Under one flag.
“And through thee I
believe
In the noble and great, who are gone.”
“Yes! I believe that
there lived
Others like thee in the past.
Not like the men of the crowd.
Who all around me to-day,
Bluster, or cringe, and make life
Hideous, and arid, and vile,
But souls temper’d with fire,
Fervent, heroic, and good;
Helpers, and friends of mankind.”
—ARNOLD.
“Our armor now may rust,
our idle scimitars
Hang by our sides for ornament, not use.
Children shall beat our atabals and drums;
And all the noisy trades of war no more
Shall wake the peaceful morn.”
—DRYDEN.
As the years go on they bring many
changes—changes that come as naturally
as the seasons—that tend as naturally to
anticipated growth and decay—that scarcely
startle the subjects of them, till a lengthened-out
period of time discloses their vitality and extent.
Between the ages of twenty and thirty, ten years
do not seem very destructive to life. The woman
at eighteen, and twenty-eight, if changed, is usually
ripened and improved; the man at thirty, finer and
more mature than he was at twenty. But when this
same period is placed to women and men who are either
approaching fifty, or have passed it, the change is
distinctly felt.
It was even confessed by the Senora
one exquisite morning in the beginning of March, though
the sun was shining warmly, and the flowers blooming,
and the birds singing, and all nature rejoicing, as
though it was the first season of creation.
“I am far from being as gay
and strong as I wish to be, Roberto,” she, said;
“and today, consider what a company there is
coming! And if General Houston is to be added
to it, I shall be as weary as I shall be happy.”
“He is the simplest of men;
a cup of coffee, a bit of steak—”
“San Blas! That
is how you talk! But is, it possible to receive
him like a common mortal? He is a hero, and,
besides that, among hidalgos de casa Solar”
(gentlemen of known property)—
“Well, then, you have servants,
Maria, my dear one.”
“Servants! Bah!
Of what use are they, Roberto, since they also have
got hold of American ideas?”
“Isabel and Antonia will be here.”
“Let me only enumerate to you,
Roberto. Thomas and his wife and four children
arrived last night. You may at this moment hear
the little Maria crying. I dare say Pepita is
washing the child, and using soap which is very disagreeable.
I have always admired the wife of Thomas, but I think
she is too fond of her own way with the children.
I give her advices which she does not take.”
“They are her own children, dearest.”
“Holy Maria! They are also my own grandchildren.”
“Well, well, we must remember
that Abbie is a little Puritan. She believes
in bringing up children strictly, and it is good;
for Thomas would spoil them. As for Isabel’s
boys—”
“God be blessed! Isabel’s
boys are entirely charming. They have been
corrected at my own knee. There are not more
beautifully behaved boys in the christened world.”
“And Antonia’s little Christina?”
“She is already an angel.
Ah, Roberto! If I had only died when I was
as innocent as that dear one!”
“I am thankful you did not die,
Maria. How dark my life would have been without
you!”
“Beloved, then I am glad I am
not in the kingdom of heaven; though, if one dies
like Christina, one escapes purgatory. Roberto,
when I rise I am very stiff: I think, indeed,
I have some rheumatism.”
“That is not unlikely; and also
Maria, you have now some years.”
“Let that be confessed; but
the good God knows that I lost all my youth in that
awful flight of ’thirty-six.”
“Maria, we all left or lost
something on that dark journey. To-day, we shall
recover its full value.”
“To be sure—that
is what is said—we shall see. Will
you now send Dolores to me? I must arrange my
toilet with some haste; and tell me, Roberto, what
dress is your preference; it is your eyes, beloved,
I wish to please.”
Robert Worth was not too old to feel
charmed and touched by the compliment. And he
was not a thoughtless or churlish husband; he knew
how to repay such a wifely compliment, and it was
a pleasant sight to see the aged companions standing
hand in hand before the handsome suits which Dolores
had spread out for her mistress to examine.
He looked at the purple and the black
and the white robes, and then he looked at the face
beside him. It was faded, and had lost its oval
shape; but its coloring was yet beautiful, and the
large, dark eyes tender and bright below the snow-white
hair. After a few minutes’ consideration,
he touched, gently, a robe of white satin. “Put
this on, Maria,” he said, “and your white
mantilla, and your best jewels. The occasion
will excuse the utmost splendor.”
The choice delighted her. She
had really wished to wear it, and some one’s
judgment to endorse her own inclinations was all that
was necessary to confirm her wish. Dolores found
her in the most delightful temper. She sat before
the glass, smiling and talking, while her maid piled
high the snowy plaits and curls and crowned them with
the jewelled comb, only worn on very great festivals.
