack he had
+thwarted at the wedding had come to the cabin, shot the dog that had
+rushed out to defend the place, beat the woman back from the door, tore
+the baby from its bed, slashed its head off with a knife, and, flinging
+the little body into her lap, departed with the words, "This is my
+revenge. I am satisfied." Before the sun was in the east again Minamee
+was with her baby.
+
+Wolsey sat for hours in the ruin of his happiness, his breathing alone
+proving that he was alive, and when at last he arose and went out of the
+house, there were neither tears nor outcry; he saddled his horse and
+rode off to the westward. At nightfall he came to the Indian village
+where he had won his wife, and relating to the assembled tribe what had
+happened, he demanded that the murderer be given up to him. His demand
+was readily granted, whereupon the white man advanced on the cowering
+wretch, who had confidently expected the protection of his people, and
+with the quick fling and jerk of a raw-hide rope bound his arms to his
+side. Then casting a noose about his neck and tying the end of it to
+his saddle-bow, he set off for the Hudson. All that night he rode, the
+Indian walking and running at the horse's heels, and next day he reached
+his cabin. Tying his prisoner to a tree, the trapper cut a quantity of
+young willows, from which he fashioned a large cradle-like receptacle;
+in this he placed the culprit, face upward, and tied so stoutly that he
+could not move a finger; then going into his house, he emerged with the
+body of Minamee, and laid it, face downward, on the wretch, who could
+not repress a groan of horror as the awful burden sank on his breast.
+Wolsey bound together the living and the dead, and with a swing of his
+powerful arms he flung them on his horse's back, securing them there
+with so many turns of rope that nothing could displace them. Now he
+began to lash his horse until the poor beast trembled with anger and
+pain, when, flinging off the halter, he gave it a final lash, and the
+animal plunged, foaming and snorting, into the wilderness. When it had
+vanished and the hoof-beats were no longer heard, Nick Wolsey took his
+rifle on his arm and left his home forever. And tradition says that the
+horse never stopped in its mad career, but that on still nights it can
+be heard sweeping through the woods along the Hudson and along the
+Mohawk like a whirlwind, and that as the sound goes by a smothered voice
+breaks out in cursing, in appeal, then in harsh and dreadful laughter.
+
+
+
+
+THE VANDERDECKEN OF TAPPAN ZEE
+
+It is Saturday night; the swell of the Hudson lazily heaves against the
+shores of Tappan Zee, the cliff above Tarrytown where the white lady
+cries on winter nights is pale in starlight, and crickets chirp in the
+boskage. It is so still that the lap of oars can be heard coming across
+the water at least a mile away. Some small boat, evidently, but of
+heavy build, for it takes a vigorous hand to propel it, and now there is
+a grinding of oars on thole-pins. Strange that it is not yet seen, for
+the sound is near. Look! Is that a shadow crossing that wrinkle of
+starlight in the water? The oars have stopped, and there is no wind to
+make that sound of a sigh.
+
+Ho, Rambout Van Dam! Is it you? Are you still expiating your oath to
+pull from Kakiat to Spuyten Duyvil before the dawn of Sabbath, if it
+takes you a month of Sundays? Better for you had you passed the night
+with your roistering friends at Kakiat, or started homeward earlier, for
+Sabbath-breaking is no sin now, and you, poor ghost, will find little
+sympathy for your plight. Grant that your month of Sundays, or your
+cycle of months of Sundays, be soon up, for it is sad to be reminded
+that we may be punished for offences many years forgotten. When the sun
+is high to-morrow a score of barges will vex the sea of Tappan, each
+crowded with men and maids from New Amsterdam, jigging to profane music
+and refreshing themselves with such liquors as you, Rambout, never even
+smelled--be thankful for that much. If your shade sits blinking at them
+from the wooded buttresses of the Palisades, you must repine, indeed, at
+the hardness of your fate.
+
+
+
+
+ THE GALLOPING HESSIAN
+
+In the flower-gemmed cemetery of Tarrytown, where gentle Irving sleeps,
+a Hessian soldier was interred after sustaining misfortune in the loss
+of his head in one of the Revolutionary battles. For a long time after
+he was buried it was the habit of this gentleman to crawl from his grave
+at unseemly hours and gallop about the country, sending shivers through
+the frames of many worthy people, who shrank under their blankets when
+they heard the rush of hoofs along the unlighted roads.
+
+In later times there lived in Tarrytown--so named because of the
+tarrying habits of Dutch gossips on market days, though some hard-minded
+people insist that Tarwe-town means Wheat-towna gaunt schoolmaster, one
+Ichabod Crane, who cherished sweet sentiments for Katrina Van Tassell,
+the buxom daughter of a farmer, also a famous maker of pies and
+doughnuts. Ichabod had been calling late one evening, and, his way home
+being long, Katrina's father lent him a horse to make the journey; but
+even with this advantage the youth set out with misgivings, for he had
+to pass the graveyard.
+
+As it was near the hour when the Hessian was to ride, he whistled feebly
+to keep his courage up, but when he came to the dreaded spot the whistle
+died in a gasp, for he heard the tread of a horse. On looking around,
+his hair bristled and his heart came up like a plug in his throat to
+hinder his breathing, for he saw a headless horseman coming over the
+ridge behind him, blackly defined against the starry sky. Setting spurs
+to his nag with a hope of being first to reach Sleepy Hollow bridge,
+which the spectre never passed, the unhappy man made the best possible
+time in that direction, for his follower was surely overtaking him.
+Another minute and the bridge would be reached; but, to Ichabod's
+horror, the Hessian dashed alongside and, rising in his stirrups, flung
+his head full at the fugitive's back. With a squeal of fright the
+schoolmaster rolled into a mass of weeds by the wayside, and for some
+minutes he remained there, knowing and remembering nothing.
+
+Next morning farmer Van Tassell's horse was found grazing in a field
+near Sleepy Hollow, and a man who lived some miles southward reported
+that he had seen Mr. Crane striding as rapidly along the road to New
+York as his lean legs could take him, and wearing a pale and serious
+face as he kept his march. There were yellow stains on the back of his
+coat, and the man who restored the horse found a smashed pumpkin in the
+broken bushes beside the road. Ichabod never returned to Tarrytown, and
+when Brom Bones, a stout young ploughman and taphaunter, married
+Katrina, people made bold to say that he knew more about the galloping
+Hessian than any one else, though they believed that he never had reason
+to be jealous of Ichabod Crane.
+
+
+
+
+ STORM SHIP OF THE HUDSON
+
+It was noised about New Amsterdam, two hundred years ago, that a round
+and bulky ship flying Dutch colors from her lofty quarter was careering
+up the harbor in the teeth of a north wind, through the swift waters of
+an ebbing tide, and making for the Hudson. A signal from the Battery to
+heave to and account for herself being disregarded, a cannon was trained
+upon her, and a ball went whistling through her cloudy and imponderable
+mass, for timbers she had none. Some of the sailor-folk talked of
+mirages that rose into the air of northern coasts and seas, but the wise
+ones put their fingers beside their noses and called to memory the
+Flying Dutchman, that wanderer of the seas whose captain, having sworn
+that he would round Cape Horn in spite of heaven and hell, has been
+beating to and fro along the bleak Fuegian coast and elsewhere for
+centuries, being allowed to land but once in seven years, when he can
+break the curse if he finds a girl who will love him. Perhaps Captain
+Vanderdecken found this maiden of his hopes in some Dutch settlement on
+the Hudson, or perhaps he expiated his rashness by prayer and penitence;
+howbeit, he never came down again, unless he slipped away to sea in snow
+or fog so dense that watchers and boatmen saw nothing of his passing. A
+few old settlers declared the vessel to be the Half Moon, and there were
+some who testified to seeing that identical ship with Hudson and his
+spectre crew on board making for the Catskills to hold carouse.
+
+This fleeting vision has been confounded with the storm ship that lurks
+about the foot of the Palisades and Point-no-Point, cruising through
+Tappan Zee at night when a gale is coming up. The Hudson is four miles
+wide at Tappan, and squalls have space enough to gather force; hence,
+when old skippers saw the misty form of a ship steal out from the
+shadows of the western hills, then fly like a gull from shore to shore,
+catching the moonlight on her topsails, but showing no lanterns, they
+made to windward and dropped anchor, unless their craft were stanch and
+their pilot's brains unvexed with liquor. On summer nights, when falls
+that curious silence which is ominous of tempest, the storm ship is not
+only seen spinning across the mirror surface of the river, but the
+voices of the crew are heard as they chant at the braces and halyards in
+words devoid of meaning to the listeners.
+
+
+
+
+ WHY SPUYTEN DUYVIL IS SO NAMED
+
+The tide-water creek that forms the upper boundary of Manhattan Island
+is known to dwellers in tenements round about as "Spittin' Divvle." The
+proper name of it is Spuyten Duyvil, and this, in turn, is the
+compression of a celebrated boast by Anthony Van Corlaer. This
+redoubtable gentleman, famous for fat, long wind, and long whiskers, was
+trumpeter for the garrison at New Amsterdam, which his countrymen had
+just bought for twenty-four dollars, and he sounded the brass so
+sturdily that in the fight between the Dutch and Indians at the Dey
+Street peach orchard his blasts struck more terror into the red men's
+hearts than did the matchlocks of his comrades. William the Testy vowed
+that Anthony and his trumpet were garrison enough for all Manhattan
+Island, for he argued that no regiment of Yankees would approach near
+enough to be struck with lasting deafness, as must have happened if they
+came when Anthony was awake.
