Excerpt from Eagle's Cry
Chapter One
Mt. Vernon, Virginia, December 1799
On
the night of December 11, 1799, General George Washington,
retired now from the presidency of the United States for
more than two years, sixty-seven years old and feeling older,
saw a large misty ring around the moon that hung over Mount
Vernon.
"Coming
on snow, General," Billy Lee said. They were on the
front lawn. The big white house that stood for so much
in Washington's life gleamed in the pale light. Billy was
the General's manservant, huge, black, devoted, crippled
in body now and hung on the bottle as well, but he'd seen
the General through the war and all that had followed.
His speech was blurred by the loss of his teeth, providing
another bond; Washington's teeth were gone, his dentures
painful, his speech necessarily careful. Which was all
right -- measured speech added to his gravity.
"Maybe
not," Washington said. Billy would be free with a
lifetime income to support him when the General was gone.
He was a good man and loyal but you didn't look to him for
decisions.
In
the morning the mercury stood at thirty-three, wind from
the northeast wet and clammy, clouds hanging low.
"Don't
look good, General," Billy said. They were in the
stable, grooms saddling their mounts.
"You
stay back, Billy -- sit by the fire."
"Nah, suh. You go, I go."
"Well,
I've never let a little weather stop me."
"Yes,
suh, but--"
"I
know -- I'm older now. But that doesn't mean I'll roll over
and die when I see snow. Now, that's enough talk."
"Yes,
suh."
They
rode out of the barn. Temperature down, wind brisk, it
was chill. He thought of the fire crackling in his
study, quills sharpened and waiting on the gleaming desk.
But he had rounds to make, fields and herds to examine,
walls to check and foremen to query. That heifer in the
far barn with the sore in her mouth, how was she doing?
Hands expected to see the master as soldiers expected to
see the general; you couldn't sit in your tent all day and
pretend to be a leader. Presently it began to snow.
"I
done told you I smelled snow," Billy said.
"That
you did, Billy."
The snow eased into steady rain.
He drew his greatcoat collar closer. He didn't want to
see the day when rain could drive him from duty. But the
balm he normally drew from the very sight of his land was
lacking today. George Cabot's letter had disturbed him
deeply and he'd scarcely slept, lying there listening to
Martha's gentle breathing with awful visions of his country
in trouble flashing in his mind. They were still there.
Listen to George up in Boston and it
seemed the nation the General had nurtured was sinking in
a tide of venom. Federalists attacking Democrats, Democrats
snarling at Federalists. Damn all political parties anyway,
shattering the American ideal! Of course, George did see
things in extremes, but here he was talking of Thomas Jefferson
and James Madison as handmaidens of the devil. The General
knew that no more decent man than Jimmy Madison had ever
walked, let alone one smarter, but George saw all Democrats
as Beelzebub's minions. The blind conviction of his hatred
told the story. Still, it wasn't just Federalists -- Democrats
were haters, too.
He
sighed, slouching in his saddle. The thing was -- but then
he saw a sagging fence. Better have Henderson get those
posts reset immediately. He swung down and lifted the post
straight, kicking dirt in around it. When he remounted
he felt rather surprisingly winded. He was older, granted,
but worse, he felt old, the world sweeping by him,
the country troubled. But what had kept him awake much
of the night was George's echo of a call that came more
and more often: come back, take command again, hold us together
again lest we fly into fragments. But that was ridiculous,
his time was past, John Adams was president now. Rescue
us, show us the way, make us do right -- they sounded like
children acting up while the schoolmaster was out back relieving
himself!
At the far barn Norris had set a
fire and he warmed his hands before turning to the heifer.
She was standing, a good sign; he forced open her jaw and
ran an experienced finger along its lower side. Yes, the
canker was definitely shrinking. She rolled her eyes and
bawled when he let her go. More of the blue ointment, he
told Norris; keep after it.
Riding
on, rain slanting against his face, he mulled over the nation's
divisions. Hold us together, George mewing like a pussycat.
"Why
in the devil does everyone look to me?" He glared
at Billy. "Answer me that!"
Billy
had a chaw tucked in his cheek. He spat a brown gout to
clear for speech. "Why, General," he said, "`cause
you knows what to do. Most folks don't know diddledum but
you got your head fixed on right. Most ... well, look at
me, hungering after the rum when I know it tears me up.
But you..."
Well, it had been a rhetorical question
anyway. He turned his horse to the path. But Billy was
right, he'd always known what to do. Holding them together,
the army, the country, the people -- been successful, too,
until the rise of opposing political parties divided Americans
who once had been a single people. At the start we were
all together, in war, in striking a new Constitution, in
firming the nation's place in the world.
His
horse stumbled and he rose automatically in the stirrups.
But once the new nation was on its feet his
own Cabinet had split, young Alexander Hamilton, his favorite,
really, off like a greyhound toward a future he could see
more clearly than anyone else. And his other favorite,
little Jimmy Madison, turned suddenly rabid in support of
Mr. Jefferson, a man with whom the General had known from
the beginning he would never be close. Tom and Jimmy dug
in their heels over a radically different vision.
He hadn't seen the split coming
-- they'd had problems and Alex offered solutions. Tom
and Jimmy saw dangers ahead, but Alex's solutions were immediate
and real. But, now, looking back, what if Tom and Jimmy
had been right all along? Alex was a near genius in finance,
handsome, elegant, loyal -- Washington felt him a sort of
son. But that didn't mean he was always right. Sometimes
ambition betrayed him, the hungers of a poor boy who has
risen too fast, the arrogance of a mind that raced beyond
others. But genius wasn't all that mattered. Heart mattered,
too.
A sudden image of Jefferson popped
into his mind, tall, elegant of manner, rusty hair graying,
head thrown back in that characteristic way when a thought
struck him, saying, "Above all, trust the honest heart
of the common man." The honest heart. Now
that, George Washington well knew, was the plain truth.
