BUILDERS of the commonwealth.
“Methinks I see in my mind a
noble and puissant nation rousing herself like a strong
man after sleep and shaking her invincible locks.
Methinks I see her as an eagle mewing her mighty
youth and kindling her undazzled eye in the full mid-day
beam.”—MILTON.
“And from these grounds, concluding as we doe,
Warres causes diuerse, so by consequence
Diuerse we must conclude their natures too:
For war proceeding from Omnipotence,
No doubt is holy, wise, and without error;
The sword, of justice and of sin, the terror.”
—Lord
BROOKE.
It is the fashion now to live for
the present but the men of fifty years ago, the men
who builded the nation, they reverenced the past,
and therefore they could work for the future.
As Robert Worth rode through the streets of San Antonio
that afternoon, he was thinking, not of his own life,
but of his children’s and of the generations
which should come after them.
The city was flooded with sunshine,
and crowded with a pack-train going to Sonora; the
animals restlessly protesting against the heat and
flies; their Mexican drivers in the pulqueria, spending
their last peso with their compadres, or with the
escort of soldiers which was to accompany them—a
little squad of small, lithe men, with round, yellow,
beardless faces, bearing in a singular degree the
stamp of being native to the soil. Their lieutenant,
a gorgeously clad officer with a very distinguished
air, was coming slowly down the street to join them.
He bowed, and smiled pleasantly to the doctor as
he passed him, and then in a few moments the word
of command and the shouting of men and the clatter
of hoofs invaded the enchanted atmosphere like an
insult.
But the tumult scarcely jarred with
the thoughts of his mind. They had been altogether
of war and rumors of war. Every hour that subtile
consciousness of coming events, which makes whole
communities at times prescient, was becoming stronger.
“If the powers of the air have anything to
do with the destinies of men,” he muttered,
“there must be unseen battalions around me.
The air I am breathing is charged with the feeling
of battle.”
After leaving the city there were
only a few Mexican huts on the shady road leading
to his own house. All within them were asleep,
even the fighting cocks tied outside were dozing on
their perches. He was unusually weary, he had
been riding since dawn, and his heart had not been
in sympathy with his body, it had said no good cheer
to it, whispered no word of courage or promise.
All at once his physical endurance
seemed exhausted, and he saw the white wall and arched
gateway of his garden and the turrets of his home
with an inexpressible relief. But it was the
hour of siesta, and he was always careful not to let
the requirements of his profession disturb his household.
So he rode quietly to the rear, where he found a
peon nodding within the stable door. He opened
his eyes unnaturally wide, and rose to serve his master.
“See thou rub the mare well
down, and give her corn and water.”
“To be sure, Senior, that is
to be done. A stranger has been here to-day;
an American.”
“What did he say to thee?”
“That he would call again, Senor.”
The incident was not an unusual one,
and it did not trouble the doctor’s mind.
There was on the side of the house a low extension
containing two rooms. These rooms belonged exclusively
to him. One was his study, his office, his covert,
the place to which he went when he wanted to be alone
with his own soul. There were a bed and bath
and refreshments in the other room. He went
directly to it, and after eating and washing, fell
into a profound sleep.
At the hour before Angelus the house
was as noisy and busy as if it had been an inn.
The servants were running hither and thither, all
of them expressing themselves in voluble Spanish.
The cooks were quarrelling in the kitchen.
Antonia was showing the table men, as she had to do
afresh every day, how to lay the cloth and serve the
dishes in the American fashion. When the duty
was completed, she went into the garden to listen
for the Angelus. The young ladies of to-day would
doubtless consider her toilet frightfully unbecoming;
but Antonia looked lovely in it, though but a white
muslin frock, with a straight skirt and low waist
and short, full sleeves. It was confined by
a blue belt with a gold buckle, and her feet were
in sandalled slippers of black satin.
The Angelus tolled, and the thousands
of Hail Maries! which blended with its swinging vibrations
were uttered, and left to their fate, as all spoken
words must be. Antonia still observed the form.
It lent for a moment a solemn beauty to her face.
She was about to re-enter the house, when she saw
a stranger approaching it. He was dressed in
a handsome buckskin suit, and a wide Mexican hat,
but she knew at once that he was an American, and
she waited to receive him.
As soon as he saw her, he removed
his hat and approached with it in his hand.
Perhaps he was conscious that the act not only did
homage to womanhood, but revealed more perfectly a
face of remarkable beauty and nobility. For the
rest, he was very tall, powerfully built, elegantly
proportioned, and his address had the grace and polish
of a cultured gentleman.
“I wish to see Dr. Worth, Dona.”
With a gentle inclination of the head,
she led him to the door of her father’s office.
