Marianson, by Mary Hartwell 
Catherwood 
 
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Title: Marianson From "Mackinac And Lake Stories", 1899 
Author: Mary Hartwell Catherwood 
Release Date: October 30, 2007 [EBook #23251] 
Language: English 
Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 
*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 
MARIANSON *** 
 
Produced by David Widger 
 
MARIANSON 
From "Mackinac And Lake Stories", 1899 
By Mary Hartwell Catherwood
When the British landed on the west side of Mackinac Island at three 
o'clock in the morning of July 17,1812, Canadians were ordered to 
transport the cannon. They had only a pair of six-pounders, but these 
had to be dragged across the long alluvial stretch to heights which 
would command the fortress, and sand, rock, bushes, trees, and fallen 
logs made it a dreadful portage. Voyageurs, however, were men to 
accomplish what regulars and Indians shirked. 
All but one of the hundred and sixty Canadians hauled with a good will 
on the cannon ropes. The dawn was glimmering. Paradise hid in the 
untamed island, breathing dew and spice. The spell worked instantly 
upon that one young voyageur whose mind was set against the secret 
attack. All night his rage had been swelling. He despised the British 
regulars-forty-two lords of them only being in this expedition-as they in 
turn despised his class. They were his conquerors. He had no desire to 
be used as means of pushing their conquest further. These islanders he 
knew to be of his own race, perhaps crossed with Chippewa blood. 
Seven hundred Indians, painted and horned for war, skulked along as 
allies in the dim morning twilight. He thought of sleeping children 
roused by tomahawk and scalping-knife in case the surprised fort did 
not immediately surrender. Even then, how were a few hundred white 
men to restrain nearly a thousand savages? 
The young Canadian, as a rush was made with the ropes, stumbled over 
a log and dropped behind a bush. His nearest companions scarcely 
noticed the desertion in their strain, but the officer instantly detailed an 
Indian. 
"One of you Sioux bring that fellow back or bring his scalp." 
A Sioux stretched forward and leaped eagerly into the woods. All the 
boy's years of wilderness training were concentrated on an escape. The 
English officer meant to make him a lesson to the other voyageurs. And 
he smiled as he thought of the race he could give the Sioux. All his 
arms except his knife were left behind the bush; for fleet-ness was to 
count in this venture. The game of life or death was a pretty one, to be 
enjoyed as he shot from tree to tree, or like a noiseless-hoofed deer
made a long stretch of covert. He was alive through every blood drop. 
The dewy glory of dawn had never seemed so great. Cool as the Sioux 
whom he dodged, his woodsman's eye gathered all aspects of the 
strange forest. A detached rock, tall as a tree, raised its colossal altar, 
surprising the eye like a single remaining temple pillar. 
Old logs, scaled as in a coat of mail, testified to the humidity of this 
lush place. The boy trod on sweet white violets smelling of incense. 
The wooded deeps unfolded in thinning dusk and revealed a line of 
high verdant cliffs walling his course. He dashed through hollows 
where millions of ferns bathed him to the knees. As daylight 
grew--though it never was quite daylight there-so did his danger. He 
expected to hear the humming of an arrow, and perhaps to feel a shock 
and sting and cleaving of the bolt, and turned in recklessly to climb for 
the uplands, where after miles of jutting spurs the ridge stooped and 
pushed out in front of itself a round-topped rock. As the Canadian 
passed this rock a yellow flare like candle-light came through a crack at 
its base. 
He dropped on all-fours. The Indian was not in sight. He squirmed 
within a low battlement of serrated stone guarding the crack, and let 
himself down into what appeared to be the mouth of a cave. The 
opening was so low as to be invisible just outside the serrated 
breastwork. He found himself in a room of rock, irregularly hollow 
above, with a candle burning on the stone floor. As he sat upright and 
stretched forth a hand to pinch off the flame, the image of a sleeping 
woman was printed on his eyeballs so that he saw every careless ring of 
fair hair around her head and every curve of her body for hours 
afterwards    
    
		
	
	
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