Another memory ... a column of his
men, must have been in `Seventy-nine or maybe `Eighty, in
there somewhere, the war settling into a terrible grind,
the British locked into New York and Boston and holding
hard. It was near dusk and he'd called a small attack and
come out to watch the column go by, lean, hungry looking
men with rifles in hand, near empty haversacks slung, battered
hats drooping over stern faces, rags tied around shoes that
rotted on their feet. Marching out to fight, knowing that
some wouldn't return, knowing that before the night was
out they might be running in retreat before superior British
numbers. The whole trick was to go in and hit hard, sting
the enemy, throw him off balance, keep him on edge and then
slip away to fight him another day. It would be a long
time before these men slept.
He stood and watched them pass and
as they went by they nodded. Nodded! "Evening, ginral."
"Evening, sir." "How do, ginral?"
They would salute on the parade ground but here it was one
soldier to another, one citizen to another, men with honest
hearts marching to war. Evening, ginral.
His eyes blurred for a moment.
He blinked rapidly. The rain slanted harder, occasionally
flaking into snow; he should go back, he supposed. Yes,
he was older now and intimations that he wouldn't live indefinitely
were coming with disconcerting frequency. But he wasn't
gone yet, and until then...
He knew why George Cabot's importuning
disturbed him -- it stirred the old call of leadership.
He'd always been a leader. Born poor but of solid family,
he'd molded himself so. Leading his men into combat for
the British back in the French and Indian war -- he was
just a boy then, God, he was green, he'd had so much to
learn. But some of his strength was the capacity to learn
while holding poise and equilibrium. He made mistakes and
sometimes they cost lives but he never was flummoxed, never
let his distress show and he learned. His power wasn't
in brilliant schemes nor seeing deeper than anyone else
could see but rather in the capacity to grasp the whole,
make the parts work, calm passions, hold control when things
wanted to go out of control.
But now? Martha said sixty-seven wasn't
old but age is measured in more than years. It had been
a long road...
He was home well before dinner at three,
half-hour at least.
"George!" Martha cried.
"Didn't you take shelter? Look at you -- you're all
wet."
He frowned; he wasn't really wet.
"Flakes of snow in your hair!
Oh, George! Your inner coat is damp too -- go and change,
get something dry--"
All this maternal fussing! He couldn't
help the iron in his voice, that will do, Madam, he was
ready for dinner now. Actually he did feel a bit of a chill,
but it was a little late now to mention the tickle in his
chest. He took a long sip of claret and felt the act of
swallowing, not a good sign.
After dinner, ignoring a half-dozen
new letters, he read the papers aloud and soon had Martha
laughing over his comments. As concession to that tickle
in his chest he went to bed early, and in the morning decided
not to go out. There was the new mail and swallowing his
tea had been yes, difficult. Why not cosset himself? After
all, he wasn't as young...
Letters full of fear and foreboding
from Fisher Ames and Timothy Pickering and Oliver Wolcott
and one from Colonel Hamilton picking poor John Adams apart.
John was having a troubled presidency, attacked by his own
party as well as by Democrats and taking it hard. And why
shouldn't he? The General himself took criticism like a
bee-stung horse and what was wrong with that? A man who'd
molded himself into a leader wasn't likely to sit around
with a smile as folks savaged him. And the Democratic papers
had made brutal personal attacks in his last years in office,
and if he could lay hands on a few of the worst editors
he'd give them a taste of the horsewhip ... except that
that would be beneath his dignity.
When Cullie brought tea he asked
her to add a little honey to ease his throat and say nothing
to Mrs. Washington. A dull ache lay at the center of his
chest. He sat by his window gazing over his grounds where
three inches of snow had fallen overnight. He loved this
place. As he studied it he felt decision forming: those
trees yonder did, after all, mar the view and should be
cut. It was always his way, study as long as needed, then
unshakeable decision and prompt action. He'd walk out later
and mark the trees. Thus he had run army and country.
The letters echoed George's call
-- come back, come back.
It was a cry of anguish, but it was the
wrong prescription. There's no going back, there never
is.
On the other hand, that didn't mean
there was nothing he could do. A leader must find his own
way to lead. The problem was our divisions, the fear we
would break apart or come to civil war. He shut his eyes,
listening to the fire crackle, and it came to him that this
new division of the parties really was but a metaphor for
a struggle for the nation's soul -- who are we, what kind
of country do we want? Maybe that query had been in the
wings from the beginning and we'd been too busy winning
independence and getting onto our feet to notice. Maybe
it was maturity that brought it before us, lingering immaturity
that made dealing with it so difficult.
But what could he do? A
leader must rise above problems, see deeper and understand
more than others. Parties seduced men into dogmatism --
your way comes to seem the right way and then the only way
and then the sanctified way, and opposition becomes first
aberration, then evil, then treason. How to lift his people
above that? -- he must find the kernel of truth, grasp it
whole, turn it like a gem to the light and make his people
see as broadly as did he. He could do that -- call for
a big public dinner, let people know he had something to
say. When he had everyone's attention, give them a talk
or even a metaphorical toast that would guide quarreling
men back to sanity.
But what would he actually say? He must
be very careful, must think it all through as he once had
done in war for he knew he would get just one chance and
then the force of his words would be gone. Think it through,
ruminate across the years, see what they had wrought ...
and where they'd failed. He sighed, adjusted the chair's
bolster at his neck and let his mind drift back to the war
where it all had begun. He'd been an ignorant Virginia
farmer -- he could see that now -- and had learned about
the varied country and its immensely varied people with
not a few pratfalls. But his men stayed with him, they
taught him and he learned and they went to war together...
He'd
never found decision difficult, but now with thousands of
men awaiting his orders and a skilled army prepared to destroy
him, he faced overwhelming detail. Everything -- weather,
food supplies, clothing and blankets, shoes, wagon stock
and the animals to draw them, stocks of powder and ball
and when he could expect replenishment, how many ill or
wounded and hence how many effectives, how to force feuding
generals to work together, how to meld Virginia and Massachusetts
troops into units, scout reports on terrain and the enemy...
Stunning detail, long lists, piles
of reports on his camp desk, he reading and trying to remember.
