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With gallant face be moves, and gallantly is met.

Brave spirits, rous'd by glory, throng our camp;

The hardy hunter, skil'd to fell the deer,

Or start the sluggish bear from covert rude;

And not a clown that comes, but from his youth

Is trained to pour from far the leaden death,

To climb the steep, to struggle with the stream,

To labor firmly under scorching skies,

And bear, unshrinking, winter's roughest blast.

This, and that heaven-inspir'd enthusiasm

Which ever animates the patriot's breast,

Shall far outweigh the lack of discipline.

. Justice is ours; what shall prevail against her?

. But as I pass'd along, many strange tales

And monstrous rumors have my ears assail'd:

That Arnold had prov'd false; but he was ta'en

And hung, or to be hung—I know not what.

Another told that all our army, with their

Much-lov'd Chief, sold and betray'd, were captur'd.

But as I nearer drew, at yonder cot

'T was said that Arnold, traitor like, had fled;

And that a Briton, tried and prov'd a spy,

Was, on this day, as such, to suffer death.

. As you drew near, plain truth advanced to meet you.

'T is even as you heard, my brave young friend.

Never had people on a single throw

More interest at stake; when he who held

For us the die prov'd false and play'd us foul.

But for a circumstance of that nice kind,

Of cause so microscopic that the tongues

Of inattentive men call it the effect

Of chance, we must have lost the glorious game.

. Blest, blest be heaven! whatever was the cause!

. The blow ere this had fallen that would have bruis'd

The tender plant which we have striven to rear,

Crush'd to the dust, no more to bless this soil.

. What warded off the blow?

. The brave young man, who this day dies, was seiz'd

Within our bounds, in rustic garb disguis'd.

He offer'd bribes to tempt the band that seiz'd him;

But the rough farmer, for his country arm'd,

That soil defending which his ploughshare turn'd,

Those laws his father chose and he approv'd,

Cannot, as mercenary soldiers may,

Be brib'd to sell the public weal for gold.

. 'T is well. Just Heaven! O grant that thus may fall

All those who seek to bring this land to woe,

All those, who, or by open force, or dark

And secret machinations, seek to shake

The Tree of Liberty, or stop its growth,

In any soil where thou hast pleased to plant it.

. Yet not a heart but pities and would save him;

For all confirm that he is brave and virtuous;

Known, but till now, the darling child of Honor.

. (Contemptuously.) And how is call'd this—honorable spy?

. André 's his name.

. (Much agitated.) André!

. Aye! Major André.

. André!—O no, my friend, you 're, sure deceiv'd—

I'll pawn my life, my ever sacred fame,

My General's favor, or a soldier's honor,

That gallant André never yet put on

The guise of falsehood. O, it cannot be!

. How might I be deceiv'd? I 've heard him, seen him,

And what I tell, I tell from well-prov'd knowledge;

No second tale-bearer who heard the news.

. Pardon me, Melville. O, that well-known name,

So link'd with circumstances infamous!

My friend must pardon me. Thou wilt not blame

When I shall tell what cause I have to love him;