She was the only one in the Doctor’s family
at all familiar with the room. The Senora said
so many books made her feel as if she were in a church
or monastery; she was afraid to say anything but paternosters
in it. Isabel cowered before the poor skeleton
in the corner, and the centipedes and snakes that
filled the bottles on the shelves. There was
not a servant that would enter the room.
But Antonia did not regard books as
a part of some vague spiritual power. She knew
the history of the skeleton. She had seen the
death of many of those “little devils”
corked up in alcohol. She knew that at this
hour, if her father were at home he was always disengaged,
and she opened the door fearlessly, saying, “Father,
here is a gentleman who wishes to see you.”
The doctor had quite refreshed himself,
and, in a house-suit of clean, white linen, was lying
on a couch reading. He arose with alacrity,
and with his pleasant smile seemed to welcome the
intruder, as he stepped behind him and closed the door.
Antonia had disappeared. They were quite alone.
“You are Doctor Robert Worth, sir?”
Their eyes met, their souls knew each other.
“And you are Sam Houston?”
The questions were answered in a hand
grip, a sympathetic smile on both faces—the
freemasonry of kindred spirits.
“I have a letter from your son
Thomas, doctor, and I think, also, that you will have
something to say to me, and I to you.”
The most prudent of patriots could
not have resisted this man. He had that true
imperial look which all born rulers of men possess—that
look that half coerces, and wholly persuades.
Robert Worth acknowledged its power by his instant
and decisive answer.
“I have, indeed, much to say
to you. We shall have dinner directly, then
you will give the night to me?”
After a short conversation he led
him into the sala and introduced him to Antonia.
He himself had to prepare the Senora for her visitor,
and he had a little quaking of the heart as he entered
her room. She was dressed for dinner, and turned
with a laughing face to meet him.
“I have been listening to the
cooks quarrelling over the olla, Roberto. But
what can my poor Manuel say when your Irishwoman attacks
him. Listen to her! `Take your dirty stew aff
the fire then! Shure it isn’t fit for a
Christian to ate at all!’”
“I hope it is, Maria, for we
have a visitor to-night.”
“Who, then, my love?”
“Mr. Houston.”
“Sam Houston? Holy Virgin
of Guadalupe preserve us! I will not see the
man.”
“I think you will, Maria.
He has brought this letter for you from our son Thomas;
and he has been so kind as to take charge of some
fine horses, and sell them well for him in San Antonio.
When a man does us a kindness, we should say thank
you.”
“That is truth, if the man is
not the Evil One. As for this Sam Houston, you
should have heard what was said of him at the Valdez’s.”
“I did hear. Everything was a lie.”
“But he is a very common man.”
“Maria, do you call a soldier,
a lawyer, a member of the United States Congress,
a governor of a great State like Tennessee, a common
man? Houston has been all of these things.”
“It is, however, true that he
has lived with Indians, and with those Americans,
who are bad, who have no God, who are infidels, and
perhaps even cannibals. If he is a good man,
why does he live with bad men? Not even the saints
could do that. A good man should be in his home.
Why does he not stay at home.”
“Alas! Maria, that is a
woman’s fault. He loved a beautiful girl.
He married her. My dear one, she did not bless
his life as you have blessed mine. No one knows
what his sorrow was, for he told no one. And
he never blamed her, only he left his high office
and turned his back forever on his home.”
“Ah! the cruel woman.
Holy Virgin, what hard hearts thou hast to pray for!”
“Come down and smile upon him,
Maria. I should like him to see a high-born
Mexican lady. Are they not the kindest and fairest
among all God’s women? I know, at least,
Maria, that you are kind and fair”; and he took
her hands, and drew her within his embrace.
What good wife can resist her husband’s
wooing? Maria did not. She lifted her
face, her eyes shone through happy tears, she whispered
softly: “My Robert, it is a joy to please
you. I will be kind; I will be grateful about
Thomas. You shall see that I will make a pleasant
evening.”
So the triumphant husband went down,
proud and happy, with his smiling wife upon his arm.
Isabel was already in the room. She also wore
a white frock, but her hair was pinned back with gold
butterflies, and she had a beautiful golden necklace
around her throat. And the Senora kept her word.
She paid her guest great attention. She talked
to him of his adventures with the Indians. She
requested her daughters to sing to him. She
told him stories of the old Castilian families with
which she was connected, and described her visit to
New Orleans with a great deal of pleasant humor.
She felt that she was doing herself justice; that
she was charming; and, consequently, she also was
charmed with the guest and the occasion which had
been so favorable to her.
After the ladies had retired, the
doctor led his visitor into his study. He sat
down silently and placed a chair for Houston.
Both men hesitated for a moment to open the conversation.
Worth, because he was treading on unknown ground;
Houston, because he did not wish to force, even by
a question, a resolution which he felt sure would come
voluntarily.
The jar of tobacco stood between them,
and they filled their pipes silently. Then Worth
laid a letter upon the table, and said: “I
unstand{sic} from this, that my son Thomas thinks
the time has come for decisive action.”