+
+Peter Stuyvesant-Peter the Headstrong--showed his appreciation of
+Anthony's worth by making him his esquire, and when he got news of an
+English expedition on its way to seize his unoffending colony, he at
+once ordered Anthony to rouse the villages along the Hudson with a
+trumpet call to war. The esquire took a hurried leave of six or eight
+ladies, each of whom delighted to believe that his affections were
+lavished on her alone, and bravely started northward, his trumpet
+hanging on one side, a stone bottle, much heavier, depending from the
+other. It was a stormy evening when he arrived at the upper end of the
+island, and there was no ferryman in sight, so, after fuming up and down
+the shore, he swallowed a mighty draught of Dutch courage,--for he was
+as accomplished a performer on the horn as on the trumpet,--and swore
+with ornate and voluminous oaths that he would swim the stream "in spite
+of the devil" [En spuyt den Duyvil].
+
+He plunged in, and had gone half-way across when the Evil One, not to be
+spited, appeared as a huge moss-bunker, vomiting boiling water and
+lashing a fiery tail. This dreadful fish seized Anthony by the leg; but
+the trumpeter was game, for, raising his instrument to his lips, he
+exhaled his last breath through it in a defiant blast that rang through
+the woods for miles and made the devil himself let go for a moment.
+Then he was dragged below, his nose shining through the water more and
+more faintly, until, at last, all sight of him was lost. The failure of
+his mission resulted in the downfall of the Dutch in America, for, soon
+after, the English won a bloodless victory, and St. George's cross
+flaunted from the ramparts where Anthony had so often saluted the
+setting sun. But it was years, even then, before he was hushed, for in
+stormy weather it was claimed that the shrill of his trumpet could be
+heard near the creek that he had named, sounding above the deeper roar
+of the blast.
+
+
+
+
+ THE RAMAPO SALAMANDER
+
+A curious tale of the Rosicrucians runs to the effect that more than two
+centuries ago a band of German colonists entered the Ramapo valley and
+put up houses of stone, like those they had left in the Hartz Mountains,
+and when the Indians saw how they made knives and other wonderful things
+out of metal, which they extracted from the rocks by fire, they believed
+them to be manitous and went away, not wishing to resist their
+possession of the land. There was treasure here, for High Tor, or Torn
+Mountain, had been the home of Amasis, youngest of the magi who had
+followed the star of Bethlehem. He had found his way, through Asia and
+Alaska, to this country, had taken to wife a native woman, by whom he
+had a child, and here on the summit he had built a temple. Having
+refused the sun worship, when the Indians demanded that he should take
+their faith, he was set upon, and would have been killed had not an
+earthquake torn the ground at his feet, opening a new channel for the
+Hudson and precipitating into it every one but the magus and his
+daughter. To him had been revealed in magic vision the secrets of
+wealth in the rocks.
+
+The leader in the German colony, one Hugo, was a man of noble origin,
+who had a wife and two children: a boy, named after himself; a girl,--
+Mary. Though it had been the custom in the other country to let out the
+forge fires once in seven years, Hugo opposed that practice in the forge
+he had built as needless. But his men murmured and talked of the
+salamander that once in seven years attains its growth in unquenched
+flame and goes forth doing mischief. On the day when that period was
+ended the master entered his works and saw the men gazing into the
+furnace at a pale form that seemed made from flame, that was nodding and
+turning in the fire, occasionally darting its tongue at them or allowing
+its tail to fall out and lie along the stone floor. As he came to the
+door he, too, was transfixed, and the fire seemed burning his vitals,
+until he felt water sprinkled on his face, and saw that his wife, whom
+he had left at home too ill to move, stood behind him and was casting
+holy water into the furnace, speaking an incantation as she did so. At
+that moment a storm arose, and a rain fell that put out the fire; but as
+the last glow faded the lady fell dead.
+
+When her children were to be consecrated, seven years later, those who
+stood outside of the church during the ceremony saw a vivid flash, and
+the nurse turned from the boy in her fright. She took her hands from
+her eyes. The child was gone. Twice seven years had passed and the
+daughter remained unspotted by the world, for, on the night when her
+father had led her to the top of High Torn Mountain and shown her what
+Amasis had seen,--the earth spirits in their caves heaping jewels and
+offering to give them if Hugo would speak the word that binds the free
+to the earth forces and bars his future for a thousand years,--it was
+her prayer that brought him to his senses and made the scene below grow
+dim, though the baleful light of the salamander clinging to the rocks at
+the bottom of the cave sent a glow into the sky.
+
+Many nights after that the glow was seen on the height and Hugo was
+missing from his home, but for lack of a pure soul to stand as
+interpreter he failed to read the words that burned in the triangle on
+the salamander's back, and returned in rage and jealousy. A knightly
+man had of late appeared in the settlement, and between him and Mary a
+tender feeling had arisen, that, however, was unexpressed until, after
+saving her from the attack of a panther, he had allowed her to fall into
+his arms. She would willingly then have declared her love for him, but
+he placed her gently and regretfully from him and said, "When you slept
+I came to you and put a crown of gems on your head: that was because I
+was in the power of the earth spirit. Then I had power only over the
+element of fire, that either consumes or hardens to stone; but now water
+and life are mine. Behold! Wear these, for thou art worthy." And
+touching the tears that had fallen from her eyes, they turned into
+lilies in his hands, and he put them on her brow.
+
+"Shall we meet again?" asked the girl.
+
+"I do not know," said he. "I tread the darkness of the universe alone,
+and I peril my redemption by yielding to this love of earth. Thou art
+redeemed already, but I must make my way back to God through obedience
+tested in trial. Know that I am one of those that left heaven for love
+of man. We were of that subtle element which is flame, burning and
+glowing with love,--and when thy mother came to me with the power of
+purity to cast me out of the furnace, I lost my shape of fire and took
+that of a human being,--a child. I have been with thee often, and was
+rushing to annihilation, because I could not withstand the ordeal of the
+senses. Had I yielded, or found thee other than thou art, I should have
+become again an earth spirit. I have been led away by wish for power,
+such as I have in my grasp, and forgot the mission to the suffering. I
+became a wanderer over the earth until I reached this land, the land
+that you call new. Here was to be my last trial and here I am to pass
+the gate of fire."
+
+As he spoke voices arose from the settlement.
+
+"They are coming," said he. The stout form of Hugo was in advance.
+With a fierce oath he sprang on the young man. "He has ruined my
+household," he cried. "Fling him into the furnace!" The young man
+stood waiting, but his brow was serene. He was seized, and in a few
+moments had disappeared through the mouth of the burning pit. But Mary,
+looking up, saw a shape in robes of silvery light, and it drifted upward
+until it vanished in the darkness. The look of horror on her face died
+away, and a peace came to it that endured until the end.
+
+
+
+
+
+ CHIEF CROTON
+
+Between the island of Manhattoes and the Catskills the Hudson shores
+were plagued with spooks, and even as late as the nineteenth century
+Hans Anderson, a man who tilled a farm back of Peekskill, was worried
+into his grave by the leaden-face likeness of a British spy whom he had
+hanged on General Putnam's orders. "Old Put" doubtless enjoyed immunity
+from this vexatious creature, because he was born with few nerves. A
+region especially afflicted was the confluence of the Croton and the
+Hudson, for the Kitchawan buryingground was here, and the red people
+being disturbed by the tramping of white men over their graves, "the
+walking sachems of Teller's Point" were nightly to be met on their
+errands of protest.
+
+These Indians had built a palisade on Croton Point, and here they made
+their last stand against their enemies from the north. Throughout the
+fight old chief Croton stood on the wall with arrows showering around
+him, and directed the resistance with the utmost calm. Not until every
+one of his men was dead and the fort was going up in flame about him did
+he confess defeat. Then standing amid the charring timbers, he used his
+last breath in calling down the curse of the Great Spirit against the
+foe. As the victorious enemy rushed into the enclosure to secure the
+scalps of the dead he fell lifeless into the fire, and their jubilant
+yell was lost upon his ears. Yet, he could not rest nor bear to leave
+his ancient home, even after death, and often his form, in musing
+attitude, was seen moving through the woods. When a manor was built on
+the ruins of his fort, he appeared to the master of it, to urge him into
+the Continental army, and having seen this behest obeyed and laid a
+solemn injointure to keep the freedom of the land forever, he vanished,
+and never appeared again.
+
+
+
+
+ THE RETREAT FROM MAHOPAC
+
+After the English had secured the city of New Amsterdam and had begun
+to extend their settlements along the Hudson, the Indians congregated
+in large numbers about Lake Mahopac, and rejected all overtures for the
+purchase of that region. In their resolution they were sustained by
+their young chief Omoyao, who refused to abandonon on any terms the
+country where his fathers had solong hunted, fished, and built their
+lodges. A half-breed, one Joliper, a member of this tribe, was secretly
+in the pay of the English, but the allurements and insinuations that he
+put forth on their behalf were as futile as the breathing of wind in the
+leaves. At last the white men grew angry. Have the land they would, by
+evil course if good ways were refused, and commissioning Joliper to act
+for them in a decisive manner, they guaranteed to supply him with forces
+if his negotiations fell through. This man never thought it needful to
+negotiate. He knew the temper of his tribe and he was too jealous of
+his chief to go to him for favors, because he loved Maya, the chosen one
+of Omoyao.
+
+At the door of Maya's tent he entreated her to go with him to the white
+settlements, and on her refusal he broke into angry threats, declaring,
+in the self-forgetfulness of passion, that he would kill her lover and
+lead the English against the tribe. Unknown to both Omoyao had
+overheard this interview, and he immediately sent runners to tell all
+warriors of his people to meet him at once on the island in the lake.
+Though the runners were cautioned to keep their errand secret, it is
+probable that Joliper suspected that the alarm had gone forth, and he
+resolved to strike at once; so he summoned his renegades, stole into
+camp next evening and made toward Maya's wigwam, intending to take her
+to a place of safety. Seeing the chief at the door, he shot an arrow at
+him, but the shaft went wide and slew the girl's father. Realizing,
+upon this assault, that he was outwitted and that his people were
+outnumbered, the chief called to Maya to meet him at the island, and
+plunged into the brush, after seeing that she had taken flight in an
+opposite direction. The vengeful Joliper was close behind him with his
+renegades, and the chief was captured; then, that he might not
+communicate with his people or delay the operations against them, it was
+resolved to put him to death.
