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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Old Ticonderoga, A Picture of The Past, by
+Nathaniel Hawthorne
+
+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: Old Ticonderoga, A Picture of The Past
+
+Author: Nathaniel Hawthorne
+
+Posting Date: December 20, 2010 [EBook #9242]
+Release Date: November, 2005
+First Posted: September 18, 2003
+Last Updated: February 6, 2007
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK OLD TICONDEROGA ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by David Widger. HTML version by Al Haines
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ THE SNOW-IMAGE
+
+ AND
+
+ OTHER TWICE-TOLD TALES
+
+
+
+ OLD TICONDEROGA
+ A PICTURE OF THE PAST
+
+ By
+
+ Nathaniel Hawthorne
+
+
+
+The greatest attraction, in this vicinity, is the famous old fortress of
+Ticonderoga, the remains of which are visible from the piazza of the
+tavern, on a swell of land that shuts in the prospect of the lake. Those
+celebrated heights, Mount Defiance and Mount Independence, familiar to
+all Americans in history, stand too prominent not to be recognized,
+though neither of them precisely corresponds to the images excited by
+their names. In truth, the whole scene, except the interior of the
+fortress, disappointed me. Mount Defiance, which one pictures as a
+steep, lofty, and rugged hill, of most formidable aspect, frowning down
+with the grim visage of a precipice on old Ticonderoga, is merely a long
+and wooded ridge; and bore, at some former period, the gentle name of
+Sugar Hill. The brow is certainly difficult to climb, and high enough to
+look into every corner of the fortress. St. Clair's most probable
+reason, however, for neglecting to occupy it, was the deficiency of
+troops to man the works already constructed, rather than the supposed
+inaccessibility of Mount Defiance. It is singular that the French never
+fortified this height, standing, as it does, in the quarter whence they
+must have looked for the advance of a British army.
+
+In my first view of the ruins, I was favored with the scientific guidance
+of a young lieutenant of engineers, recently from West Point, where he
+had gained credit for great military genius. I saw nothing but confusion
+in what chiefly interested him; straight lines and zigzags, defence
+within defence, wall opposed to wall, and ditch intersecting ditch;
+oblong squares of masonry below the surface of the earth, and huge
+mounds, or turf-covered hills of stone, above it. On one of these
+artificial hillocks, a pine-tree has rooted itself, and grown tall and
+strong, since the banner-staff was levelled. But where my unmilitary
+glance could trace no regularity, the young lieutenant was perfectly at
+home. He fathomed the meaning of every ditch, and formed an entire plan
+of the fortress from its half-obliterated lines. His description of
+Ticonderoga would be as accurate as a geometrical theorem, and as barren
+of the poetry that has clustered round its decay. I viewed Ticonderoga
+as a place of ancient strength, in ruins for half a century: where the
+flags of three nations had successively waved, and none waved now; where
+armies had struggled, so long ago that the bones of the slain were
+mouldered; where Peace had found a heritage in the forsaken haunts of
+War. Now the young West-Pointer, with his lectures on ravelins,
+counterscarps, angles, and covered ways, made it an affair of brick and
+mortar and hewn stone, arranged on certain regular principles, having a
+good deal to do with mathematics, but nothing at all with poetry.
+
+I should have been glad of a hoary veteran to totter by my side, and tell
+me, perhaps, of the French garrisons and their Indian allies,--of
+Abercrombie, Lord Howe, and Amherst,--of Ethan Allen's triumph and St.
+Clair's surrender. The old soldier and the old fortress would be emblems
+of each other. His reminiscences, though vivid as the image of
+Ticonderoga in the lake, would harmonize with the gray influence of the
+scene. A survivor of the long-disbanded garrisons, though but a private
+soldier, might have mustered his dead chiefs and comrades,--some from
+Westminster Abbey, and English churchyards, and battle-fields in
+Europe,--others from their graves here in America,--others, not a few,
+who lie sleeping round the fortress; he might have mustered them all,
+and bid them march through the ruined gateway, turning their old historic
+faces on me, as they passed. Next to such a companion, the best is one's
+own fancy.
+
+At another visit I was alone, and, after rambling all over the ramparts,
+sat down to rest myself in one of the roofless barracks. These are old
+French structures, and appear to have occupied three sides of a large
+area, now overgrown with grass, nettles, and thistles. The one in which
+I sat was long and narrow, as all the rest had been, with peaked gables.