“Thomas Worth is right.
With such souls as his the foundation of the state
must be laid.”
“I am glad Thomas has taken
the position he has; but you must remember, sir, that
he is unmarried and unembarrassed by many circumstances
which render decisive movement on my part a much more
difficult thing. Yet no man now living has watched
the Americanizing of Texas with the interest that
I have.”
“You have been long on the watch, sir.”
“I was here when my countrymen
came first, in little companies of five or ten men.
I saw the party of twenty, who joined the priest
Hidalgo in eighteen hundred and ten, when Mexico made
her first attempt to throw off the Spanish yoke.”
“An unsuccessful attempt.”
“Yes. The next year I
made a pretended professional journey to Chihuahua,
to try and save their lives. I failed.
They were shot with Hidalgo there.”
“Yet the strife for liberty went on.”
“It did. Two years afterwards,
Magee and Bernardo, with twelve hundred Americans,
raised the standard of independence on the Trinity
River. I saw them them{sic} take this very city,
though it was ably defended by Salcedo. They
fought like heroes. I had many of the wounded
in my house. I succored them with my purse.
“It was a great deed for a handful of men.”
“The fame of it brought young
Americans by hundreds here. To a man they joined
the Mexican party struggling to free themselves from
the tyranny of old Spain. I do not think any
one of them received money. The love of freedom
and the love of adventure were alike their motive
and their reward.”
“Mexico owed these men a debt she has forgotten.”
“She forgot it very quickly.
In the following year, though they had again defended
San Antonio against the Spaniards, the Mexicans drove
all the Americans out of the city their rifles had
saved.”
“You were here; tell me the true reason.”
“It was not altogether ingratitude.
It was the instinct of self-preservation. The
very bravery of the Americans made the men whom they
had defended hate and fear them; and there was a continual
influx of young men from the States. The Mexicans
said to each other: `There is no end to these
Americans. Very soon they will make a quarrel
and turn their arms against us. They do not
conform to our customs, and they will not take an
order from any officer but their own.’”
Houston smiled. “It is
away the Saxon race has,” he said. “The
old Britons made the same complaint of them.
They went first to England to help the Britons fight
the Romans, and they liked the country so well, they
determined to stay there. If I remember rightly
the old Britons had to let them do so.”
“It is an old political situation.
You can go back to Genesis and find Pharaoh arguing
about the Jews in the same manner.”
“What happened after this forcible
expulsion of the American element from Texas?”
“Mexican independence was for
a time abandoned, and the Spanish viceroys were more
tyrannical than ever. But Americans still came,
though they pursued different tactics. They
bought land and settled on the great rivers.
In eighteen twenty-one, Austin, with the permission
of the Spanish viceroy in Mexico, introduced three
hundred families.”
“That was a step in the right
direction; but I am astonished the viceroy sanctioned
it.”
“Apodoca, who was then viceroy,
was a Spaniard of the proudest type. He had
very much the same contempt for the Mexicans that
an old English viceroy in New York had for the colonists
he was sent to govern. I dare say any of them
would have permitted three hundred German families
to settle in some part of British America, as far
from New York as Texas is from Mexico. I do
not need to tell you that Austin’s colonists
are a band of choice spirits, hardy working men, trained
in the district schools of New England and New York—nearly
every one of them a farmer or mechanic.”
“They were the very material
liberty needed. They have made homes.”
“That is the truth. The
fighters who preceded them owned nothing but their
horses and their rifles. But these men brought
with them their wives and their children, their civilization,
their inborn love of freedom and national faith.
They accepted the guarantee of the Spanish government,
and they expected the Spanish government to keep its
promises.”
“It did not.”
“It had no opportunity.
The colonists were hardly settled when the standard
of revolt against Spain was again raised. Santa
Anna took the field for a republican form of government,
and once more a body of Americans, under the Tennesseean,
Long, joined the Mexican army.”
“I remember that, well.”
“In eighteen twenty-four, Santa
Anna, Victoria and Bravo drove the Spaniards forever
from Mexico, and then they promulgated the famous
constitution of eighteen twenty-four. It was
a noble constitution, purely democratic and federal,
and the Texan colonists to a man gladly swore to obey
it. The form was altogether elective, and what
particularly pleased the American element was the
fact that the local government of every State was
left to itself.”
Houston laughed heartily. “Do
you know, Worth,” he said, “State Rights
is our political religion. The average American
citizen would expect the Almighty to conform to a written
constitution, and recognize the rights of mankind.”
“I don’t think he expects
more than he gets, Houston. Where is there a
grander constitution than is guaranteed to us in His
Word; or one that more completely recognizes the rights
of all humanity?”
“Thank you, Worth. I see
that I have spoken better than I knew. I was
sitting in the United States Congress, when this constitution
passed, and very much occupied with the politics of
Tennessee.”
