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The Conqueror by Atherton, Gertrude Franklin Horn - I

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The Conqueror

I

I should have been glad to find an old Al­manac of Nevis which con­tained a de­scrip­tion of its 11th of Jan­uary, 1757. But one Jan­uary is much like an­oth­er in the Lee­ward Is­lands, and he who has been there can eas­ily imag­ine the day on which Alexan­der Hamil­ton was born. The sky was a deep­er blue than in sum­mer, for the sun was rest­ing af­ter the ter­rif­ic labours of Au­tumn, and there was a prick in the trade winds which stim­ulat­ed the blood by day and chilled it a tri­fle at night. The slave wom­en moved more briskly, fol­lowed by a trot­ting brood of “pic'nees,” one or more cling­ing to their hips, all be­wail­ing the rigours of win­ter. Down in the riv­er where they pound­ed the clothes on the stones, they vowed they would car­ry the next linen to the sul­phur springs, for the very mar­row in their bones was cold. In the Great Hous­es there were no fires, but doors and win­dows were closed ear­ly and opened late, and blan­kets were on ev­ery bed. The ther­mome­ter may have stood at 72 deg..

Nevis her­self was like a green jew­el cas­ket, af­ter the au­tumn rains. Or­anges and sweet limes were yel­low in her or­chards, the long-​leaved ba­nana trees were swelling with bunch­es of fruit, the guavas were ready for cream and the boil­ing. The wine was in the co­coanut, the roy­al palms had shed their fad­ed sum­mer leaves and glit­tered like bur­nished met­al. The gor­geous mass­es of the cro­ton bush had drawn fresh colour from the rain. In the woods and in the long av­enues which wound up the moun­tain to the Great House of ev­ery es­tate, the air was al­most cold; but out un­der the ten o'clock sun, even a West In­di­an could keep warm, and the ne­groes sang as they reaped the cane. The sea near the shore was like green sun­light, but some yards out it deep­ened in­to that in­tense hot blue which is the fi­nal ex­cess of West In­di­an colour­ing. The spray flew high over the reef be­tween Nevis and St. Kitts, glit­ter­ing like the salt ponds on the des­olate end of the larg­er is­land, the roar of the break­ers au­di­ble in the room where the child who was to be called Alexan­der Hamil­ton was born.

Rachael rose to a cease­less de­mand up­on her at­ten­tion for which she was grate­ful dur­ing the long days of Hamil­ton's ab­sence. Alexan­der turned out to be the most rest­less and monar­chi­cal of young­sters and pre­ferred his moth­er to his black at­ten­dants. She ruled him with a firm hand, how­ev­er, for she had no mind to lessen her plea­sure in him, and al­though she could not keep him qui­et, she pre­vent­ed the blacks from spoil­ing him.

Dur­ing the hur­ri­cane months Hamil­ton yield­ed to her ner­vous fears, as he had done in the pre­ced­ing year, and crossed to St. Kitts but sel­dom. As a mat­ter of fact, hur­ri­canes of the first de­gree, are rare in the West In­dies, the av­er­age to each is­land be­ing one in a cen­tu­ry. But from the 25th of Au­gust, when all the Caribbean world pros­trates it­self in church while prayers for de­liv­er­ance from the aw­ful vis­ita­tion are read, to the 25th of Oc­to­ber, when the grate­ful or the sur­vivors join in thanks­giv­ing, ev­ery wind alarms the ner­vous, and ev­ery round wool­ly cloud must con­tain the white squall. Rachael knew that Nevis boats had turned over when mi­nor squalls dashed down the Nar­rows be­tween the ex­treme points of the Is­lands, and that they were most to be dread­ed in the hur­ri­cane sea­son. Hamil­ton's in­cli­na­tion was to spare in ev­ery pos­si­ble way the wom­an who had sac­ri­ficed so much for him, and he asked lit­tle urg­ing to idle his days in the cool li­brary with his charm­ing wife and son. There­fore his busi­ness suf­fered, for his part­ners took ad­van­tage of his neg­li­gence; and the de­cay of their for­tunes be­gan when Rachael, de­spite the an­gry protests of Archibald Hamn, sold her prop­er­ty on St. Kitts and gave Hamil­ton the mon­ey. He with­drew from the firm which had treat­ed him in­con­sid­er­ate­ly, and set up a busi­ness for him­self. For a few years he was hope­ful, al­though more than once obliged to bor­row mon­ey from his wife. She gave freely, for she had been brought up in the care­less plen­ty of the Is­lands. Mary Fawcett, ad­mirable man­ag­er as she was, had been lav­ish with mon­ey, par­tic­ular­ly when her favourite child was in ques­tion; and Rachael's imag­ina­tion had nev­er worked to­ward the fact that mon­ey could roll down hill and not roll up again. She was long in dis­cov­er­ing that the man she loved and ad­mired was a fail­ure in the un­in­ter­est­ing world of busi­ness. He was a bril­liant and charm­ing com­pan­ion, read in the best lit­er­atures of the world, a thought­ful and ador­ing hus­band. It availed Archibald Hamn noth­ing to rage or Dr. Hamil­ton to re­mon­strate. Rachael grad­ual­ly learned that Hamil­ton was not as strong as her­self, but the ma­ter­nal in­stinct, so ful­ly aroused by her child, im­pelled her to fill out his na­ture with hers, while deny­ing noth­ing to the man who did all he could to make her hap­py.