Her form was still good, and the white satin fell
gracefully from her throat to her small feet.
Besides, whatever of loss or gain had marred her once
fine proportions, was entirely concealed by the beautifying,
graceful, veiling folds of her mantilla. There
was the flash of diamonds, and the moonlight glimmer
of pearls beneath this flimsy covering; and at her
belt a few white lilies. She was exceedingly
pleased with her own appearance, and her satisfaction
gave an ease and a sense of authority to her air and
movements which was charming.
“By Maria’s grace, I am
a very pretty old lady,” she said to herself;
“and I think I shall I astonish my daughter-in-law
a little. One is afraid of these calm, cool,
northern women, but I feel to-day that even Abbie
must be proud of me.”
Indeed, her entrance into the large
parlor made quite a sensation. She could see
the quiet pleasure in her husband’s face; and
her son Thomas, after one glance, put down the child
on his knee, and went to meet her. “Mi
madre,” he whispered with a kiss. He had
not used the pretty Spanish word for years, but in
the sudden rush of admiring tenderness, his boyish
heart came back to him, and quite unconsciously he
used his boyhood’s speech. After this,
she was not the least in awe of her wise daughter-in-law.
She touched her cheek kindly, and asked her about
the children, and was immeasurably delighted when
Abbie said: “How beautiful you are to-day!
I wish I had your likeness to send to Boston.
Robert, come here and look at your grandmother!
I want you to remember, as long as you live, how
grandmother looks to-day.” And Robert—a
fine lad eight years old, accustomed to implicit obedience—
put down the book he was reading, planted himself squarely
before the Senora, and looked at her attentively, as
if she was a lesson to be learned.
“Well then, Roberto?”
“I am glad I have such a pretty
grandmother. Will you let me stand on tiptoes
and kiss you?” and the cool, calm northern woman’s
eyes filled with tears, as she brought her younger
children, one by one, for the Senora’s caress.
The doctor and his son watched this pretty domestic
drama with hearts full of pride and happiness; and
before it had lost one particle of its beauty and
feeling, the door was flung open with a vigor which
made every one turn to it with expectation.
A splendid little lad sprang in, and without any consideration
for satin and lace, clung to the Senora. He was
her image: a true Yturbide, young as he was;
beautiful and haughty as his Castilian ancestors.
Isabel and Luis followed; Isabel more
lovely than ever, richly dressed in American fashion,
full of pretty enthusiasms, vivacious, charming, and
quite at her ease. She had been married eight
years. She was a fashionable woman, and an authority
upon all social subjects.
Luis also was wonderfully improved.
The light-hearted gaiety, which ten years ago had
bubbled over in continual song, was still there; but
it was under control, evident only because it made
perpetual sunshine on his face. He had taken
the doctor’s advice—completed his
study of English and Mexican law—and become
a famous referee in cases of disputed Mexican claims
and title deeds. His elegant form and handsome,
olive face looked less picturesque in the dull, uncompromising
stiffness of broadcloth, cut into those peculiarly
unbecoming fashions of ugliness which the anglo-Saxon
and anglo-American affect. But it gained by
the change a certain air of reliability and importance;
an air not to be dispensed with in a young lawyer
already aspiring to the seat among the lawmakers of
his State.
“We called upon Antonia,”
said Isabel, “as we came here. Of course
she was engaged with Lopez. They were reading
a book together; and even on such a day as this were
taking, with the most blessed indifference, a minute
at a time. They will join us on the Plaza.
I represented to them that they might miss a good
position. `That has been already secured,’ said
Lopez, with that exasperating repose which only the
saints could endure with patience. For that
reason, I consider Antonia a saint to permit it.
As for me, I should say: `The house is on fire,
Lopez! Will it please you for once to feel a
little excited?’ Luis says they read, continually,
books which make people think of great solemnities
and responsibilities. How foolish, when they
are so rich, and might enjoy themselves perpetually!”
“Here are the carriages,”
cried Thomas Worth, “and the ceremony of to-day
has its own hour. It will never come again.”
“Your mother and I will go first,
Thomas; and we will take Abbie and your eldest son.
I shall see you in your place. Luis, bring
your boy with you; he has intelligence and will remember
the man he will see to-day, and may never see again.”
On the Plaza, close to the gates of
the Alamo, a rostrum had been erected; and around
it were a few stands, set apart for the carriages
of the most illustrious of the families of San Antonio.
The Senora, from the shaded depths of her own, watched
their arrival. Nothing could be more characteristic
than the approach of her daughters. Antonia
and Lopez, stately and handsome, came slowly; their
high-stepping horses chafing at the irrestraint.