“I will not detain you with
Mexican politics. It may be briefly said that
for the last ten years there has been a constant fight
between Pedraza, Guerrero, Bustamante and Santa Anna
for the Presidency of Mexico. After so much war
and misery the country is now ready to resign all
the blessings the constitution of eighteen twenty-four
promised her. For peace she is willing to have
a dictator in Santa Anna.”
“If Mexicans want a dictator
let them bow down to Santa Anna! But do you
think the twenty thousand free-born Americans in Texas
are going to have a dictator? They will have
the constitution of eighteen twenty-four—or
they will have independence, and make their own constitution!
Yes, sir!”
“You know the men for whom you speak?”
“I have been up and down among
them for two years. Just after I came to Texas
I was elected to the convention which sent Stephen
Austin to Mexico with a statement of our wrongs.
Did we get any redress? No, sir! And
as for poor Austin, is he not in the dungeons of the
Inquisition? We have waited two years for an
answer. Great heavens Doctor, surely that is
long enough!”
“Was this convention a body of any influence?”
“Influence! There were
men there whose names will never be forgotten.
They met in a log house; they wore buckskin and homespun;
but I tell you, sir, they were debating the fate of
unborn millions.”
“Two years since Austin went to Mexico?”
“A two years’ chapter
of tyranny. In them Santa Anna has quite overthrown
the republic of which we were a part. He has
made himself dictator. and, because our authorities
have protested against the change, they have been
driven from office by a military force. I tell
you, sir, the petty outrages everywhere perpetrated
by petty officials have filled the cup of endurance.
It is boiling over. Now, doctor, what are you
going to do? Are you with us, or against us?”
“I have told you that I have
been with my countrymen always— heart and
soul with them.”
The doctor spoke with some irritation,
and Houston laid his closed hand hard upon the table
to emphasize his reply:
“Heart and soul! Very
good! But we want your body now. You must
tuck your bowie-knife and your revolvers in your belt,
and take your rifle in your hand, and be ready to help
us drive the Mexican force out of this very city.”
“When it comes to that I shall be no laggard.”
But he was deathly pale, for he was
suffering as men suffer who feel the sweet bonds of
wife and children and home, and dread the rending
of them apart. In a moment, however, the soul
behind his white face made it visibly luminous.
“Houston,” he said, “whenever the
cause of freedom needs me, I am ready. I shall
want no second call. But is it not possible,
that even yet—”
“It is impossible to avert what
is already here. Within a few days, perhaps
to-morrow, you will hear the publication of an edict
from Santa Anna, ordering every American to give up
his arms.”
“What! Give up our arms!
No, no, by Heaven! I will die fighting for
mine, rather.”
“Exactly. That is how
every white man in Texas feels about it. And
if such a wonder as a coward existed among them, he
understands that he may as well die fighting Mexicans,
as die of hunger or be scalped by Indians. A
large proportion of the colonists depend on their
rifles for their daily food. All of them know
that they must defend their own homes from the Comanche,
or see them perish. Now, do you imagine that
Americans will obey any such order? By all the
great men of seventeen seventy-five, if they did,
I would go over to the Mexicans and help them to wipe
the degenerate cowards out of existence!”
He rose as he spoke; he looked like
a flame, and his words cut like a sword. Worth
caught fire at his vehemence and passion. He
clasped his hands in sympathy as he walked with him
to the door. They stood silently together for
a moment on the threshold, gazing into the night.
Over the glorious land the full moon hung, enamoured.
Into the sweet, warm air mockingbirds were pouring
low, broken songs of ineffable melody. The white
city in the mystical light looked like an enchanted
city. It was so still that the very houses looked
asleep.
“It is a beautiful land,” said the doctor.
“It is worthy of freedom,”
answered Houston. Then he went with long, swinging
steps down the garden, and into the shadows beyond,
and Worth turned in and closed the door.
He had been watching for this very
hour for twenty years; and yet he found himself wholly
unprepared for it. Like one led by confused
and uncertain thoughts, he went about the room mechanically
locking up his papers, and the surgical instruments
he valued so highly. As he did so he perceived
the book he had been reading when Houston entered.
It was lying open where he had laid it down.
A singular smile flitted over his face. He
lifted it and carried it closer to the light.
It was his college Cicero.
“I was nineteen years old when
I marked that passage,” he said; “and
I do not think I have ever read it since, until to-night.
I was reading it when Houston came into the room.
Is it a message, I wonder?—
“`But when thou considerest
everything carefully and thoughtfully; of all societies
none is of more importance, none more dear, than that
which unites us with the commonwealth. Our parents,
children, relations and neighbors are dear, but our
fatherland embraces the whole round of these endearments.
In its defence, who would not dare to die, if only
he could assist it?”