+
+He was tied to a tree, the surrounding wood was set on fire, and he was
+abandoned to his fate, his enemies leaving him to destruction in their
+haste to reach the place of the council and slay or capture all who were
+there. Hardly were they out of hearing ere the plash of a paddle
+sounded through the roar of flame and Maya sprang upon the bank, cut her
+lover's bonds, and with him made toward the island, which they reached
+by a protected way before the assailants had arrived. They told the
+story of Joliper's cruelty and treason, and when his boats were seen
+coming in to shore they had eyes and hands only for Joliper. He was the
+first to land. Hardly had he touched the strand before he was
+surrounded by a frenzied crowd and had fallen bleeding from a hundred
+gashes.
+
+The Indians were overpowered after a brief and bloody resistance. They
+took safety in flight. Omoyao and Maya, climbing upon the rock above
+their "council chamber," found that while most of their people had
+escaped their own retreat was cut off, and that it would be impossible
+to reach any of the canoes. They preferred death to torture and
+captivity, so, hand in hand, they leaped together down the cliff, and
+the English claimed the land next day.
+
+
+
+
+ NIAGARA
+
+The cataract of Niagara (properly pronounced Nee-ah-gah-rah), or
+Oniahgarah, is as fatal as it is fascinating, beautiful, sublime, and
+the casualties occurring there justify the tradition that "the
+Thundering Water asks two victims every year." It was reputed, before
+white men looked for the first time on these falls--and what thumping
+yarns they told about them!--that two lives were lost here annually, and
+this average has been kept up by men and women who fall into the flood
+through accident, recklessness or despair, while bloody battles have
+been fought on the shores, and vessels have been hurled over the brink,
+to be dashed to splinters on the rocks.
+
+The sound of the cataract was declared to be the voice of a mighty
+spirit that dwelt in the waters, and in former centuries the Indians
+offered to it a yearly sacrifice. This sacrifice was a maiden of the
+tribe, who was sent over in a white canoe, decorated with fruit and
+flowers, and the girls contended for this honor, for the brides of
+Manitou were objects of a special grace in the happy hunting-grounds.
+The last recorded sacrifice was in 1679, when Lelawala, the daughter of
+chief Eagle Eye, was chosen, in spite of the urgings and protests of the
+chevalier La Salle, who had been trying to restrain the people from
+their idolatries by an exposition of the Christian dogma. To his
+protests he received the unexpected answer, "Your words witness against
+you. Christ, you say, set us an example. We will follow it. Why
+should one death be great, while our sacrifice is horrible?" So the
+tribe gathered at the bank to watch the sailing of the white canoe. The
+chief watched the embarkation with the stoicism usual to the Indian when
+he is observed by others, but when the little bark swung out into the
+current his affection mastered him, and he leaped into his own canoe and
+tried to overtake his daughter. In a moment both were beyond the power
+of rescue. After their death they were changed into spirits of pure
+strength and goodness, and live in a crystal heaven so far beneath the
+fall that its roaring is a music to them: she, the maid of the mist; he,
+the ruler of the cataract. Another version of the legend makes a lover
+and his mistress the chief actors. Some years later a patriarch of the
+tribe and all his sons went over the fall when the white men had seized
+their lands, preferring death to flight or war.
+
+In about the year 200 the Stone Giants waded across the river below the
+falls on their northward march. These beings were descended from an
+ancient family, and being separated from their stock in the year 150 by
+the breaking of a vine bridge across the Mississippi, they left that
+region. Indian Pass, in the Adirondacks, bore the names of Otneyarheh,
+Stony Giants; Ganosgwah, Giants Clothed in Stone; and Dayohjegago, Place
+Where the Storm Clouds Fight the Great Serpent. Giants and serpents
+were held to be harmful inventions of the Evil Spirit, and the Lightning
+god, catching up clouds as he stood on the crags, broke them open, tore
+their lightnings out and hurled them against the monsters. These
+cannibals had almost exterminated the Iroquois, for they were of immense
+size and had made themselves almost invincible by rolling daily in the
+sand until their flesh was like stone. The Holder of the Heavens,
+viewing their evil actions from on high, came down disguised as one of
+their number--he used often to meditate on Manitou Rock, at the
+Whirlpool--and leading them to a valley near Onondaga, on pretence of
+guiding them to a fairer country, he stood on a hill above them and
+hurled rocks upon their heads until all, save one, who fled into the
+north, were dead. Yet, in the fulness of time, new children of the
+Stone Giants (mail-clad Europeans?) entered the region again and were
+destroyed by the Great Spirit,--oddly enough where the famous fraud
+known as the Cardiff giant was alleged to have been found. The
+Onondagas believed this statue to be one of their ancient foes.
+
+
+
+
+ THE DEFORMED OF ZOAR
+
+The valley of Zoar, in western New York, is so surrounded by hills that
+its discoverers--a religious people, who gave it a name from Scripture
+said, "This is Zoar; it is impregnable. From her we will never go."
+And truly, for lack of roads, they found it so hard to get out, having
+got in, that they did not leave it. Among the early settlers here were
+people of a family named Wright, whose house became a sort of inn for
+the infrequent traveller, inasmuch as they were not troubled with piety,
+and had no scruples against the selling of drink and the playing of
+cards at late hours. A peddler passed through the valley on his way to
+Buffalo and stopped at the Wright house for a lodging, but before he
+went to bed he incautiously showed a number of golden trinkets from his
+pack and drew a considerable quantity of money out of his pocket when he
+paid the fee for his lodging. Hardly had he fallen asleep before his
+greedy hosts were in the room, searching for his money. Their lack of
+caution caused him to awake, and as he found them rifling his pockets
+and his pack he sprang up and showed fight.
+
+A blow sent him to the bottom of the stairs, where his attempt to escape
+was intercepted, and the family closed around him and bound his arms and
+legs. They showed him the money they had taken and asked where he had
+concealed the rest. He vowed that it was all he had. They insisted
+that he had more, and seizing a knife from the table the elder Wright
+slashed off one of his toes "to make him confess." No result came from
+this, and six toes were cut off,--three from each foot; then, in
+disgust, the unhappy peddler was knocked on the head and flung through a
+trap-door into a shallow cellar. Presently he arose and tried to draw
+himself out, but with hatchet and knife they chopped away his fingers
+and he fell back. Even the women shared in this work, and leaned
+forward to gaze into the cellar to see if he might yet be dead. While
+listening, they heard the man invoke the curse of heaven on them: he
+asked that they should wear the mark of crime even to the fourth
+generation, by coming into the world deformed and mutilated as he was
+then. And it was so. The next child born in that house had round,
+hoof-like feet, with only two toes, and hands that tapered from the
+wrist into a single long finger. And in time there were twenty people
+so deformed in the valley: The "crab-clawed Zoarites" they were called.
+
+
+
+
+ HORSEHEADS
+
+The feeling recently created by an attempt to fasten the stupid names of
+Fairport or of North Elmira on the village in central New York that, off
+and on for fifty years, had been called Horseheads, caused an inquiry as
+to how that singular name chanced to be adopted for a settlement. In
+1779, when General Sullivan was retiring toward the base of his supplies
+after a destructive campaign against the Indians in Genesee County, he
+stopped near this place and rested his troops. The country was then
+rude, unbroken, and still beset with enemies, however, and when the
+march was resumed it was thought best to gain time over a part of the
+way by descending the Chemung River on rafts.
+
+As there were no appliances for building large floats, and the depth of
+the water was not known, the general ordered a destruction of all
+impedimenta that could be got rid of, and commanded that the poor and
+superfluous horses should be killed. His order was obeyed. As soon as
+the troops had gone, the wolves, that were then abundant, came forth and
+devoured the carcasses of the steeds, so that the clean-picked bones
+were strewn widely over the camp-ground. When the Indians ventured back
+into this region, some of them piled the skulls of the horses into
+heaps, and these curious monuments were found by white settlers who came
+into the valley some years later, and who named their village
+Horseheads, in commemoration of these relics. The Indians were
+especially loth to leave this region, for their tradition was that it
+had been the land of the Senecas from immemorial time, the tribe being
+descended from a couple that had a home on a hill near Horseheads.
+
+
+
+
+ KAYUTA AND WANETA
+
+The Indians loved our lakes. They had eyes for their beauty, and to
+them they were abodes of gracious spirits. They used to say of Oneida
+Lake, that when the Great Spirit formed the world "his smile rested on
+its waters and Frenchman's Island rose to greet it; he laughed and Lotus
+Island came up to listen." So they built lodges on their shores and
+skimmed their waters in canoes. Much of their history relates to them,
+and this is a tale of the Senecas that was revived a few years ago by
+the discovery of a deer-skin near Lakes Waneta and Keuka, New York, on
+which some facts of the history were rudely drawn, for all Indians are
+artists.
+
+Waneta, daughter of a chief, had plighted her troth to Kayuta, a hunter
+of a neighboring tribe with which her people were at war. Their tryst
+was held at twilight on the farther shore of the lake from her village,
+and it was her gayety and happiness, after these meetings had taken
+place, that roused the suspicion and jealousy of Weutha, who had marked
+her for his bride against the time when he should have won her father's
+consent by some act of bravery. Shadowing the girl as she stole into
+the forest one evening, he saw her enter her canoe and row to a densely
+wooded spot; he heard a call like the note of a quail, then an answer;
+then Kayuta emerged on the shore, lifted the maiden from her little
+bark, and the twain sat down beside the water to listen to the lap of
+its waves and watch the stars come out.