+The exterior walls were nearly entire, constructed of gray, flat,
+unpicked stones, the aged strength of which promised long to resist the
+elements, if no other violence should precipitate their fall.--The roof,
+floors, partitions, and the rest of the wood-work had probably been
+burnt, except some bars of stanch old oak, which were blackened with
+fire, but still remained imbedded into the window-sills and over the
+doors. There were a few particles of plastering near the chimney,
+scratched with rude figures, perhaps by a soldier's hand. A most
+luxuriant crop of weeds had sprung up within the edifice, and hid the
+scattered fragments of the wall. Grass and weeds grew in the windows,
+and in all the crevices of the stone, climbing, step by step, till a tuft
+of yellow flowers was waving on the highest peak of the gable. Some
+spicy herb diffused a pleasant odor through the ruin. A verdant heap of
+vegetation had covered the hearth of the second floor, clustering on the
+very spot where the huge logs had mouldered to glowing coals, and
+flourished beneath the broad flue, which had so often puffed the smoke
+over a circle of French or English soldiers. I felt that there was no
+other token of decay so impressive as that bed of weeds in the place of
+the backlog.
+
+Here I sat, with those roofless walls about me, the clear sky over my
+head, and the afternoon sunshine falling gently bright through the
+window-frames and doorway. I heard the tinkling of a cow-bell, the
+twittering of birds, and the pleasant hum of insects. Once a gay
+butterfly, with four gold-speckled wings, came and fluttered about my
+head, then flew up and lighted on the highest tuft of yellow flowers, and
+at last took wing across the lake. Next a bee buzzed through the
+sunshine, and found much sweetness among the weeds. After watching him
+till he went off to his distant hive, I closed my eyes on Ticonderoga in
+ruins, and cast a dream-like glance over pictures of the past, and scenes
+of which this spot had been the theatre.
+
+At first, my fancy saw only the stern hills, lonely lakes, and venerable
+woods. Not a tree, since their seeds were first scattered over the
+infant soil, had felt the axe, but had grown up and flourished through
+its long generation, had fallen beneath the weight of years, been buried
+in green moss, and nourished the roots of others as gigantic. Hark! A
+light paddle dips into the lake, a birch canoe glides round the point,
+and an Indian chief has passed, painted and feather-crested, armed with a
+bow of hickory, a stone tomahawk, and flint-headed arrows. But the
+ripple had hardly vanished from the water, when a white flag caught the
+breeze, over a castle in the wilderness, with frowning ramparts and a
+hundred cannon. There stood a French chevalier, commandant of the
+fortress, paying court to a copper-colored lady, the princess of the
+land, and winning her wild love by the arts which had been successful
+with Parisian dames. A war-party of French and Indians were issuing from
+the gate to lay waste some village of New England. Near the fortress
+there was a group of dancers. The merry soldiers footing it with the
+swart savage maids; deeper in the wood, some red men were growing frantic
+around a keg of the fire-water; and elsewhere a Jesuit preached the faith
+of high cathedrals beneath a canopy of forest boughs, and distributed
+crucifixes to be worn beside English scalps.
+
+I tried to make a series of pictures from the old French war, when fleets
+were on the lake and armies in the woods, and especially of Abercrombie's
+disastrous repulse, where thousands of lives were utterly thrown away;
+but, being at a loss how to order the battle, I chose an evening scene in
+the barracks, after the fortress had surrendered to Sir Jeffrey Amherst.
+What an immense fire blazes on that hearth, gleaming on swords, bayonets,
+and musket-barrels, and blending with the hue of the scarlet coats till
+the whole barrack-room is quivering with ruddy light! One soldier has
+thrown himself down to rest, after a deer-hunt, or perhaps a long run
+through the woods with Indians on his trail. Two stand up to wrestle,
+and are on the point of coming to blows. A fifer plays a shrill
+accompaniment to a drummer's song,--a strain of light love and bloody
+war, with a chorus thundered forth by twenty voices. Meantime, a veteran
+in the corner is prosing about Dettingen and Fontenoy, and relates
+camp-traditions of Marlborough's battles, till his pipe, having been
+roguishly charged with gunpowder, makes a terrible explosion under his
+nose. And now they all vanish in a puff of smoke from the chimney.