In the third year Hamil­ton gave up his sail-​boat, and had him­self rowed across the Nar­rows, where the over­look­er of a salt es­tate he had bought await­ed him with a horse. Once he would have thought noth­ing of walk­ing the eight miles to Bas­seterre, but the Trop­ics, while they sharp­en the nerves, ca­ress un­ceas­ing­ly the in­do­lence of man. Dur­ing the hur­ri­cane sea­son he crossed as of­ten as he thought nec­es­sary, for with ex­pert oars­men there was lit­tle dan­ger, even from squalls, and the dis­tance was quick­ly cov­ered.

Grad­ual­ly Rachael's po­si­tion was ac­cept­ed. Noth­ing could al­ter the fact that she was the daugh­ter of Dr. and Mary Fawcett, and Hamil­ton was of the best blood in the King­dom. She was spo­ken of gen­er­al­ly as Mis­tress Hamil­ton, and old friends of her par­ents be­gan to greet her pleas­ant­ly as she drove about the Is­land with her beau­ti­ful child. In time they called, and from that it was but an­oth­er step to in­vite, as a mat­ter of course, the young Hamil­tons to their en­ter­tain­ments. Af­ter all, Rachael was not the first wom­an in trop­ical Great Britain to love a man she could not mar­ry, and it was fa­tigu­ing to ask the ev­er­last­ing ques­tion of whether the hon­esty of a pub­lic ir­reg­ular al­liance were not coun­ter­bal­anced by its dan­ger­ous ex­am­ple. It was a day of loose morals, the first fruit of the vast sci­en­tif­ic move­ment of the cen­tu­ry, whose last was the French Rev­olu­tion. More­over, the James Hamil­tons were de­light­ful peo­ple, and life on the Is­lands was a tri­fle monotonous at times; they brought in­to Nevis so­ci­ety fresh and un­usu­al per­son­al­ities, spiced with a salient va­ri­ety. Hamil­ton might al­most be said to have been born an as­tute man of the world. He opened his doors with an ac­com­plished hos­pi­tal­ity to the most in­tel­li­gent and cul­ti­vat­ed peo­ple of the Is­land, ig­nor­ing those who based their so­cial pre­ten­sions on rank and wealth alone. In con­se­quence he and his wife be­came the lead­ers of a small and ex­clu­sive set, who ap­pre­ci­at­ed their good for­tune. Dr. Hamil­ton and a few oth­er Kit­ti­fo­ni­ans were con­stant vis­itors in this hos­pitable man­sion. Chris­tiana Hug­gins, who had tak­en a bold stand from the first, car­ried her fa­ther there one day in tri­umph, and that aus­tere par­ent laid down his arms. All seemed well, and the crum­bling of the foun­da­tions made no sound.

And Alexan­der? He was an ex­citable and in­ge­nious imp, who saved him­self from many a spank­ing by his sparkling mind and en­tranc­ing sweet­ness of tem­per. He might fly at his lit­tle slaves and beat them, and to his white play­mates he nev­er yield­ed a point; but they loved him, for he was gen­er­ous and hon­est, and the hap­pi­est lit­tle mor­tal on the Is­land. He could get in­to as tow­er­ing a rage as old John Fawcett, but he was im­me­di­ate­ly amenable to the ten­der­ness of his par­ents.

When he was four years old he was sent to a small school, which hap­pened to be kept by a Jew­ess. In spite of his pre­coc­ity his par­ents had no wish to force a mind which, al­though de­light­ful to them in its saucy quick­ness, aroused no am­bi­tious hopes; they sent him to school mere­ly that there might be less op­por­tu­ni­ty to spoil him at home. His new ex­pe­ri­ence was of a brief du­ra­tion.

Hamil­ton on a Sun­day was read­ing to Rachael in the li­brary. Alexan­der shoved a chair to the ta­ble and climbed with some dif­fi­cul­ty, for he was very small, to an el­evat­ed po­si­tion among the last re­views of Eu­rope. He de­mand­ed the at­ten­tion of his par­ents, and, clasp­ing his hands be­hind his back, be­gan to re­cite rapid­ly in an un­known tongue. The day was very hot, and he wore noth­ing but a white apron. His lit­tle pink feet were bare on the ma­hogany, and his fair curls fell over a flushed and earnest face, which at all times was too thin and alert to be an­gel­ic or cheru­bic. Hamil­ton and Rachael, won­der­ing whom he fan­cied him­self im­itat­ing, pre­served for a mo­ment a re­spect­ful si­lence, then, over­come by his solemn coun­te­nance and the flu­en­cy of his out­landish ut­ter­ance, burst in­to one of those peals of sud­den laugh­ter which seem to strike the most sen­si­tive chord in young chil­dren. Alexan­der shrieked in wrath and ter­ror, and made as if to fling him­self on his moth­er's bo­som, then plant­ed his feet with an air of stub­born de­fi­ance, and went on with his recital. Hamil­ton lis­tened a mo­ment longer, then left the house abrupt­ly. He re­turned in wrath.

“That wom­an has taught him the Deca­logue in He­brew!” he ex­claimed. “'Tis a won­der his brains are not ad­dled. He will sail boats in the swim­ming-​bath and make shell hous­es in the gar­den for the next three years. We'll have no more of school.”