+
+Hurrying back to camp, the spy reported that an enemy was near them, and
+although Waneta had regained her wigwam by another route before the
+company of warriors had reached the lake, Kayuta was seen, pursued, and
+only escaped with difficulty. Next evening, not knowing what had
+happened after her homeward departure on the previous night--for the
+braves deemed it best to keep the knowledge of their military operations
+from the women--the girl crept away to the lake again and rowed to the
+accustomed place, but while waiting for the quail call a twig dropped on
+the water beside her. With a quick instinct that civilization has
+spoiled she realized this to be a warning, and remaining perfectly
+still, she allowed her boat to drift toward shore, presently discovering
+that her lover was standing waist-deep in the water. In a whisper he
+told her that they were watched, and bade her row to a dead pine that
+towered at the foot of the lake, where he would soon meet her. At that
+instant an arrow grazed his side and flew quivering into the canoe.
+
+Pushing the boat on its course and telling her to hasten, Kayuta sprang
+ashore, sounded the warwhoop, and as Weutha rose into sight he clove his
+skull with a tomahawk. Two other braves now leaped forward, but, after
+a struggle, Kayuta left them dead or senseless, too. He would have
+stayed to tear their scalps off had he not heard his name uttered in a
+shriek of agony from the end of the lake, and, tired and bleeding though
+he was, he bounded along its margin like a deer, for the voice that he
+heard was Waneta's. He reached the blasted pine, gave one look, and
+sank to the earth. Presently other Indians came, who had heard the
+noise of fighting, and burst upon him with yells and brandished weapons,
+but something in his look restrained them from a close advance. His
+eyes were fixed on a string of beads that lay on the bottom of the lake,
+just off shore, and when the meaning of it came to them, the savages
+thought no more of killing, but moaned their grief; for Waneta, in
+stepping from her canoe to wade ashore, had been caught and swallowed by
+a quagmire. All night and all next day Kayuta sat there like a man of
+stone. Then, just as the hour fell when he was used to meet his love,
+his heart broke, and he joined her in the spiritland.
+
+
+
+
+ THE DROP STAR
+
+A little maid of three years was missing from her home on the Genesee.
+She had gone to gather water-lilies and did not return. Her mother,
+almost crazed with grief, searched for days, weeks, months, before she
+could resign herself to the thought that her little one--Kayutah, the
+Drop Star, the Indians called her--had indeed been drowned. Years went
+by. The woman's home was secure against pillage, for it was no longer
+the one house of a white family in that region, and the Indians had
+retired farther and farther into the wilderness. One day a hunter came
+to the woman and said, "I have seen old Skenandoh,--the last of his
+tribe, thank God! who bade me say this to you: that the ice is broken,
+and he knows of a hill of snow where a red berry grows that shall be
+yours if you will claim it." When the meaning of this message came upon
+her the woman fainted, but on recovering speech she despatched her
+nephew to the hut of the aged chief and passed that night in prayer.
+
+The young man set off at sunset, and by hard riding, over dim trails,
+with only stars for light, he came in the gray of dawn to an upright
+timber, colored red and hung with scalps, that had been cut from white
+men's heads at the massacre of Wyoming. The place they still call
+Painted Post. Without drawing rein he sped along the hills that hem
+Lake Seneca, then, striking deeper into the wilds, he reached a smaller
+lake, and almost fell from his saddle before a rude tent near the shore.
+A new grave had been dug close by, and he shuddered to think that
+perhaps he had come too late, but a wrinkled Indian stepped forth at
+that moment and waited his word.
+
+"I come," cried the youth,--to see the berry that springs from snow."
+
+"You come in time," answered Skenandoh. "No, 'tis not in that grave.
+It is my own child that is buried there. She was as a sister to the one
+you seek, and she bade me restore the Drop Star to her mother,--the
+squaw that we know as the New Moon's Light."
+
+Stepping into the wigwam, he emerged again, clasping the wrist of a girl
+of eighteen, whose robe he tore asunder at the throat, showing the white
+breast, and on it a red birth-mark; then, leading her to the young man,
+he said,--"And now I must go to the setting sun." He slung a pouch about
+him, loaded, not with arms and food, but stones, stepped into his canoe,
+and paddled out upon the water, singing as he went a melancholy chant--
+his deathsong. On gaining the middle of the lake he swung his tomahawk
+and clove the bottom of the frail boat, so that it filled in a moment
+and the chief sank from sight. The young man took his cousin to her
+overjoyed mother, helped to win her back to the ways of civilized life,
+and eventually married her. She took her Christian name again, but left
+to the lake on whose banks she had lived so long her Indian name of Drop
+Star--Kayutah.
+
+
+
+
+ THE PROPHET OF PALMYRA
+
+It was at Palmyra, New York, that the principles of Mormonism were first
+enunciated by Joseph Smith, who claimed to have found the golden plates
+of the Book of Mormon in a hill-side in neighboring Manchester,--the
+"Hill of Cumorah,"--to which he was led by angels. The plates were
+written in characters similar to the masonic cabala, and he translated
+them by divine aid, giving to the world the result of his discovery.
+The Hebrew prophet Mormon was the alleged author of the record, and his
+son Moroni buried it. The basis of Mormonism was, however, an
+unpublished novel, called "The Manuscript Found," that was read to
+Sidney Rigdon (afterwards a Mormon elder) by its author, a clergyman,
+and that formulated a creed for a hypothetical church. Smith had a
+slight local celebrity, for he and his father were operators with the
+divining-rod, and when he appropriated this creed a harmless and
+beneficent one, for polygamy was a later "inspiration" of Brigham Young
+--and began to preach it, in 1844, it gained many converts. His
+arrogation of the presidency of the "Church of Latter Day Saints" and
+other rash performances won for him the enmity of the Gentiles, who
+imprisoned and killed him at Carthage, Missouri, leaving Brigham Young
+to lead the people across the deserts to Salt Lake, where they prospered
+through thrift and industry.
+
+It was claimed that in the van of this army, on the march to Utah, was
+often seen a venerable man with silver beard, who never spoke, but who
+would point the way whenever the pilgrims were faint or discouraged.
+When they reached the spot where the temple was afterwards built, he
+struck his staff into the earth and vanished.
+
+At Hydesville, near Palmyra, spiritualism, as it is commonly called,
+came into being on March 31, 1849, when certain of the departed
+announced themselves by thumping on doors and tables in the house of the
+Fox family, the survivors of which confessed the fraud nearly forty
+years after. It is of interest to note that the ground whence these new
+religions sprang was peopled by the Onondagas, the sacerdotal class of
+the Algonquin tribe, who have preserved the ancient religious rites of
+that great family until this day.
+
+
+
+
+ A VILLAIN'S CREMATION
+
+Bramley's Mountain, near the present village of Bloomfield, New York, on
+the edge of the Catskill group, was the home of a young couple that had
+married with rejoicing and had taken up the duties and pleasures of
+housekeeping with enthusiasm. To be sure, in those days housekeeping
+was not a thing to be much afraid of, and the servant question had not
+come up for discussion. The housewives did the work themselves, and the
+husband had no valets. The domicile of this particular pair was merely
+a tent of skins stretched around a frame of poles, and their furniture
+consisted principally of furs strewn over the earth floor; but they
+loved each other truly. The girl was thankful to be taken from her home
+to live, because, up to the time of her marriage, she had been
+persecuted by a morose and ill-looking fellow of her tribe, who laid
+siege to her affection with such vehemence that the more he pleaded the
+greater was her dislike; and now she hoped that she had seen the last of
+him. But that was not to be. He lurked about the wigwam of the pair,
+torturing himself with the sight of their felicity, and awaiting his
+chance to prove his hate. This chance came when the husband had gone to
+Lake Delaware to fish, for he rowed after and gave battle in the middle
+of the pond. Taken by surprise, and being insufficiently armed, the
+husband was killed and his body flung into the water. Then, casting an
+affectionate leer at the wife who had watched this act of treachery and
+malice with speechless horror from the mountain-side, he drove his canoe
+ashore and set off in pursuit of her. She retreated so slowly as to
+allow him to keep her in sight, and when she entered a cave he pressed
+forward eagerly, believing that now her escape was impossible; but she
+had purposely trapped him there, for she had already explored a tortuous
+passage that led to the upper air, and by this she had left the cavern
+in safety while he was groping and calling in the dark. Returning to
+the entrance, she loosened, by a jar, a ledge that overhung it, so that
+the door was almost blocked; then, gathering light wood from the dry
+trees around her, she made a fire and hurled the burning sticks into the
+prison where the wretch was howling, until he was dead in smoke and
+flame. When his yells and curses had been silenced she told a friend
+what she had done, then going back to the lake, she sang her death-song
+and cast herself into the water, hoping thus to rejoin her husband.
+
+
+
+
+ THE MONSTER MOSQUITOE
+
+They have some pretty big mosquitoes in New Jersey and on Long Island,
+but, if report of their ancestry is true, they have degenerated in size
+and voracity; for the grandfather of all mosquitoes used to live in the
+neighborhood of Fort Onondaga, New York, and sallying out whenever he
+was hungry, would eat an Indian or two and pick his teeth with their
+ribs. The red men had no arms that could prevail against it, but at
+last the Holder of the Heavens, hearing their cry for aid, came down and
+attacked the insect. Finding that it had met its match, the mosquito
+flew away so rapidly that its assailant could hardly keep it in sight.
+It flew around the great lake, then turned eastward again. It sought
+help vainly of the witches that brooded in the sink-holes, or Green
+Lakes (near Janesville, New York), and had reached the salt lake of
+Onondaga when its pursuer came up and killed it, the creature piling the
+sand into hills in its dying struggles.