+
+I merely glanced at the ensuing twenty years, which glided peacefully
+over the frontier fortress, till Ethan Allen's shout was heard, summoning
+it to surrender "in the name of the great Jehovah and of the Continental
+Congress." Strange allies! thought the British captain. Next came the
+hurried muster of the soldiers of liberty, when the cannon of Burgoyne,
+pointing down upon their stronghold from the brow of Mount Defiance,
+announced a new conqueror of Ticonderoga. No virgin fortress, this!
+Forth rushed the motley throng from the barracks, one man wearing the
+blue and buff of the Union, another the red coat of Britain, a third a
+dragoon's jacket, and a fourth a cotton frock; here was a pair of leather
+breeches, and striped trousers there; a grenadier's cap on one head, and
+a broad-brimmed hat, with a tall feather, on the next; this fellow
+shouldering a king's arm, that might throw a bullet to Crown Point, and
+his comrade a long fowling-piece, admirable to shoot ducks on the lake.
+In the midst of the bustle, when the fortress was all alive with its last
+warlike scene, the ringing of a bell on the lake made me suddenly unclose
+my eyes, and behold only the gray and weed-grown ruins. They were as
+peaceful in the sun as a warrior's grave.
+
+Hastening to the rampart, I perceived that the signal had been given by
+the steamboat Franklin, which landed a passenger from Whitehall at the
+tavern, and resumed its progress northward, to reach Canada the next
+morning. A sloop was pursuing the same track; a little skiff had just
+crossed the ferry; while a scow, laden with lumber, spread its huge
+square sail, and went up the lake. The whole country was a cultivated
+farm. Within musket-shot of the ramparts lay the neat villa of Mr. Pell,
+who, since the Revolution, has become proprietor of a spot for which
+France, England, and America have so often struggled. How forcibly the
+lapse of time and change of circumstances came home to my apprehension!
+Banner would never wave again, nor cannon roar, nor blood be shed, nor
+trumpet stir up a soldier's heart, in this old fort of Ticonderoga. Tall
+trees have grown upon its ramparts, since the last garrison marched out,
+to return no more, or only at some dreamer's summons, gliding from the
+twilight past to vanish among realities.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Old Ticonderoga, A Picture of The Past, by
+Nathaniel Hawthorne
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+Project Gutenberg EBook, Old Ticonderoga, by Nathaniel Hawthorne
+From "The Snow Image and Other Twice-Told Tales"
+#69 in our series by Nathaniel Hawthorne
+
+Copyright laws are changing all over the world. Be sure to check the
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+Title: Old Ticonderoga, A Picture of The Past
+ (From: "The Snow Image and Other Twice-Told Tales")
+
+Author: Nathaniel Hawthorne
+
+Release Date: Nov, 2005 [EBook #9242]
+[This file was first posted on September 18, 2003]
+[Last updated on February 6, 2007]
+
+Edition: 10
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+
+
+
+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK, OLD TICONDEROGA ***
+
+
+
+
+This eBook was produced by David Widger
+
+
+
+
+
+ THE SNOW-IMAGE
+
+ AND
+
+ OTHER TWICE-TOLD TALES
+
+
+
+ OLD TICONDEROGA
+ A PICTURE OF THE PAST
+
+ By
+
+ Nathaniel Hawthorne
+
+
+
+The greatest attraction, in this vicinity, is the famous old fortress of
+Ticonderoga, the remains of which are visible from the piazza of the
+tavern, on a swell of land that shuts in the prospect of the lake. Those
+celebrated heights, Mount Defiance and Mount Independence, familiar to
+all Americans in history, stand too prominent not to be recognized,
+though neither of them precisely corresponds to the images excited by
+their names. In truth, the whole scene, except the interior of the
+fortress, disappointed me. Mount Defiance, which one pictures as a
+steep, lofty, and rugged hill, of most formidable aspect, frowning down
+with the grim visage of a precipice on old Ticonderoga, is merely a long
+and wooded ridge; and bore, at some former period, the gentle name of
+Sugar Hill. The brow is certainly difficult to climb, and high enough to
+look into every corner of the fortress. St. Clair's most probable
+reason, however, for neglecting to occupy it, was the deficiency of
+troops to man the works already constructed, rather than the supposed
+inaccessibility of Mount Defiance. It is singular that the French never
+fortified this height, standing, as it does, in the quarter whence they
+must have looked for the advance of a British army.