Soon he began writing summaries, just extended lists at
first, but the very process of writing produced such order,
logic and coherence that lists turned into essays. His
pen scratched steadily down sheet after sheet of foolscap
as the candle guttered on his desk and his camp bed remained
smooth and untouched. Step by step, the mass of information
became a solid whole and then simply and clearly, decision
took care of itself.
Was today so different? He felt
the same confusion and clashes, same omnipresent sense
of danger, the old calls to leadership renewed. How to
respond? Surely as he had before -- think it through,
write it out -- or, at least, think it out. Suddenly he
was more content than he'd been in weeks: yes, review all
that had happened till he knew the answers.
Martha leaned on the back of his chair.
She put her hands on his throat. They were warm and he
sighed. "You're not well, are you?" It was a
statement and he didn't deny it.
"A cold," he said. "I'll
shake it off."
"I knew you took a chill.
I'll mix the medicine."
"No -- you know I never take anything
for a cold. Let it go as it came, without help."
"But George, you're not as--"
"I know." He raised a hand.
"Ask Cullie for more tea."
There was a limit to just how much he
would cosset himself. He was busy now ... go back to the
start, when things were simple. They had fought for eight
fierce years; eyes shut, he let images of war roll in his
mind. He had never seriously doubted they would win, and
finally the British saw the reality and went home.
Ah, that November day in `Eighty-three!
He grouped his troops just above New York City while the
last British soldiers boarded ships off the Battery. Then,
his big warhorse, Nelson, prancing under him -- Old Nelson
felt as proud as he did -- he led the boys in. People lined
the streets in awestruck silence and then burst into a stunning
roar. Hats flew in the air, women rushed forward with hothouse
flowers in thick bunches, Henry Knox's cannon on the heights
opened in wild salute...
Flowery welcome speeches said no
one but General Washington could have held it all together
and made independence work. That was fair enough. He had
a clear sense of himself: solid, strong, able, self-contained,
intelligent -- but, mind you, not brilliant, not even clever,
never scheming, not the most rapid man in thought, not intellectual,
not a wide reader, his real interests agricultural, all
qualities that meant he understood his men and they understood
him.
He knew himself very well. Slow
to decide but unshakeable when he did, profound judgement
proved over the years, he'd held them together, the boys
suffering through winter after winter, gathering themselves
for another awful forced march to another slashing attack
and quick retreat. The men of the Revolution, great men,
gallant, loyal, dangerous men with the taste of independence
in their mouths.
Marched into New York to the boom of
cannon and at four that very afternoon he summoned his senior
officers to Fraunce's Tavern not far from the Battery.
Looking at their familiar faces, lined now where once they
had been smooth and young, he felt the tears start. Grew
worse as he took each in hard embrace, whispering thanks
and farewell and Godspeed. An hour later he was crossing
the Hudson, heading south. It was over.
King George III, who had his odd moments
but was nobody's fool, was reputed to have said that if
General Washington gave up power now the American would
be the great man of the Eighteenth Century. Well,
he could have justified hanging on. Many men so urged,
brimming with reasons, the country staggering out of the
disciplinary grip of war, a weak and quarreling congress,
states that viewed themselves as separate powers, European
nations looking upon us as a hawk looks on goslings. Men
tried to push duty on him, told him he owed them
a ruling hand. He remembered being infuriated one day,
close to knocking the man down ... now he couldn’t remember
who it was...
But it was clear he could have been king,
and he thought about it. Power is sweet; he knew that who
doubts that hasn't tasted it or is a liar. But he gave
it up and went south in a great rattling coach with four
horses that Simon Simcoe of Camden had loaned him, cheering
crowds and cannon salutes and children with hothouse flowers
all the way. The darling of the people. Tendered his commission
to Congress with a graceful speech, tears standing in his
eyes. Then he was free.. Mount Vernon and Martha awaited.
Even now, he remembered his contentment.
He had been true to himself. He was a man of probity, above
the slashing swords of ambition and desire and hence all
sides could turn to him.
Meanwhile, he must mark those trees.
He summoned Billy with the axe, wrapped a scarf around his
neck in deference to a throat that now was worse than sore
and walked out, boots growing damp in three inches of snow.
"General, "Billy said, "you
look like something the cat drug in. You better stay inside."
"I'll manage," he said. He
was very tired. Suddenly it seemed quite intolerable that
people should call on him again -- just too much!
Billy was holding the axe close to the
head. "Show me which trees. I'll blaze `em."
"I'll do it!"
"Suh--"
"Damn you, Billy, shut your mouth!"
He was in a fury, hands shaking. He snatched the axe.
Billy stared at him, dismayed but not cowed. It struck
him he must be sicker than he thought...
"All right," he said at last.
He touched Billy on the shoulder. "Maybe I'm not so
well after all." It wasn't quite an apology. He passed
over the axe. "You do the rest."
The pain in his chest expanded. He began
to shiver, overtaken by a chill despite his coat. They
walked back to the house in silence. He was searching for
something to say to Billy when the big man said, "You'll
feel better tomorrow, General. You don't mind my saying
it, you'll find a dollop of corn would go good right now."
The General smiled. "I believe
you're right, Billy." Inside, he asked Cullie to lace
his tea with whiskey. He pulled off his boots and put slippered
feet toward the fire before Martha could admonish him.
His pipe had a foul taste, not a good sign. He was surprisingly
tired and he put his head back in the big blue chair, eyes
shut, remembering...
Home from war he'd seen immediately that
a tottering confederation under a toothless congress with
no chief-of-state must fail. He remembered his surprise
that it came as a surprise. There was just no focusing
authority to hold states together. So he put into motion
the steps upon steps that led to forming a new government.
There was a heat wave in Philadelphia
that summer of 1787. Dancing on burning cobblestones and
shedding coats in the stifling chamber reminded them of
their common humanity, he felt, inducing humility. They
met in the State House, in the same room where years before
he had accepted command, and seated themselves at the same
little tables covered in green baize. He took his place
on a small dais between two dormant fireplaces faced with
marble. He scarcely spoke; he was a commander, not an orator.
And he watched them unfold a miracle.
He jerked awake. Martha was standing
over him, her hand on his forehead. She gave him a cup
of thick pea soup that slid down his aching throat and said
he must go to bed. In the bedroom she helped him disrobe.