+
+As its blood poured upon the earth it became small mosquitoes, that
+gathered about the Holder of the Heavens and stung him so sorely that he
+half repented the service that he had done to men. The Tuscaroras say
+that this was one of two monsters that stood on opposite banks of the
+Seneca River and slew all men that passed. Hiawatha killed the other
+one. On their reservation is a stone, marked by the form of the Sky
+Holder, that shows where he rested during the chase, while his tracks
+were until lately seen south of Syracuse, alternating with footprints of
+the mosquito, which were shaped like those of a bird, and twenty inches
+long. At Brighton, New York, where these marks appeared, they were
+reverentially renewed by the Indians for many years.
+
+
+
+ THE GREEN PICTURE
+
+In a cellar in Green Street, Schenectady, there appeared, some years
+ago, the silhouette of a human form, painted on the floor in mould. It
+was swept and scrubbed away, but presently it was there again, and month
+by month, after each removal, it returned: a mass of fluffy mould,
+always in the shape of a recumbent man. When it was found that the
+house stood on the site of the old Dutch burial ground, the gossips
+fitted this and that together and concluded that the mould was planted
+by a spirit whose mortal part was put to rest a century and more ago,
+on the spot covered by the house, and that the spirit took this way of
+apprising people that they were trespassing on its grave. Others held
+that foul play had been done, and that a corpse, hastily and shallowly
+buried, was yielding itself back to the damp cellar in vegetable form,
+before its resolution into simpler elements. But a darker meaning was
+that it was the outline of a vampire that vainly strove to leave its
+grave, and could not because a virtuous spell had been worked about the
+place.
+
+A vampire is a dead man who walks about seeking for those whose blood he
+can suck, for only by supplying new life to its cold limbs can he keep
+the privilege of moving about the earth. He fights his way from his
+coffin, and those who meet his gray and stiffened shape, with fishy eyes
+and blackened mouth, lurking by open windows, biding his time to steal
+in and drink up a human life, fly from him in terror and disgust. In
+northern Rhode Island those who die of consumption are believed to be
+victims of vampires who work by charm, draining the blood by slow
+draughts as they lie in their graves. To lay this monster he must be
+taken up and burned; at least, his heart must be; and he must be
+disinterred in the daytime when he is asleep and unaware. If he died
+with blood in his heart he has this power of nightly resurrection. As
+late as 1892 the ceremony of heart-burning was performed at Exeter,
+Rhode Island, to save the family of a dead woman that was threatened
+with the same disease that removed her, namely, consumption. But the
+Schenectady vampire has yielded up all his substance, and the green
+picture is no more.
+
+
+
+
+ THE NUNS OF CARTHAGE
+
+At Carthage, New York, where the Black River bends gracefully about a
+point, there was a stanch old house, built in the colonial fashion and
+designed for the occupancy of some family of hospitality and wealth, but
+the family died out or moved away, and for some years it remained
+deserted. During the war of 1812 the village gossips were excited by
+the appearance of carpenters, painters and upholsterers, and it was
+evident that the place was to be restored to its manorial dignities; but
+their curiosity was deepened instead of satisfied when, after the house
+had been put in order and high walls built around it, the occupants
+presented themselves as four young women in the garb of nuns. Were they
+daughters of the family? Were they English sympathizers in disguise,
+seeking asylum in the days of trouble? Had they registered a vow of
+celibacy until their lovers should return from the war? Were they on
+a secret and diplomatic errand? None ever knew, at least in Carthage.
+The nuns lived in great privacy, but in a luxury before unequalled in
+that part of the country. They kept a gardener, they received from New
+York wines and delicacies that others could not afford, and when they
+took the air, still veiled, it was behind a splendid pair of bays.
+
+One afternoon, just after the close of the war, a couple of young
+American officers went to the convent, and, contrary to all precedent,
+were admitted. They remained within all that day, and no one saw them
+leave, but a sound of wheels passed through the street that evening.
+Next day there were no signs of life about the place, nor the day
+following, nor the next. The savage dog was quiet and the garden walks
+had gone unswept. Some neighbors climbed over the wall and reported
+that the place had been deserted. Why and by whom no one ever knew, but
+a cloud remained upon its title until a recent day, for it was thought
+that at some time the nuns might return.
+
+
+
+
+ THE SKULL IN THE WALL
+
+A skull is built into the wall above the door of the court-house at
+Goshen, New York. It was taken from a coffin unearthed in 1842, when
+the foundation of the building was laid. People said there was no doubt
+about it, only Claudius Smith could have worn that skull, and he
+deserved to be publicly pilloried in that manner. Before the
+Revolutionary war Smith was a farmer in Monroe, New York, and being
+prosperous enough to feel the king's taxes no burden, to say nothing of
+his jealousy of the advantage that an independent government would be to
+the hopes of his poorer neighbors, he declared for the king. After the
+declaration of independence had been published, his sympathies were
+illustrated in an unpleasantly practical manner by gathering a troop of
+other Tories about him, and, emboldened by the absence of most of the
+men of his vicinage in the colonial army, he began to harass the country
+as grievously in foray as the red-coats were doing in open field.
+
+He pillaged houses and barns, then burned them; he insulted women, he
+drove away cattle and horses, he killed several persons who had
+undertaken to defend their property. His "campaigns" were managed with
+such secrecy that nobody knew when or whence to look for him. His
+murder of Major Nathaniel Strong, of Blooming Grove, roused indignation
+to such a point that a united effort was made to catch him, a money
+reward for success acting as a stimulus to the vigilance of the hunters,
+and at last he was captured on Long Island. He was sent back to Goshen,
+tried, convicted, and on January 22, 1779, was hanged, with five of his
+band. The bodies of the culprits were buried in the jail-yard, on the
+spot where the court-house stands, and old residents identified Smith's
+skeleton, when it was accidentally exhumed, by its uncommon size. A
+farmer from an adjacent town made off with a thigh bone, and a mason
+clapped mortar into the empty skull and cemented it into the wall, where
+it long remained.
+
+
+
+
+ THE HAUNTED MILL
+
+Among the settlers in the Adirondacks, forty or fifty years ago, was
+Henry Clymer, from Brooklyn, who went up to Little Black Creek and tried
+to make a farm out of the gnarly, stumpy land; but being a green hand at
+that sort of thing, he soon gave it up and put up the place near
+Northwood, that is locally referred to as the haunted mill. When the
+first slab was cut, a big party was on hand to cheer and eat pie in
+honor of the Clymers, for Mr. Clymer, who was a dark, hearty, handsome
+fellow, and his bright young wife had been liberal in their hospitality.
+The couple had made some talk, they were so loving before folks--too
+loving to last; and, besides, it was evident that Mrs. Clymer was used
+to a better station in life than her husband. It was while the crowd
+was laughing and chattering at the picnic-table of new boards from the
+mill that Mrs. Clymer stole away to her modest little house, and a
+neighbor who had followed her was an accidental witness to a singular
+episode. Mrs. Clymer was kneeling beside her bed, crying over the
+picture of a child, when Clymer entered unexpectedly and attempted to
+take the picture from her.
+
+She faced him defiantly. "You kept that because it looked like him, I
+reckon," he said. "You might run back to him. You know what he'd call
+you and where you'd stand with your aristocracy."
+
+The woman pointed to the door, and the man left without another word,
+and so did the listener. Next morning the body of Mrs. Clymer was found
+hanging to a beam in the mill. At the inquest the husband owned that he
+had "had a few words" with her on the previous day, and thought that she
+must have suddenly become insane. The jury took this view. News of the
+suicide was printed in some of the city papers, and soon after that the
+gossips had another sensation, for a fair-haired man, also from
+Brooklyn, arrived at the place and asked where the woman was buried.
+When he found the grave he sat beside it for some time, his head resting
+on his hand; then he inquired for Clymer, but Clymer, deadly pale, had
+gone into the woods as soon as he heard that a stranger had arrived.
+The new-comer went to Trenton, where he ordered a gravestone bearing the
+single word "Estella" to be placed where the woman's body had been
+interred. Clymer quickly sold out and disappeared. The mill never
+prospered, and has long been in a ruinous condition. People of the
+neighborhood think that the ghost of Mrs. Clymer--was that her name?--
+still troubles it, and they pass the place with quickened steps.
+
+
+
+
+ OLD INDIAN FACE
+
+On Lower Ausable Pond is a large, ruddy rock showing a huge profile,
+with another, resembling a pappoose, below it. When the Tahawi ruled
+this region their sachem lived here at "the Dark Cup," as they called
+this lake, a man renowned for virtue and remarkable, in his age, for
+gentleness. When his children had died and his manly grandson, who was
+the old man's hope, had followed them to the land of the cloud
+mountains, Adota's heart withered within him, and standing beneath this
+rock, he addressed his people, recounting what he had done for them, how
+he had swept their enemies from the Lakes of the Clustered Stars (the
+Lower Saranac) and Silver Sky (Upper Saranac) to the Lake of Wandah,
+gaining a land where they might hunt and fish in peace. The little one,
+the Star, had been ravished away to crown the brow of the thunder god,
+who, even now, was advancing across the peaks, bending the woods and
+lighting the valleys with his jagged torches.
+
+Life was nothing to him longer; he resigned it.
+
+As he spoke these words he fell back, and the breath passed out of him.
+Then came the thunder god, and with an appalling burst of fire sent the
+people cowering. The roar that followed seemed to shake the earth, but
+the medicine-man of the tribe stood still, listening to the speech of
+the god in the clouds. "Tribe of the Tahawi," he translated, "Adota
+treads the star-path to the happy hunting-grounds, and the sun is
+shining on his heart. He will never walk among you again, but the god
+loves both him and you, and he will set his face on the mountains.
+Look!" And, raising their eyes, they beheld the likeness of Adota and
+of his beloved child, the Star, graven by lightning-stroke on the cliff.
