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The Conqueror by Atherton, Gertrude Franklin Horn - IV

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The Conqueror

IV

In the third year of their life on St. Croix, Rachael dis­cov­ered that Pe­ter Lyt­ton was dis­sat­is­fied with Hamil­ton, and re­tained him to his own detri­ment, out of sym­pa­thy for her­self and her chil­dren. From that time she had few tran­quil mo­ments. It was as if, like the timid in the hur­ri­cane sea­son, she sat con­stant­ly with ears strained for that first loud roar in the east. She re­al­ized then that the sort of up­heaval which shat­ters one's eco­nom­ic life is but the pre­cur­sor of oth­er up­heavals, and she thought on the un­known fu­ture un­til her strong soul was faint again.

Hamil­ton was one of those men whose gifts are ru­ined by their im­puls­es, in whom the cul­ti­va­tion of sober judge­ment is in­ter­rupt­ed by the ex­cess­es of a too san­guine tem­per­ament. He was hon­ourable, and al­ways will­ing to ad­mit his mis­takes, but years and re­peat­ed fail­ure did lit­tle to­ward bal­anc­ing his faults and virtues. In time he wore out the pa­tience of even those who loved and ad­mired him. His wife re­mained his one loy­al and unswerv­ing friend, but her part in his life was near its fin­ish. The day came when Pe­ter Lyt­ton, ex­as­per­at­ed once too of­ten, af­ter an ill-​con­sid­ered sale of valu­able stock, let fly his tem­per, and fur­ther ac­cep­tance of his favour was out of the ques­tion. Hamil­ton, af­ter a scene with his wife, in which his agony and re­morse quick­ened all the finest pas­sions in her own na­ture, sailed for the Is­land of St. Vin­cent, in the hope of find­ing em­ploy­ment with one of his for­mer busi­ness con­nec­tions. He had no choice but to leave his wife and chil­dren de­pen­dent up­on her rel­atives un­til he could send for them; and a week lat­er Rachael was forced to move to Pe­ter Lyt­ton's.

Her broth­er-​in-​law's house was very large. She was giv­en an up­stairs wing of it and treat­ed with much con­sid­er­ation, but this fi­nal ig­nominy broke her haughty spir­it, and she lost in­ter­est in her­self. She was thank­ful that her chil­dren were not to grow up in want, that Alexan­der was able to con­tin­ue his stud­ies with Hugh Knox. He was be­yond her now in ev­ery­thing but French, in which they read and talked to­geth­er dai­ly. She al­so dis­cussed con­stant­ly with him those heroes of his­to­ry dis­tin­guished not on­ly for great achieve­ments, but for sternest hon­our. She dreamed of his fu­ture great­ness, and some­times of her part in it. But her in­ner life was swathed like a mum­my.

To Alexan­der the change would have been wel­come had he un­der­stood his moth­er less. But the or­di­nary bright boy of nine is acute and ob­serv­ing, and this boy of Rachael's, with his ex­traor­di­nary in­tu­itions, his un­boy­ish brain, his sym­pa­thet­ic and pro­found af­fec­tion for his moth­er, felt with her and crit­icised his fa­ther severe­ly. To him fail­ure was in­com­pre­hen­si­ble, then, as lat­er, for self-​con­fi­dence and in­domitabil­ity were parts of his equip­ment; and that a man of his fa­ther's age and ex­pe­ri­ence, to say noth­ing of his ed­uca­tion and in­tel­lect, should so fail in the com­mon re­la­tion of life, and break the heart and pride of the un­com­mon­est of wom­en, filled him with a deep dis­ap­point­ment, which, no doubt, was the first step to­ward the ear­ly loss of cer­tain il­lu­sions.

Oth­er­wise his life was vast­ly im­proved. He soon be­came in­ti­mate with boys of neigh­bour­ing es­tates, Ed­ward and Thomas Stevens, and Ben­jamin Yard, and for a time they all stud­ied to­geth­er un­der Hugh Knox. At first there was dis­cord, for Alexan­der would have led a host of cheru­bims or had naught to do with them, and these boys were clever and spir­it­ed. There were rights of word and fist in the lee of Mr. Lyt­ton's barn, where in­ter­fer­ence was un­like­ly; but the three suc­cumbed speed­ily, not alone to the pow­er­ful mag­netism in lit­tle Hamil­ton's mind, and to his ac­tive fists, but be­cause he in­vari­ably ex­cit­ed pas­sion­ate at­tach­ment, un­less he en­coun­tered jeal­ous hate. When his pop­ular­ity with these boys was es­tab­lished they adored the very blaze of his tem­per, and when he formed them in­to a sol­dier com­pa­ny and marched them up and down the palm av­enue for a morn­ing at a time, they nev­er mur­mured, al­though they were like to die of the heat and un­ac­cus­tomed ex­er­tion. Ned­dy Stevens, who re­sem­bled him some­what in face, was the clos­est of these boy­hood friends.