He made her face the wall when he pulled on his nightshirt
-- modesty holds to the end -- and then sank into the feathers,
exhausted. He let her spoon the potion of emetic, James
powder and Peruvian bark into his mouth.
"George," she said, "I
forbid you to be ill." She sat on the edge of the
bed and wiped his face. He brought her hand to his lips.
She was stout now with jowls and double chin that accentuated
her pointed nose and her beauty of long ago had not faded
but changed, gone inside, evident as ever through her eyes.
She was a widow when he married her and was well-to-do,
not a small matter, and perhaps for both of them it had
been as much arrangement as passion. He had known passions;
now he wanted solidity, a woman who could manage a home
and complete a life. And over forty-one years respect had
deepened into profound love and he was never quite so content
as when she was near.
He lay there, drifting and dreaming and
wondering, back in Philadelphia again listening to them
build a new nation. They would have a president and soon
he saw they expected him to take the post and give it shape.
Good enough. Sliding toward sleep, his breathing very shallow,
ignoring the fire in his throat, he saw that this
was why finding the way was so important. In Philadelphia
they had created a form in which free men could live in
peace, granting the rights of others while retaining their
own. It was a noble document and it should live forever.
Indeed, it was proving itself out at
just this moment of George Cabot's terror when Alexander
Hamilton was doing his best to crush the Democrats. Jimmy
Madison had overcome the great pitfall of democracy, how
to have majority rule while still preserving the rights
of the minority; he crafted an intricate balance of powers
between the three branches. Freedom within limits -- divided
legislature with staggered terms, each branch forced to
yield to the others, two-thirds to impeach, three-fifths
to limit debate...
The General supposed Jimmy felt fully
estranged from him now. Madison had left the Congress and
was rusticating at his estate in Virginia, a great waste.
Suddenly wistful, he thought how good it would be to see
Jimmy again, see him walk in and flash that shy smile and
hear his soft voice laying out logic in that building-block
way of his.
And the General would say, my boy, you
saved yourself and your people with that wonderful document.
For as things had worked out, now Jimmy's own Democrats
had become an angry minority that couldn't be silenced no
matter how the Federalists tried. Good ... as much as the
General admired Hamilton he didn't like to think of a man
with Alex's instincts ruling without limits. Wouldn't be
much different from that young devil Napoleon now shattering
the old orders in Europe, probably forevermore. Not that
shattering the old orders was bad -- open `em up and let
in air and light. But we needed no Napoleons in America.
Lying quietly on his side, swallowing
only when he must, he searched those early days for hints
of the trouble that was to comes. Well, getting started
was the easy part. He was elected in an atmosphere of good
humor. Hamilton as Secretary of the Treasury and Jefferson
as Secretary of State would be the key Cabinet figures.
Jimmy Madison was a congressman from Virginia and became
the General's leading advisor.
Alike in their powerful minds, Jimmy
and Alex were startlingly different in every other way,
Hamilton handsome, vivid, swift of thought, clever to a
fault, dashing with women, Madison modest, retiring, thoughtful,
stimulating in quiet conversation but downright dull in
social situations. You never saw him with a woman in those
days. But when he did stir himself to look at a woman,
lo and behold, he chose the gorgeous Widow Todd, her husband
swept away in the great yellow fever epidemic in Philadelphia.
Miss Dolley was as charming as she was
beautiful and when she began appearing on Jimmy Madison's
arm the whole town took note and some of the racier lads
made book on whether he would have the nerve to follow through.
The General loved to dance with Miss Dolley -- he danced
with all the women, of course, a champion of the minuet,
but she was special. Martha turned matchmaker: had Jimmy
spoken? She said Dolley looked ready to cry as she shook
her head. Martha marched to Jimmy: this young woman was
a prize and he'd better be sensible. The General was dubious
about interfering in matters of the heart but Martha pished
him to silence and she proved right, for the wedding followed
and they seemed supremely happy. That was in the easy days,
dancing with Dolley before things turned harsh.
He was less familiar with Jefferson,
who was just back from six years as ambassador to France
under the old government. They got off to a poor start
when Jefferson delayed accepting the appointment. Took
a couple of months to get a yes out of him and the General
heard that Jimmy had to make a hard case to persuade him.
Jefferson wanted to sit on that mountaintop he called Monticello
-- a pretentious name, really, not that that was any of
the General's business. But it was his business that a
man would hesitate when asked to serve at a crucial time.
It embarrassed Jimmy; he and Jefferson were the closest
of friends.
John Adams was vice president.
Fussy, good-hearted, honest, more proud of himself than
any man needed to be, John was always ready to talk himself
into trouble. He proposed the most god-awful kingly forms
you could imagine with a thirteen-word title for the President,
his most exalted etc. etc. The General never did get it
really straight but he cut right through the uproar -- his
title would be President of the United States and direct
address would be Mr. President and that was that! It had
held so far; he hoped it would hold forever. A good start
for a democracy ... but then, thinking about it, he saw
that the incident had foretold the divisions of the future.
He snapped awake and knew instantly that
he was much worse. His throat was aflame, his breathing
labored. All at once breath stopped! Plugged! As if a
hand clutched his throat. Strangling, he raised himself
with a hoarse cry. Martha sat up, sleeping cap askew, horror
in her eyes. He stretched an imploring hand toward her
and then miraculously his passages opened and he took a
rasping breath.
"I'll go for help," she said,
throwing back the covers. "We'll call Mr. Rawlins."
He stopped her. Rawlins took care of
the people down to the quarters and was expert with lancet
and cup. Washington knew he needed bleeding, he could feel
the evil humors in his veins, but if he let Martha wander
the cold house she'd be as sick as he was. He viewed this
as pragmatic: bleeding could wait and he would need her
before this was over. Yet he also had an odd sense that
nothing really mattered. The suspicion that he was approaching
the end was growing. They would call the doctors but everyone
knew that past a certain point doctors were helpless. He'd
many times contemplated dying, doubtless everyone had, but
never as immediate prospect. Yet somehow he found the possibility
not unduly disturbing.