+There they buried the body of Adota and held their solemn festivals
+until the white men drove them out of the country.
+
+
+
+
+ THE DIVISION OF THE SARANACS
+
+In the middle of the last century a large body of Saranac Indians
+occupied the forests of the Upper Saranac through which ran the Indian
+carrying-place, called by them the Eagle Nest Trail. Whenever they
+raided the Tahawi on the slopes of Mount Tahawus (Sky-splitter), there
+was a pleasing rivalry between two young athletes, called the Wolf and
+the Eagle, as to which would carry off the more scalps, and the tribe
+was divided in admiration of them. There was one who did not share this
+liking: an old sachem, one of the wizards who had escaped when the Great
+Spirit locked these workers of evil in the hollow trees that stood
+beside the trail. In their struggles to escape the less fortunate ones
+thrust their arms through the closing bark, and they are seen there, as
+withered trunks and branches, to this day. Oquarah had not been
+softened by this exhibition of danger nor the qualification of mercy
+that allowed him still to exist. Rather he was more bitter when he saw,
+as he fancied, that the tribe thought more of the daring and powerful
+warriors than it did of the bent and malignant-minded counsellor.
+
+It was in the moon of green leaves that the two young men set off to
+hunt the moose, and on the next day the Wolf returned alone. He
+explained that in the hunt they had been separated; he had called for
+hours for his friend, and had searched so long that he concluded he must
+have returned ahead of him. But he was not at the camp. Up rose the
+sachem with visage dark. "I hear a forked tongue," he cried. "The Wolf
+was jealous of the Eagle and his teeth have cut into his heart."
+
+"The Wolf cannot lie," answered the young man.
+
+"Where is the Eagle?" angrily shouted the sachem, clutching his
+hatchet.
+
+"The Wolf has said," replied the other.
+
+The old sachem advanced upon him, but as he raised his axe to strike,
+the wife of the Wolf threw herself before her husband, and the steel
+sank into her brain. The sachem fell an instant later with the Wolf's
+knife in his heart, and instantly the camp was in turmoil. Before the
+day had passed it had been broken up, and the people were divided into
+factions, for it was no longer possible to hold it together in peace.
+The Wolf, with half of the people, went down the Sounding River to new
+hunting-grounds, and the earth that separated the families was reddened
+whenever one side met the other.
+
+Years had passed when, one morning, the upper tribe saw a canoe
+advancing across the Lake of the Silver Sky. An old man stepped from
+it: he was the Eagle. After the Wolf had left him he had fallen into a
+cleft in a rock, and had lain helpless until found by hunters who were
+on their way to Canada. He had joined the British against the French,
+had married a northern squaw, but had returned to die among the people
+of his early love. Deep was his sorrow that his friend should have been
+accused of doing him an injury, and that the once happy tribe should
+have been divided by that allegation. The warriors and sachems of both
+branches were summoned to a council, and in his presence they swore a
+peace, so that in the fulness of time he was able to die content. That
+peace was always kept.
+
+
+
+
+ AN EVENT IN INDIAN PARK
+
+It was during the years when the Saranacs were divided that Howling
+Wind, one of the young men of Indian Carry, saw and fell in love with a
+girl of the family on Tupper Lake. He quickly found a way to tell his
+liking, and the couple met often in the woods and on the shore. He made
+bold to row her around the quieter bays, and one moonlight evening he
+took her to Devil's Rock, or Devil's Pulpit, where he told her the story
+of the place. This was to the effect that the fiend had paddled, on
+timbers, by means of his tail, to that rock, and had assembled fish and
+game about him in large numbers by telling them that he was going to
+preach to them, instead of which moral procedure he pounced upon and ate
+all that were within his grasp.
+
+As so often happened in Indian history, the return of these lovers was
+seen by a disappointed rival, who had hurried back to camp and secured
+the aid of half a dozen men to arrest the favored one as soon as he
+should land. The capture was made after a struggle, and Howling Wind
+was dragged to the chief's tent for sentence. That sentence was death,
+and with a refinement of cruelty that was rare even among the Indians,
+the girl was ordered to execute it. She begged and wept to no avail.
+An axe was put into her hands, and she was ordered to despatch the
+prisoner. She took the weapon; her face grew stern and the tears dried
+on her cheeks; her lover, bound to a tree, gazed at her in amazement;
+his rival watched, almost in glee. Slowly the girl crossed the open
+space to her lover. She raised the tomahawk and at a blow severed the
+thongs that held him, then, like a flash, she leaped upon his rival, who
+had sprung forward to interfere, and clove his skull with a single
+stroke. The lovers fled as only those can fly who run for life.
+Happily for them, they met a party from the Carry coming to rescue
+Howling Wind from the danger to which his courtship had exposed him, and
+it was even said that this party entered the village and by presenting
+knives and arrows at the breast of the chief obtained his now
+superfluous consent to the union of the fugitives. The pair reached
+the Carry in safety and lived a long and happy life together.
+
+
+
+
+ THE INDIAN PLUME
+
+Brightest flower that grows beside the brooks is the scarlet blossom of
+the Indian plume: the blood of Lenawee. Hundreds of years ago she lived
+happily among her brother and sister Saranacs beside Stony Creek, the
+Stream of the Snake, and was soon to marry the comely youth who, for the
+speed of his foot, was called the Arrow. But one summer the Quick Death
+came on the people, and as the viewless devil stalked through the
+village young and old fell before him. The Arrow was the first to die.
+In vain the Prophet smoked the Great Calumet: its smoke ascending took
+no shape that he could read. In vain was the white dog killed to take
+aloft the people's sins. But at last the Great Spirit himself came down
+to the mountain called the Storm Darer, splendid in lightning, awful in
+his thunder voice and robe of cloud. "My wrath is against you for your
+sins," he cried, "and naught but human blood will appease it."
+
+In the morning the Prophet told his message, and all sat silent for a
+time. Then Lenawee entered the circle. "Lenawee is a blighted flower,"
+she sobbed. "Let her blood flow for her people." And catching a knife
+from the Prophet's belt, she ran with it to the stream on which she and
+the Arrow had so often floated in their canoe. In another moment her
+blood had bedewed the earth. "Lay me with the Arrow," she murmured,
+and, smiling in their sad faces, breathed her last. The demon of the
+quick death shrank from the spot, and the Great Spirit smiled once more
+on the tribe that could produce such heroism. Lenawee's body was placed
+beside her lover's, and next morning, where her blood had spilt, the
+ground was pure, and on it grew in slender spires a new flower,--the
+Indian plume: the transformed blood of sacrifice. The people loved that
+flower in all years after. They decked their hair and dresses with it
+and made a feast in its honor. When parents taught their children the
+beauty of unselfishness they used as its emblem a stalk of Indian plume.
+
+
+
+
+ BIRTH OF THE WATER-LILY
+
+Back from his war against the Tahawi comes the Sun, chief of the Lower
+Saranacs,--back to the Lake of the Clustered Stars, afterward called, by
+dullards, Tupper's Lake. Tall and invincible he comes among his people,
+boasting of his victories, Indian fashion, and stirring the scalps that
+hang at his breast. "The Eagle screams," he cries. "He greets the
+chief, the Blazing Sun. Wayotah has made the Tahawi tremble. They fly
+from him. Hooh, hooh! He is the chief." Standing apart with wistful
+glance stands Oseetah, the Bird. She loves the strong young chief, but
+she knows that another has his promise, and she dares not hope; yet the
+chief loves her, and when the feasting is over he follows her footprints
+to the shore, where he sees her canoe turning the point of an island.
+He silently pursues and comes upon her as she sits waving and moaning.
+He tries to embrace her, but she draws apart. He asks her to sing to
+him; she bids him begone.
+
+He takes a more imperious tone and orders her to listen to her chief.
+She moves away. He darts toward her. Turning on him a face of sorrow,
+she runs to the edge of a steep rock and waves him back. He hastens
+after. Then she springs and disappears in the deep water. The Sun
+plunges after her and swims with mad strength here and there. He calls.
+There is no answer. Slowly he returns to the village and tells the
+people what has happened. The Bird's parents are stricken and the Sun
+moans in his sleep. At noon a hunter comes in with strange tidings:
+flowers are growing on the water! The people go to their canoes and row
+to the Island of Elms. There, in a cove, the still water is enamelled
+with flowers, some as white as snow, filling the air with perfume,
+others strong and yellow, like the lake at sunset.
+
+"Explain to us," they cry, turning to the old Medicine of his tribe,
+"for this was not so yesterday." "It is our daughter," he answered.
+"These flowers are the form she takes. The white is her purity, the
+yellow her love. You shall see that her heart will close when the sun
+sets, and will reopen at his coming." And the young chief went apart
+and bowed his head.
+
+
+
+
+ ROGERS'S SLIDE
+
+The shores of Lakes George and Champlain were ravaged by war. Up and
+down those lovely waters swept the barges of French and English, and the
+green hills rang to the shrill of bugles, the boom of cannon, and the
+yell of savages. Fiction and history have been weft across the woods
+and the memory of deeds still echoes among the heights. It was at
+Glen's Falls, in the cave on the rock in the middle of the river, that
+the brave Uncas held the watch with Hawkeye. Bloody Defile and Bloody
+Pond, between there and Lake George, take their names from the "Bloody
+morning scout" sent out by Sir William Johnson on a September day in
+1755 to check Dieskau until Fort William Henry could be completed. In
+the action that ensued, Colonel Williams, founder of Williams College,
+and Captain Grant, of the Connecticut line, great-grandfather of the
+President who bore that name, were killed. The victims, dead and
+wounded alike, having been flung into Bloody Pond, it was thick and red
+for days, and tradition said that in after years it resumed its hue of
+crimson at sunset and held it until dawn. The captured, who were
+delivered to the Indians, had little to hope, for their white allies
+could not stay their savagery. Blind Rock was so called because the
+Indians brought a white man there, and tearing his eyes out, flung them
+into embers at the foot of the stone. Captives were habitually
+tortured, blazing splinters of pine being thrust into their flesh, their
+nails torn out, and their bodies slashed with knives before they went to
+the stake. An English prisoner was allowed to run the gauntlet here.
