The Rulers of the Lakes eBook

Joseph Alexander Altsheler
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 328 pages of information about The Rulers of the Lakes.

The Rulers of the Lakes eBook

Joseph Alexander Altsheler
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 328 pages of information about The Rulers of the Lakes.

The French were not withdrawing.  Upon that field, as well as every other in North America, they showed that they were the bravest of the brave.  Wheeling his regulars and Canadians to the right, Dieskau sought to crush there the three American regiments of Titcomb, Ruggles and Williams, and for an hour the battle at that point swayed to and fro, often almost hand to hand.  Titcomb was slain and many of his officers fell, but when Dieskau himself came into view an American rifleman shot him through the leg.  His adjutant, a gallant young officer named Montreuil, although wounded himself, rushed from cover, seized his wounded chief in his arms and bore him to the shelter of a tree.

But he was not safe long even there.  While they were washing his wounds he was struck again by two bullets, in the knee and in the thigh.  Two Canadians attempted to carry him to the rear.  One was killed instantly, and Montreuil took his place, but Dieskau made them put him down and directed the adjutant to lead the French again in a desperate charge to regain a day that had started so brilliantly, and that now seemed to be wavering in the balance.

Colonel Johnson himself had been wounded severely, and had been compelled to retire to his tent, but the American colonels, at least those who survived, conducted the battle with skill and valor.  The cannon, protected by the riflemen, still sent showers of grape shot among the French and Indians.  The huge Tandakora with St. Luc tried to lead the savages anew upon the American lines, but the hearts of the red men failed them.

The French regulars, urged on by Montreuil, charged once more, and once more were driven back, and the Americans, rising from their logs and coverts, rushed forward in their turn.  The regulars and Canadians were driven back in a rout, and Dieskau himself lying among the bushes was taken, being carried to the tent of Johnson, where the two wounded commanders, captor and captive, talked politely of many things.

The victory became more complete than the Americans had hoped.  The Indians who had stayed far in the rear to scalp those fallen in the morning were attacked suddenly by a band of frontiersmen, coming to join Johnson’s army, and, although they fought desperately and were superior in numbers, they were routed as Dieskau had been, the survivors fleeing into the forest.

Thus, late in the afternoon, closed the momentous battle of Lake George.  The French and Indian power had received a terrible blow, the whole course of the war, which before had been only a triumphant march for the enemy, was changed, and men took heart anew as the news spread through all the British colonies.

When Dieskau’s regulars, the Canadians and the Indians, broke in the great defeat, Robert, Tayoga, Willet, Grosvenor, the Philadelphia troop, Black Rifle and Daganoweda, all fierce with exultation, followed in pursuit.  But the enemy melted away before them, and then, from the crest of a hill, Robert heard the distant note of a French song he knew: 

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The Rulers of the Lakes from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.