He turned on his side and Martha held
his hand in both of hers. He found that he could breathe
through his nose and his throat eased a little and he slid
into sleep. When he awakened he was dizzy, head whirling,
and he lay very still, listening to Martha breathe. She
was awake and he knew she was frightened, but there was
nothing more he could say to her. He felt he was chasing
something, a fragment forgotten, left undone. His mind
dipped and whirled. A duty...
With an effort he remembered ... he must
put together a message and it must be exactly right. Recall
their early enthusiasm. They were new and highly experimental,
the only democracy in the world, moving on trial and error
and struggling for balance. Now they must reclaim that
focus. Somehow.
He lay in the dark taking careful, shallow
breaths, afraid his throat would close again, asking himself
if that original focus had really been so strong, since
it faded when they faced real issues. It all began there,
factions, clashing ambitions, rage bordering into hatred
-- still, he knew now that parties wouldn't go away because
it was no accident that they had arisen. They represented
the great philosophical schism breaking not on personalities
but on opposite answers to that question, what kind of a
country were we to be? He began to shiver and a cough tore
his throat. Tears in his eyes, he tried to hold to his
task ... as soon they came to real things the question opened.
At the time he'd had no idea that the
break was at hand. He wondered: if he'd been wiser, more
prescient? Well, it didn't matter now. The problem was
that they were broke and the trouble arose in what to do
about it. No nation can live long in insolvency. The trouble
lay in those state bonds issued helter-skelter to finance
the war and still outstanding, interest unpaid for years.
He'd passed out bales of them himself, payment to a gray-faced
farmer for a dozen steers, payment to a wounded soldier
for his service when real money was scarce as hen's teeth.
This debt now in the many millions undermined everything.
What sayest thee, Mr. Secretary of the
Treasury? Within weeks, Alex dropped two elegant designs
on the cabinet table. Whence came Alex's financial genius?
He was thirty-five, bastard son of a Scottish planter in
the West Indies, his only training in finance the keeping
of ledgers in an island store before he came to America.
Yet overnight he put the national economy on sound footing
-- and it was only later that it became evident that he'd
also torn the cover off the philosophical question.
His eyes popped open -- daylight. Rawlins
was standing by the bed, gazing down on him. Martha was
up and dressed. He'd slept but felt no better. Rawlins
was quivering with fear. He was a tall man with a permanent
stoop who was uneasy among his betters. Get on with it,
Mr. Rawlins, don't be afraid -- but no sound came so the
General pointed emphatically at the big vein in the crook
of his right arm. Lips trembling, Rawlins drew up a stool
and braced the arm on his knee.
Martha watched from the end of the bed.
"Not too much," she said.
Rawlins wiped the broad blade of the
lancet on his sleeve. Bracing the heel of his hand on the
arm he made a swift, clean incision, clamped his thumb on
the vein above the cut, put the cup in place and let the
blood run out of the instrument. The General watched the
cup filling with satisfaction. He felt better already.
Bleeding was just the ticket to relieve the blood of the
humors that caused the trouble. He'd used it for years,
swore by it.
When the cup was full, Martha said, "That's
enough."
Anger forced open his throat. "More!"
"Yes, sir!" Rawlins placed
a second cup.
"George, darling, you'll weaken
yourself."
With a second cup gone he nodded and
Rawlins stopped the wound. He felt suddenly weak and shut
his eyes.
"Are you all right?" she said.
He nodded. "Better," he croaked.
He wanted to sleep.
"Take a bit of the medicine,"
she said.
His throat had closed again, but he raised
himself obediently and she poured in a spoonful. With his
throat closed the mixture had no place to go and suddenly
he was strangling! He lunged upward, it was in his bronchial
tubes, he was choking and coughing and his throat was tearing
-- he blew the medicine out on the bed and fell back in
a near faint, the pain in his throat as bad as anything
he remembered from a wound.
"George, darling--" But he
raised a hand. Please, let me sleep. She sat on the side
of the bed, her warm hand stroking his face. He heard her
sweet voice, "Sleep, darling."
Yet the pain was too great -- and yes,
the sense of urgency. The way he felt now he doubted he'd
be speaking to anyone. But somehow that made the quest
more pressing, time narrowing down, he must find the answers.
See that political parties won't go away so we can't let
them destroy us. Keep them in bounds...
But by thunder, he still thought
Alex's plans were wise. First, the new nation would take
over the state debts, issuing new bonds, interest to be
paid by taxes. Second, it would establish a national
bank, quite an unknown critter here. Together, the two
would stabilize the national economy, provide a new source
of credit and a reliable currency and assure foreign capital
that it would be safe here.
It seemed perfect but immediately a storm
of protest arose from men who scented royalist tendencies
and cried that the bank was just like the Bank of England,
which actually was one of its strong points. The government
was still in New York then, in that ungainly building that
later fell down or would have if they hadn't torn it down;
the General hated inferior work which he thought described
the Democratic view. He remembered studying quarter-gaps
in window frames as they talked. The quarrel turned his
cabinet room into a battleground. He started to cut Jimmy
off and then decided to let it rage. Madison and Jefferson
were an effective team; he thought Jimmy provided the hard
analytical thought, Tom the flashing ideas and flights of
rhetoric.
They listened as Alex presented the first
leg, the bonds and then Jimmy's icy question, "What
about the original holders?"
"What about
them?" Alex had a way of hunching his head down into
his shoulders when he saw a fight coming.
Jimmy
glanced at the General. "The original holders, mostly
your soldiers, sir, plus the shoemaker and the gunsmith
and the farmer who took these bonds for services, they haven't
been able to save their certificates. Had to sell them
off for what they could get in hard times. And who was
buying? Speculators, paying as little as a tenth of the
face value. Now, Alex, you know that perfectly well."
"Of
course."
"Then
for God's sake, take them into account! Give them some
of the payment."
"Track
them all down? Spend years when we're sinking right now?
That's a baseless idea, all bleeding heart. Point is not
to rescue little men but to save the country!"