+
+In my first view of the ruins, I was favored with the scientific guidance
+of a young lieutenant of engineers, recently from West Point, where he
+had gained credit for great military genius. I saw nothing but confusion
+in what chiefly interested him; straight lines and zigzags, defence
+within defence, wall opposed to wall, and ditch intersecting ditch;
+oblong squares of masonry below the surface of the earth, and huge
+mounds, or turf-covered hills of stone, above it. On one of these
+artificial hillocks, a pine-tree has rooted itself, and grown tall and
+strong, since the banner-staff was levelled. But where my unmilitary
+glance could trace no regularity, the young lieutenant was perfectly at
+home. He fathomed the meaning of every ditch, and formed an entire plan
+of the fortress from its half-obliterated lines. His description of
+Ticonderoga would be as accurate as a geometrical theorem, and as barren
+of the poetry that has clustered round its decay. I viewed Ticonderoga
+as a place of ancient strength, in ruins for half a century: where the
+flags of three nations had successively waved, and none waved now; where
+armies had struggled, so long ago that the bones of the slain were
+mouldered; where Peace had found a heritage in the forsaken haunts of
+War. Now the young West-Pointer, with his lectures on ravelins,
+counterscarps, angles, and covered ways, made it an affair of brick and
+mortar and hewn stone, arranged on certain regular principles, having a
+good deal to do with mathematics, but nothing at all with poetry.
+
+I should have been glad of a hoary veteran to totter by my side, and tell
+me, perhaps, of the French garrisons and their Indian allies,--of
+Abercrombie, Lord Howe, and Amherst,--of Ethan Allen's triumph and St.
+Clair's surrender. The old soldier and the old fortress would be emblems
+of each other. His reminiscences, though vivid as the image of
+Ticonderoga in the lake, would harmonize with the gray influence of the
+scene. A survivor of the long-disbanded garrisons, though but a private
+soldier, might have mustered his dead chiefs and comrades,--some from
+Westminster Abbey, and English churchyards, and battle-fields in Europe,
+--others from their graves here in America,--others, not a few, who lie
+sleeping round the fortress; he might have mustered them all, and bid
+them march through the ruined gateway, turning their old historic faces
+on me, as they passed. Next to such a companion, the best is one's own
+fancy.
+
+At another visit I was alone, and, after rambling all over the ramparts,
+sat down to rest myself in one of the roofless barracks. These are old
+French structures, and appear to have occupied three sides of a large
+area, now overgrown with grass, nettles, and thistles. The one in which
+I sat was long and narrow, as all the rest had been, with peaked gables.
+The exterior walls were nearly entire, constructed of gray, flat,
+unpicked stones, the aged strength of which promised long to resist the
+elements, if no other violence should precipitate their fall.--The roof,
+floors, partitions, and the rest of the wood-work had probably been
+burnt, except some bars of stanch old oak, which were blackened with
+fire, but still remained imbedded into the window-sills and over the
+doors. There were a few particles of plastering near the chimney,
+scratched with rude figures, perhaps by a soldier's hand. A most
+luxuriant crop of weeds had sprung up within the edifice, and hid the
+scattered fragments of the wall. Grass and weeds grew in the windows,
+and in all the crevices of the stone, climbing, step by step, till a tuft
+of yellow flowers was waving on the highest peak of the gable. Some
+spicy herb diffused a pleasant odor through the ruin. A verdant heap of
+vegetation had covered the hearth of the second floor, clustering on the
+very spot where the huge logs had mouldered to glowing coals, and
+flourished beneath the broad flue, which had so often puffed the smoke
+over a circle of French or English soldiers. I felt that there was no
+other token of decay so impressive as that bed of weeds in the place of
+the backlog.
+
+Here I sat, with those roofless walls about me, the clear sky over my
+head, and the afternoon sunshine falling gently bright through the
+window-frames and doorway. I heard the tinkling of a cow-bell, the
+twittering of birds, and the pleasant hum of insects. Once a gay
+butterfly, with four gold-speckled wings, came and fluttered about my
+head, then flew up and lighted on the highest tuft of yellow flowers, and
+at last took wing across the lake. Next a bee buzzed through the
+sunshine, and found much sweetness among the weeds. After watching him
+till he went off to his distant hive, I closed my eyes on Ticonderoga in
+ruins, and cast a dream-like glance over pictures of the past, and scenes
+of which this spot had been the theatre.