Alexan­der was a great favourite with Mr. Lyt­ton, who took him to ride ev­ery morn­ing; Mrs. Lyt­ton pre­ferred James, who was a com­fort­able child to nurse; but Mrs. Mitchell was the de­clared slave of her live­ly nephew, and sent her coach for him on Sat­ur­day morn­ings. As for Hugh Knox, he nev­er ceased to whit­tle at the boy's am­bi­tion and point it to­ward a great place in mod­ern let­ters. Had he been born with less sound sense and a less watch­ful moth­er, it is ap­palling to think what a brat he would have been; but as it was, the spoil­ing but fos­tered a self-​con­fi­dence which was half the bat­tle in af­ter years.

Hamil­ton nev­er re­turned. His let­ters to his wife spoke al­ways of the hap­pi­ness of their fi­nal re­union, of be­lief in the fu­ture. His broth­ers had sent him mon­ey, and he hoped they would help him to re­cov­er his for­tunes. But two years passed and he was still ex­ist­ing on a small salary, his hopes and his im­pas­sioned ten­der­ness were stereo­typed. Rachael's ex­pe­ri­ence with Hamil­ton had de­vel­oped her in­sight. She knew that man re­quires wom­an to look af­ter her own fu­el. If she can­not, he may car­ry through life the per­fume of a sen­ti­ment, and a ten­der re­gret, but it grows easy and more easy to live with­out her. It was a long while be­fore she forced her pen­etrat­ing vi­sion round to the cer­tain­ty that she nev­er should see Hamil­ton again, and then she re­al­ized how strong hope had been, that her in­ter­est in her­self was not dead, that her love must re­main quick through in­ter­minable years of monotony and hu­mil­ia­tion. For a time she was so alive that she went close to killing her­self, but she fought it out as she had fought through oth­er des­per­ate crises, and wrenched her­self free of her youth, to live for the time when her son's ge­nius should lift him so high among the im­mor­tals that his birth would mat­ter as lit­tle as her own hours of agony. But the strength that car­ried her tri­umphant­ly through that bat­tle was fed by the last of her vi­tal­ity, and it was not long be­fore she knew that she must die.

Alexan­der knew it first. The change in his moth­er was so sud­den, the earth­en hue of her white skin, the dim­ming of her splen­did eyes, spoke so un­mis­tak­ably of some strange col­lapse of the vi­tal forces, that it seemed to the boy who wor­shipped her as if all the nois­es of the Uni­verse were shriek­ing his an­guish. At the same time he fought for an im­pas­sive ex­te­ri­or, then bolt­ed from the house and rode across the Is­land for a doc­tor. The man came, pre­scribed for a megrim, and Alexan­der did not call him again; nor did he men­tion his moth­er's con­di­tion to the rest of the fam­ily. She was in the habit of re­main­ing in her rooms for weeks at a time, and she had her own at­ten­dants. Mrs. Lyt­ton was an in­valid, and Pe­ter Lyt­ton, while ready to give of his boun­ty to his wife's sis­ter, had too lit­tle in com­mon with Rachael to seek her com­pan­ion­ship. Alexan­der felt the pres­ence of death too sure­ly to hope, and was de­ter­mined to have his moth­er to him­self dur­ing the time that re­mained. He con­fid­ed in Hugh Knox, then bare­ly left the apart­ments.

Just be­fore her col­lapse Rachael was still a beau­ti­ful wom­an. She was on­ly thir­ty-​two when she died. Her face, ex­cept when she forced her brain to ac­tiv­ity, was sad and worn, but the mo­bile beau­ty of the fea­tures was unim­paired, and her eyes were lu­mi­nous, even at their dark­est. Her head was al­ways proud­ly erect, and na­ture had giv­en her a grace and a dash which sur­vived bro­ken for­tunes and the death of her co­quetry. No doubt this is the im­pres­sion of her which Alexan­der car­ried through life, for those last two months passed to the sound of falling ru­ins, on which he was too sen­si­ble to dwell when they had gone in­to the con­trol of his will.

