During the assault Washington
stood in an embrasure of the grand battery, watching the advance of
the men. He was always given to exposing himself recklessly
when there was fighting to be done, but not when he was only an
observer.
This night, however, he was much exposed to the enemy's fire.
One of his aides, anxious and disturbed for his safety, told him
that the place was perilous.
``If you think so,'' was the quiet answer, ``you are at liberty to
step back.''
The moment was too exciting, too fraught with meaning, to think of
peril. The old fighting spirit of Braddock's field was
unchained for the last time. He would have liked to head the
American assault, sword in hand, and as he could not do that, he
stood as near his troops as he could, utterly regardless of the
bullets whistling in the air about him. Who can wonder at his
intense excitement at that moment?
Others saw a brilliant storming of two out- works, but to Washington
the whole Revolution and all the labor and thought and conflict of
six years were culminating in the smoke and din on those redoubts,
while out of the dust and heat of the sharp, quick fight success was
coming.
He had waited long, and worked hard, and his whole soul went out as
he watched the troops cross the abatis and scale the works. He
could have no thought of danger then, and when all was over, he
turned to Knox and said:--
``The work is done, and well done. Bring me my horse.''