The
General remembered Jimmy's voice going flat and he saw this
would get no easier. "I see a plot," Jimmy said,
"a design to give vast windfall profits to men who
literally stole from the little people who supported the
war..."
A little later the bank produced an equal
fight. Alex envisioned it as a treasury binding private
capital to government. As the official repository for government
money, its bills would be as good as gold and we would have
stable money at last. It would be tax-supported but eighty
percent would be owned privately.
"Privately?
By whom?" Again Jimmy moving to the attack.
The
General remembered Alex's sharp, glinting glance, suspicious,
a bit too surprised that anyone would be dull enough to
ask, manner that reduced many antagonists to silence. Then
in a rush, "Who do you think, Jimmy? Men who have
money, naturally -- they're the ones we need."
"But
won't they shape policies of this bank of yours to suit
their own ends? To the detriment of the common citizen?"
Something
feral in Alex's expression, lips pulled back on his teeth.
"Certainly -- that's the point! Take care of people
with money and they'll take care of the country. Give them
a financial stake in the country's success and it'll succeed."
The General saw immediately that the great question was
opening. He sat back and let it unfold.
Alex
pointed a quivering finger at Jimmy. "You know why?
Because money is the real power in any country."
"No,
sir! -- the people are the real power."
"My
foot, they are! Men are creatures of self-interest. Damned
little happens for love of country -- save love talk for
the bedroom, for God's sake. Money is what drives any country."
That was Alex, harsh, cutting,
contemptuous of opposition. It made him effective, but
it was a weakness, too; someday he might pay for that arrogance.
"You're
planning a cheat on the people," Jefferson said slowly.
"Brutalize little men who have no recourse. It's a
hoax to reduce honest American yeomen to serfs of the wealthy."
Their intensity
shook the General a little. There was the division defined.
What should government be? Tom and Jimmy said policies
should help all citizens and especially the poor, since
the rich took care of themselves. But Alex was rewarding
the rich at the expense of the poor.
"General?
General? Can you hear me?" Familiar voice, hand tugging
his -- he came swimming up from very deep under, Jimmy's
words still loud in his mind and opened his eyes to see
Jim Craik at his bedside. Ah ... good old Craik would know
what to do. The very sight of the worn lines in Craik's
cheeks swept him back to the forests of Kentucky in the
French and Indian affair when they'd been together under
Braddock, he the regimental colonel, Craik regimental surgeon.
The doctor was a new graduate in medicine from Pennsylvania
Hospital and he cared for his patients with the same loyal
intensity that Washington gave his men.
The General's
voice was a croak. "Bleed me," he said. He saw
Jim had the cup in his hand.
"Mr. Rawlins
already bled him," Martha said. He heard the uncertainty
in her voice. "Two cups."
He tried to speak
but nothing came out and he had a moment of panic, it was
like awakening in a coffin, hearing voices outside but unable
to say -- with a convulsive effort that tore his throat
he ground out the words, "Bleed me," coupled with
a command stare that told Jim Craik to get on with it!
He could feel the evil humors circulating in his blood,
affecting every part of his body, making him heavy and strained,
blood rotten and useless. Drain it off and ease the pressure.
Not, actually,
that he thought it would do much good. Doctors soothed
more than they really helped. If they were caring you felt
better. Of course they did help sometimes, but he'd seen
too many gut-shot solders die in agony while Craik watched,
seen the benevolent pus that Craik sought in wounds and
amputations turn into cascades that overwhelmed the patient.
Craik wiping
the blade on a handkerchief, making the neat incision, blood
running into his cup, ah ... felt better already. Probably
transitory, but welcome. He thought he was coming to the
end and now, watching Jim wet his lips nervously, he thought
the doctor was of the same opinion. He shut his eyes, suddenly
desperately weak, felt he was whirling and whirling down
into depths, he heard Martha's tremulous voice, realized
Jim had stopped the blood, started to protest and was gone.
He'd had the
key just before they'd awakened him, a grip on what it all
meant. It had been oddly comforting -- he'd been sitting
at his camp desk with the long white plume graceful in his
hand, judgement taking hold with iron certainty.
He dug into his
mind. He'd had hold of it there...
Yes, yes, that was it! Alex insisting
money is what powers any country, Jimmy leaping up in angry
outrage. The fight wasn't about the bank nor the bonds
nor any of the details. It was about who we are as a people.
What do we care about, believe in?
Alex and most of his Federalist brethren
wanted a tight, contained, carefully controlled government
in the hands of the ruling few, everyone else taking orders.
He would shape all policies to bind men of money power closer
and hold little men in their places -- limit their vote,
reduce their capacity to rise, keep them subservient, make
them glad to be of service at low wages to those who counted.
Jimmy and Tom wanted a diffuse government
in which states were strong and the common man's voice ranked
with that of the gentry. If the government were to be skewed,
let it be toward the poor and the helpless.
Alex said Great Britain's system was
the best in the world. Tom and Jimmy saw the British as
oppressors and were sure Alex aimed at monarchy in America.
That charge drove Alex wild. His slender face, handsome
as a Greek statue, would go white and strained with ugly
red blotches, all beauty vanished.
"Do you still not understand?"
he cried. "We're bankrupt -- no economy, no currency,
no structure, no credit, we're the laughingstock of the
commercial world. But I can give us structure, restore
our credit, control inflation -- Jimmy, I can put us on
a par with any nation in the world."
"Nor do I doubt that,"
Jimmy said. "But Alex, I think you understand finance
too well and your fellow American too little."
"So you say, but what is there
to understand? The common man is just that, common. He's
a boor. Knows nothing. Captive of his emotions. Prey
of demagogues. As witness the ear he gives all these dirty
little Democratic rags attacking our financial reality."
Jimmy started to speak but Alex
shouted him down. "Captive of his emotions, sir!
Swung by the last shout penetrating his piggy little brain.
Of course he needs to be controlled, guided, shaped, held
in line. He's a peasant! -- and peasants were made to be
held in line, to touch their caps to their lords and ladies.
This difference you see in Americans has about the width
of an eyelash."