+They had already begun to strike at him as he sped between the lines,
+when he seized a pappoose, flung it on a fire, and, in the instant of
+confusion that followed, snatched an axe, cut the bonds of a comrade who
+had been doomed to die, and both escaped.
+
+But the best-known history of this region is that of Rogers's Rock, or
+Rogers's Slide, a lofty precipice at the lower end of Lake George.
+Major Rogers did not toboggan down this rock in leather trousers, but
+his escape was no less remarkable than if he had. On March 13, 1758,
+while reconnoitring near Ticonderoga with two hundred rangers, he was
+surprised by a force of French and Indians. But seventeen of his men
+escaped death or capture, and he was pursued nearly to the brink of this
+cliff. During a brief delay among the red men, arising from the loss of
+his trail, he had time to throw his pack down the slide, reverse his
+snow-shoes, and go back over his own track to the head of a ravine
+before they emerged from the woods, and, seeing that his shoe-marks led
+to the rock, while none pointed back, they concluded that he had flung
+himself off and committed suicide to avoid capture. Great was their
+disappointment when they saw the major on the frozen surface of the lake
+beneath going at a lively rate toward Fort William Henry. He had gained
+the ice by way of the cleft in the rocks, but the savages, believing
+that he had leaped over the precipice, attributed his preservation to
+the Great Spirit and forbore to fire on him. Unconsciously, he had
+chosen the best possible place to disappear from, for the Indians held
+it in superstitious regard, believing that spirits haunted the wood and
+hurled bad souls down the cliff, drowning them in the lake, instead of
+allowing them to go to the happy hunting grounds. The major reached his
+quarters in safety, and lived to take up arms against the land of his
+birth when the colonies revolted, seventeen years later.
+
+
+
+
+ THE FALLS AT COHOES
+
+When Occuna, a young Seneca, fell in love with a girl whose cabin was
+near the present town of Cohoes, he behaved very much as Americans of a
+later date have done. He picked wild flowers for her; he played on the
+bone pipe and sang sentimental songs in the twilight; he roamed the
+hills with her, gathering the loose quartz crystals that the Indians
+believed to be the tears of stricken deer, save on Diamond Rock, in
+Lansingburgh, where they are the tears of Moneta, a bereaved mother and
+wife; and in fine weather they went boating on the Mohawk above the
+rapids. They liked to drift idly on the current, because it gave them
+time to gaze into each other's eyes, and to build air castles that they
+would live in in the future. They were suddenly called to a realization
+of danger one evening, for the stream had been subtly drawing them on
+and on until it had them in its power. The stroke of the paddle failed
+and the air castles fell in dismal ruin. Sitting erect they began their
+death-song in this wise:
+
+Occuna: "Daughter of a mighty warrior, the Manitou calls me hence. I
+hear the roaring of his voice; I see the lightning of his glance along
+the river; he walks in clouds and spray upon the waters."
+
+The Maiden: "Thou art thyself a warrior, O Occuna. Hath not thine axe
+been often bathed in blood? Hath the deer ever escaped thine arrow or
+the beaver avoided thy chase? Thou wilt not fear to go into the
+presence of Manitou."
+
+Occuna: "Manitou, indeed, respects the strong. When I chose thee from
+the women of our tribe I promised that we should live and die together.
+The Thunderer calls us now. Welcome, O ghost of Oriska, chief of the
+invincible Senecas! A warrior and the daughter of a warrior come to
+join you in the feast of the blessed!"
+
+The boat leaped over the falls, and Occuna, striking on the rocks below,
+was killed at once; but, as by a miracle, the girl fell clear of them
+and was whirled on the seething current to shoal water, where she made
+her escape. For his strength and his virtues the dead man was
+canonized. His tribe raised him above the regions of the moon, whence
+he looked down on the scenes of his youth with pleasure, and in times of
+war gave pleasant dreams and promises to his friends, while he confused
+the enemy with evil omens. Whenever his tribe passed the falls they
+halted and with brief ceremonials commemorated the death of Occuna.
+
+
+
+
+ FRANCIS WOOLCOTT'S NIGHT-RIDERS
+
+In Copake, New York, among the Berkshire Hills, less than a century ago,
+lived Francis Woolcott, a dark, tall man, with protruding teeth, whose
+sinister laugh used to give his neighbors a creep along their spines.
+He had no obvious trade or calling, but the farmers feared him so that
+he had no trouble in making levies: pork, flour, meal, cider, he could
+have what he chose for the asking, for had he not halted horses at the
+plow so that neither blows nor commands could move them for two hours?
+Had he not set farmer Raught's pigs to walking on their hind legs and
+trying to talk? When he shouted "Hup! hup! hup!" to farmer Williams's
+children, had they not leaped to the moulding of the parlor wainscot,
+--a yard above the floor and only an inch wide,--and walked around it,
+afterward skipping like birds from chair-back to chair-back, while the
+furniture stood as if nailed to the floor? And was he not the chief of
+thirteen night-riders, whose faces no man had seen, nor wanted to see,
+and whom he sent about the country on errands of mischief every night
+when the moon was growing old? As to moons, had he not found a mystic
+message from our satellite on Mount Riga, graven on a meteor?
+
+Horses' tails were tied, hogs foamed at the mouth and walked like men,
+cows gave blood for milk. These night-riders met Woolcott in a grove of
+ash and chestnut trees, each furnished with a stolen bundle of oat
+straw, and these bundles Woolcott changed to black horses when the night
+had grown dark enough not to let the way of the change be seen. These
+horses could not cross streams of water, and on the stroke of midnight
+they fell to pieces and were oaten sheaves once more, but during their
+time of action they rushed through woods, bearing their riders safely,
+and tore like hurricanes across the fields, leaping bushes, fences, even
+trees, without effort. Never could traces be found of them the next
+day. At last the devil came to claim his own. Woolcott, who was ninety
+years old, lay sick and helpless in his cabin. Clergymen refused to see
+him, but two or three of his neighbors stifled their fears and went to
+the wizard's house to soothe his dying moments. With the night came
+storm, and with its outbreak the old man's face took on such a strange
+and horrible look that the watchers fell back in alarm. There was a
+burst of purple flame at the window, a frightful peal, a smell of
+sulphur, and Woolcott was dead. When the watchers went out the roads
+were dry, and none in the village had heard wind, rain, or thunder. It
+was the coming of the fiend.
+
+
+
+
+ POLLY'S LOVER
+
+In about the middle of this century a withered woman of ninety was
+buried from a now deserted house in White Plains, New York, Polly Carter
+the name of her, but "Crazy Polly" was what the neighbors called her,
+for she was eccentric and not fond of company. Among the belongings of
+her house was a tall clock, such as relic hunters prize, that ticked
+solemnly in a landing on the stairs.
+
+For a time, during the Revolution, the house stood within the British
+lines, and as her father was a colonel in Washington's army she was left
+almost alone in it. The British officers respected her sex, but they
+had an unpleasant way of running in unannounced and demanding
+entertainment, in the king's name, which she felt forced to grant. One
+rainy afternoon the door was flung open, then locked on the inside, and
+she found herself in the arms of a stalwart, handsome lieutenant, who
+wore the blue. It was her cousin and fiance. Their glad talk had not
+been going long when there came a rousing summons at the door. Three
+English officers were awaiting admittance.
+
+Perhaps they had seen Lawrence Carter go into the house, and if caught
+he would be killed as a spy. He must be hidden, but in some place where
+they would not think of looking. The clock! That was the place. With
+a laugh and a kiss the young man submitted to be shut in this narrow
+quarter, and throwing his coat and hat behind some furniture the girl
+admitted the officers, who were wet and surly and demanded dinner. They
+tramped about the best room in their muddy boots, talking loudly, and in
+order to break the effect of the chill weather they passed the brandy
+bottle freely. Polly served them with a dinner as quickly as possible,
+for she wanted to get them out of the house, but they were in no mood to
+go, and the bottle passed so often that before the dinner was over they
+were noisy and tipsy and were using language that drove Polly from the
+room.
+
+At last, to her relief, she heard them preparing to leave the house, but
+as they were about to go the senior officer, looking up at the landing,
+now dim in the paling light, said to one of the others, "See what time
+it is." The officer addressed, who happened to be the drunkest of the
+party, staggered up the stair and exclaimed, "The d---d thing's
+stopped." Then, as if he thought it a good joke, he added, "It'll never
+go again." Drawing his sabre he gave the clock a careless cut and ran
+the blade through the panel of the door; after this the three passed
+out. When their voices had died in distant brawling, Polly ran to
+release her lover. Something thick and dark was creeping from beneath
+the clock-case. With trembling fingers she pulled open the door, and
+Lawrence, her lover, fell heavily forward into her arms, dead. The
+officer was right: the clock never went again.
+
+
+
+
+ CROSBY, THE PATRIOT SPY
+
+It was at the Jay house, in Westchester, New York, that Enoch Crosby met
+Washington and offered his services to the patriot army. Crosby was a
+cobbler, and not a very thriving one, but after the outbreak of
+hostilities he took a peddler's outfit on his back and, as a non-
+combatant, of Tory sympathies, he obtained admission through the British
+lines. After his first visit to head quarters it is certain that he
+always carried Sir Henry Clinton's passport in the middle of his pack,
+and so sure were his neighbors that he was in the service of the British
+that they captured him and took him to General Washington, but while his
+case was up for debate he managed to slip his handcuffs, which were not
+secure, and made off. Clinton, on the other hand, was puzzled by the
+unaccountable foresight of the Americans, for every blow that he
+prepared to strike was met, and he lost time and chance and temper. As
+if the suspicion of both armies and the hatred of his neighbors were not
+enough to contend against, Crosby now became an object of interest to
+the Skinners and Cowboys, who were convinced that he was making money,
+somehow, and resolved to have it.