Af­ter she had ad­mit­ted to Alexan­der that she un­der­stood her con­di­tion, they sel­dom al­lud­ed to the sub­ject, al­though their con­ver­sa­tion was as rarely im­per­son­al. The house stood high, and Rachael's win­dows com­mand­ed one of the most charm­ing views on the Is­land. Be­low was the green val­ley, with the tur­baned wom­en mov­ing among the cane, then the long white road with its splen­did set­ting of roy­al palms, wind­ing past a hill with groves of palms, mar­ble foun­tains and stat­ues, ter­races cov­ered with hi­bis­cus and or­chid, and an­oth­er Great House on its sum­mit. Far to the right, through an open­ing in the hills, was a glimpse of the sea.

Rachael lay on a couch in a lit­tle bal­cony dur­ing much of the soft win­ter day, and talked to Alexan­der of her moth­er and her youth, fi­nal­ly of his fa­ther, touch­ing light­ly on the al­most for­got­ten episode with Levine. All that she did not say his cre­ative brain di­vined, and when she told him what he had long sus­pect­ed, that his moth­er's name was un­known to the Hamil­tons of Grange, he ac­cept­ed the fact as but one more ob­sta­cle to be over­thrown in the bat­tle with life which he had long known he was to fight un­aid­ed. To crit­icise his moth­er nev­er oc­curred to him; her con­trol of his heart and imag­ina­tion was too ab­so­lute. His on­ly re­gret was that she could not live un­til he was able to jus­ti­fy her. The au­dac­ity and bold­ness of his na­ture were stim­ulat­ed by the prospect of this sharp bat­tle with the world's most cher­ished con­ven­tion, and he was ful­ly aware of all that he owed to his moth­er. When he told her this she said:--

“I re­gret noth­ing, even though it has brought me to this. In the first place, it is not in me to do any­thing so fu­tile. In the sec­ond place, I have been per­mit­ted to live in ev­ery part of my na­ture, and how many wom­en can say that? In the third, you are in the world, and if I could live I should see you the hon­oured of all men. I die with re­gret be­cause you need me for many years to come, and I have suf­fered so much that I nev­er could suf­fer again. Re­mem­ber al­ways that you are to be a great man, not mere­ly a suc­cess­ful one. Your mind and your will are ca­pa­ble of all things. Nev­er try for the sec­ond best, and that means to put your im­me­di­ate per­son­al de­sire aside when it en­coun­ters one of the ide­als of your time. Un­less you iden­ti­fy your­self with the great prin­ci­ples of the world you will be a fail­ure, be­cause your mind is cre­at­ed in har­mo­ny with them, and if you use it for small­er pur­pos­es it will fail as sure­ly as if it tried to lie or steal. Your pas­sions are vi­olent, and you have a black­ness of hate in you which will ru­in you or oth­ers ac­cord­ing to the con­trol you ac­quire over it; so be warned. But you nev­er can fail through any of the or­di­nary de­fects of char­ac­ter. You are too bold and in­de­pen­dent to lie, even if you had been born with any such dis­po­si­tion; you are hon­ourable and tact­ful, and there is as lit­tle doubt of your fas­ci­na­tion and your pow­er over oth­ers. But re­mem­ber--use all these great forces when your am­bi­tion is hottest, then you can stum­ble up­on no sec­ond place. As for your heart, it will con­trol your head some­times, but your in­sa­tiable brain will ac­com­plish so much that it can af­ford to lose oc­ca­sion­al­ly; and the warmth of your na­ture will make you so many friends, that I draw from it more strength to die than from all your oth­er gifts. Leave this Is­land as soon as you can. Ah, if I could give you but a few thou­sands to force the first doors!”

She died on the 25th of Febru­ary, 1768. Her con­di­tion had been known for some days, and her sis­ters had shed many tears, aghast and deeply im­pressed at the trag­ic fate of this youngest, strangest, and most gift­ed of their fa­ther's chil­dren. Un­con­scious­ly they had ex­pect­ed her to do some­thing ex­traor­di­nary, and it was yet too soon to re­al­ize that she had. His aunts had an­nounced far and wide that Alexan­der was the bright­est boy on the Is­land, but that a na­tion lay fold­ed in his saucy au­da­cious brain they hard­ly could be ex­pect­ed to know.