"You're wrong, Alex,"
Jimmy said. His smile was supremely confident and it subtly
ridiculed Hamilton. Alex caught it, too, that flush riding
up his cheeks again. "In fact the common man is a
lover of freedom. He possesses an innate wisdom, rough
hewn at times but entirely real. He takes care of himself,
he controls himself, his sense of right and wrong rings
like a bell, he'll fight forever for his freedom. And he
sees you canting government away from him -- catering to
the bosses, the money men, the merchants and owners. And
sooner or later he'll make you pay, Alex."
The General pushed back his chair. "That'll
do, gentlemen," he said. Still, it had been illuminating
and he was glad he'd let the argument rage, distressing
as naked anger could be. He doubted Alex and the Federalists
really wanted monarchy in America -- the General had made
that decision for them years before -- but they certainly
wanted the best people in charge and probably liked the
idea of institutionalizing their role in a hereditary form,
nobles in perpetuity. Once, much later, he challenged Alex
to his face on this and Alex backed and filled, smiling
boyishly, but he never denied it.
It wouldn't have mattered so much if
this were just a cabinet quarrel, but in fact it swept across
the country. The parties shaped ever more clearly around
these opposite visions, newspapers hammered the issue, even
the states split up, taking sides, New England strong for
Federalism, South and West for the Democrats, middle states
swinging. Federalists shouted that any nation must be run
by the nobility, call it what you like; Democrats denounced
an elite rewarded at the common man's expense. The General
judged the party break to be beyond repair.
The image of an old soldier swapping
his certificate for a sack of beans was darkly painful but
in the end he accepted Alex's plan because he saw no alternative;
we would have no standing in the world till we could pay
our bills. But an estrangement arose between him and the
two Virginians. This hurt, especially with Jimmy. Tom
was brilliant but there was something foolish about him,
too; Jimmy was solid.
A dream seized him. He'd plunged into
a lake, didn’t know why. The water's warmth was comforting
and he'd gone down and down in search of something, he wasn't
sure what, until his breath began to fail and now he was
fighting his way back to the surface, lungs bursting --
he popped awake and heaved a great gasp that broke things
open enough --
Craik
bent over him. With candle and mirror he cast light into
the tortured throat. Craik's face was strained; the General
read fear. There were more men in the room. He recognized
Dr. Brown from over at Port Tobacco and Craik introduced
a Dr. Dick, Elisha Dick, new young fellow from Alexandria
who bowed deeply. He'd just finished medical school at
Edinburgh, well known as the best in the world, but he looked
very young. Three doctors ... he must be as ill
as he felt. He let Craik depress his tongue while Brown
held mirror and light and they all peered. He felt about
like that heifer he'd been doctoring.
"Quinsy, I think," Craik
said. Pus engulfing the tonsils. The General nodded: that's
what it felt like. Brown agreed. The young fellow hesitated,
then said, "With respect, it could be inflammation
of the throat membranes." Craik grunted, which told
the General all he needed to know about the young man.
Edinburgh was fine but the lines in Craik's face made the
real diploma.
Martha
wiped his face. He asked for the two wills in his desk.
Her eyes widened and she started to object, but he gave
her his command stare. One was out of date: burn it. The
other went into her closet. She said he'd soon be better
but he raised a hand; he knew he was in a long slide toward
the end.
Craik bled him
again, Martha watching in alarm. Not much blood came. Craik
burned his neck with Spanish fly to bring blisters and draw
blood from the throat. Fed him sage tea with vinegar but
his throat instantly closed and he was drowning until Craik
lifted him. He fell back on the bed feeling more dead than
alive; this was going to be harder than he'd supposed.
He spun off into blessed darkness,
yet felt his mind was firing with its old force. Too late
now to dream of the healing speech, but he didn't want to
go into the dark night feeling his country was dying too.
His brilliant young men had brought the issue to focus.
Who are we? How will we define ourselves? Tightly held,
narrowly based, men of wealth controlling with lesser folk
locked to place and class? Or open, fluid, moving, every
man equal with breaks as fair for the poor as for the wealthy,
everyone limited only by his own capacities, free to be
all that brains and grit could make him?
That was the quarrel out of which
parties had grown. Now men seemed willing to war to the
death over these matters. But how had we come to that?
Eyes shut, motionless, taking shallow breaths, Martha's
weight heavy on one side of the bed, he could hear them
talking in low voices. But he held to the question -- he
must know! -- and immediately saw how thoroughly the events
of the last decade had pushed both sides toward extremes.
He remembered the day the news from
France burst -- they were in New York, he and Martha still
in the Osgood house on Franklin Square. There was a clamor
outside and he went to a window to see shouting men running
from the direction of the Battery. It was late fall and
a light rain had kept up all day. An hour later Billy delivered
a rain-spattered broadsheet headlined REVOLUTION IN FRANCE!,
the ink still wet. Commoners had taken over, all new laws
proclaimed, the King acquiesces, crowds seize the Bastille
to free political prisoners. He remembered standing just
inside the door, light pouring in from a high window, Billy
pulling off his wet coat, and he'd thought instantly, this
will be trouble.
It
was happening too fast, the old thrown away too rapidly,
wild mobs surging in the streets of Paris and it was sure
to get out of hand. Monarchies of Europe would resist it
and that could mean war and they would try to draw us in...
Every
ship brought fresh news. Americans took the French adventure
as extension of their own revolution. They thrilled to
a glorious statement of liberty, Rights of Man and Citizen.
Crowds celebrated in American streets. Men wore the soft
liberty caps affected in Paris, decorated their coats with
tricolor cockades, sang French songs in theaters, dropped
Mister for Citizen as a form of address. This enthusiasm
swirling madly through the streets -- he could feel it even
as his stately carriage passed by -- was infectious but
a little frightening, too. Everything seemed unstable.
Jefferson
was beside himself with joyous approval and infuriatingly
patronizing to boot. On the basis of his ambassadorial
years he explained it in moralizing little analogies for
America showing that the gentry should look for no special
favors. When French affairs did darken Tom seemed to see
them as insignificant, the important thing being the French
movement stood for liberty.