+
+The Skinners were camp-followers of the American troops and the Cowboys
+a band of Tories and renegade British. Both factions were employed,
+ostensibly, in foraging for their respective armies, but, in reality,
+for themselves, and the farmers and citizens occupying the neutral belt
+north of Manhattan Island had reason to curse them both impartially.
+While these fellows were daring thieves, they occasionally got the worst
+of it, even in the encounters with the farmers, as on the Neperan, near
+Tarrytown, where the Cowboys chased a woman to death, but were afterward
+cut to pieces by the enraged neighbors. Hers is but one of the many
+ghosts that haunt the neutral ground, and the croaking of the birds of
+ill luck that nest at Raven rock is blended with the cries of her dim
+figure. Still, graceless as these fellows were, they affected a loyalty
+to their respective sides, and were usually willing to fight each other
+when they met, especially for the plunder that was to be got by
+fighting.
+
+In October, 1780, Claudius Smith, "king of the Cowboys," and three
+scalawag sons came to the conclusion that it was time for Crosby's money
+to revert to the crown, and they set off toward his little house one
+evening, sure of finding him in, for his father was seriously ill. The
+Smiths arrived there to find that the Skinners had preceded them on the
+same errand, and they recognized through the windows, in the leader of
+the band, a noted brigand on whose head a price was laid. He was
+searching every crack and cranny of the room, while Crosby, stripped to
+shirt and trousers, stood before the empty fireplace and begged for that
+night to be left alone with his dying father.
+
+"To hell with the old man!" roared the Skinner. "Give up your gold, or
+we'll put you to the torture," and he significantly whirled the end of a
+rope that he carried about his waist. At that moment the faint voice of
+the old man was heard calling from another room.
+
+"Take all that I have and let me go!" cried Crosby, and turning up a
+brick in the fire-place he disclosed a handful of gold, his life
+savings. The leader still tried to oppose his exit, but Crosby flung
+him to the floor and rushed away to his father, while the brigand,
+deeming it well to delay rising, dug his fingers into the hollow and
+began to extract the sovereigns. At that instant four muskets were
+discharged from without: there was a crash of glass, a yell of pain, and
+four of the Skinners rolled bleeding on the floor; two others ran into
+the darkness and escaped; their leader, trying to follow, was met at the
+threshold by the Smiths, who clutched the gold out of his hand and
+pinioned his elbows in a twinkling.
+
+"I thought ye'd like to know who's got ye," said old Smith, peering into
+the face of the astonished and crestfallen robber, "for I've told ye
+many a time to keep out of my way, and now ye've got to swing for
+getting into it."
+
+Within five minutes of the time that he had got his clutch on Crosby's
+money the bandit was choking to death at the end of his own rope, hung
+from the limb of an apple-tree, and, having secured the gold, the
+Cowboys went their way into the darkness. Crosby soon made his
+appearance in the ranks of the Continentals, and, though they looked
+askant at him for a time, they soon discovered the truth and hailed him
+as a hero, for the information he had carried to Washington from
+Clinton's camp had often saved them from disaster. He had survived
+attack in his own house through the falling out of rogues, and he
+survived the work and hazard of war through luck and a sturdy frame.
+Congress afterwards gave him a sum of money larger than had been taken
+from him, for his chief had commended him in these lines: "Circumstances
+of political importance, which involved the lives and fortunes of many,
+have hitherto kept secret what this paper now reveals. Enoch Crosby has
+for years been a faithful and unrequited servant of his country. Though
+man does not, God may reward him for his conduct.
+ GEORGE WASHINGTON."
+
+Associated with Crosby in his work of getting information from the enemy
+was a man named Gainos, who kept an inn on the neutral ground, that was
+often raided. Being assailed by Cowboys once, Gainos, with his tenant
+and stable-boys, fired at the bandits together, just as the latter had
+forced his front door, then stepping quickly forward he slashed off the
+head of the leader with a cutlass. The retreating crew dumped the body
+into a well on the premises, and there it sits on the crumbling curb o'
+nights looking disconsolately for its head.
+
+It may also be mentioned that the Skinners had a chance to revenge
+themselves on the Cowboys for their defeat at the Crosby house. They
+fell upon the latter at the tent-shaped cave in Yonkers,--it is called
+Washington's Cave, because the general napped there on bivouac,--and not
+only routed them, but secured so much of their treasure that they were
+able to be honest for several years after.
+
+
+
+
+ THE LOST GRAVE OF PAINE
+
+Failure to mark the resting-places of great men and to indicate the
+scenes of their deeds has led to misunderstanding and confusion among
+those who discover a regard for history and tradition in this practical
+age. Robert Fulton, who made steam navigation possible, lies in an
+unmarked tomb in the yard of Trinity Church--the richest church in
+America. The stone erected to show where Andre was hanged was destroyed
+by a cheap patriot, who thought it represented a compliment to the spy.
+The spot where Alexander Hamilton was shot in the duel by Aaron Burr is
+known to few and will soon be forgotten. It was not until a century of
+obloquy had been heaped on the memory of Thomas Paine that his once
+enemies were brought to know him as a statesman of integrity, a
+philanthropist, and philosopher. His deistic religion, proclaimed in
+"The Age of Reason," is unfortunately no whit more independent than is
+preached in dozens of pulpits to-day. He died ripe in honors, despite
+his want of creed, and his mortal part was buried in New Rochelle, New
+York, under a large walnut-tree in a hay-field. Some years later his
+friends removed the body to a new grave in higher ground, and placed
+over it a monument that the opponents of his principles quickly hacked
+to pieces. Around the original grave there still remains a part of the
+old inclosure, and it was proposed to erect a suitable memorial--
+the Hudson and its Hills the spot, but the owner of the tract would
+neither give nor sell an inch of his land for the purpose of doing honor
+to the man. Some doubt has already been expressed as to whether the
+grave is beneath the monument or in the inclosure; and it is also
+asserted that Paine's ghost appears at intervals, hovering in the air
+between the two burial-places, or flitting back and forth from one to
+the other, lamenting the forgetfulness of men and wailing, "Where is my
+grave? I have lost my grave!"
+
+
+
+
+ THE RISING OF GOUVERNEUR MORRIS
+
+Gouverneur Morris, American minister to the court of Louis XVI, was
+considerably enriched, at the close of the reign of terror, by plate,
+jewels, furniture, paintings, coaches, and so on, left in his charge by
+members of the French nobility, that they might not be confiscated in
+the sack of the city by the /sans culottes/; for so many of the
+aristocracy were killed and so many went into exile or disguised their
+names, that it was impossible to find heirs or owners for these effects.
+Some of the people who found France a good country to be out of came to
+America, where adventurers had found prosperity and refugees found peace
+so many times before. Marshal Ney and Bernadotte are alleged to have
+served in the American army during the Revolution, and at Hogansburg,
+New York, the Reverend Eleazer Williams, an Episcopal missionary, who
+lies buried in the church-yard there, was declared to be the missing son
+of Louis XVI. The question, "Have we a Bourbon among us?" was
+frequently canvassed; but he avoided publicity and went quietly on with
+his pastoral work.
+
+All property left in Mr. Morris's hands that had not been claimed was
+removed to his mansion at Port Morris, when he returned from his
+ministry, and he gained in the esteem and envy of his neighbors when the
+extent of these riches was seen. Once, at the wine, he touched glasses
+with his wife, and said that if she bore a male child that son should be
+heir to his wealth. Two relatives who sat at the table exchanged looks
+at this and cast a glance of no gentle regard on his lady. A year went
+by. The son was born, but Gouverneur Morris was dead.
+
+It is the first night of the year 1817, the servants are asleep, and the
+widow sits late before the fire, her baby in her arms, listening betimes
+to the wind in the chimney, the beat of hail on the shutters, the
+brawling of the Bronx and the clash of moving ice upon it; yet thinking
+of her husband and the sinister look his promise had brought to the
+faces of his cousins, when a tramp of horses is heard without, and anon
+a summons at the door. The panels are beaten by loaded riding-whips,
+and a man's voice cries, "Anne Morris, fetch us our cousin's will, or
+we'll break into the house and take it." The woman clutches the infant
+to her breast, but makes no answer. Again the clatter of the whips; but
+now a mist is gathering in the room, and a strange enchantment comes
+over her, for are not the lions breathing on the coat of arms above the
+door, and are not the portraits stirring in their frames?
+
+They are, indeed. There is a rustle of robes and clink of steel and one
+old warrior leaps down, his armor sounding as he alights, and striking
+thrice his sword and shield together he calls on Gouverneur Morris to
+come forth. Somebody moves in the room where Morris died; there is a
+measured footfall in the corridor, with the clank of a scabbard keeping
+time; the door is opened, and on the blast that enters the widow hears a
+cry, then a double gallop, passing swiftly into distance. As she gazes,
+her husband appears, apparelled as in life, and with a smile he takes a
+candelabrum from the mantel and, beckoning her to follow, moves from
+room to room. Then, for the first time, the widow knows to what wealth
+her baby has been born, for the ghost discloses secret drawers in
+escritoires where money, title deeds, and gems are hidden, turns
+pictures and wainscots on unsuspected hinges, revealing shelves heaped
+with fabrics, plate, and lace; then, returning to the fireside, he
+stoops as if to kiss his wife and boy, but a bell strikes the first hour
+of morning and he vanishes into his portrait on the wall.
+
+
+
+
+
+*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK MYTHS-LEGENDS, BY SKINNER, V1 ***
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