+
+At first, my fancy saw only the stern hills, lonely lakes, and venerable
+woods. Not a tree, since their seeds were first scattered over the
+infant soil, had felt the axe, but had grown up and flourished through
+its long generation, had fallen beneath the weight of years, been buried
+in green moss, and nourished the roots of others as gigantic. Hark! A
+light paddle dips into the lake, a birch canoe glides round the point,
+and an Indian chief has passed, painted and feather-crested, armed with a
+bow of hickory, a stone tomahawk, and flint-headed arrows. But the
+ripple had hardly vanished from the water, when a white flag caught the
+breeze, over a castle in the wilderness, with frowning ramparts and a
+hundred cannon. There stood a French chevalier, commandant of the
+fortress, paying court to a copper-colored lady, the princess of the
+land, and winning her wild love by the arts which had been successful
+with Parisian dames. A war-party of French and Indians were issuing from
+the gate to lay waste some village of New England. Near the fortress
+there was a group of dancers. The merry soldiers footing it with the
+swart savage maids; deeper in the wood, some red men were growing frantic
+around a keg of the fire-water; and elsewhere a Jesuit preached the faith
+of high cathedrals beneath a canopy of forest boughs, and distributed
+crucifixes to be worn beside English scalps.
+
+I tried to make a series of pictures from the old French war, when fleets
+were on the lake and armies in the woods, and especially of Abercrombie's
+disastrous repulse, where thousands of lives were utterly thrown away;
+but, being at a loss how to order the battle, I chose an evening scene in
+the barracks, after the fortress had surrendered to Sir Jeffrey Amherst.
+What an immense fire blazes on that hearth, gleaming on swords, bayonets,
+and musket-barrels, and blending with the hue of the scarlet coats till
+the whole barrack-room is quivering with ruddy light! One soldier has
+thrown himself down to rest, after a deer-hunt, or perhaps a long run
+through the woods with Indians on his trail. Two stand up to wrestle,
+and are on the point of coming to blows. A fifer plays a shrill
+accompaniment to a drummer's song,--a strain of light love and bloody
+war, with a chorus thundered forth by twenty voices. Meantime, a veteran
+in the corner is prosing about Dettingen and Fontenoy, and relates camp-
+traditions of Marlborough's battles, till his pipe, having been roguishly
+charged with gunpowder, makes a terrible explosion under his nose. And
+now they all vanish in a puff of smoke from the chimney.
+
+I merely glanced at the ensuing twenty years, which glided peacefully
+over the frontier fortress, till Ethan Allen's shout was heard, summoning
+it to surrender "in the name of the great Jehovah and of the Continental
+Congress." Strange allies! thought the British captain. Next came the
+hurried muster of the soldiers of liberty, when the cannon of Burgoyne,
+pointing down upon their stronghold from the brow of Mount Defiance,
+announced a new conqueror of Ticonderoga. No virgin fortress, this!
+Forth rushed the motley throng from the barracks, one man wearing the
+blue and buff of the Union, another the red coat of Britain, a third a
+dragoon's jacket, and a fourth a cotton frock; here was a pair of leather
+breeches, and striped trousers there; a grenadier's cap on one head, and
+a broad-brimmed hat, with a tall feather, on the next; this fellow
+shouldering a king's arm, that might throw a bullet to Crown Point, and
+his comrade a long fowling-piece, admirable to shoot ducks on the lake.
+In the midst of the bustle, when the fortress was all alive with its last
+warlike scene, the ringing of a bell on the lake made me suddenly unclose
+my eyes, and behold only the gray and weed-grown ruins. They were as
+peaceful in the sun as a warrior's grave.
+
+Hastening to the rampart, I perceived that the signal had been given by
+the steamboat Franklin, which landed a passenger from Whitehall at the
+tavern, and resumed its progress northward, to reach Canada the next
+morning. A sloop was pursuing the same track; a little skiff had just
+crossed the ferry; while a scow, laden with lumber, spread its huge
+square sail, and went up the lake. The whole country was a cultivated
+farm. Within musket-shot of the ramparts lay the neat villa of Mr. Pell,
+who, since the Revolution, has become proprietor of a spot for which
+France, England, and America have so often struggled. How forcibly the
+lapse of time and change of circumstances came home to my apprehension!
+Banner would never wave again, nor cannon roar, nor blood be shed, nor
+trumpet stir up a soldier's heart, in this old fort of Ticonderoga. Tall
+trees have grown upon its ramparts, since the last garrison marched out,
+to return no more, or only at some dreamer's summons, gliding from the
+twilight past to vanish among realities.
+
+
+
+
+
+*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK, OLD TICONDEROGA ***
+By Nathaniel Hawthorne
+
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