Edward Bellamy

THE DUKE OF STOCKBRIDGE


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       Edward Bellamy

      THE DUKE OF STOCKBRIDGE

      Published by

      Books

      - Advanced Digital Solutions & High-Quality eBook Formatting -

       [email protected]

      2018 OK Publishing

      ISBN 978-80-272-4470-6

      Table of Contents

       Chapter I. The March of the Minute Men

       Chapter II. Nine Years After

       Chapter III. The Tavern-Jail at Barrington

       Chapter IV. The People Ask Bread and Receive a Stone

       Chapter V. That Means Rebellion!

       Chapter VI. Perez Defines His Position

       Chapter VII. The First Encounter

       Chapter VIII. Great Goings on at Barrington

       Chapter IX. Judge Dwight's Signature

       Chapter X. Great Goings at Barrington Continued

       Chapter XI. End of the Goings on at Barrington

       Chapter XII. A Fair Suppliant

       Chapter XIII. A Praise Meeting

       Chapter XIV. Perez Goes to Meeting

       Chapter XV. What Happened After Meeting

       Chapter XVI. An Auction Sale and Its Consequences

       Chapter XVII. Plots and Counterplots

       Chapter XVIII. Lex Talionis

       Chapter XIX. Perez Gets His Title

       Chapter XX. Two Critical Interviews

       Chapter XXI. Husking

       Chapter XXII. Brace of Proclamations

       Chapter XXIII. Snow-Bound

       Chapter XXIV. The Battle of West Stockbridge

       Chapter XXV. A Game of Bluff

       Chapter XXVI. The Restoration

       Chapter XXVII. Some Real Fighting

      Chapter First.

       The March of the Minute Men

       Table of Contents

      The first beams of the sun of August 17, 1777, were glancing down the long valley, which opening to the East, lets in the early rays of morning, upon the village of Stockbridge. Then, as now, the Housatonic crept still and darkling around the beetling base of Fisher's Nest, and in the meadows laughed above its pebbly shoals, embracing the verdant fields with many a loving curve. Then, as now, the mountains cradled the valley in their eternal arms, all round, from the Hill of the Wolves, on the north, to the peaks that guard the Ice Glen, away to the far south-east. Then, as now, many a lake and pond gemmed the landscape, and many a brook hung like a burnished silver chain upon the verdant slopes. But save for this changeless frame of nature, there was very little, in the village, which the modern dweller in Stockbridge would recognize.

      The main settlement is along a street lying east and west, across the plain which extends from the Housatonic, northerly some distance, to the foot of a hill. The village green or "smooth" lies rather at the western end of the village than at the center. At this point the main street intersects with the county road, leading north and south, and with divers other paths and lanes, leading in crooked, rambling lines to several points of the compass; sometimes ending at a single dwelling, sometimes at clusters of several buildings. On the hill, to the north, somewhat separated from the settlement on the plain, are quite a number of houses, erected there during the recent French and Indian wars, for the sake of being near the fort, which is now used as a parsonage by Reverend Stephen West, the young minister. The streets are all very wide and grassy, wholly without shade trees, and bordered generally by rail fences or stone walls. The houses, usually separated by wide intervals of meadow, are rarely over a story and a half in height. When painted, the color is usually red, brown, or yellow, the effect of which is a certain picturesqueness wholly outside any design on the part of the practical minded inhabitants.

      Interspersed among the houses, and occurring more thickly in the south and west parts of the village, are curious huts, as much like wigwams as houses. These are the dwellings of the Christianized and civilized Stockbridge Indians, the original possessors of the soil, who live intermingled with the whites on terms of the most utter comity, fully sharing the offices of church and town, and fighting the battles of the Commonwealth side by side with the white militia.

      Around the green stand the public buildings of the place. Here is the tavern, a low two-story building, without porch or piazza, and entered by a door in the middle of the longest side. Over the door swings a sign, on which a former likeness of King George has, by a metamorphosis common at this period, been transformed into a soldier of the revolution, in Continental uniform of buff and blue. But just at this time its contemplation does not afford the patriotic tipler as much complacency as formerly, for Burgoyne is thundering at the passes of the Hoosacs, only fifty miles away, and King George may get his red coat back again, after all. The Tories in the village say that the landlord keeps a pot of red paint behind the door, so that the Hessian dragoons may not take him by surprise when they come galloping down the valley, some afternoon. On the other side [of] the green is the meeting-house, built some thirty