Luis and Isabel drove to their appointed place with
a speed and clatter, accentuated by the jingling of
the silver rings of the harness and the silver hanging
buttons on the gay dress of the Mexican driver.
But the occupants of both carriages appeared to be
great favorites with the populace who thronged the
Plaza, the windows, the flat roofs of the houses,
and every available place for hearing and seeing.
The blue flag of Texas fluttered gayly
over the lovely city; and there was a salvo of cannon;
then, into the sunshine and into the sight of all
stepped the man of his generation. Nature has
her royal line, and she makes no mistakes in the kings
she crowns. The physical charm of Houston was
at this time very great. His tall, ample, dignified
form attracted attention at once. His eyes penetrated
the souls of all upon whom they fell. His lips
were touched with fire, and his words thrilled and
swayed men, as the wind sways the heavy heads in a
field of ripe barley.
He stretched out his arms to the people,
and they stretched out their arms to him. The
magnetic chain of sympathy was complete. The
hearts of his listeners were an instrument, on which
he played the noblest, most inspiring, the sweetest
of melodies. He kindled them as flame kindles
dry grass. He showed them their future with
a prophet’s eye, and touched them also with
the glad diviner’s rapture. They aspired,
they rejoiced at his bidding; and at the moment of
their highest enthusiasm, he cried out:
“Whatever State gave us birth,
we have one native land and we have one flag!”
Instantly from the grim, blood-stained walls of the
fortress, the blessed Stars and Stripes flew out; and
in a moment a thousand smaller flags, from every high
place, gave it salutation. Then the thunder
of cannon was answered by the thunder of voices.
Cannon may thunder and make no impression; but the
shout of humanity! It stirs and troubles the
deepest heart-stream. It is a cry that cannot
be resisted. It sets the gates of feeling wide
open. And it was while men were in this mood
that Houston said his last words:
“I look in this glorious sunshine
upon the bloody walls of the Alamo. I remember
Goliad. I carry my memory back over the long
struggle of thirty years. Do you think the young,
brave souls, fired with the love of liberty, who fell
in this long conflict have forgotten it? No!
No! No! Wherever in God’s Eternity
they are this day, I believe they are permitted to
know that Texas has become part of their country, and
rests forever under the flag they loved. The
shouting thousands, the booming cannon, that greeted
this flag were not all the sounds I heard! Far
off, far off, yet louder than any noise of earth,
I heard from the dead years, and the dead heroes of
these years; the hurrahing of ghostly voices and the
clapping of unseen hands!”
“It was like Houston to call
the dead to the triumph,” said the doctor, as
he stood with the Senora in her room. He was
unbuttoning her gloves, and her tears dropped down
upon his hands.
“He is a man by himself, and
none like him. I thought that I should never
forgive him for sparing the life of that monster—Santa
Anna; but to-day I forgive him even that. I am
so happy that I shall ask Holy Maria to excuse me the
feeling; for it is not good to permit one’s
self to be too happy; it brings trouble. But
indeed, when I looked at Thomas, I thought how wisely
he has married. It is seldom a mother can approve
of her daughter-in-law; but Abbie has many excellencies—good
manners, and a good heart, and a fortune which is
quite respectable.”
“And strong principles also,
Maria. She will bring up her children to know
right and wrong, and to do right.”
“THAT of course. Every good mother does that. I am sure
it is a sight for the angels to see Isabel teaching her
children their prayers. Did you observe also how great a
favorite Luis is? He lifted his hat to this one and that one,
and it is certain that the next election will be in his hand.”
“Perhaps—I wish Lopez would take more interest in politics.
He is a dreamer.”
“But, then, a very happy dreamer.” Perhaps to dream well and
pleasantly is to live a better life. Antonia is devoted to
him. She has a blessed lot. Once I did not think she would
be so fortunate.”
“Lopez was prudent and patient.”
“Prudent! Patient! It is a miracle to me! I assure you,
they even talk together of young Senor Grant! It is
satisfactory, but extremely strange.”
“You had better sleep a little, Maria. General Houston is
coming to dinner.”
“That is understood. When I spoke last to him, I was a woman
broken-hearted. To-night I will thank him for all that
he has done. Ah, Roberto! His words to-day went to my,
soul-I thought of my Juan-I thought of the vision he showed
me-I wondered if he knew-if he saw-and heard-” she leaned
her head upon her husband’s breast, and he kissed away the
sorrowful rain.
“He was so sweet! so beautiful! Oh, Roberto!”
“He was God’s greatest gift to us. Maria! dear. Maria! I
love you for, all the children you have given me; BUT MOST
OF ALL, FOR JUAN!”