The
General grew steadily more concerned. French radicals executed
the king and scores of nobles, bloody blade clattering,
heads tumbling to the basket. The mad zealot Robespierre
opened a reign of terror that killed thousands -- bodies
must have been stacked like cordwood in France from the
sound of things.
Americans
enthused over revolutionary ideals as they lamented the
excesses. It puzzled the General that events abroad which
really were none of our business should so profoundly affect
life here. Both sides were ready to fight. Democrats said
all that mattered was that monarchy had been vanquished
and democracy was on the march. Federalists said that France
proved that democracy given free rein must destroy itself
and all around it. Let Democrats push Federalists aside
in America, and next thing you know the best people will
be dangling from trees.
Sure
enough, war did flame in Europe. Surrounding monarchies
attacked the revolution which responded with evangelical
fervor. Then Britain jumped in against France and just
as he'd expected, both sides turned on the little United
States. It had infuriated him then, and sick as he was,
it still did, breath going short at the thought. Man abused
you, you'd like to take a stick and break some heads. Both
abused us, stopping our ships, seizing our cargoes, the
British impressing our seamen, each trying to force us into
a reluctant alliance.
The General had hoped this pressure
would draw our own warring sides together but no -- the
split widened. Never mind Robespierre's excesses, Democrats
said; the French were fighting to preserve democracy against
monarchial tyrants and a fellow democracy must support
them. Federalists called American Democrats slaves to the
French who would make us an overseas department of France.
Rather, Democrats shouted, Federalists were using the war
as excuse to tuck America under the wing of the British
monarchy. At least, though, Tom quit talking about the
nobility of the French after the Terror took hold.
"Tell me," the General
remembered crying in exasperation one day, this when the
Secretary of the Treasury and the Secretary of State had
stopped speaking, "do you really believe these extremes
you're prating?" And both nodded.
Papers went to new extremes, Congress
rocked with charge and countercharge, orators struck mighty
blows for the British on one corner, for the French on the
next. Some taverns were Federalist and some were Democratic
and it was as good as a man's life to go in the wrong one.
In Boston a mob tarred and feathered a fellow who insisted
on wearing a cockade and singing "La Marseillaise",
the new French revolutionary song.
His
eyes popped open. Someone had thrust a knife down his throat,
or so it felt. There was haze in front of his eyes and
then his vision cleared and he saw Billy Lee standing by
his bed. Billy was crying, tears coursing unguarded down
his cheeks. The General put up a hand and Billy took it
and held it a moment. Then his throat closed and he choked
for air, his body bucking, and Craik was at his side, holding
him and Martha led Billy away.
When
he could breathe again, rasping, shuddering breaths, he
told Craik to bleed him once more. The young doctor, Elisha
Dick, raised a hand as if to protest but Craik ignored him.
The old doc milked the arm but almost no blood came and
no relief. The General gasped, desperately sucking wind.
The young fellow said something.
"He
says your throat may close completely," Craik whispered.
"Wants to try something new from Edinburgh. Open your
windpipe below your throat so you can breathe through the
opening."
The
General was dubious. Speaking was torture. "Wants
to cut me?"
"Yes,
sir. Cuts into the trachea. Tracheotomy, he calls it.
Says they preach it at Edin--"
"Has
he done one?"
"No,
sir, but he knows how. He says."
"Come
on, Jim." The fear was back in his old friend's face
and he whispered, his throat tearing, "Do we or don't
we?"
Long
silence. Jim sighed and shook his head. "I'm scared,"
he said.
That
settled it. He didn't look at the young doctor. He took
Craik's hand. "I die hard," he said, "but
I'm not afraid to go. My breath cannot last long."
His
secretary, Tobias Lear, knelt by the bed and took his hand.
"I am just going." The General forced out the
words.
"Have me
decently buried and do not let my body be put into the vault
in less than three days." Lear, weeping, nodded.
"Do
you understand?" Even now, it was the voice of command.
"Yes,
sir!"
"`Tis
well."
He
looked around for Martha. She came and sat on the bed.
She held his hand in both of hers and after awhile she leaned
close and kissed him. He drifted away, conscious of her
hand and her presence, drifting down and down into sleep,
going away.
Dreams,
flashing lights, but it was too late, he was hurrying now.
Too late to grasp all the troubles, and did they really
matter? The whiskey rebellion, those west Pennsylvania
farmers bloodily protesting a tax, he'd thought for awhile
there that scenes of France were to be replayed, but it
all passed. Finished his second term, the Democratic papers
denouncing him in the vilest terms -- too late to horsewhip
an editor, but it didn't matter now -- and John Adams had
taken over.
More
trouble with France, they treating us with vast contempt
for no reason he could see, but neither was that cause for
war ... but Alex wanted war, wanted to focus France as the
enemy, wanted to link with Britain just as Jimmy had always
said. That Jimmy ... there was a man, frail in body, weak
in health, iron in mind and courage and force of personality.
And good John Adams resisted the Federalist clamor for war,
may God bless him in heaven, the country more shredded than
ever...
And
he was leaving, questions unanswered...
Trust
the honest heart of the common man. Only truly wise
thing he'd ever heard Thomas Jefferson say. But maybe you
only had to say one truly wise thing to be a great man.
And maybe it contained the answer for which his soul was
parched.
And
that talisman memory returned ... men you could trust passing
in column, going to battle. It was before Trenton, he now
remembered, dusk and already cold, their breath frosting
in the air. They marched past, rifles in hand, slung haversacks
nearly empty. He remembered those empty sacks, they were
hungry, and they looked at him with level eyes, strong men,
sensible, the taste of independence in their mouths, men
you could trust to carry a battle, to make a country, to
cut through the folderol of political clamor and do the
right thing. Men of pride, of tradition, men who knew who
they were. They'd passed in a long single line, given
him that appraising glance and they'd nodded. Just nodded.
Said,
Evening, Ginral. How do, Ginral?
He
was leaving the country in good hands.
Goodnight, Ginral.
Excerpted from Eagle's
Cry by David Nevin. Copyright 2000 by David Nevin. Excerpted
by permission of Forge Books (175 Fifth Avenue, New York,
NY 10010). All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt
may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing
from the publisher.
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